Intellectual Property UK

  • April 03, 2024

    Genmab Builds Oncology Portfolio With $1.8B Deal

    Danish biotechnology company Genmab announced Wednesday that it would acquire private cancer drugmaker ProfoundBio for $1.8 billion in cash, a move set to beef up Genmab's oncology portfolio and position the company as a competitor to other biotech companies that have made similar deals in the antibody drug conjugate space in recent months.

  • April 03, 2024

    Jacob & Co. Can't Get TM Over Name For Alcohol Venture

    High-end jeweler Jacob & Co. can't register a trademark of its name over spirits after European officials ruled that a German company selling "Jacobi"-branded spirits had already established a presence in the market.

  • April 03, 2024

    IP Firm Reddie & Grose Names New Chairman, Eyes Growth

    Intellectual property boutique Reddie & Grose LLP has appointed Steve Howe as its next chairman, one of a series of senior promotions the business has made as it continues its growth push in the U.K. and Europe.

  • April 03, 2024

    EUIPO Director Seeks Clarity On TM Rules, In An Office First

    The executive director of the European Union's Intellectual Property Office has for the first time asked the office's Grand Board to clarify parts of the bloc's trademark rules, seeking guidance on when an EU-wide application can be converted into national requests.

  • April 03, 2024

    Uber Loses Some European TM Protections For Its Name

    Ride-hailing giant Uber has failed to persuade the European Union that it should retain a suite of broad trademarks for its name, with the bloc's intellectual property body deciding to trim down protections for computer software and telecommunications.

  • April 03, 2024

    Valrhona's Bid For 3D Mold TM Melts At UKIPO

    Valrhona has failed to register a 3D oval-shaped trademark after the U.K. intellectual property office ruled that it was a common mold in the industry and consumers would not link the cocoa bean lookalike to the premium French chocolatier.

  • April 02, 2024

    L'Oreal Holds Off Competitor's Objections To Hair Dye Patent

    A Japanese cosmetics brand failed to foil a L'Oreal hair-dyeing patent after European officials ruled that the invention to even out color satisfied all requirements, even if it didn't specify minimum concentrations for certain ingredients.

  • April 02, 2024

    Molson Coors Blocks Stone Brewing TM In UK

    California's Stone Brewing Co. could not convince the U.K.'s Intellectual Property Office to register a trademark for its own name, after drinks rival Molson Coors argued that it could be confused with existing trademarks it owns for the word "Stones."

  • April 02, 2024

    Shell-Exxon Joint Venture Fends Off Fuel Additive IP Attack

    An Exxon Mobil and Shell joint venture has successfully fought off attempts by competitors to invalidate its patent for a diesel fuel additive, with a European Patent Office appeals board ruling that the additive was inventive enough for protection.

  • April 02, 2024

    Blur Drummer Leads Competition Challenge Over Royalties

    The drummer for an English rock band is leading a legal challenge on behalf of songwriters, claiming that a society that collects royalties for artists has been unfairly distributing cash, according to details published by the Competition Appeal Tribunal on Tuesday.

  • April 02, 2024

    ASOS Loses Appeal For Topshop TM In Europe

    Online retailer ASOS has lost a second bid for trademark protection over the fashion brand name Topshop, with the European intellectual property authority saying the name lacks any distinctive character and simply means "an excellent store."

  • March 28, 2024

    House Of Fraser Loses Bid To Broaden 'BIBA' EU Trademark

    House of Fraser can't broaden its "BIBA" trademark because consumers could confuse the sign with an earlier "BiBA" logo that appears on similar goods, a European Union appeals panel has ruled.

  • March 28, 2024

    British Biz Hits Back At Chinese Co. In LED Mask Design Fight

    A British businesswoman has hit back at a Chinese light-therapy device manufacturer's claim that she misused its designs for an LED mask and bib, telling a London court she was always the rightful owner of the designs.

  • March 28, 2024

    Questel Partners With AI Workflow Automation Software Maker

    Intellectual property software provider Questel has partnered with a workflow automation software maker to help IP lawyers automate more document-based tasks with artificial intelligence, according to statements from both companies.

  • March 28, 2024

    4 Questions For Bristows' Commercial IP Experts

    Bristows LLP intellectual property leaders Matthew Warren and Robert Burrows have seen much change in their decades of advising clients, but they say the pace has “increased significantly” in recent years. Here, they talk to Law360 about artificial intelligence, the latest developments in FRAND disputes and other trends in IP litigation.

  • March 28, 2024

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen investors target fraudsters who ran a fake film tax scheme, Barclays Bank sue privately owned Russian bank PJSC Sovcombank, easyGroup bring a trademark infringement claim against online casino TGI Entertainment for its "easybet" word sign, and a bioethanol fuel company hit high-profile individuals connected to the collapsed Elysian Fuels scheme. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • March 28, 2024

    Locksmith Hits Back At Security Biz In Key Copy Patent Feud

    A locksmith service has denied infringing an Austrian security company's patent by cutting copies of a key design, telling a court it could not have known the key was patent-protected and saying that the patent is invalid either way.

  • March 27, 2024

    Bayer Can Briefly Stop Rivals Selling Patented Xarelto Dosage

    Bayer AG can briefly block its rivals from selling generic versions of anticoagulant Xarelto at its protected once-daily dosage while both sides await a ruling on the validity of the patent, a London court said on Wednesday.

  • March 27, 2024

    BoE Finds Increasing Fear Of Financial Risk From AI

    The Bank of England said on Wednesday the proportion of banks, insurers and other firms that find artificial intelligence one of the greatest risks to the finance system has doubled in six months.

  • March 27, 2024

    Sainsbury's Says Mandarins Not From Protected Variety

    Sainsbury's has hit back at accusations that a variety of its mandarin oranges infringe on the plant breeding rights of a French company, arguing that its Tang Golds are intrinsically different from the protected Nadorcotts owned by Nador Cott Protection SAS.

  • March 27, 2024

    Wine Drunk By Queen Elizabeth Triumphs In EU TM Spat

    European intellectual property officials have dismissed efforts by a Dutch drinks maker to register its beverages with the trademark "Petrus" after finding that consumers could confuse the brand with wines made by the famous Bordeaux vineyard.

  • March 27, 2024

    Skyscanner Stands Firm In TM Infringement Feud With Rival

    Skyscanner Ltd. has doubled down on its claim that rival travel agency Loveholidays infringed its trademark by adopting a similar logo, while also refuting its competitor's claim that the imitation was actually the other way around.

  • March 26, 2024

    Nokia Loses Bid To Patent Telecoms Device Invention

    Nokia Solutions and Networks Oy has failed to win patent protection for an invention related to a new wireless transmission method, after European officials ruled that the company's amendments had gone beyond what was originally claimed.

  • March 26, 2024

    Pet Drug Maker Faces EU Probe For Axing Pipeline Dog Med

    The European Union's antitrust authority said Tuesday it has launched a probe into whether Zoetis Inc. had illegally blocked competition by acquiring a pipeline product designed to treat pain in dogs and axing a potential rival's deal to sell it.

  • March 26, 2024

    Abbott Sues Over 3D TM Infringement Of Diabetes Device

    Abbott Diabetes has sued several companies for selling a Chinese-made glucose monitoring device with signs that allegedly look "identical" to the ones on its product.

Expert Analysis

  • Surefire Marketing Methods To Build Your Legal Practice

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Some Clarity On Inventor-Employee Compensation In The UK

    Author Photo

    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.

  • The Rise Of Patent Wars In Europe's Gene Therapy Space

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Self-Driving Vehicles' Neural Networks Present IP Conundrum

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Failure To Launch: The Patent Thicket Delay Of US Biosimilars

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Huawei Case Might Mean UK Forum Sets Global FRAND Rates

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Must Inventors Be Humans? An Active Debate Over AI Patents

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Henry Schein Case Illuminates Maze Of Arbitrability Questions

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Using Global Dossier To Simplify USPTO Disclosure Duty

    Author Photo

    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.

  • The Unique Challenges Of Owning International Cannabis IP

    Author Photo

    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.

  • IP Protection Still Elusive For Data Compilations In US And EU

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Perspectives

    Artisanal Miners' Roadblocks To Justice: Is A Path Clearing?

    Author Photo

    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.

  • How PTAB Is Applying New Patent Eligibility Guidance

    Author Photo

    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.

  • Keys To Successful AI Patents In The US And Europe

    Author Photo

    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.

  • 9 Ways To Prepare Your IP Rights For Brexit

    Author Photo

    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.

Want to publish in Law360?


Submit an idea

Have a news tip?


Contact us here
Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Intellectual Property UK archive.
Hello! I'm Law360's automated support bot.

How can I help you today?

For example, you can type:
  • I forgot my password
  • I took a free trial but didn't get a verification email
  • How do I sign up for a newsletter?
Ask a question!