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Intellectual Property UK
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February 03, 2025
Tata's Steel Patent Survives ArcelorMittal Challenge At EPO
A European appeals panel has upheld an amended version of Tata's patent over a steel treatment that prevents rusting, ruling in a decision published on Monday that the technique is inventive enough to merit protection.
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January 31, 2025
Brexit Five Years On: The Legal Landscape After Europe
Five years after the U.K. formally left the European Union, Law360 looks at how Brexit has changed the legal, regulatory and financial terrain.
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January 31, 2025
Ex-IP Co. Director Says Lawyer, Founders Hid $40M Takeover
A former director of a celebrity intellectual property licensing company has claimed in court filings that two fellow directors, aided by an ex-Russells Solicitors partner, concealed plans for a $40 million takeover to try to convince him to sell his shares on the cheap.
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January 31, 2025
Valorem Sues Former CEO For Violating Russia Sanctions
A luxury perfume group has sued its former chief executive officer, who is accused of bragging to a private investigator about selling his product to Russia in breach of sanctions, for fiduciary and contractual breaches and failure to protect its intellectual property rights.
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January 31, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen another claim by Woodford investors against Hargreaves Lansdown in the widening £200 million ($248 million) dispute over the fund's collapse, a solicitor barred for his role in a suspected advance fee fraud face action by a Swiss wholesaler, and The Resort Group, which markets investments in luxury hotel resorts, hit with a claim by a group of investors. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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January 31, 2025
What Brexit? UK Still Shines At Europe's Patent Court
Euro-skepticism helped push Britain out of Europe's Unified Patent Court, but intellectual property firms and patent attorneys have wielded significant influence at the new venue — and a recent decision to claim jurisdiction over U.K. patents could enmesh Britain even further.
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January 31, 2025
Construction Co. Denies Infringing UK Biz's 'Briticom' TM
A construction business has denied infringing a U.K. company's "Briticom" trademark on counterfeit supplies for a building project in Benin, telling a court that it did not procure any goods unlawfully bearing the brand.
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January 31, 2025
Nail Polish Co. Removes Rival's 'Pure' TMs At UKIPO
U.K. trademark officials have sided with a company that makes nail salon products, finding that a rival's bid for a "PureGel" trademark as well as its existing "PureBuild" mark could be associated with its "Pure Nails" line.
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January 30, 2025
Bodum Unit Sues Shein For Filching 'Iconic' Designs
A Bodum subsidiary has accused Shein of infringing its design rights by selling cheap knockoffs of its iconic French press and double-walled drinking glasses.
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January 30, 2025
Pfizer Unit Loses Patent Over Cancer Drug Compound
European officials nixed a Pfizer unit's patent for a brain cancer treatment, ruling that its new delivery method would have been obvious to scientists at the filing date based on previous inventions.
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January 30, 2025
Celltrion Fails To Revoke Rivals' Asthma Drug Patent In UK
A London court on Thursday denied Celltrion's attempt to revoke Genentech and Novartis' patent for omalizumab, instead ruling that Celltrion has infringed its rivals' protections over the asthma drug in the U.K.
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January 30, 2025
Sony Says Jimi Hendrix's Bandmates Could Have Sued In '70s
Sony urged the Court of Appeal on Thursday to toss a case from the estates of former bandmates of Jimi Hendrix, saying it has been brought too late and that a lower court should have dismissed it in its entirety.
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January 30, 2025
Bedding Biz Defends TM Amid German Rival's Protests
A German bedding company has lost its attempt to revoke bed retailer Dreams' trademark over its logo, failing to persuade European Union officials that the sign simply describes the purpose of the goods.
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January 29, 2025
UK Has Dodged EU's FRAND Complaint — For Now
While the European Union focused its ire over courts setting global licensing rates for European patents on China in its recent World Trade Organization complaint, experts warn that the U.K. could end up in the same line of fire depending on how a key upcoming case pans out.
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January 29, 2025
Universities Score Patent Victory For Auto-Immune Drug
Two universities have secured a patent over a drug targeting complex diseases from multiple sclerosis to Alzheimer's disease after European officials ruled that the unique structure of one of its compounds generated previously unknown benefits.
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January 29, 2025
Nike Strap Design Too Similar To 1990s Model, EUIPO Finds
Nike has lost design rights for a type of shoe strap after European intellectual property officials sided with an Italian national, concluding that the design was essentially the same as another shoe detail from the 1990s.
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January 29, 2025
Dr. Martens Accuses Alibaba Of TM Infringement
Dr. Martens has sued an Alibaba unit in a London court for trademark infringement, claiming that its signs have appeared in ads on e-commerce site Aliexpress without permission.
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January 29, 2025
UPC Says It Can Rule Over UK Parts Of European Patents
The Unified Patent Court has ruled that it had jurisdiction to consider whether three German subsidiaries of Kodak had infringed the U.K. part of Fujifilm's European patent, pointing out that the units are based in the European Union.
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January 28, 2025
Early Learners Nurseries Fires Back At Rival's Copycat Case
A nursery has denied ripping off a rival's trademark for its operations, arguing that the company registered an invalid trademark with a similar sounding name in bad faith after years of co-existing together in the same area.
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January 28, 2025
Researcher Loses Fight For Patent Royalties From Gene Biz
A London-based gene therapy technology company has beaten allegations by one of its co-founders that it filed patents covering her research from before she joined the company, after a London court found she likely made the discoveries while there.
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January 28, 2025
Amazon Can Request Interim License In Nokia Patent Dispute
A London appellate court on Tuesday allowed Amazon to seek to force Nokia to offer it an interim license for a series of video patents, as the e-commerce giant battles to resolve final license terms for the portfolio.
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January 28, 2025
CMA Panel Blasts Microsoft's Software Licensing Practices
The antitrust watchdog should consider sanctioning Microsoft over the harmful effect of its software licensing practices on the cloud computing market, an independent inquiry group said Tuesday.
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January 28, 2025
Merck Loses Appeal To Extend Protections For MS Drug
Merck cannot extend its patent protection for a multiple sclerosis treatment because earlier marketing authorizations cover the same drug, a London appeals court ruled on Tuesday.
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January 28, 2025
'Kingsman' Film Studio Trims Drinks Maker's Rival TM
A British production company that owns the rights to the "Kingsman" spy movie franchise convinced appellate trademark officials to uphold a decision ruling that a Malaysian drinks producer's "Kingsman" trademark must be restricted to nonalcoholic drinks.
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January 27, 2025
Automated Machine Maker Can't Patent Anti-Collision Tech
An Italian manufacturer has failed to persuade a European appellate board to restore a patent for a system that prevents parts from colliding within automated machines, with officials finding that the manufacturer added a new feature that was nowhere to be found in the original application.
Expert Analysis
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Must Inventors Be Humans? An Active Debate Over AI Patents
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.
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Henry Schein Case Illuminates Maze Of Arbitrability Questions
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.
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Using Global Dossier To Simplify USPTO Disclosure Duty
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.
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The Unique Challenges Of Owning International Cannabis IP
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.
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IP Protection Still Elusive For Data Compilations In US And EU
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.
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Perspectives
Artisanal Miners' Roadblocks To Justice: Is A Path Clearing?
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.
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How PTAB Is Applying New Patent Eligibility Guidance
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.
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Keys To Successful AI Patents In The US And Europe
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.
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9 Ways To Prepare Your IP Rights For Brexit
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.
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'Biosimilar V. Biosimilar' Patent Case May Be First Of Many
While the idea of patent disputes between makers of follow-on drugs is nothing new, the complaint recently filed by Coherus against Amgen in Delaware federal court is unique in that it pits one biosimilar developer against another, say attorneys with Goodwin Procter LLP.
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UK Patent Law: Hot Topics Of 2018 And What's Ahead
English courts have been active in the past year, grappling with patent topics like plausibility and equivalents, and 2019 promises to be another exciting year as English patent lawyers await developments on obviousness, insufficiency and employee inventor compensation, says Jin Ooi of Kirkland & Ellis LLP.
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Coordinating Patent Strategies Across PTAB And EPO
The positions, arguments and prior art raised in U.S. post-grant proceedings at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board may influence European Patent Office oppositions involving counterpart cases. Understanding the procedural similarities and differences between the two jurisdictions is key, says Drew Schulte of Haley Guiliano LLP.
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New EU Patent Guidelines May Affect Companies' AI Strategy
As compared to the European Patent Office’s guidelines for artificial intelligence and machine learning — which take effect on Thursday — the U.S. eligibility framework may prove to be more favorable to innovators, say Jennifer Maisel and Eric Blatt of Rothwell Figg Ernst & Manbeck PC.
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Intellectual Property Caught In US-China Trade Crossfire
Earlier this year, President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on Chinese products as a response to China’s trade practices concerning technology transfer, intellectual property and innovation. The U.S.-Chinese trade war highlights the need to approach investments in China differently, taking a broad view of intellectual assets and looking beyond basic legal protection, says Holly White, a consultant at Rouse & Co.
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Patent Eligibility Assessments: US Approach Vs. UK Approach
Techniques used to address questions of obviousness in the U.K. may prove useful to practitioners addressing questions of patent eligibility in the U.S., say Christopher Carroll and Charles Larsen of White & Case LLP.