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Intellectual Property UK
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August 07, 2025
French Orgs. Can't Get Unitary Protection For Biotelemetry IP
France's largest research body has failed in its bid to extend protection for a small ingestible device that collects physiological data because the Unified Patent Court found that the three owners had missed the deadline to fix a key issue with its application.
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August 07, 2025
Top EU Court To Weigh File-Sharing Copyright Question
A German court said in a ruling released Thursday that it has asked the European Union's top judicial body to clarify whether sharing a recording through a hyperlink counts as making it publicly available under the bloc's copyright laws.
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August 07, 2025
Cosmetics Co. Says Rival Copied LED Face Mask Style
A British cosmetics company has told a London court that a French competitor infringed its intellectual property rights in the style of a popular LED light-therapy mask.
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August 07, 2025
German Car Parts Biz Says UK Rival Copied Brake Calipers
A German car parts supplier has accused a British competitor of infringing its patents for brake calipers, telling a London court that its opponent has sold products that are "substantial copies" of its own goods.
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August 06, 2025
Crocs Beats Rival's Bid To Nix Design Through Amazon Sales
Crocs Inc. has successfully defended itself against a German shoe company's bid to nix one of its footwear designs as a European intellectual property appeals board found that older designs sold on Amazon depicted a sufficiently different clog-style shoe.
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August 06, 2025
EU's Anti-Suit Win A Good Omen For China FRAND Complaint
The World Trade Organization's recent decision to side with the European Union in a battle over Chinese standard essential patents hamstrings a tactic from licensees to bar patent owners from suing in other jurisdictions but bodes well for the bloc's parallel challenge to Beijing's unilateral rate-setting decisions.
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August 06, 2025
Infineon Wins Semiconductor IP Clash Against Chinese Rival
Chipmaker Infineon has won its semiconductor patent fight with a Chinese competitor, persuading a German court to ban its rival's sales of certain products that infringe its patent.
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August 06, 2025
Sanofi Pauses Heart Disease Drug Patent Dispute With Amgen
Sanofi and Regeneron persuaded the Unified Patent Court on Wednesday to pause their clash with Amgen over a patent for a heart disease drug while awaiting the outcome of an appeal in a parallel case.
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August 06, 2025
Freshfields-Led Sanofi Wraps Up $470M Vigil Buy
Sanofi said Wednesday that it has completed the approximately $470 million acquisition of U.S. biotechnology company Vigil Neuroscience, which specializes in neurodegenerative diseases, strengthening the French pharma titan's early-stage medicine pipeline in neurology.
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August 06, 2025
IP Crime Unit Seizes Fake Football Merch Worth Over £5M
A police unit that tackles intellectual property crime has said it has collared almost 68,000 counterfeit football kits since the start of 2025, preventing sales that would have been worth £5.1 million ($6.8 million) if the items were genuine.
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August 05, 2025
German Plastics Maker Wins IP Fight Against Chinese Rival
A German manufacturer of high-performance plastics won a default judgment Tuesday against a Chinese rival after making the "convincing submission" the company was infringing a patent for a cable protection system in Europe's patent court.
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August 05, 2025
De La Rue Wins Patent For Secure Banknotes On Appeal
Currency printer De La Rue has convinced European officials that its patent covering a special material to make banknotes and passports counterfeit-proof deserved protection despite a rival's objections.
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August 05, 2025
Deutsche Telekom Loses Appeal For Network Tech Patent
A European appeals panel has refused Deutsche Telekom's latest attempt to secure a patent for its telecommunications network technology, ruling that its application does not set out the invention in sufficient detail.
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August 05, 2025
Huawei Voids Samsung's UK TM For 'Gauss' AI Model
Huawei has persuaded U.K. officials to invalidate Samsung's trademark for its "Gauss" artificial intelligence tool, proving that consumers could confuse the mark with its earlier "GaussDB" branding.
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August 05, 2025
MedTech Can't Sub Revised Patent Into UPC Fight With Philips
The Unified Patent Court has told a U.S. neurodiagnostics company that it does not need to update its infringement claim against Philips to reflect a recently amended version of its patent.
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August 04, 2025
Roofing Co. Denies Infringing German Rival's Drainage Patent
A British roofing company has denied infringing a German rival's patent for a rainwater drainage system, arguing the intellectual property protections should be nixed because engineers at the time would have thought it was obvious to build.
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August 04, 2025
AI Providers Must Start Sharing Training Sets Under EU Law
The European Union has ushered in fresh copyright and transparency laws for general purpose artificial intelligence models, marking the latest in the gradual rollout of the bloc's landmark AI legislation.
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August 04, 2025
P&G Beats Henkel's Bid To Nix Laundry Detergent IP
Procter & Gamble has convinced an appellate board to uphold its rights over a patent covering a laundry detergent that disperses better on fabrics, despite Henkel's argument that the use of a brightening ingredient was obvious.
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August 04, 2025
Builder Sues To Void License Deal For TM It Owned All Along
A homebuilder has sued to recover the fees it paid out to use a trademark for "Miller Metcalfe," arguing that it had actually owned the rights to the mark for years after buying it from the owner.
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August 04, 2025
Confectioner Can't Block UAE Rival's 'Igloo Ice Pop' TM Bid
A British confectioner has failed to block a United Arab Emirates food producer's "Igloo Ice Pop" trademark application, falling short of proving that U.K. consumers could mix up the sign with its own long-standing "Ice Pops" brand.
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August 11, 2025
Taylor Wessing Hires Patent Team From Simmons In Holland
Taylor Wessing has hired a team of five patent litigators from Simmons & Simmons in the Netherlands, the latest move by the law firm in Europe to boost its services in cases involving the Unified Patent Court.
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August 01, 2025
Samsung Didn't Infringe US Co.'s Wireless Patent, UPC Rules
The Unified Patent Court has tossed an infringement suit against Samsung, ruling the wireless network patent at issue invalid just days after a different court revoked another patent owned by the same U.S. firm.
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August 01, 2025
AstraZeneca Can't Take Diabetes Drug IP Appeal To Top Court
The U.K. Supreme Court has refused to consider AstraZeneca's last-ditch bid to revive patent protections for its billion-dollar diabetes drug dapagliflozin, as generic competition prepares to hit the market.
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August 01, 2025
Firefighter Clothing Co. Blocks Rival From Selling In Europe
A protective clothing maker must pay an interim award of €50,000 ($57,763) to a rival after the Unified Patent Court ruled the company had infringed a patent protecting a special mesh structure by selling two firefighter suits.
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August 01, 2025
TriOn Pharma Must Face Trial Over Inhaler IP Claims
A London pharmaceutical company lost its bid Friday to toss out a malicious falsehood claim from a medical device manufacturer, with a judge finding the allegations are not time-barred and will proceed to trial.
Expert Analysis
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Sustainable Food Progress May Close Global Regulatory Gap
As the need for sustainable food production grows, the European sector will likely align with less stringent U.S. regulatory standards, which will further enable U.S. companies to expand globally and lead to more sophisticated intellectual property strategies in all regions, say Jane Hollywood and Fiona Carter at CMS Legal.
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Cos. Should Assess IP, Contractual Protections For Their AI
Companies should understand the three types of intellectual property protection for safeguarding proprietary artificial intelligence — which is crucial to fighting the pandemic — as well as tools for creating protections when statutory means fall short, say Lori Bennett at Aetion and attorneys at Mayer Brown.
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Tips For Accelerating Patent Prosecution In China
In light of recent Chinese patent statistics showing at least eight to 10 months to first office action and an average of 22.7 months to final disposition from the date of filing, there are several strategies applicants may explore to speed through examination, say Aaron Wininger at Schwegman Lundberg and Lei Tan at Pujing Chemical.
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Use Of AI To Treat COVID-19 Shows Novel Inventorship Issues
As technology and medical companies collaborate to deploy artificial intelligence to combat COVID-19, questions arise about how best to protect AI innovations as well as who should get credit as an inventor, say attorneys at Cadwalader.
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Israel's Generic COVID-19 Drug Licensing Lacks Due Process
The Israel attorney general's special compulsory license for imported generic versions of Abbvie's patented antiviral drug Kaletra to treat COVID-19 does not provide a right of response, a hearing or direct judicial review, says Ephraim Heiliczer at Pearl Cohen.
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New US Policy On SEP Remedies Restores Critical Balance
The new joint U.S. Department of Justice-U.S. Patent and Trademark Office policy on standard-essential patents, clarifying that injunctions are available in accordance with general remedies law, helps restore a power balance between technology innovators and users, and realigns U.S. patent law with other jurisdictions, say attorneys at McKool Smith.
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Vaccine IP Under Microscope With Coronavirus Outbreak
The coronavirus global outbreak, which has focused attention on the role patent systems play in encouraging investment in vaccines and cures, affords an opportunity to examine the tension among patent rights, investments, governments and public health, say Gaby Longsworth and Robert Greene Sterne at Sterne Kessler.
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EU Lacks Effective Tool For Resolving Border Disputes
The European Court of Justice recently found that it did not have jurisdiction over Slovenia's claim to enforce an arbitration award against Croatia, indicating that EU legal framework cannot be used to resolve intra-EU border disputes, and that a new mechanism should possibly be developed, says Akshay Sewlikar at Linklaters.
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Rebuttal
AI Can't Accurately Predict Case Length And Cost — Yet
A recent Law360 guest article argued that artificial intelligence can precisely estimate the length and cost of a new case, but several limitations will likely delay truly accurate predictions for years to come, says Andrew Russell at Shaw Keller.
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Trade Agreements With EU Will Still Be Elusive Post-Brexit
Although a post-Brexit transitional arrangement largely preserves the status quo between the U.K. and the EU through the end of the year, intense trade negotiations for key industries are still to come, with the possibility of a no-deal exit in 2021, say attorneys at Baker Botts.
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Surefire Marketing Methods To Build Your Legal Practice
Attorneys who take the time and the risk to showcase their talents through speaking, writing and teaching will find that opportunities will begin building upon themselves, says Daniel Karon of Karon LLC.
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Some Clarity On Inventor-Employee Compensation In The UK
The recent U.K. Supreme Court decision in Shanks v. Unilver swept away a perception that some employers are simply too big to pay inventor compensation under the U.K.’s statutory compensation provisions, and may offer some hope to prospective employees, say attorneys at Haseltine Lake.
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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.