Intellectual Property UK

  • October 04, 2024

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

    This past week in London has seen GMB Union sued by the makers of Tetley Tea after a staff walkout in September, boxer Mike Tyson hit with legal action from a marketing company and the Met Police face a misuse of private data claim from a woman who had a relationship with an undercover police officer. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • October 03, 2024

    Panasonic Chided For 'Indefensible' Conduct In FRAND Case

    A London appeals court ruled Thursday that Panasonic did not act in good faith in licensing talks with Xiaomi for its suite of telecom patents, calling the Japanese tech giant's conduct during licensing negotiations "indefensible."

  • October 03, 2024

    Unified Patent Court Appeals On Merits Double In September

    The number of appeals for final decisions from the Unified Patent Court has doubled month-over-month following the first wave of judgments on merits handed down from the first instance courts, according to the latest case load data.

  • October 03, 2024

    Lufthansa Demands Profits From Power Outlet Patent Breach

    Lufthansa claimed in a London trial Thursday that three avionics companies found to have infringed its patent on a method of allowing airline passengers to access power outlets should turn over all profits from sales of the infringing system.

  • October 03, 2024

    German Court Convicts Trio For Misleading EUIPO Invoices

    A German court has convicted three individuals for sending fraudulent invoices to customers of the European Union Intellectual Property Office, a first-of-its-kind decision the agency said Thursday would make it easier to pursue similar claims in the future.

  • October 03, 2024

    US, France Extend Patent Prosecution Highway

    French and American authorities announced plans Thursday to extend their deal to fast-track patent examinations for IP already approved in the other jurisdiction for another five years.

  • October 03, 2024

    Hugo Boss Can't Wipe Out Rival 'Amboss' TM

    European officials have refused to nix a trademark for "Amboss," ruling that dress shirts and belts made by Hugo Boss were so distinct from its Turkish rival's products that shoppers would not think the two were linked.

  • October 02, 2024

    NY Judge Not Confused By Irish Butter Packaging

    The company behind the Kerrygold butter brand has failed to convince a federal judge in New York that consumers were confused by a smaller, newer Irish butter brand, per a ruling that called the businesses' respective packaging "markedly dissimilar."

  • October 02, 2024

    'YouTube Shorts' Hurts Image Of Short Films, Distributor Says

    Google has damaged the descriptive brand of short films by leading consumers to associate them with the tech giant's 'YouTube Shorts' video platform, international film distributor ShortsTV said Wednesday on the first day of a London trial accusing the tech giant of infringing ShortsTV's trademarks. 

  • October 02, 2024

    Italian Lender Beats Rival's Challenge To 'Isybank' TM Bid

    An Austrian bank cannot rely on its "Easybank" trademarks to stop Italian rival Intesa Sanpaolo from protecting its "Isybank" brand because there is no likelihood of European Union consumers mixing up the signs, officials in the bloc have ruled.

  • October 02, 2024

    'Petsure' Name Infringes 'Vetsure' TM, Appeals Court Says

    A pet insurance company has convinced an appeals court that shoppers would likely confuse its "Vetsure" trademark with its rival's "Petsure" name, given the conceptual similarity between the two.

  • October 09, 2024

    Shoosmiths Adds Privacy & Data Partner From BCLP

    Shoosmiths LLP has hired a new partner to its privacy and data unit in London from Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP, with the new arrival saying Wednesday that an immediate rapport with Shoosmiths' partners led her to jump ship.

  • October 02, 2024

    Huawei Hits Back At MediaTek CopyCat Claims

    Huawei has urged a London court to nix chip developer MediaTek's wireless patents because they aren't necessary to implement 4G and 5G standards, in a move to block its Taiwanese rival's infringement claims.

  • October 02, 2024

    Prada Wins 'Miu Miu' TM Challenge Over Rival's 'My-Mu' Mark

    European officials have nixed the trademark application of an Italian brand for "my-mu," ruling that shoppers would think that Prada had released a personalized line of products under its Miu Miu name.

  • October 01, 2024

    Cement Maker Revives Patent For Stronger Paste

    A cement maker won a second shot at securing a patent for a stronger and less water-demanding paste, after European officials overturned a ruling that the invention lacked enough detail to be replicated.

  • October 01, 2024

    Westfield Denies Infringing Clearpay IP In Partnership Dispute

    Shopping giant Westfield has returned fire in a battle with Clearpay Finance Ltd. over a collapsed partnership, with the shopping center company denying infringing the credit business's intellectual property by continuing to show Clearpay advertisements in its centers.

  • October 01, 2024

    YouTube Heads To Court To Defend Right To 'Shorts' Name

    A London court will convene Wednesday to consider whether YouTube's Shorts branding infringes a short film channel's intellectual property, in an argument over whether the word "shorts" has become customary in the media landscape.

  • October 01, 2024

    Crypto Developers Take Aim At 'Patent Trolls' In New Deal

    A cryptocurrency collective said Tuesday it has inked a deal with Unified Patents to help stop "patent trolls" from registering intellectual property that risks hampering blockchain innovation.

  • October 01, 2024

    Ikea's 'Outstanding Reputation' Knocks Down 'Sinoikea' TM

    European officials have nixed a French firm's "Sinoikea" mark, ruling that it was clearly taking advantage of Ikea's iconic name mark, especially given the link between the products they make.

  • October 01, 2024

    Solar Cell Tech Inventive Enough For Patent, EPO Finds

    A German company has rescued its European patent for a solar cell system after persuading an appeals panel that its method of boosting conductivity is inventive.

  • September 30, 2024

    AI Win In 1st German Copyright Battle No Carte Blanche

    A German court's first-of-its-kind ruling rebuffing a photographer's copyright claim over the use of his works to train an artificial intelligence model under European Union law is not a go-ahead for generative AI developers to use copyright works, lawyers say.

  • September 30, 2024

    Scientist Wins Revival Of Whistleblowing Case Against Oxford

    A scientist won a second chance Monday to argue his unfair dismissal case against Oxford University when an appellate judge said a tribunal must consider whether his plagiarism accusations branded him for unfair treatment.

  • September 30, 2024

    Lenovo Loses Appeal Bid For Ericsson Injunction

    The Court of Appeal refused Monday to let Lenovo stop Ericsson from selling 5G devices in the U.K. over alleged patent infringement, saying the asked-for injunction wouldn't address the damage Lenovo was claiming, which was happening 5,000 miles away in Brazil and Colombia.

  • September 30, 2024

    Gap Athletic Brand Proves Danish Co. Infringed 'Athleta' TM

    The Gap Inc.'s sportswear brand Athleta on Monday won its trademark infringement claim in a London court against a Danish rival over its "Athlecia" branding — but lost a chunk of its trademark protections in the process.

  • September 30, 2024

    Dulux Can't Extend 'Pure & Paint' TM To EU

    A DuluxGroup unit cannot protect its "Pure & Paint" trademark in the European Union because it's too similar to a printing company's "PURe" word marks, an appeals panel has ruled.

Expert Analysis

  • Privacy, Security, Risk: What You Missed At IAPP Conference

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    A few weeks ago, privacy and security professionals from around the globe gathered for the second joint conference between the International Association of Privacy Professionals and the Cloud Security Alliance Congress. Aravind Swaminathan, Antony Kim and Emily Tabatabai of Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP offer seven key takeaways.

  • Approach To '2nd Medical Use' Claims Varies Across EU

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    A number of recent court decisions have highlighted important gaps and a lack of consensus between key EU member states on the law regarding infringement of second medical use patents. The rulings also demonstrate how differences in the drug dispensing and reimbursement systems between different EU countries can influence the nature of the relief available, say attorneys with Jones Day.

  • 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.

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