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Intellectual Property UK
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February 26, 2025
Makeup Co. Denies Lifting Lash Curler Design
A cosmetics company has fired back at allegations that it lifted a French plastics manufacturer's design to create its "GrandeFANATIC" mascara brushes, arguing that the protections covered technical features that the whole industry needed to use.
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February 26, 2025
Life Magazine TM Owner Trims French Co.'s Bid To Use 'Life'
European officials have partially nixed a French company's trademark over "Life," ruling that shoppers might think it is somehow linked to Life magazine, which is famous for pioneering photography-led stories.
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February 26, 2025
Samsung Fails To Capture 'Photo Assist' TM In Europe
European Union officials have shuttered Samsung's hopes of getting a "Photo Assist" trademark in the bloc, ruling that the phrase does not merit protection as it merely describes the purpose of the photo-editing software.
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February 26, 2025
UK Seeks Input On Modernizing Design IP Protection
The U.K. Intellectual Property Office has asked designers, legal professionals, trade bodies and IP experts to share their views in a survey to help to inform its approach to Britain's design protection system.
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February 25, 2025
Creatives Urge Gov't To Scrap AI Copyright Exemptions
A coalition of U.K. creative industry bodies has urged the Labour government to rethink proposals to introduce exemptions to intellectual property laws to help bolster artificial intelligence development, as a government consultation on copyright and AI draws to a close.
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February 25, 2025
Optis Makes Case For Do-Over In Apple FRAND Ruling
Optis urged an appeals court on Tuesday to upend a decision setting a fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory license for Apple Inc. to use its suite of 4G patents, saying that the trial judge was wrong to substitute his own method for determining the value of the patents.
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February 25, 2025
EU Courts Can Assess Validity Of Patents From Outside Bloc
The European Union's top court held Tuesday that courts in member states may consider the validity of patents granted outside the bloc if a party seeks to void a patent to dodge an infringement claim.
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February 25, 2025
Toy Co. Accuses Rival Of Copycat Teddy Bear Designs
A toy seller has sued a rival for selling a stuffed animal that it claims is "nearly identical" to its Paw Bear products, accusing the rival of tricking corporate clients into buying copycat goods as promotional gifts for their conferences.
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February 25, 2025
Aspinal Of London Hits Rival For Stealing 'Mayfair' TM
Designer handbag maker Aspinal of London has accused a rival manufacturer of copying the trademark for its "Mayfair" range of bags, a move its says has caused "unfair advantage and detriment."
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February 24, 2025
Health Biz Loses UK TM For Trendy 'Gut Shot' Name
A U.K.-based health food company's bid to secure a trademark for "Gut Shot" has been rejected by the European IP officials, which held that the trademark was not distinctive given that "gut shots seem to be a popular trend."
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February 24, 2025
Boston Scientific Loses Patent For Flexible Stent On Appeal
European officials have nixed Boston Scientific's patent for a flexible stent device that expands in blood vessels, ruling that a prior patent revealed all of its claimed features and would have prompted scientists to make the invention themselves.
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February 24, 2025
'Thirst' Sports Drink Maker Loses Bid For Logo TM At EUIPO
A Belgian probiotic soda company has blocked an Irish businessman's bid for a "Thirst" trademark covering sports drinks, with European officials concluding that Estonian, Lithuanian and Polish consumers were likely to confuse the brands.
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February 24, 2025
Sportswear Chain Footasylum Loses 'Authorized' EU Mark
Sportswear retailer Footasylum has failed to convince European officials to register a trademark for "Authorized," with an EU Intellectual Property Office examiner holding that the word was "purely laudatory."
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February 24, 2025
GSK Completes $1.2B Takeover Of US Cancer Drug Biz IDRx
Pharmaceutical giant GSK said Monday that it has completed its acquisition of biopharma company IDRx Inc. in a deal worth up to $1.15 billion in cash to boost its treatment for gastrointestinal cancers.
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February 21, 2025
Spanish Department Store Wins Block Of 'Savanna' Rum TM
Spanish department store giant El Corte Ingles has persuaded European Union officials to halt a rum company's "Savanna" trademark bid, proving that shoppers would mix up the sign with its own logo of the same name.
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February 21, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Russell Brand sued by publishing house Macmillan, administrators of London Capital & Finance sue the collapsed firm's former lawyers Buss Murton Law LLP, Tesco bring a competition claim against fish suppliers, and former Entain execs sue Addleshaw Goddard over privileged information. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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February 21, 2025
Barry Manilow Bids To Kick Hipgnosis Claim To LA Court
Singer-songwriter Barry Manilow called for a London court on Friday to toss part of a claim by U.K.-based intellectual-property investment fund Hipgnosis SFH 1 Ltd. that Manilow failed to pay it royalties, arguing that the claim should be heard in Los Angeles.
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February 21, 2025
Lufthansa Wins $11.9M Over Charging Patent Infringement
A London judge on Friday ordered a Panasonic unit and two aircraft hardware manufacturers to pay Lufthansa $11.89 million for selling in-flight charging systems within seats that infringed its patented technology.
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February 21, 2025
University Fights For Drone Autopilot Patent Rights
The University of Southampton has told a London court that it is the rightful owner of a patent covering a type of autopilot technology for unmanned aerial vehicles, denying a bid by a cargo drone manufacturer to claim the patent rights back.
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February 21, 2025
Cisco Beats Rival's Wireless Tech Infringement Claim At UPC
The Unified Patent Court has ruled that communications giant Cisco did not infringe an Irish company's European patent with its wireless network technology — but the court stopped short of ruling that the patent was invalid.
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February 21, 2025
Speed Tops Lawyers' Wishlist For UPC's Transparency Push
The Unified Patent Court said recently that it would do better at giving members of the public access to what it's doing — and lawyers are happy to lay out how the court can do better.
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February 20, 2025
Birkenstock Sandals Not Art, Top German Court Rules
Germany's highest court ruled Thursday that Birkenstock's sandals cannot be considered works of art, dealing a serious blow to the sandal maker in its bid to protect its leather-strapped shoe design.
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February 20, 2025
German Co. Cuts Down 2nd Hyundai TM Over Shared Name
Hyundai Technology has convinced the EUIPO to trim trademark protections for Korean car giant Hyundai's logo, as the German LED TV maker continues in its efforts to restrict the motor company's brand protection.
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February 20, 2025
Abbott Wins 'Urgent' Ban On Rival's Glucose Monitor Sales
The Unified Patent Court has hit a Chinese company with an interim ban on sales of glucose monitors that may infringe Abbott's patent, citing an "urgent" need for stop-gap measures in a decision released Thursday.
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February 20, 2025
PornHub Owner Can't Get Costs Security In Dish UPC Feud
Europe's patent court has refused to order Dish Technologies to pay €400,000 ($420,000) as security for legal costs that the owner of adult entertainment website PornHub has incurred fighting its patent infringement claims, ruling that the streamer was good for the money.
Expert Analysis
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The Rise Of Patent Wars In Europe's Gene Therapy Space
Drug companies can prepare for increasing competition and a rise in contentious patent proceedings in Europe’s gene therapy industry by aligning patents, orphan designations and data exclusivity where possible, say Jane Hollywood and Frances Denney of CMS Legal.
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Self-Driving Vehicles' Neural Networks Present IP Conundrum
While autonomous vehicles' use of artificial intelligence through neural networks is highly innovative, the position of these networks within intellectual property has yet to be cemented, and a debate is ongoing as to whether they are best protected by patent, database rights or copyright, say Rajvinder Jagdev and Lin Liu of Powell Gilbert.
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Failure To Launch: The Patent Thicket Delay Of US Biosimilars
Almost 10 years after enactment of the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act, AbbVie’s assertion of 18 patents against three Humira biosimilars shows that patent thickets remain an obstacle to launching follow-on biologics and help explain why U.S. launches lag behind those in Europe, say attorneys at Axinn.
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Huawei Case Might Mean UK Forum Sets Global FRAND Rates
The U.K. Supreme Court’s eventual opinion in Unwired Planet v. Huawei will decide whether English courts are a proper forum for determining global fair license terms for standard-essential patents, and there are several reasons to question the English courts' creation of this approach, says Thomas Cotter of the University of Minnesota Law School.
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Must Inventors Be Humans? An Active Debate Over AI Patents
With the first international patents naming artificially intelligent algorithms as inventors filed this summer, and with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office’s query into whether inventorship laws and regulations need revising, the debate over AI is testing the boundaries of patent laws in the U.S. and elsewhere, says Christian Mammen of Womble Bond.
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Henry Schein Case Illuminates Maze Of Arbitrability Questions
While the U.S. Supreme Court’s Henry Schein decision strengthens the enforceability of arbitration provisions, the Fifth Circuit’s ruling on remand concerning arbitrability authority, exemplifies a need for careful drafting of arbitration clauses, say Andrew Behrman and Brandt Thomas Roessler at Baker Botts.
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Using Global Dossier To Simplify USPTO Disclosure Duty
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office can make compliance with its duty of disclosure less burdensome by allowing applicants to submit a list of patent families that are believed to have material information and defining electronically available records broadly to include the Global Dossier, whose use the USPTO recently encouraged, says Brian Dorini of InterDigital CE Holdings.
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The Unique Challenges Of Owning International Cannabis IP
Due to the cost of prosecuting patents and the uncertainty in obtaining and enforcing cannabis patents in foreign jurisdictions, building a global cannabis patent portfolio presents complex strategic questions, says Jayashree Mitra of Zuber Lawler.
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IP Protection Still Elusive For Data Compilations In US And EU
As businesses continue to increase investment into artificial intelligence systems, questions arise as to whether they can own or legally protect data compiled by those systems. Currently, in the U.S. and EU, obtaining copyright protection for databases is difficult and trade secret protection requires policies and procedures to establish rights, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.
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Perspectives
Artisanal Miners' Roadblocks To Justice: Is A Path Clearing?
Efforts to give small-scale gold miners, who face displacement, pollution and violence at sites around the world, access to fair and functioning justice systems have met with apathy from politicians and fierce resistance from powerful business lobbies, but there are signs that this may be changing, says Mark Pieth, president of the Basel Institute on Governance.
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How PTAB Is Applying New Patent Eligibility Guidance
Since the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office released its revised patent eligibility guidance in January, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board has been reversing Section 101 rejections at a higher rate, say Nick Anderson and Braden Katterheinrich of Faegre Baker Daniels.
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Keys To Successful AI Patents In The US And Europe
Unsurprisingly, the World Intellectual Property Organization recently reported that patent filings for artificial intelligence inventions are increasing rapidly. Stakeholders should be mindful of maintaining quality during this filing surge, says Drew Schulte of Haley Guiliano LLP.
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9 Ways To Prepare Your IP Rights For Brexit
Those with a European intellectual property portfolio should be considering how Brexit — scheduled for March 29 — will affect EU trademarks and registered community designs, says Paula Jill Krasny of Levenfeld Pearlstein LLC.
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'Biosimilar V. Biosimilar' Patent Case May Be First Of Many
While the idea of patent disputes between makers of follow-on drugs is nothing new, the complaint recently filed by Coherus against Amgen in Delaware federal court is unique in that it pits one biosimilar developer against another, say attorneys with Goodwin Procter LLP.
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UK Patent Law: Hot Topics Of 2018 And What's Ahead
English courts have been active in the past year, grappling with patent topics like plausibility and equivalents, and 2019 promises to be another exciting year as English patent lawyers await developments on obviousness, insufficiency and employee inventor compensation, says Jin Ooi of Kirkland & Ellis LLP.