Intellectual Property UK

  • February 13, 2025

    Conde Nast, Politico Are Latest To Bring AI Copyright Fight

    Conde Nast, Politico LLC and other publishers and news organizations on Thursday hit artificial intelligence company Cohere Inc. with a copyright infringement lawsuit in New York federal court, the latest salvo in the high-stakes battle over AI companies' use of published materials to train their models.

  • February 13, 2025

    Patent Court Rules Out DIY Defense For Attys Party To A Case

    Lawyers cannot represent themselves at the Unified Patent Court if they are a party to a case, an appeals panel at the court has ruled.

  • February 13, 2025

    Billboard Biz Can Re-Up Infringement Claim At UPC

    The Unified Patent Court has given billboard advertising company Aim Sport the go-ahead to expand its patent dispute with a sports advertising rival to include a U.K. unit and cover infringement that allegedly took place in Germany and Spain.

  • February 13, 2025

    Dolby Ends UPC Claim Against Asus After Settlement  

    Dolby has pulled its infringement case against Asus at the Unified Patent Court, after Asus agreed to license Dolby's video encoding technology as part of a broader deal with a patent administrator. 

  • February 13, 2025

    Woolworth Nixes Rival Retailer's 'Lifa Infinity' TM 

    European appellate officials have rejected a Norwegian retailer's bid to register a trademark for its line of "Lifa Infinity" waterproof clothing, ruling that its rival Woolworth had already captured the market using the "Infinity" name.

  • February 12, 2025

    Oil Company Wins Effort To Patent Improved Drilling Method 

    National Oilwell Varco has won its bid to patent a faster, cheaper way of drilling boreholes after convincing European officials that skilled scientists wouldn't have stopped checking the rotational speeds of specific drill bits. 

  • February 12, 2025

    EU Sinks SEP Proposals Among Deregulation Push

    The European Commission's surprise decision to ax controversial reforms to standard-essential patent licensing and several other major proposals could mark the latest in a global trend of deregulation and protectionism, experts say.

  • February 12, 2025

    UPC Cracks The Door Open For In-House Counsel To Appear

    The Unified Patent Court ruled in a decision released Wednesday that there is no blanket ban on in-house lawyers appearing at the court, handing them a lifeline after a recent ruling jeopardized their ability to represent their employers.

  • February 12, 2025

    Tom Ford Can't Get EU TM For Perfume Bottle Design

    Luxury fashion brand Tom Ford cannot get trademark protection for its fine-line illustration of a perfume bottle, with EU officials finding that the design was not obviously different from other perfume packaging.

  • February 12, 2025

    Blur Drummer's Class Action Claim Faces PRS Strike-Out Bid

    An organization that collects royalties on behalf of musicians in the U.K. on Wednesday asked the country's competition tribunal to toss out a claim brought by the drummer of rock band Blur, who alleged that it has been unfairly distributing cash.

  • February 12, 2025

    EU Shelves SEP Plan In Drive To Simplify New Regs

    The European Commission has withdrawn its bid to overhaul laws on standard-essential patents, announcing in its work plan for 2025 that there is "no foreseeable agreement" for the controversial proposal.

  • February 11, 2025

    ETSI Picks IP Law Pro For New Chief Policy Officer

    Europe's telecommunications standards body has appointed a new chief policy officer with a background in intellectual property law and policy.

  • February 11, 2025

    Baccarat's TM Cut Down In EU Fight With Interior Design Co.

    An interior design company has convinced a European trademark authority to cut luxury homeware company Baccarat's trademark "Baccarat La Maison" for a swathe of categories, after officials found the famed French crystal maker could not show it was using the mark extensively.

  • February 11, 2025

    Saint-Gobain Grinds Out IP Win Over Robert Bosch Challenge

    European officials have upheld a patent for an abrasive material that reduces the imperfections caused to steel and other pieces, ruling that Saint-Gobain Abrasives' had used a special equation to generate a unique geometric pattern. 

  • February 11, 2025

    Bristows Hires New UPC Chief In Dublin

    Bristows LLP has hired a new Unified Patent Court director to its Dublin office who aims to "sculpt" the firm's practice at the European forum.

  • February 11, 2025

    O2 Fails To Block Israeli Org's 'LMNT O2' Trademark Bid

    O2 has lost its attempt to foil an Israeli laser company's "LMNT O2" trademark application, failing to convince a European Union appeals panel that consumers could confuse the mark with its own branding.

  • February 11, 2025

    Edwards Halts Meril's Heart Valve Sales In Netherlands

    A Dutch court has ordered Meril to stop selling heart valves that infringe one of Edwards' European patents, rejecting Meril's bid to invalidate its rival's protections.

  • February 11, 2025

    Novartis To Buy US Pharma Biz Anthos For Up To $3.1B

    Novartis AG said Tuesday that it plans to buy Anthos Therapeutics Inc. for up to $3.1 billion, allowing the Swiss pharmaceutical heavyweight to return a drug that originated at the company back into its portfolio of cardiovascular therapies.

  • February 10, 2025

    Amgen Saves Patent For Making Parathyroid Drug

    European officials have dismissed an appeal seeking to defeat Amgen's patent for making a peptide that treats hyperparathyroidism resulting from kidney disease, saying the patent can stand because skilled inventors at the time wouldn't have thought of linking molecules in the same way. 

  • February 10, 2025

    DeLorean Wins TM Claim Against Ex-European Franchisee

    DeLorean has won its trademark infringement claim accusing a former European franchisee of continuing to use its branding years after its partnership with the famous two-doored sports car company ended.

  • February 10, 2025

    Gambling Biz Wins Bid To Exit TM Deal Without Paying €1.7M

    A gambling business was entitled to end a trademark licensing deal with another online gaming company without paying a €1.7 million ($1.8 million) penalty because their joint venture was performing poorly, a London court ruled Monday.

  • February 10, 2025

    Make-Up Artist Can't Sue BBC Over Reality TV Show

    A London judge on Monday dismissed a case against the British Broadcasting Corp. and a Warner Bros. unit, ruling that they didn't steal a makeup artist's idea to make "Glow Up: Britain's Next Make-Up Star."

  • February 10, 2025

    Hyundai Technology Trims Hyundai Motor Co.'s Logo TM

    Hyundai Technology Inc. has successfully blocked Hyundai Motor from using its logo in the European Union for a range of consumer electronics and computer devices — but failed to block the trademark for some vehicle-related technology products.

  • February 07, 2025

    Nokia Blocks Some Amazon Prime Features In German IP Suit

    A German court on Friday hit Amazon with an injunction after ruling that its Prime Video streaming service infringes one of Nokia's patents.

  • February 07, 2025

    Thom Browne Beats Adidas Copycat Claims In Dutch Scuffle

    Thom Browne has scored another victory against Adidas AG, convincing a Dutch court that a stripe pattern stamped on jackets and shoes was not a copy of the German brand's famous three-stripe logo. 

Expert Analysis

  • 5 Ways University Students, Faculty Risk Forfeiting IP Rights

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    Although academic institutions recognize the value of translating research into patents, licenses and commercial products, there remains a strong scholastic motivation for faculty and students to publish their research findings in journals and at academic conferences to advance their reputation and career. As a result, intellectual property is often an afterthought, say attorneys with Meunier Carlin & Curfman LLC.

  • EPO Set To Clarify Priority And Divisional Application Problem

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    In a recent decision, one European Patent Office Board of Appeal finally decided that the question of the possibility of poisonous priority and divisional applications should be settled once and for all. The Enlarged Board of Appeal may simply do away with poisonous applications or possibly formulate detailed criteria for the assessment of partial priority, say attorneys with CH KILGER Anwaltspartnerschaft mbB.

  • EU High Court Sets Important SEP Precedent

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    The EU high court's recent ruling in Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. v. ZTE Corp. provided a significant amount of guidance on standard-essential patents, injunctions and abuse of dominance but addresses only some of the legal questions that SEP holders and alleged infringers face in these situations, and even the questions addressed are in part expressed in very broad terms inviting different interpretations, say Axel Gutermuth and Christopher Stothers of Arnold & Porter LLP.

  • Procuring Personalized Medicine Patents In US Vs. Europe

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    In the United States, many patent claims related to personalized medicine are being challenged based on patentable subject matter, whereas in Europe, most claims are questioned based on novelty and inventive step, says Gabriela Coman of Dickstein Shapiro LLP.

  • Rival Global Views On Patent Disclosures

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    When it comes to patent disclosure requirements, terminology varies widely across the world. But the major national patent players seem to break down into two chief opposing views on just how much support patent claims and amendments require in originally filed applications, says Stephen Keefe of Rabin & Berdo PC.

  • Use Strategic Continuation Practice To Monetize IP

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    Continuation patent applications provide a useful mechanism to raise the overall quality of patents within a given portfolio, says Michael Moore, intellectual property and deputy general counsel at Rambus Inc.

  • Using Patents To Curtail Climate Change: A Proposal

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    Last fall, 74 countries and more than 1,000 businesses signed a declaration calling on all nations to price carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, yet the prospects of meaningful government action are dim. We see a possible solution in our patent system — impose a flexible license fee tied to greenhouse gas emissions, say attorneys with Klarquist Sparkman LLP, Green Patent Law, Robins Kaplan LLP, Burns & Levinson LLP and Susman Godfrey LLP.

  • 22 Ways Congress Can Save Section 101

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    As delightful as the post-Alice patent-invalidating trend may be to patent defendants, it has created enormous consequences for companies that rely on patent protection to protect crucial technology assets, including the loss of business contracts, disrupted partnerships and increased difficulty in obtaining venture funding. It is time for Congress to act, says Robert Sachs of Fenwick & West LLP.

  • Top 5 IPR Discovery Tips For Patent Owners

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    Recent Patent Trial and Appeal Board orders shed some light on how parties can use the inter partes review discovery periods to their best advantage, says Carly Levin of Venable LLP.

  • What To Know About Extending Patent Term In Southeast Asia

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    For pharmaceutical products, the most general form of extended patent protection available in Southeast Asia is currently data exclusivity, says James Kinnaird of Marks & Clerk.

  • New Guidelines Suggest A Friendlier European Patent Office

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    While many of the changes in the latest European Patent Office guidelines reflect the current practice of the EPO’s boards of appeal, they also suggest that the first-instance departments of the EPO may be moving toward a less rigid and formalistic approach to some issues, say Philip Cupitt and Hazel Ford of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP.

  • Why Canada's Patent Prosecution Highway Is A Huge Success

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    Canada's Patent Prosecution Highway program has positioned the country as a highly cost-effective jurisdiction in which to procure patent protection with exceptional speed and efficacy, says Elliott Simcoe of Smart & Biggar.

  • An Update On The Status Of EU Unitary Patents

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    There no longer appears to be much doubt that the EU Unified Patent Court Agreement will receive the minimum required ratification, however the schedule is stretching out. While implementation was initially expected in 2015, the Unified Patent Court and unitary patent now appear unlikely to be available before spring 2016, say Frank Peterreins and John Pegram of Fish & Richardson PC.

  • The Most Important New Changes To Russian IP Law

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    New amendments bring Russian intellectual property law more into line with practices in other jurisdictions and will have a positive effect on the protection and enforcement of IP rights in Russia, says Irina Stepanova of Baker Botts LLP.

  • Good News For Originators Of Antibody Products

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    In Eli Lilly and Company v. Human Genome Sciences Inc., the English Patents Court recently gave its interpretation of the EU Court of Justice’s most recent decision on supplementary protection certificates. In doing so, the court confirmed that SPCs are available based on patents with claims that define the product in functional terms only, say Andrew Sharples and Emma Muncey of EIP.

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