Nick Phillips speaks at ITMA Spring Conference
Edwin Coe is delighted to announce that Intellectual Property Partner, Nick Phillips, is to speak at the The Institute of Trade Mark Attorneys (ITMA) Spring Conference today (17/03/2016).
The theme for this event is history and heritage, and the speakers will take you on a journey through historical and current trade mark issues. Nick Phillips will be speaking regarding The legacy Copyright Acts with a talk entitled “It’s not just Peter Pan that doesn’t get old.”
Nick specialises in Intellectual Property and IT. Nick qualified as a solicitor in 1995 and joined Edwin Coe as a partner in 2013. Prior to joining Edwin Coe Nick co-founded and subsequently headed the IT/IP department in a large regional firm.
Nick has considerable experience in advising clients on data protection, e-commerce, domain names and internet related issues as well as on a wide variety of IT contacts. Nick also regularly advises on the protection, exploitation and enforcement of the full range of intellectual property rights. His clients include individual inventors, SMEs, larger companies, charities and international organisations. He has advised manufacturers, retailers, wholesalers, ISPs, re-sellers, distributors and agents in a wide range of industries.
About Edwin Coe
Discreet strength. Clear judgement. Enduring relationships.
Founded in 1913 and based in Lincoln's Inn, Edwin Coe is a leading independent London law firm built on clarity, collaboration and trust. We specialise in dispute resolution, private capital and cross-border matters.
What began as a boutique disputes practice over 100 years ago has evolved into a firm advising private clients, entrepreneurs, family offices, UK and international businesses across the areas of corporate, private client, real estate and litigation. Throughout that evolution, one thing has remained constant – our belief that the best advice combines legal insight with human understanding.
Collaborative in approach. Committed in purpose. Connected where it matters most.