Related topics from BritannicaICANN nonprofit private organization incorporated in California on Sept. 18, 1998, and tasked with taking over from the U.S. government various administrative duties associated with running the Internet. ...
intellectual-property law In the 1990s the exclusive right to use Internet domain names-unique sequences of letters (divided, by convention, into segments separated by periods) that correspond to the numerical "Internet ...
Tuvalu On Aug. 3, 2006, Tuvalu held a general election for the country's 15-member legislature (in which there were no formal parties). Although Prime Minister Maatia Toafa retained his seat, many of his ...
TUVALU Area: 25.6 sq km (9.9 sq mi)Law, Crime, and Law Enforcement The U.S. agreed to normalize trade relations with China permanently upon the latter's accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO). The U.S. lost two cases brought by the European Union (EU) in ...
World Intellectual Property Organization international organization designed to promote the worldwide protection of both industrial property (inventions, trademarks, and designs) and copyrighted materials (literary, musical, photographic, ...
Tuvalu Prime Minister Saufatu Sopoanga was defeated by a vote of no confidence in August 2004. Because all seats in the 15-member legislature had to be filled before a vote for prime minister could be ...
Tuvalu Tuvalu's well-managed Tuvalu Trust Fund, which invested in major economies and funded a significant part of the government budget, started 2007 in good shape, but the fund was likely to suffer from ...
intellectual-property law The tightening of laws governing intellectual property has been paralleled by a steady increase in the economic and cultural importance of intellectual-property rights. The entertainment industry has ...
Tuvalu Tuvalu was admitted to the United Nations in September 2000 as the world organization's 189th member and 22 years after having achieved independence from the U.K. In his first UN address, Prime ...
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