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Intellectual Property UK
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December 19, 2024
NanoString Can't Reclaim Deposit In Harvard Patent Feud
The Unified Patent Court has refused to return a €300,000 ($312,000) security deposit that biotech company NanoString paid to allay concerns over its financial footing and ability to cover legal costs amid a sample testing patent feud with Harvard College.
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December 19, 2024
Lighter-Maker Burns Rival For Copying 'Clipper' Logo
Lighter manufacturer Flamagas has sued a wholesaler for stealing its Clipper trademark and logo without its consent for the marketing and selling of electric lighters in the UK.
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December 19, 2024
Belkin Hit With Coercive Fine At UPC For Delayed Philips Info
Dutch electronics company Philips has persuaded the Unified Patent Court to impose a €46,000 ($48,000) coercive penalty on Belkin, as it proved that its American rival has taken too long to come clean on how far it infringed a major wireless charging patent.
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December 18, 2024
AmEx Beats Spanish Software Co.'s Costs Bid In IP Battle
American Express convinced a London judge on Wednesday that it shouldn't have to cover the litigation costs of a Spanish technology startup that ultimately dropped its claims that the credit card giant copied software that searched for cheaper flights.
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December 18, 2024
Huawei Fights To Toss MediaTek's UK Chip Patent Claim
Chinese tech company Huawei asked the High Court on Wednesday to toss out patent infringement claims brought by Taiwanese rival MediaTek, arguing that the English courts are not the right place to hear the dispute and that the issues should be decided in China.
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December 18, 2024
Novartis Beats EPO Challenge To Eye-Drop Medication Patent
Novartis has fended off the challenges of two pharmaceutical rivals to its patent for an eye-drop medication as European officials concluded that the drugmaker's combination of key components differed from an older patent for disinfecting contact lenses.
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December 18, 2024
Creatives Wary Of UK Proposal For AI Training Opt-Out
Representatives of the creative industry have expressed concern about the government's proposals for people in the sector to opt out of having their work used to train AI models, arguing that the onus should be on developers of artificial intelligence to pay holders of the rights.
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December 18, 2024
Group Says Craig Wright In Contempt For £900B Bitcoin Claim
Cryptocurrency developers argued in a London court Wednesday that Australian computer scientist Craig Wright should be found in contempt of court for asserting he had invented bitcoin in an approximately £900 billion ($1.144 trillion) claim after a judge ruled that he had repeatedly lied about creating the digital currency.
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December 17, 2024
UK's IPO Fails To Improve Persistent Pay Gap For Women
U.K. officials revealed on Tuesday that male workers at the Intellectual Property Office made 27% more than their female colleagues in the last year, marking almost no improvement over the past three years.
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December 17, 2024
UK Eases Trademark Rules To Allow Partial Int'l Replacements
The U.K. has tweaked its trademark laws to allow international registrations to partially replace domestic trademarks, boosting flexibility for intellectual property owners.
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December 17, 2024
3M Unit Can't Nix Smith & Nephew's Wound-Healing Patent
A 3M subsidiary lost its bid to block Smith & Nephew's patent for a pump that treats wounds using negative pressure after European officials ruled that its unique features deserved protection, in the latest skirmish between the firms over the technology.
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December 17, 2024
Thatchers Says Aldi Got Unfair Advantage By Copycat Cider
The makers of Thatchers cider urged an appeals court on Tuesday to revive its trademark infringement claim against Aldi, arguing that the supermarket chain had gained an unfair advantage by producing a copycat design of its drink.
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December 17, 2024
Mayer Brown-Led Shell Co. To Buy Music Biz For £97M
Acquisition company Acceler8 Ventures PLC said on Tuesday that it has agreed to buy Verifyyed, a U.S. music transaction platform, for £96.8 million ($122.7 million) in a move to grow the business in a profitable market.
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December 17, 2024
UK Gov't Floats Copyright Exception For AI Training
The government has floated the idea of introducing exceptions for copyright law to train artificial intelligence models for commercial purposes, amid a broader consultation launched Tuesday that will look at the impact of the new technology on the intellectual property system.
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December 16, 2024
EU Urged To Put IP Crime Among Policy Priorities
Fighting intellectual property crime and counterfeiting must be among the key policy priorities for the European Union's crime-busting initiative, a coalition of IP groups has said.
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December 16, 2024
Halozyme Loses Bid To Protect Breast Cancer Drugs
A London judge on Monday rejected Halozyme's bid to protect an active ingredient in two breast cancer drugs with a supplementary protection certificate, after finding that it was actually an inactive substance used to enhance other therapeutic effects.
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December 16, 2024
Gov't Urged To Protect Creative Copyright In AI Policy
A coalition of U.K. creative industry groups launched on Monday and urged the government to prioritize copyright protections as generative artificial intelligence continues to advance, stressing the importance of human-authored material in developing AI.
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December 16, 2024
Chipmaker Arm Settles UPC, US IP Litigation With Rival
The Unified Patent Court has granted two computer chip companies permission to pull out of their litigation in Europe after the pair inked an agreement ending their parallel U.S. feud.
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December 16, 2024
Harvesting Tech Biz Can't Nix Rival's Crop Monitoring Patent
A harvesting technology company has fought off a challenge by a rival to its crop monitoring patent, convincing a European appeals panel that it did not unlawfully extend the patent's scope during examination.
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December 13, 2024
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a group of franchise operators hit Vodafone with a £120 million ($151 million) claim for allegedly imposing commission cuts, green energy tycoon Dale Vince pursue another libel action against the publisher of the Daily Mail, and parcel delivery giant Yodel face a claim by an investor that helped save it from collapse earlier in the year.
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December 13, 2024
Fresenius Can't Stop Baxter's Effort To Save Dialysis Patent
Baxter has won a shot at rescuing its European patent over a dialysis machine amid Fresenius' opposition, persuading an appeals panel in a ruling published Friday to shelve an earlier decision to revoke the patent.
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December 13, 2024
Microsoft Can't Challenge Damages Ceiling During UPC Fight
Europe's patent court refused Microsoft's bid to reduce the potential amount of damages a Finnish rival can claim in an infringement dispute, ruling that the tech giant couldn't bring an interlocutory appeal.
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December 13, 2024
Materials Orgs Can Fight To Nix Rival's Aluminum Foil Patent
A group of materials companies have won the chance to revoke the patent of a rival over aluminum foil, convincing a European appeals panel that examiners should reassess the patent's validity.
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December 13, 2024
GSK Seeks Second Shot At Pfizer Vaccine Patent Fight
GSK asked a London court on Friday to allow it to challenge a decision to nix two patents protecting its blockbuster vaccine for the respiratory syncytial virus, arguing that a judge made errors when revoking patent protection.
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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.
Expert Analysis
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.