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Intellectual Property UK
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January 31, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen another claim by Woodford investors against Hargreaves Lansdown in the widening £200 million ($248 million) dispute over the fund's collapse, a solicitor barred for his role in a suspected advance fee fraud face action by a Swiss wholesaler, and The Resort Group, which markets investments in luxury hotel resorts, hit with a claim by a group of investors. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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January 31, 2025
What Brexit? UK Still Shines At Europe's Patent Court
Euro-skepticism helped push Britain out of Europe's Unified Patent Court, but intellectual property firms and patent attorneys have wielded significant influence at the new venue — and a recent decision to claim jurisdiction over U.K. patents could enmesh Britain even further.
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January 31, 2025
Construction Co. Denies Infringing UK Biz's 'Briticom' TM
A construction business has denied infringing a U.K. company's "Briticom" trademark on counterfeit supplies for a building project in Benin, telling a court that it did not procure any goods unlawfully bearing the brand.
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January 31, 2025
Nail Polish Co. Removes Rival's 'Pure' TMs At UKIPO
U.K. trademark officials have sided with a company that makes nail salon products, finding that a rival's bid for a "PureGel" trademark as well as its existing "PureBuild" mark could be associated with its "Pure Nails" line.
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January 30, 2025
Bodum Unit Sues Shein For Filching 'Iconic' Designs
A Bodum subsidiary has accused Shein of infringing its design rights by selling cheap knockoffs of its iconic French press and double-walled drinking glasses.
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January 30, 2025
Pfizer Unit Loses Patent Over Cancer Drug Compound
European officials nixed a Pfizer unit's patent for a brain cancer treatment, ruling that its new delivery method would have been obvious to scientists at the filing date based on previous inventions.
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January 30, 2025
Celltrion Fails To Revoke Rivals' Asthma Drug Patent In UK
A London court on Thursday denied Celltrion's attempt to revoke Genentech and Novartis' patent for omalizumab, instead ruling that Celltrion has infringed its rivals' protections over the asthma drug in the U.K.
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January 30, 2025
Sony Says Jimi Hendrix's Bandmates Could Have Sued In '70s
Sony urged the Court of Appeal on Thursday to toss a case from the estates of former bandmates of Jimi Hendrix, saying it has been brought too late and that a lower court should have dismissed it in its entirety.
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January 30, 2025
Bedding Biz Defends TM Amid German Rival's Protests
A German bedding company has lost its attempt to revoke bed retailer Dreams' trademark over its logo, failing to persuade European Union officials that the sign simply describes the purpose of the goods.
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January 29, 2025
UK Has Dodged EU's FRAND Complaint — For Now
While the European Union focused its ire over courts setting global licensing rates for European patents on China in its recent World Trade Organization complaint, experts warn that the U.K. could end up in the same line of fire depending on how a key upcoming case pans out.
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January 29, 2025
Universities Score Patent Victory For Auto-Immune Drug
Two universities have secured a patent over a drug targeting complex diseases from multiple sclerosis to Alzheimer's disease after European officials ruled that the unique structure of one of its compounds generated previously unknown benefits.
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January 29, 2025
Nike Strap Design Too Similar To 1990s Model, EUIPO Finds
Nike has lost design rights for a type of shoe strap after European intellectual property officials sided with an Italian national, concluding that the design was essentially the same as another shoe detail from the 1990s.
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January 29, 2025
Dr. Martens Accuses Alibaba Of TM Infringement
Dr. Martens has sued an Alibaba unit in a London court for trademark infringement, claiming that its signs have appeared in ads on e-commerce site Aliexpress without permission.
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January 29, 2025
UPC Says It Can Rule Over UK Parts Of European Patents
The Unified Patent Court has ruled that it had jurisdiction to consider whether three German subsidiaries of Kodak had infringed the U.K. part of Fujifilm's European patent, pointing out that the units are based in the European Union.
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January 28, 2025
Early Learners Nurseries Fires Back At Rival's Copycat Case
A nursery has denied ripping off a rival's trademark for its operations, arguing that the company registered an invalid trademark with a similar sounding name in bad faith after years of co-existing together in the same area.
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January 28, 2025
Researcher Loses Fight For Patent Royalties From Gene Biz
A London-based gene therapy technology company has beaten allegations by one of its co-founders that it filed patents covering her research from before she joined the company, after a London court found she likely made the discoveries while there.
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January 28, 2025
Amazon Can Request Interim License In Nokia Patent Dispute
A London appellate court on Tuesday allowed Amazon to seek to force Nokia to offer it an interim license for a series of video patents, as the e-commerce giant battles to resolve final license terms for the portfolio.
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January 28, 2025
CMA Panel Blasts Microsoft's Software Licensing Practices
The antitrust watchdog should consider sanctioning Microsoft over the harmful effect of its software licensing practices on the cloud computing market, an independent inquiry group said Tuesday.
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January 28, 2025
Merck Loses Appeal To Extend Protections For MS Drug
Merck cannot extend its patent protection for a multiple sclerosis treatment because earlier marketing authorizations cover the same drug, a London appeals court ruled on Tuesday.
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January 28, 2025
'Kingsman' Film Studio Trims Drinks Maker's Rival TM
A British production company that owns the rights to the "Kingsman" spy movie franchise convinced appellate trademark officials to uphold a decision ruling that a Malaysian drinks producer's "Kingsman" trademark must be restricted to nonalcoholic drinks.
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January 27, 2025
Automated Machine Maker Can't Patent Anti-Collision Tech
An Italian manufacturer has failed to persuade a European appellate board to restore a patent for a system that prevents parts from colliding within automated machines, with officials finding that the manufacturer added a new feature that was nowhere to be found in the original application.
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January 27, 2025
Music Union Warns Gov't Over AI Copyright Exception
The trade union for U.K. musicians has criticized the government's proposed copyright exception for using artistic works to train artificial intelligence, saying its system for offering creators the right to opt their work out could still be harmful.
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January 27, 2025
EUIPO Faces Busier Workload As TM, Design Filings Rise
The European Union Intellectual Property Office said Monday that the number of trademark and design applications it received in 2024 was 4% higher than 2023, marking the second-busiest year ever for the agency.
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January 27, 2025
Korean Biz Can't Challenge Rival's Ultraviolet LED Patent
The Unified Patent Court has blocked a Korean company from trying to revoke a rival's patent over an ultraviolet LED device, ruling that its action was not admissible.
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January 24, 2025
WL Gore Loses European Syringe Patent At EPO
A London-based patent firm has persuaded European appellate officials to scrap medical device maker W. L. Gore's patent for a type of syringe after the panel concluded that the invention was too vague and Gore's modifications were unoriginal.
Expert Analysis
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Guest Feature
An Interview With Floyd Abrams
It was a privilege to spend a half-hour on the phone with the nation's foremost First Amendment lawyer. Floyd Abrams and I discussed his career, his new book and what he sees in his free-speech crystal ball. And he was a very good sport when I asked if it is constitutionally protected to yell inside a movie theater: “Citizens United is a terrible decision and should be set on fire,” says Randy Maniloff of White and Williams LLP.
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An Interview With Ex-USPTO Director Todd Dickinson: Part 2
During a recent conversation with us, Q. Todd Dickinson, former director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, offered his thoughts on intellectual property legislative and judicial activity in recent years, the policies that could use improvement, and the challenges that lie ahead for patent holders, say David Haas and Scott Weingust of Stout Risius Ross LLC.
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An Interview With Ex-USPTO Director Todd Dickinson: Part 1
David Haas and Scott Weingust of Stout Risius Ross LLC recently had a candid discussion with Q. Todd Dickinson, former director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and current head of Polsinelli PC’s intellectual property public policy practice. He shared his thoughts on the evolution of IP policy since his time at the PTO and his current concerns about U.S. patent law.
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How China Became An IP Superpower
China has repeatedly been labeled an intellectual property pirate and wholesale IP rights violator, but those labels are no longer accurate. Today, applicants who overlook China do so at their peril, says Jay Erstling, of counsel at Patterson Thuente Pedersen PA and former director of WIPO's Patent Cooperation Treaty Office.
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Real-World IP Tools In Virtual Worlds
Nonmillennials usually approach things like virtual reality from the perspective of what we know as the “real” world. We compare objects and interactions with how they would be if generated by Mother Nature. This is the greatest challenge for intellectual property professionals working in a virtual environment, say Elizabeth Ferrill of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP and Joacim Lydén of Awapatent.
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Filing Foreign Patents: 3rd-Party Disclosure Considerations
For U.S. patent applications filed following a disclosure of the invention, the one-year grace period provides a useful safety net. However, in other territories much stricter rules apply, say Hannah Buckley and Stuart Lumsden of Marks & Clerk.
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EU May Soon Surpass US As Patent Center
Despite some uncertainty surrounding Brexit’s impact, the changing patent regime in Europe likely will make things easier for patent holders. Indeed, the new Unified Patent Court has several features that suggest it will be an appealing alternative to U.S. patent courts, say Ashley Keller and Katharine Wolanyk of Burford Capital LLC.
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What To Expect From NPE Activity In China
An affiliate of nonpracticing entity Wi-LAN recently filed a patent suit against Sony in Nanjing, China. NPE activities have rarely been seen in China, so this raises the concern that international NPEs are now stepping in. Chinese patent litigation practice has two factors favorable to NPEs and two factors not favorable to NPEs, says Jackie Wong, legal counsel at Xiaomi Inc.
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US Patent Practice Drifting Toward Approach Prevalent Abroad
Post-Alice cases on technical problems and technical solutions show that a problem-solution standard similar to the one adopted in Europe, Australia, China and Japan is seeing express endorsement by U.S. courts adjudicating Section 101 challenges, say Gurneet Singh and Harold Laidlaw of Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC.
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Tips For Addressing The IP Challenges Of 3-D Printing: Part 1
The intellectual property rights of both manufacturers that use 3-D printing and manufacturers that don't may suffer through claim drafting that does not take into account the opportunities provided by 3-D manufacturing, say attorneys with Marks & Clerk.
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EU Unified Patent Court Will Proceed In 2017 — Now What?
Although it is sensible to be cautious and plan accordingly, we believe that the European Union's Unified Patent Court will, after a possibly extended teething period, become a significant forum in which patents are litigated, say Trevor Cook and Anthony Trenton, leaders of WilmerHale's IP litigation practice in Europe.
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Comparing Patent Quality At The USPTO And EPO
In this latest article in an ongoing series on patent quality, Professor Colleen Chien of Santa Clara University School of Law and Professor Jay Kesan of University of Illinois College of Law provide a snapshot of comparative patent inputs, processes and outcomes at the European Patent Office and U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
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Brexit And Supplemental Protection Certificates
The procedure for applying for patents through the European Patent Office will be entirely unaffected by Brexit because the EPO was established by a separate treaty unrelated to the European Union. EU law, however, is critical to the acquisition and enforcement of other intellectual property rights, including supplemental protection certificates, say William Hubbard and Barry Herman of Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice LLP.
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Q&A With GAO Directors: Improving Patent Quality
Overall, we were impressed by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's commitment to improving patent quality through their Enhanced Patent Quality Initiative. However, we still recommended that the USPTO take a number of actions, say John Neumann and Frank Rusco of the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
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EU Court Brings New Copyright Liability For Linked Material
The EU Court of Justice recently ruled that websites that merely link to infringing material can be liable for copyright infringement. If GS Media v. Sanoma stands, it threatens to disrupt common practices on a wide variety of websites and social media platforms, say Jennifer Stanley and Liwen Mah of Fenwick & West LLP.