Intellectual Property UK

  • 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. 

  • 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."

  • 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."

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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."

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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. 

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • February 27, 2025

    Baker Botts Hires White & Case's Ex-Project Finance Chief

    Baker Botts LLP has hired a new global projects partner to its London office from White & Case LLP, with the new arrival also set to co-chair its project finance group.

  • February 20, 2025

    Vape Distributor Argues Rival's 'Vape Stop' TM Is Descriptive  

    A vape distributor has fought back against a rival's claims that it was taking advantage of more reputable "Vape Stop" signs to steal potential customers, arguing that the mark was descriptive and fair game for others. 

  • February 19, 2025

    Education Co.'s Claim Aims To Stifle Rival, Ex-Worker Says

    A senior software developer has denied claims that he enticed customers away from his former employer using tech updates that made it easier for customers to switch providers, arguing that the true purpose of the allegation against him is to "stifle lawful competition."

  • February 19, 2025

    EU Told 'Skewed' AI Rules Won't Protect Creators' Copyrights

    Several creators' rights groups have urged European Union officials to bolster copyright protections in a pending code of practice for artificial intelligence, warning that the draft rule book is "skewed" toward AI developers.

  • February 19, 2025

    ETSI Debuts New Committee To Support AI Future

    Europe's telecommunications standard-setting body is launching a new committee to develop industry guidelines covering data-intensive tools, as the future turns increasingly toward artificial intelligence. 

  • February 19, 2025

    Tether Co. Claims Crypto Trader Is Withholding Wallets

    A Tether company has accused a former business partner in Tasmanian Bitcoin mining investments of withholding cryptowallets and roughly $5 million in tokens and cash after relationships turned sour.

  • February 19, 2025

    Biopharma Biz Medincell Raises €43M In Global Offering

    Medincell SA, a pharmaceutical technology business, said Wednesday it has raised €42.9 million ($45 million) through issuing shares to investors, as it looks to expand its technology and strengthen its balance sheet.

Expert Analysis

  • Dairy Vs. Plant-Based 'Milks': A Regulatory Standoff

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    Sales of nondairy milk alternatives are flourishing, but the dairy industry charges the U.S. Food and Drug Administration with failing to enforce its own labeling regulations regarding the definition of "milk." The longer terms like soy milk, almond milk and coconut milk remain in use, the stronger the argument for their continued use to describe these products, say attorneys with Shook Hardy & Bacon LLP.

  • UK Supreme Court Broadens Scope Of Patent Protection

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    The U.K. Supreme Court’s recent judgment in Actavis v. Eli Lilly sets out a revised approach to assessing patents in the U.K. and is likely to confer greater protection on patent owners, by providing that the protection afforded to a patent is not limited to the wording of the claims, say attorneys with Dechert LLP.

  • Brexit Creates Uncertainty For IP

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    Following Brexit, if the EU regulations directly applicable to intellectual property law are not transposed into English or Scottish law, a regulatory vacuum could be created. For patents, this could mean the first lack of substantive legal protection in over 700 years, says Roberta Young of Loza & Loza LLP.

  • Guest Feature

    An Interview With Floyd Abrams

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    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.

  • An Interview With Ex-USPTO Director Todd Dickinson: Part 2

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    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.

  • An Interview With Ex-USPTO Director Todd Dickinson: Part 1

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    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.

  • How China Became An IP Superpower

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    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.

  • Real-World IP Tools In Virtual Worlds

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    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.

  • Filing Foreign Patents: 3rd-Party Disclosure Considerations

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    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.

  • EU May Soon Surpass US As Patent Center

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    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.

  • What To Expect From NPE Activity In China

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    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.

  • US Patent Practice Drifting Toward Approach Prevalent Abroad

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    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.

  • Tips For Addressing The IP Challenges Of 3-D Printing: Part 1

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    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.

  • EU Unified Patent Court Will Proceed In 2017 — Now What?

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    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.

  • Comparing Patent Quality At The USPTO And EPO

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    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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