Berrin has graduated from Ankara University Faculty of Law in 2010. She has started her career in all aspects of IP law in a leading law office in Istanbul and she has an experience in this field for twelve years.
During her practice, Berrin has assisted her clients in managing their IP portfolios and advised on their strategy. She has been involved in numerous advisory and litigation matters and represented multinational and local clients from different business sectors including fashion, textile, food and beverage, cosmetics, technology, media and telecom, entertainment, hotel and tourism.
Her expertise in trademarks, designs, patents and utility models are extended to all contentious and non-contentious administrative and legal works. She has taken a leading role in various cancellation, invalidation, infringement, unfair competition and compensation lawsuits.
Berrin is the co-author of various articles published on prestigious publications such as Intellectual Property Magazines, Managing IP and WTR. She has also attended both private and public institutions as a guest lecturer on IP rights and ECTA (European Communities Trade Mark Association) meetings. She has worked as a member in the Law Commitee of ECTA in 2019 and 2020. She is also an active member of INTA Brand Restrictions Committee and AIPPI Copyright Committee.
She is also a registered trademark attorney.
BAR ADMISSION
Istanbul Bar Association
LANGUAGES
English
EDUCATION
Istanbul Bilgi University, Faculty of Law (LL.M., Business Law, 2023)
Ankara University, Faculty of Law (LL.B., 2010)
MEMBERSHIPS
AIPPI
ECTA
INTA
MARQUES
PTMG
Registered Trademark Attorney
PUBLICATIONS
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Exercise of the right to be forgotten in Turkey in terms of search engine result (IBA, Co-Author, 1 December 2023)
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Green Is the New Black: The Rise of Green Marks and Possible Solutions to Greenwashing (Annales de la Faculté de Droit d’Istanbul, Co-Author, 19 October 2023)
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Court of Cassation Decision Breaks Routine (INTA - Law & Practice, Co-Author, 14 October 2021)
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Turkish Court of Cassation disregards the identity of the device elements of the signs when examining similarity (Oxford University Press - Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice, Co-Author, 14 July 2021)