Intellectual Property UK

  • March 21, 2025

    UK Licensing Group Allows AI Use Of Copyrighted Content

    The Copyright Licensing Agency will allow both private and public customers to use its members' material to prompt AI models — though not to train them.

  • March 21, 2025

    Shein Added To E-Commerce IP Enforcement List

    The U.K.'s Intellectual Property Office has updated guidance for rightsholders looking to crack down on copycat products listed on Chinese e-commerce giant Shein.

  • March 21, 2025

    Bose Headphone Patent Appeal Falls Flat At EPO

    Bose Corp. left a European patent office appeal board empty-handed after its attempt to overturn a decision scrapping its headphones patent, with officials echoing the lower board's finding that the design lacked originality.

  • March 21, 2025

    Huawei Gets 2nd Shot At Patenting Data Migration Tech

    European appellate officials have given Huawei a second chance at securing a patent for transferring data between devices, ruling that previous examiners had blindsided the Chinese firm by relying on new evidence in their final decision. 

  • March 21, 2025

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen a sub-postmaster sue the Post Office and Fujitsu, Russian insurer Ingosstrakh hit the Financial Times with a defamation claim, and Britvic-owned Robinsons Soft Drinks file a passing off claim against Aldi. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • March 20, 2025

    Dutch Bioscience Giant Loses 2 Infant Formula Patents

    A London court on Thursday rejected the bulk of Dutch bioscience giant DSM's claim that its rivals infringed its microbial oil patents in the U.K., ruling that two of its patents over the infant formula ingredient are invalid.

  • March 20, 2025

    Mercedes-Benz's Bid For SUV Silhouette TM Derails In EU

    A European court has rejected Mercedes-Benz Group's appeal to overturn a decision scrapping its bid for a trademark showing an off-road vehicle driving uphill, finding that the image was too run-of-the-mill to justify trademark protection.

  • March 20, 2025

    Thyssenkrupp Wins 2nd Shot To Patent Phoned Elevator Unit

    European officials have given Thyssenkrupp's elevator unit a second shot at securing a patent for a method of operating an elevator using a phone, rejecting a challenge from rival Otis Elevator.

  • March 20, 2025

    PE Firm Says Ex-Exec Stole Data, Poached Staff And Clients

    A mining private equity firm has sued a former vice president for £140,000 ($181,000) in a London court, alleging that the executive stole confidential documents, and tried to take the company's business and poach its staff after he left the company.

  • March 20, 2025

    Zaha Hadid Can't Renew Bid To Exit IP Licensing Deal

    Zaha Hadid's architectural firm cannot revive its bid to escape a deal signed before her death in 2016 that gave the practice a license to use her trademarks, as a judge ruled Thursday that it had no prospect of succeeding.

  • March 19, 2025

    BMW Can't Put Brakes On Toyota's Car Panel Patent In Europe

    Toyota has steered clear of BMW's attempt to revoke its European patent over a car panel that helps withstand the impact of a crash, convincing an appeals panel in a ruling released Wednesday that the design is both new and inventive.

  • March 19, 2025

    Oatly Heads To UK's Top Court With Battle Over 'Post Milk' TM

    The U.K.'s top court will weigh in on whether oat drink maker Oatly AB should be barred from registering the trademark "Post Milk Generation" under retained European Union law that restricts certain uses of the word "milk" to dairy products.

  • March 19, 2025

    Medtronic, Abbott Block Boston Scientific Heart Valve IP

    European officials have nixed a Boston Scientific patent for a stent to replace diseased heart valves, ruling that it was unclear how its frame was meant to maintain an elliptical shape when some valve openings have different shapes.

  • March 19, 2025

    Patent Court Bats Away Roku's Challenge To Its Legal Footing

    The Unified Patent Court has rebuffed Roku's attempt to dodge two infringement claims from Dolby and a patent trust by taking aim at the rules underpinning the court's jurisdiction.

  • March 19, 2025

    Huawei Loses Bid To Move MediaTek Patent Dispute To China

    A London court has refused to pause a patent dispute between Huawei and MediaTek, ruling that parallel proceedings in China were too narrow to justify pausing MediaTek's bid for a global license.

  • March 19, 2025

    Energy Co. Accuses Ex-Lead Of Taking Secrets To Rival Outfit

    An energy tech company has sued a former senior employee in a London court for breaching his contract, alleging he took confidential information about its software to help build a rival product at a competitor.

  • March 18, 2025

    ApeCoin Biz's Trademark Pared Back In Battle With Retailer

    European officials have blocked a company connected to the Bored Ape NFT from registering a trademark for certain uses of "Ape Coin," ruling that Italian fashion retailer Coin had shown it had already cornered large markets.

  • March 18, 2025

    Umbro Says TM Fights Should Factor In Confusion After Sale

    The owners of the Umbro trademark told the U.K.'s top court Tuesday that judges should take into account real world situations when determining if one brand can be confused for another, closing a high-profile appeal on how far trademark protections stretch.

  • March 18, 2025

    MSD Challenges Finding It Broke Ban On Using 'Merck' In UK

    Pharmaceuticals giant Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC urged an appeals court Tuesday to overturn a declaration that it breached the terms of a 2020 injunction prohibiting it from using the word "Merck" to target U.K. consumers, arguing that the declaration was improperly used instead of contempt proceedings.

  • March 18, 2025

    AstraZeneca Unit Fights Amgen, Samsung Over Soliris Patent

    An AstraZeneca subsidiary sought on Tuesday to prevent Amgen and Samsung Bioepis from selling drugs similar to its Soliris product, claiming at a London court that the two companies' drugs infringe a patent it owns over its blockbuster antibody eculizumab.

  • March 18, 2025

    Google Fails To Get Trademark Over Peace Sign In EU

    European Union officials have rebuffed Google's attempt to get a trademark over an image of a hand showing a peace sign, ruling that the logo isn't distinctive enough.

  • March 17, 2025

    Shoemaker Urges Justices To Ax 'Absurd' TM Confusion Test

    A French footwear company urged the U.K. Supreme Court on Monday to upend a ruling that it infringed Umbro's famous "double diamond" trademark, arguing that the decision provides "no workable limit" on situations where consumers' brand confusion after the point of sale could be a problem.

  • March 17, 2025

    Chevron Phillips Wins Appeal For Polymer-Making Patent

    European officials have regranted Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. rights over a patent for making polymers that are then processed into industrial plastics, ruling that a seventh request to edit its claims had finally made its method worthy of protection.

  • March 17, 2025

    Brand Management Biz Can't Register 'Tech One' TM

    U.K. trademark officials have tossed a Brazilian brand management company's bid to register its trademark "Tech One" for anti-theft alarms and heaters after finding that it clashed with a Finnish decorating supply store's 'Tec 1' trademark.

  • March 17, 2025

    Alcohol Seller Can't Get 'Magic Monkey' TM In EU

    An appeals panel has rejected an alcohol retailer's attempt to register a "Magic Monkey" trademark in the European Union over beers, deeming the logo too similar to a rival's "Dead Monkey" brand.

Expert Analysis

  • Teva Case Aims Europe's Pharma Crackdown At IP Loophole

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    The European Commission's recent allegations against Teva signal not only the EU competition watchdog's continued focus on intellectual property violations in the pharmaceutical sector but also its new enforcement interest in exclusionary disparagement, say Robert Bell and Malgorzata Janiec at Armstrong Teasdale.

  • Determining Whether To Opt Out Of New Unified Patent Court

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    The new United Patent Court, made up of judges from all European Union member states, will cover the new unitary patent and European patents unless the owner chooses to opt out during the transition period, so patent proprietors must consider whether to opt out for each patent family, say Steffen Steininger and Anna-Katharina Friese-Okoro at Hogan Lovells.

  • 10 Things To Know About The Coming EU Unified Patent Court

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    When the Unified Patent Court opens next year, it will represent a paradigm shift for adversarial patent proceedings in Europe, and practitioners should familiarize themselves now with this new, centralized litigation system, say Fabian Koenigbauer at Ice Miller and Thomas Kronberger at Grünecker.

  • 7 Key Takeaways For Litigating Willful Patent Infringement

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    Brian Nolan and Manuel Velez at Mayer Brown explore the impact of the Federal Circuit's 2021 SRI International v. Cisco Systems decision, and six other areas recent parties have focused on when litigating willful infringement in the latest case law.

  • Trademark Ruling Brings Clarity To Product Defect Liability

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    The recent Court of Justice of the EU ruling in Fennia v. Philips, its first concerning the trademark aspect of producer liability in Article 3(1) of Directive 85/374, brings greater clarity to the question of compensation in the event of a claim for defective products, say Radboud Ribbert and Thomas van Weeren at Greenberg Traurig.

  • Appointments Shape EU Unified Patent Court Before Launch

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    A series of judiciary appointments at the EU Unified Patent Court help put the court on track for its April opening, while also reflecting a patent-friendly enforcement system, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.

  • 5 Considerations In Preparing For EU's New Patent System

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    With the upcoming implementation of the unitary patent and Unified Patent Court, Europe gets closer to its long-term goal of one EU patent that can be enforced in one court, and non-EU patent owners and applicants will have strategic decisions to make, say Fabian Koenigbauer at Ice Miller and Thomas Kronberger at Grünecker.

  • Reexamining Negative Limitations After Novartis Patent Ruling

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    The Federal Circuit's decision and denial of rehearing in Novartis v. Accord has created exacting standards that must be met in order for negative limitations in patent claims to satisfy the written description requirement, but whether the dissent is correct that the majority opinion heightened the standard is an arguable point, say Jonathan Fitzgerald and Jaime Choi at Snell & Wilmer.

  • UK Courts' 3rd-Party Disclosure Rule Sets Global Precedent

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    The quiet change about to take place in the English Civil Procedure Rules, enabling U.K. courts to require pre-action disclosure of information from overseas third parties, is uncharted territory and will have profound implications for any organization that handles assets on behalf of a party, says Simon Bushell at Seladore Legal.

  • Zara TM Ruling Shows Prefiling Clearance Is Always Advisable

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    The recent Trade Mark Tribunal decision regarding Zara and House of Zana demonstrates the importance of conducting prefiling clearance investigations, so that where opposition may be anticipated, a strategy can be put in place, says Melanie Harvey at Birketts.

  • Dutch Merger May Promote Behavioral Remedies Across EU

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    A Dutch tribunal's recent clearing of the Sanoma-Iddink deal might further encourage merging parties in the EU to offer — and government agencies to accept — behavioral remedies, which was rarer when more emphasis was put on divestments, says Robert Hardy at Greenberg Traurig.

  • How Will UK Address AI Patent Infringement?

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    As artificial intelligence-related patent litigation activity inevitably approaches, a review of U.K. principles of direct and indirect liability offers insight into how courts may address questions involving cloud-based technology and arguments related to training AI models, say Alexander Korenberg at Kilburn & Strode and Toby Bond at Bird & Bird.

  • Law Commission's 'Data Objects' Proposal Is Far-Reaching

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    The Law Commission’s proposals to recognize data objects as a new category of personal property would bring fundamental changes were they to be implemented, and would have significant ramifications for finance litigation, say attorneys at Norton Rose.

  • UK Rulings Give Chinese Courts Wide Powers In IP Disputes

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    The recent rulings in Nokia v. Oppo and Philips v. Oppo open the door for Chinese courts to adjudicate worldwide rate-setting terms for standard-essential patents, and in so doing present a timely wake-up call as to China's influence, say F. Scott Kieff at George Washington University Law School and Thomas Grant at the University of Cambridge.

  • Swatch V. Samsung Offers IP Warning To Platform Operators

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    The recent U.K. High Court decision of Swatch v. Samsung demonstrates that while platform operators may wish to exercise greater control over the apps distributed on their platforms, this carries with it a corresponding duty to apply due diligence to protect the intellectual property rights of third parties, say Alex Borthwick and William Hillson at Powell Gilbert.

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