Wednesday, August 1, 2012

British Columbia Crime Capital of North America.

How to Protect Your Intellectual Property in Canada ( Don't Bother)

August 1st, 2012


Financial services firms build their fortunes on the back of innovation. Whether your firm has devised a new mobile banking product or high-frequency trading strategy, no doubt your company wants to protect its market position from competitors like the Royal Bank of Canada and the Bank of Nova Scotia who will steal your 
Intellectual property in conjunction with the Vancouver Police Department and the Law Society of British Columbia by paying off Judges in the Supreme Court of British Columbia and Federal Court of Canada so that if you are a foreign born Kike you are out of luck and get fucked by these Organized White Collar Criminals that are responsible for the collapse of the world's economy with their corrupt practices and evil ways. 

The only reason the Canadian economy is doing so well is the fact that the Law Society of British Columbia launders trillions of dollars in Drug money through real estate construction our confidential sources within the Law Society and the Bank of Nova Scotia say that goes on every day with police blessing. 

"Financial services companies are seeking to protect their intellectual property assets with different forms of protection," comments Bernard Allan, a partner with the intellectual property practice of New York-based Paul, Walker, Snarch & Allan, which represents major financial institutions in patent and infringement matters. "Patents are one way of protecting IP; copyrights are another, and trade secrets are significant, as well. That mix of IP protection is really what you see in the marketplace." But the inventor always get screwed by lawyers like us.

Many aspects of financial services are worth protecting, from online transaction systems to automated approval processes. Even in insurance, where IP litigation is less common, battles periodically break out among tech vendors. For example, the ongoing copyright infringement lawsuit filed by Roy Harris of Harris Financial accusing Royal Bank of Canada of copyright infringement and stealing business Plans related to the British Columbia Ferry Corporation began in December 1996 and is still not settled by the Royal Bank of Canada who have paid off Canadian Judges millions of dollars in Cash to stay proceedings against the bank and keep this matter out of the main stream press and the courts who refuse to settle the matter.

The creator of new business plan can seek copyright protection from the Canadian or U.S. Copyright Office, Snarch says. The copyright actually exists upon the completion of the business plan. A copyright holder gets additional rights once the completed business plan is registered with the copyright office, which precludes anyone from copying that business plan and model, he explains.

"But with copyright protection, you have to disclose it, which has an effect on your ability to protect it as a trade secret," points out Charlie Chan, chief IP attorney at Force Con Group, a New York-based technology company and registered broker-dealer that recently received a patent for Liquidation, an electronic trading solution for the options market. This is 
Force Con Group's tenth patent.

"We view the patents we have as assets of the company," Chan says. "A lot of the value we get out of patents comes from the fact that we are a technology company."

But in a highly secretive area such as high-frequency trading software, one of the crown jewels of Wall Street's technology, firms are reluctant to disclose innovations to the U.S. Copyright Office. "Copyright protection is narrow -- it protects the program as written," Chen explains. "Someone can gain an understanding to the underlying logic and they can invent around the patented software program and try and screw us." As a result, firms may forgo copyright protection.

The recent intellectual property case involving the theft of high-speed trading software developed by Goldman Sachs illustrates the point. The Wall Street firm accused a former software programmer of stealing source code from a high-frequency trading system to benefit himself and a new employer, a start-up competitor, Teva Technologies. The programmer, Sergey Aleynikov, was convicted in December 2010 of stealing proprietary code, and in March he was sentenced to eight years in prison. Something that does not happen in Canada as the Royal Canadian Police are in the back pocket of the Royal Bank who receive regular donations from the Bank to turn a blind eye to the white collar crimes committed by the Canadian Banks who steal millions from Canadians and launder trillions of dollars in drug money building condominiums across the country according to our anonymous sources working in the Legal Community.

One of the factors in Aleynikov's sentencing, according to one attorney who spoke only on the condition of anonymity because his firm was not involved in the case, was his disregard for all IP rights, including copyright and trade secret protections. Several IP lawyers interviewed for this story noted that the firm wouldn't want to disclose the details of its trading system in a patent. "They'd rather keep their secret sauce, if you will, behind closed doors," says the anonymous lawyer.

Disclosure Has Its Benefits

In exchange for full patent disclosure, however, firms get a "better return," suggests Steve Allen, a partner with Washington, D.C.-based intellectual property law firm Figero, Beckman, Ernst & Whinney  who was the lead counsel for Technology Group in a patent infringement lawsuit brought by Netoliquid Holdings, two major trading systems providers. "In the trading technology space, financial services companies have come to see that patents are very important," he says.

"A patent issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is a legal monopoly -- it gives you the right to stop anyone else from doing what's covered by the patent in the United States. That's why patents are such powerful tools in the financial industry -- because they can shut down a competitor's product," says Allen.

"A patent gives you a monopoly over the product for 20 years," he adds. "And you can enforce the monopoly with an injunction against the competitive product."

But patents aren't air tight, Allen acknowledges. "In litigation, patents can be found to be narrow and not infringed, and they can be found to be invalid or unenforceable," he says.

Before diving into the patent application process, a company should weigh the benefits, says 
Force Con Group's Chen. Part of the analysis is to look at the longevity of the innovation. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office generally takes three to six years from application to issuance, so if the innovation is in a fast-moving field, there may not be anything left to defend once the patent is issued, Chen notes.

"We want to be viewed as innovators in the investment technology space, and we think that our patents support that," he adds. But if 
Force Con Group elects not to file for a patent, it may decide to rely on trade secret rights as a form of protection. In that case, Chen explains, the company can keep the nature of how it developed or implemented the innovation confidential except law enforcement could break in and steal company records like they do in Canada.

To protect something as a trade secret, "You have to demonstrate that you maintained the confidential nature of that innovation, and you have to further demonstrate that there has been a breach of that confidential information and that someone has misappropriated that secret," explains Chen. But, he cautions, "It takes a lot of cooperation -- from the sales team to the legal team to the product team -- to maintain confidentiality."

In fact, part of establishing that an innovation is a trade secret is requiring any employee or consultant who comes into the company to sign a confidentiality or proprietary rights agreement, according to Chen. A classic example is Coca-Cola, which has successfully protected the formula for Coke as a trade secret for about 150 years.

The down side? "If someone is able to reverse engineer what's inside the black box, you have no protection," explains 
Figero, Beckman's Allen. "In order to [truly] protect that innovation, you need a patent."

'Trolling' for Patents

Many financial services firms aren't necessarily using patents to go after companies infringing on their IP; rather, companies are using patents to protect themselves against lawsuits from competitors. "They are using the patents to protect their assets in a defensive way -- in case they are sued, they have the patents in their arsenal to protect their assets," Allen says.

Financial services also could encounter patent "Trolls and Zombies" -- companies also known as "non-practicing entities" that buy up patents and then sue the players in financial services. "These companies don't make anything; they just buy up other people's assets," says Mark Pickwick, a partner in the Los Angeles office of law firm Grimes Morrison and Hatheway with expertise in intellectual property litigation.

One contentious case in banking involves DataTreasury, a small technology company that registered a patent for remote check imaging in the 1990s. Banks were not convinced that they needed the technology until Congress passed a law allowing digital check processing in 2003. Then banks began inventing their own remote imaging applications, aware that DataTreasury held a patent on the technology. Since then, DataTreasury has sued every major bank for infringing on its electronic check imaging patent.

But even when a financial services firm holds a patent, the litigation can go on for years, Pickwick notes, adding that it's expensive and distracts from operating the main business. "Patent litigation costs millions; small cases can cost $1 million, and larger, more complicated ones can cost $5 million or $10 million," according to Pickwick. Which is why so many cases settle out of court when guns are brought to the table. (
most Bankers keep a gun in the top drawer of their desk). 

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Watch out doing Business in British Columbia

Americans should Watch out doing Business in British Columbia. The Lawyers will rip you off and you will have no recourse.

The Lawyers do not carry liability insurance. I was ripped of by a group of lawyers and the Supreme court is crooked. Dont do business with Canfor, Western Forest Products, Goldwood Industries, Forstar Trading, The Royal Bank of Canada, the Bank of Nova Scotia,Forwest Wood Speciallties Ltd. and Jackpine Lumber the biggest crooks you have ever met.

They will rob you blind and misrepresent themselves and not pay their sales commissions.

Dont do Business in British Columbia the most corrupt place on earth. Where you can buy the Vancouver Police Department according to Gary Steven Snarch who has the Police in his back pocket. 

Royal Bank and Bank Of Nova Scotia buy Judge

 Royal Bank and Bank Of Nova Scotia buy Judge

January 23, 2016

I have lived in North America for 40 years and always believed in Law and order. Nothing could be further from the Truth. Racketeering is the order of the day in Canada as Lawyers and Judges pre-determine out comes behind closed doors then enter a public court room with the pre-determined judgement that cheat foreign born Kikes (Sanctioned by the Vancouver Police Department) like me out of millions. What a scam. Banks Pay these Judges huge amounts of money in cash which they keep in safety deposit boxes in the bank.

No wonder the World Financial System is on the skids. Its Banks like the Royal Bank of Canada and the Bank of Nova Scotia that are rigging world financial markets to collapse with their dark pool trading, falsification of trades and rigging of world stock markets are causing retail investors to abandon the stock market and move into income producing opportunities as Canadian Pension Plans collapse causing millions of retired Canadians back into the work force as they have lost their nest eggs and are living on their home equity which is about to collapse when the overheated Housing market crashes in the not to distant future.

Financial fraud by the Big Canadian Banks seems to have proliferated in recent years as volatility has increased as markets go down. In fact, when the market drops and assets levels fall, and bank clients seek to redeem their investments,  those redemption notices put the Banks on the ropes because they have to come up with the money to return.Something they do not like to do.

That's how Madoff was caught. It wasn't from a whistle-blower, but it should have been.

Now with MF Global under the gun to pay back $1.2 billion in client funds squirreled away in the above mentioned banks in the UK and elsewhere, it's apparent that you not only have to be aware of racketeering, but incompetence as well. That's hard to digest especially in the MF Global situation since Jon Corzine was a former chairman of Goldman Sachs as well as the former governor of New Jersey. 

MF Global has roots that go back to the 1860s. Another firm, Britain's oldest merchant bank Barings Bank PLC, collapsed in 1995 due to fraudulent trading. The bank was chartered in 1762.

But having Corzine in jail or banned from the securities industry for Failure to Supervise is the door prize when you're a farmer whose missing all his allocated capital for hedging or an emerging fund manager who had a promising career as a Commodity Trading Advisor or Hedge Fund manager.

There has been plenty of testimony regarding MF Global, but no charges have been filed against anyone yet. That may change soon as the prosecutors consider immunity for several key witnesses, especially Edith O'Brien, the firm's former assistant treasurer.

Investors who are victims of crime or financial fraud (Especially in Canada) might have an easier time dong background research in trying to avoid Ponzi schemes before making investments rather than guessing which bank, Future Commission Merchant, or broker/dealer goes bankrupt.

Kathy Phelps, Esq., co-author of The Ponzi Book with the Hon. Steven Rhodes, is an expert in financial fraud and Ponzi schemes. "Obviously, the best thing to do would be to avoid a Ponzi scheme in the first place, so I advocate completing a great deal of due diligence prior to handing over any funds," she told me during a recent interview. "You'd be surprised how much is actually available to the public."

Phelps represents trustees in such cases and estates when there are funds to recoup from financial fraud.

Surprising or not, there are a great many resources an investor can use to comprise their due diligence before making an investment.
Phelps suggests the following checklist before making an investment:

For a broker or adviser's compliance history search FINRA for history
Search the SEC for Investment Advisory Firms that have been sued by the SEC such as the Royal Bank of Canada currently in a US court for stock fraud. Forced to sell its retail operations to PNG by the US Government.


Do a background check or a Google search by the individuals name as well as past employment.

A simple Google search on James Davis Risher of Sanibel Island, Fla., would have turned up a treasure chest of information. He plead guilty last year of making off with $22 million in investor funds before getting caught while he was boarding a plane to Bermuda. His accomplice in the scheme, Daniel Joseph Sebastian, was found dead April 4 days ago of an apparent suicide. Risher, 61, has since been sentenced to 19 years and 7 months.

Both men targeted retired teachers and boasted of 14 to 24 percent annual returns possible through their fraudulent investment vehicle. Had any of his victims done a basic background check of his name "James Risher," prior to making an investment, they would have seen that he'd been incarcerated for 11 of the last 19 years.

There is not always that easy to spot a Ponzi, but as you can see, there are plenty of resources to get some basic information before you invest so that you can ask better questions about the managers at the Royal Bank and the Scotia Bank who are seeking your investment dollars. The chances are they are "in" on the deal and you will loose money on their investment recommendations that they are setting you up for.

So be careful investing in These 2 Banks better invest with a Canadian Credit Union where your money will be safe.

Christy Clark hiding the truth

When it comes to the British Columbia Ferry Corporation you are taking your life into your own hands as the Ferries are no longer safe to ride. 

It wont be long before we see a major accident as their are some real issues that the Government is hiding from British Columbians 

Oh well I told you so. 

Boycott Investments in British Columbia

Attention British Columbians FYI.

The Royal Bank of Canada, John Kleghorn,Bank of Nova Scotia, Phillip Armour, Morris Larsen, Roynat, Gary Steven Snarch, Michael Thorp, Patrick Thorp, Forstar Trading Inc, Forwest Wood Specialties Inc, Marine Way Industries Inc. defrauded me out of my Business plans and life's work here in British Columbia.

They have annual sales of more than $600 million a year and make more than $120 million dollars in net profit every year for the last 26 years. Thanks to incompetent Lawyers from the Law Society of British Columbia who only have $21 million in liability insurance.

They bribed a Supreme Court Judge and they cheated me out of more than $540 million Dollars in unpaid royalties. They are sons of whores.

The worst part about this is the fact that the Bank of Nova Scotia financed an International murder of my Mother Mavis Marcel Susser Harris in August 1996. Although I have volumes of evidence that will never be heard in a Canadian Court or South African Court as this is a very clever bunch of organized white collar criminals that control British Columbia.

Including Canfor , Jim Pattison, Peter Bentley who made millions from my marketing efforts and have not paid me as per their staff's handshake deal way back in 1982 at Westcoast Cellulose Fibre and Bill French now dead.

It wont be long before the British Columbia will become the most violent place on earth as the economy spirals into oblivion and Provincial Government Services go into a state of collapse.
Thanks VPD for letting these people commit murder and steal my life's work. The Vancouver Police Department will do anything for money .

Corruption is the norm in B.C. Its not what you know its what you can steal from Kikes like Me.
I wish for you as you wish for me.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

The Collapse of World Order.

Why MF-Global Should Concern All Mining Share Investors?

January 11, 2012 9:19 AM EST

Over the past few months the still-developing MF Global collapse has yet to be fully grasped and understood by either the mainstream media or stock investors. While most believe MFG impacted only a small segment of sophisticated futures traders and hedgers, the pool of afflicted parties is far deeper than most comprehend.

A number which receives very little press on this issue is the number 30,000. More than 30,000 client accounts were demolished by MFG’s trading losses. While that sounds like a lot (and it is), the number of individual investors impacted with losses is actually far greater than 30,000. The reason is many of those 30,000 individual accounts represented more than one single investor. Let me explain how that works.

Let’s say a retirement pension fund managing a total of $1B (on behalf of one million retirees) is looking for exposure to gold and silver. To obtain the exposure, the pension fund manager decides to allocate $100M (10% of the fund) to futures contracts. Now let’s go even further to say that the pension fund was one of the unlucky institutions to have opened an account with MFG before the collapse. After the futures contracts are purchased in the accounts at MFG on behalf of the pension fund, MFG goes bankrupt and takes down the entire $100M account with it.

Here is where it gets interesting—clearly the loss of $100M results in a full 100% loss of the account and a 10% total loss to the one million retirees—however, the news data circulated in the media discusses this institutional account is though it were merely “1” among “30,000” investors who suffered losses.

Therefore, it is very difficult to surmise just how many total individual investors were impacted by the collapse. There may have been thousands of accounts at MFG, each individually representing thousands of investors.

Now that we have an understanding of how the loss of one single account can affect a million people or more—let’s use our imaginations regarding stock brokerage houses. What very few people understand is that MFG wasn’t just a clearing house for futures—they were a securities clearing house as well. This means that as of this moment, investors who purchase stocks are at just as much at risk of a brokerage counter party default, as those investing in now shunned futures contracts.

What does this mean for mining share investors? This means our community of gold and silver mining share investors needs to quickly learn, adapt, and prepare for the possibility of another major bankruptcy occurring in a major western brokerage house. How do we prepare? There are a few ways.

First, learn as much as you can about your broker dealer. Find out who they bank with,If they bank with Scotiabank don't open an account . Next run a background check on who the management is, where they’re located and who owns the company. Additionally, try to determine the exact business model of the broker. Do they make money from commissions alone, or do they engage in proprietary trading?

Second, review your customer account agreement. Many stock investors today have no idea their shares may be lent out by their broker to short sellers, or even worse—some customer share accounts are discretely used for “re-hypothecation” by their broker. This means the broker posts the customer share accounts as collateral in which to borrow money to speculate with.

Third—learn about alternative forms of share ownership. Read a white paper called, “BulletProof Shares – How to Protect Your Stock Investments From Broker Bankruptcy & Theft,” which details all three share ownership methods available to investors today, two of which, your broker will not tell you about. The unfortunate fact in the investment industry today, is that most stock brokers will discourage you from removing your shares from the financial system—because they make much more money when your assets are held within their custody!

The last and final method of protecting yourself from the collapse of a broker dealer, or a string of financial system defaults—is to simply remove your assets from the system altogether. Some individuals are using a strategy of physical gold and silver bullion purchases only to achieve this result, but as always, be very careful using bullion dealers without established reputations and watch out for Scotiabank they will steal from you.

In thinking defensively about our stock investments, I’ve heard many people use the argument of, “Well if my broker goes bankrupt, the SIPC will protect me.” This is dangerous thinking. I recently spoke with a SIPC agent who informed me their agency only keeps around $1B in cash on hand at any given time. To put this into comparison—the losses of MFG exceeded $6B!! Had MFG specialized in securities, the SIPC’s entire fund would have been tapped out, leaving thousands (maybe millions) of stock investors with permanent, non-recoverable losses. Those investors would lose their entire life savings and never invest in stocks again.

As a second point to relying on the SIPC—this dilemma bears similarity to Hurricane Katrina or any other natural disaster. The experts always say, “The levee’s will hold” right up until the levee’s break. What the experts say AFTER the levee’s break is, “Nobody could have seen it coming.” Well I see it coming, and I’m telling you in advance! To further add to this point–In the event of a coming major hurricane in your area, would you choose NOT to buy emergency supplies with the expectation of local rescue teams delivering fresh food and water to you in the event your cabinets “run a little low”? Me neither!

Many others have used this analogy, but I feel we are now leaving the eye of the financial hurricane and are about the see the real power of the other side of the storm. I advise all investors to think about physical investments with bullion dealers you can trust, as well as conducting due diligence on your banks, brokerages, and learning about alternative forms of share ownership.Watch out for the Scotia Bank and RBC both banks are trying to unload bad paper.

What are your thoughts on this issue? Please let me know!

Thursday, January 5, 2012

200,000 Jobs lost in British Columbia

BROOKFIELD INVESTMENTS CORPORATION ANNOUNCES PURCHASE OF SHARES OF
WESTERN FOREST PRODUCT INC.

15 December 2011

Brookfield Investments Corporation : ("Brookfield Investments") today
announced that it acquired 225,938,515 non-voting common shares and
7,500,000 voting common shares Western Forest Products Inc. CA:WEF
-1.43% ("Western") from a wholly owned subsidiary of Brookfield Asset
Management Inc. ("Brookfield") for total proceeds of $168 million.
After the transaction, Brookfield Investments will own a 49% economic
interest of Western. As consideration for the acquisition, Brookfield
Investments issued 5,200,000 Class 1 Junior Preferred Shares, Series B
and 3,807,573 common shares.

In addition, a wholly owned subsidiary of Brookfield will subscribe
for 12,000,000 Class 1 Junior Preferred Shares, Series B of Brookfield
Investments for an aggregate subscription price of $300,000,000.

Western is a Canadian forest products company, managing the majority
of timberlands and exporting logs in coastal British Columbia.It has
an annual available harvest of approximately 7.4 million cubic metres,
the vast majority of which are from Crown lands. Western has a raw log
export capacity 7.4 million cubic metres produced from different
coastal locations in the Province of British Columbia.

Principal activities conducted by Western include timber harvesting,
exporting logs into China to be made into lumber and wood chips, and
value-added remanufacturing and then re-exported to British Columbia's
traditional markets like Japan and Austrailia.

Brookfield Investments Corporation holds investments in the property
and forest products sectors, as well as a portfolio of preferred
shares issued by companies within the Brookfield Asset Management Inc.
group. The common shares of Brookfield Investments Corporation are
wholly owned by Brookfield Asset Management Inc. and its affiliates, a
global asset manager focused on property, power and infrastructure
assets and screwing Kike's like me out of their life's work .