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Intellectual Property UK
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November 04, 2024
EU Seeks Feedback On Regional Crafts IP Protection
The European Union Intellectual Property Office urged makers of "craft and industrial" products to offer their views on the European Union's new regulations around products originating from specific regions as the bloc looks to boost producers' knowledge of the scheme.
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November 04, 2024
Steve Coogan's Production Co. Denies Ripping Off Sitcom
Steve Coogan's production company hit back on Monday at accusations that it ripped off a sitcom of a London-based comedian, claiming at a London trial that any similarities were coincidental and that it was "deeply implausible" that it copied the show.
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November 11, 2024
Skadden Taps Latham For New IP Head As Losses Continue
Skadden has recruited the head of Latham & Watkins LLP's intellectual property team in London, adding to the partners the firm has recently seen depart for a U.S. rival.
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November 04, 2024
Channel 4 Fights Storm Chaser's Hurricane Footage Claim
British broadcaster Channel 4 told a London court that it did not infringe the copyright for an American videographer's footage of Hurricane Beryl, as the news outlet argued that it had used only small clips and always credited the self-described storm-chaser.
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November 01, 2024
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen two industry magnates take on the Gambling Commission, Ordinance Survey hit with a claim from a Swiss GPS maker, and China's largest oil company PetroChina face a claim from a Polish documentary maker. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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November 01, 2024
Pepsi's SodaStream Collects Damages From Rival At UPC
PepsiCo subsidiary SodaStream has won €250,000 ($271,000) in compensation at the EU's Unified Patent Court after proving that a Swedish rival infringed its patent for a carbonated drinks machine.
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November 01, 2024
Sky Grounds Turkish Tech Biz 'Sky Platform' TM
Sky has defeated a Turkish rival's bid to obtain a trademark for "Sky Platform," after European officials held that using the "Sky" term would confuse consumers already accustomed to seeing the British broadcaster's marks.
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November 01, 2024
UPC Tells Auto Parts Biz To Halt Sales, Except To BMW
The Unified Patent Court has ordered a car parts maker to halt sales of an electric machine to avoid infringing the patents of a rival — but it said the company can keep supplying BMW.
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November 01, 2024
Craig Wright Faces Contempt Case Over £911M Bitcoin Claim
Computer scientist Craig Wright was accused at a London court on Friday of violating a court order by claiming he was the inventor of Bitcoin, in a claim worth an estimated £911 million ($1.2 billion), after a judge had concluded he had repeatedly lied about creating the digital currency.
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November 01, 2024
Canon Unit Can't Get Stroke Imaging Patent At EPO
An appeals panel has tossed a Canon unit's bid for a patent over a method of imaging strokes, ruling that the tech is not inventive enough to merit protection in Europe.
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October 31, 2024
Ex-Citadel Reps Can't Escape Trade Secrets Suit
A New York federal judge has greenlighted most claims in Citadel Securities' lawsuit accusing a Swiss cryptocurrency trading firm founded by two of its former employees of stealing its trade secrets, while tossing those asserted against the firm's French angel investor for lack of jurisdiction.
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October 31, 2024
Temu Faces EU Probe Over Sale Of Illegal Products
The European Commission said Thursday it is launching an investigation into Temu over concerns that the discount e-commerce platform is allowing the sale of illegal goods and the site has potential addictive features.
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October 31, 2024
Vanguard Group Scores 2nd Win In Battle Against Rival TM
Vanguard Group convinced European officials to nix a trademark for "Vanguard Reinsurance" after its Lebanese rival failed to provide any evidence that it had genuinely used the sign to market insurance services.
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October 31, 2024
Belkin Execs Dodge Injunction In UPC Clash With Philips
Belkin has paused a Unified Patent Court injunction tying its directors' hands amid a ruling that it infringed a Philips wireless charging patent, proving that the order wrongly pinned responsibility on its executives.
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October 31, 2024
Google Beats 'Shorts' TM Infringement Case
Google LLC has won a battle with a distributor of short films over its YouTube Shorts brand, as a London court ruled on Thursday that the tech giant did not infringe the distributor's own 'shorts' trademarks.
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October 31, 2024
Teva Fined €463M For Blocking Rival MS Drug Launch
The European Union antitrust enforcer hit pharmaceutical giant Teva with a €463 million ($502 million) fine Thursday for launching a smear campaign against a rival multiple sclerosis drug and misusing the patent system to thwart the competitor's attempt to enter the market.
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October 30, 2024
Teva Can't Nix Bristol-Myers' Eliquis Patent At The Hague
A Dutch court has chucked Teva's bid to end Bristol-Myers Squibb's extended protections over blood clot treatment Eliquis in the Netherlands, ruling Wednesday that its now-expired patent was always valid.
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October 30, 2024
ZTE Slams Lenovo For Taking FRAND Battle To Court
Chinese telecom company ZTE Corp. said Wednesday that it hopes for an "efficient and reasonable" end to its ongoing patent dispute with Lenovo, a week after the rival computer giant launched patent proceedings against ZTE in London.
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October 30, 2024
Meta Can't Get Augmented Reality Patent At EPO
Meta cannot protect its augmented reality overlaying system with a patent because it is not an inventive step from a survey on related technology, a European appeals panel said in a ruling released Wednesday.
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October 30, 2024
RTX Beats French Rival's Challenge To Turbine Patent
Aerospace and defense conglomerate RTX has fought off a bid by a French competitor to revoke an amended version of its gas turbine engine patent, convincing a European appeals panel that the design is sufficiently new and inventive.
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October 29, 2024
Exam Board Secures First Digital 'Newcomer Injunction'
An exam board has secured the first digital "newcomer injunction" to prevent attempts to distribute its test materials, following a landmark U.K. top court judgment that paved its way last year, the law firm leading the case announced Tuesday.
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October 29, 2024
Nokia, HP End Patent Litigation With Licensing Deal
Finnish telecommunications giant Nokia has inked a multiyear patent-licensing deal with hardware manufacturer HP Inc. over its video technologies, pouring cold water on litigation between the pair in all jurisdictions, it announced Tuesday.
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October 29, 2024
Homeopathic Biz Can't Block Novel 'Traumagel' TM
A manufacturer of a blood-clotting gel has won its bid to register the trademark "Cresilon Traumagel," after European officials ruled that it was different from a rival's "Traumeel" branded ointment.
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October 29, 2024
InterDigital Ends Legal Spats With Oppo In Licensing Deal
InterDigital said Tuesday that it has inked a licensing agreement with Chinese smartphone giant Oppo that will bring an end to the cross-border litigation between the companies over patented smartphone technology.
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October 29, 2024
Hugo Boss Wins Fight With Tech Biz Over 'Bosspowerl' TM
Hugo Boss has convinced European officials that a Chinese technology firm was taking advantage of its reputation and misleading consumers into buying its phone chargers by branding them "Bosspowerl."
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
US Courts Should Adjudicate FRAND Rates On A Global Basis
Following the U.K. Supreme Court's recent Unwired Planet v. Huawei decision, U.S. courts should analyze compliance with contracts on fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms by assessing them on a worldwide basis, because global licenses are the only technically and financially sound way to license standard-essential patents, say attorneys at McKool Smith.
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UK Top Court Ruling May Be Problematic For Global SEP Suits
There are several reasons to question the wisdom of the U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling that English judges have the power to set extraterritorial licensing royalty rates for standard-essential patents, including that it encourages forum shopping, says Thomas Cotter at the University of Minnesota Law School.
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UK Ruling Shows Global SEP Enforcement Dilemma
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling that U.K. judges have the power to set extraterritorial licensing royalty rates for standard-essential patents highlights a problem with global patent enforcement coordination and efficiency that could potentially be solved through the Patent Cooperation Treaty, says Roya Ghafele at Oxfirst.
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Time To Reassess Your Patent Cooperation Treaty Strategy
In light of the trends outlined in the World Intellectual Property Organization's recent annual Patent Cooperation Treaty review, applicants should make decisions on which international search authority to use based on immediate cost, total cost and quality, says Karam Saab at Kilpatrick.
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German FRAND Decision May Shape Global SEP Landscape
The German high court's recent decision that patent owner Sisvel didn't breach its fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory patent licensing obligations by refusing to grant Haier a license represents a shift in the standard-essential patent landscape in favor of SEP holders' enforcement freedom, say Erik Puknys and Michelle Rice at Finnegan.
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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.