Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Intellectual Property UK
-
December 12, 2024
Spanish Law Firm Nixes Rival's 'Lopez-Ibor' TM
The founder of a Spanish law firm has lost his bid to register a trademark for "López-Ibor Abogados" after a European court held that clients would likely confuse it with another firm's earlier mark.
-
December 12, 2024
Nestle Can Fight To Save Anti-Obesity Milk Formula Patent
Nestle has won a shot at rescuing its European patent over a milk formula designed to prevent obesity, persuading officials in a ruling released Thursday to overturn a decision to invalidate the patent.
-
December 12, 2024
Auto Parts Biz Frees BMW Model From Sales Ban At UPC
A car parts maker has convinced the Unified Patent Court to partially lift an order halting its electric machine sales to avoid infringing the protections of a rival, proving that the injunction wrongly left one BMW model off a list of exceptions.
-
December 12, 2024
'Curry King' Frankfurter Brand Can't Nix 'Chipsy King' TM
A European Union court has dismissed a challenge brought by one of the largest frankfurter brands in Germany against a decision by the bloc's intellectual property authority to give the green light to a trademark for "Chipsy Kings."
-
December 12, 2024
Building Orgs Deny Flouting Architectural Firm's Copyright
Several building organizations have denied they infringed the copyright of an architectural company over drawings for a proposed project, telling a court that they had a license to use the sketches.
-
December 11, 2024
Meril Loses Bid To Delay UPC Hearing In Feud With Edwards
Meril Life Sciences Pvt. Ltd. lost a bid Wednesday to push back a hearing aimed at determining whether a rival's heart valve patent is invalid, with Europe's patent court finding that it can proceed with the hearing despite pending administrative proceedings with a very similar focus.
-
December 11, 2024
Abbott Gets Another Dexcom Patent Revoked At UPC
The Unified Patent Court on Wednesday revoked another blood glucose monitoring patent belonging to Dexcom, ending the company's hopes of proving Abbott had infringed the patent.
-
December 11, 2024
Irish Tech Co. Sues Rival For Fire Alarm Patent Violation
A fire alarm manufacturer has accused a rival electronics maker of infringing its patent for fire and carbon monoxide alarm systems, claiming its competitor's product copies protected features for managing interconnected alarms via a remote control.
-
December 11, 2024
Alcon Loses Bid To Patent Improved Eye Drug At EPO
Alcon Research has lost its bid to patent a glaucoma treatment after European officials found that scientists would have already thought of using its claimed preservative to prevent microbial growth.
-
December 11, 2024
UPC Tells Honeywell Unit To Arrange Its Own Interpreter
The EU's Unified Patent Court told a Honeywell subsidiary on Wednesday to find and pay for its own interpreter for a German case, refusing to make arrangements on the company's behalf.
-
December 10, 2024
Pesticide Biz Loses Appeal For Solo Patent Control
A business must add the co-inventor of one of its pesticides as a joint applicant, after a London judge ruled that the parties didn't intend for the company to be its sole owner.
-
December 10, 2024
NanoString Wins Back €100K For Breaching Nixed Injunction
Europe's patent court has ordered 10x Genomics Inc. to return the €100,000 ($105,084) that NanoString Technologies paid for breaching an order to stop infringing its patent for gene-analyzing technology after an appeals court axed a temporary injunction in the case.
-
December 10, 2024
Mishcon-Led Biotech Biz Inks GSK Collaboration Deals
Mishcon de Reya LLP said Tuesday it has advised biotech company Relation on two deals with GlaxoSmithKline to push forward treatments for fibrotic diseases and osteoarthritis.
-
December 10, 2024
Lego Gets Rival's Toy Figurine Design Revoked At EUIPO
Lego has persuaded European Union officials to invalidate the design of a Polish rival that covers a toy figurine, proving that the blueprint mimics its own minifigures.
-
December 09, 2024
What's In A Stripe? Lessons From Adidas' TM Loss
Global brands must ensure that "position" trademark protections are clear and precise if they choose to enforce them, after a London court tossed Adidas' protections in one of its first-ever rulings involving the niche form of intellectual property.
-
December 09, 2024
Water Bottle Co. Seeks Injunction Against Chinese Copycats
Europe's patent court ruled Monday that it will examine a startup's bid to stop a Chinese rival from selling counterfeit flavor-enhancing water bottles, as the company attempts to block a flood of counterfeits.
-
December 09, 2024
SharkNinja Gets Vacuum Ban Nixed In UPC Clash With Dyson
SharkNinja has persuaded the EU's Unified Patent Court to remove an injunction blocking sales of its handheld vacuums, convincing an appeals panel that its devices may not infringe Dyson's patent.
-
December 09, 2024
Shell Beats Payment Tech Provider's Appeal Over QR Patent
A London appellate court has rejected a payment tech provider's bid to revive its patent for printed QR codes in a battle with Shell, ruling that its key idea of having a "static" code that multiple customers could use was obvious.
-
December 09, 2024
Big Bar Vape Loses Design Rights To Chinese Rival
The maker of Big Bar vapes has lost its bid to register a design for an electronic cigarette after European officials ruled that it looked too similar to an existing Chinese design.
-
December 09, 2024
Tech Biz IP Group To Sell 9 Minority Investments For £15M
Science and technology company IP Group PLC said Monday that it has agreed to sell its minority stakes in nine British innovation companies to Lexham Partners, an investment firm based in London, for £15 million ($19 million).
-
December 06, 2024
Chemical Plant Loses Bid For Plastic Compound Patent
A specialty chemical manufacturer has lost a patent for a heat stabilizer used in construction materials after European officials ruled that other scientists would have found it obvious to use a particular ingredient to keep the color from fading.
-
December 06, 2024
Volkswagen Nixes Consultancy's 'Roberto Bulli' TM
Volkswagen has partially won its bid to nix a consultancy firm's trademark for "Roberto Bulli" after European officials held that some shoppers might confuse it with the "Bulli" nickname associated with some of the vehicle-maker's camper vans.
-
December 06, 2024
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Burberry file a copyright claim against discount store B&M, the former owner of Charlton Athletic file a debt claim against the football club, and British Airways and the U.K. government face a class action brought by flight passengers taken hostage at the start of the First Gulf War. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
-
December 06, 2024
Social Care Biz Accused Of Using 'Inicio' TM As 'Weapon'
An educational trust has denied infringing a social care company's "Inicio" trademark, telling a London court that their services do not cross over and its rival has used the mark as a "weapon."
-
December 06, 2024
GE's Turbine Blade Patent Revoked In Energy Biz Challenge
A wind energy company has persuaded a European appeals board to revoke General Electric's patent over a turbine blade feature, as it proved that the blueprint is not inventive.
Expert Analysis
-
The Patent Box — Unlocking The Potential In UK R&D
The recent introduction of the U.K.'s “patent box” — an initiative to drive down corporation tax for innovative and high-tech companies in the U.K. — should be of interest to companies and multinationals with, or considering acquiring, significant U.K. research and development and other technology-focused development operations, say Arun Birla and Ross McNaughton of Paul Hastings LLP.
-
Should You Use A Patent Practitioner Or Litigator For IPR?
Conflicting opinions have been expressed as to whether an experienced “litigator” or an experienced “patent practitioner” is more suited to handling an inter partes review trial before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board. A patent practitioner, particularly one with considerable inter partes experience within the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, will usually be the best choice, says Gerald M. Murphy of Birch Stewart Kolasch & Birch LLP.
-
Italian Court's Google Decision: A Significant Precedent
The appellate court in Milan recently published its decision overturning the conviction of three Google Inc. executives for allowing video depicting the bullying of an autistic teenager to be uploaded to the Italian Google Video website. The opinion reduces the potential burdens facing content-hosting providers and other similar Internet companies, say attorneys with Jones Day.
-
How The EU Patent Court Will Protect Against Trolls
Many commentators in Europe have worried that the Unified Patent Court will support campaigns of meritless patent litigation comparable to those high-tech companies have seen in the U.S. However, a closer look at the proposed UPC agreement reveals that significant procedural and structural safeguards have been built into the court system to prevent this type of abuse, say attorneys with Ropes & Gray LLP.
-
Advantages Of Registering A Unitary European Patent
Any inventor can now introduce an application for a unitary European patent that guarantees a uniform protection and produces identical effects in the 25 states concerned. Since this new unitary patent system establishes a unique annual tax and does not require translations of the application into each national language, the cost of the patent will be drastically reduced, say Paul Van den Bulck and Evelina Roegiers of McGuireWoods LLP.
-
Inequitable Conduct: Rethinking 'Egregious Misconduct'
The Federal Circuit's decision in Outside the Box Innovations LLC v. Travel Caddy Inc., alone and collectively with the Federal Circuit's decision in Powell v. The Home Depot Inc., offers some much-needed insight as to the utility and applicability of per se material conduct. But with neither case yielding an affirmative finding of inequitable conduct, the egregious misconduct argument is the pinch hitter who has struck out twice in the batter’s box, say attorneys with Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP.
-
How The EU's New Unitary Patent System Will Work
After debating the single patent issue on and off for 40 years, the European Union is on track to complete approval of a package of proposals on Dec. 21, 2012, to create unitary patents for most of the EU and a unified patent court system. As a result, potentially lower cost patent protection and enforcement could be available throughout most of the EU as soon as April 2014, say Frank Peterreins and John Pegram of Fish & Richardson PC.
-
A European Patent Office Tool That Deserves Another Look
Well-crafted European Patent Office third-party observations can be highly valuable weapons in the battle for freedom-to-operate. In some circumstances, they can also be readily coordinated with U.S. Patent and Trademark Office submissions to challenge patent claims in both jurisdictions, say Martin Hyden and Elizabeth Doherty of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP.
-
A Therapy For European Patent Term Extensions
In its recent ruling in Neurim Pharmaceuticals Ltd v. Comptroller-General of Patents, the European Court of Justice significantly liberalized the current practice for granting supplementary protection certificates, reducing the limitations imposed on the grant or duration of SPCs by earlier marketing authorizations for the same active pharmaceutical ingredient, say attorneys with Jones Day.
-
Patentability Of Business Methods — A Global Comparison
Attempts to push for business methods to be covered by patent protection have met with varying degrees of success worldwide. A comparative analysis of the leading cases in the U.S., U.K., EU, China and Hong Kong brings clarification to this complicated and evolving area of law, say Michael Geoffrey, Steven Birt and Ian Buckley of Reed Smith LLP.
-
Aftershocks From The AIA: A Seismic Shift In Patent Law?
The America Invents Act's new joinder provisions are already affecting the behavior of patent litigants. And while the AIA's most important changes have not yet taken effect, intellectual property attorneys are already strategically analyzing some of the potential future effects, say Sasha Rao and Daniel Keese of Ropes & Gray LLP.
-
The Global Reach Of Stem Cell Research Patents
Under current law, human embryonic stem cells, parthenogenetic stem cells, and methods of making or using such cells are patentable in the U.S., but not in the European Union. This difference may require research institutions and companies to re-examine their regulatory and commercial strategies for intellectual property on a jurisdictional basis, say attorneys with DLA Piper.
-
2 PCT Written Opinions For The Price Of 1
The European Patent Office's new procedures provide certainty relating to additional examination opportunities that are available when the EPO is the International Preliminary Examining Authority, which raises several strategy questions for Patent Cooperation Treaty applicants, says Stuart Schanbacher of Condo Roccia LLP.
-
Global Harmonization Of Patent Laws: A Turning Point
Full international harmonization of the patent system will be the great challenge of the 21st century, but the groundwork is slowly coming together — and in the future, the year 2011 may be recognized as a key turning point, says David Makman of the Law Offices of David A. Makman.
-
Life In The Fast Lane Of The Patent Prosecution Highway
Prosecuting patents abroad can be an extremely expensive process, entailing the aid of a foreign patent attorney and often a translator. But the Patent Prosecution Highway is a relatively inexpensive and direct way to expedite the prosecution of foreign patent applications based on an issued corresponding U.S. patent, and vice versa, say Ralph Selitto Jr. and Eric Bleich of Greenberg Traurig LLP.