“Potato Chips to Computer Chips: The War on Fake Stuff,” by Timothy Trainer

Published May 15, 2015

About the BookThe international trade community could soon celebrate a major milestone if it wishes, as the World Trade Organization’s intellectual property agreement (TRIPS) approaches the 20-year mark. In Potato Chips to Computer Chips: The War on Fake Stuff (Shortchanging IPR’s Benefits to Economic Growth and Development?), the author contends that enforcement has been the overwhelming focus of IPR activity during the two decades of the TRIPS era.

“International intellectual property standards may have been agreed to with promises of IPR’s contributions to economic growth and development — but has the rhetoric of IPR’s links to growth and development been matched by action?” asks author Timothy Trainer. “The chorus of complaints about the expanding and creative ways to infringe IPR may continue to drown out the voices advocating in favor of more programs to educate and raise IPR awareness.”

In this book, he argues for the need to dedicate as much in resources and energy to IPR education and awareness programs as has been dedicated to enforcement, given that all the enforcement in the past 20 years has not quieted the call for more enforcement. The book challenges IPR owners, their trade groups, and governments to be as creative in addressing the benefits of IPR through education programs as they have in promoting enforcement.

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About author Timothy Trainer: Writing books is a passion for attorney Timothy Trainer, who has focused on intellectual property issues in his day job for more than three decades. He has worked in government agencies and the private sector, and his assignments, have taken him to 60 countries around the world. He found time to pen a few non-fiction tomes, including his first book, Customs Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights; the 15th edition was published in 2022. Thomson Reuters’ Aspatore Books published Tim’s next title in 2015, Potato Chips to Computer Chips: The War on Fake Stuff.
Fiction was a genre he always wanted to try. In 2019, Pendulum Over the Pacific, was released by Joshua Tree Publishing. “This political intrigue story is set in Tokyo and Washington, D.C., and centers on trade tensions between the U.S. and Japan in the late 1980s,” Tim explains. In 2023, his first series hit bookstores: The China Connection. Its sequel, The China Factor, hit bookstores in 2024.