First up for the Kat's attention is something so ephemeral, sweet and so fragile that one could hardly imagine how even the most enforceable intellectual property rights might keep it under control. For those who are so minded, it is possible to follow @365musicTweets. As composer Mikel Chamizo explains, "365 Musical Tweets A daily musical tweet from the 1st of January to the 31 of December 2011. Each composition has a maximum extension of 140 notes and reflects my daily life". Mikel opts for the benefits of both copyright and patronage. States a message on his site: "© 365 musical tweets and all the music it contains are copyright of Mikel Chamizo. Sponsored by the Baskische Musikvereinigung".
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Bulgarian sausage war sizzles. Via the Kat's friends at Petosevic comes news that, last month, Bulgaria’s Commission for Unfair Competition ordered one of the largest Bulgarian meat-processing companies -- Mekom JSC -- to pay a fine of approximately Euro 168,000 (US$236,000) for making and selling a flat sausage called KARLOSKA Krepost. You may think "Karloska is a pretty name for a girl", but to a Bulgarian it's a sausage that is uncannily and unlawfully similar to KARLOVSKA Lukanka -- a protected designation of origin for the traditional Bulgarian flat sausage (lukanka) which originates in the the central Bulgarian town of Karlovo. According to the Commission, the similarity in appearance between the two products, their brand names and the font used on the packaging was potentially misleading to consumers: KARLOVSKA and KARLOSKA, both written in capital letters, can be viewed as identical since the absence of a single letter can be understood as a mistake or simply go unnoticed. The word “krepost” (meaning "fortress"), which is intended to distinguish Mekom JSC’s product, is written in almost invisibly small and scarcely legible letters against a dark background that hides the word. Mekom claimed its product was named after a historical personality and an event, the conquest of an old Silistrian fortress by the 15th-century knight called Karlos-- but the Commission was unimpressed.
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