Intellectual Property UK

  • September 27, 2024

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

    This past week in London has seen Coca-Cola bring a trademark infringement claim against its former marketing director, Glencore face legal action by American Century ETF Trust, law firm Bishop Lloyd & Jackson defend itself against two solicitors it worked alongside during inquiries into Grenfell Tower, and a U.K. cruise line face a claim by a subsidiary of the sanctioned gambling platform GTLK.

  • September 27, 2024

    Crypto-Biz Owner's 'Bitcoin Bank America' TM Refused In EU

    The owner of a cryptocurrency company cannot register his "Bitcoin Bank America" brand as a trademark in the European Union because it is not distinctive, officials have ruled — as Bank of America Corp. geared up to oppose the application.

  • September 26, 2024

    Nobel Winners Behind Gene Editor Seek To Nix Own Patents

    The scientists credited with inventing the gene-editing tool CRISPR have voluntarily requested that two key patents be revoked in Europe, after officials suggested they might get nixed over technical issues.

  • September 26, 2024

    Mammut Sports Can't Overturn Unified Patent Court Injunction

    Mammut Sports is still barred from selling an award-winning avalanche rescue device in Germany and Austria after its rival convinced Europe's patent court to maintain an interim injunction against it.

  • September 26, 2024

    High Court To Tackle Past Sales In Oppo FRAND Trial

    Chinese mobile giant Oppo will meet InterDigital at a London court Friday to discuss whether findings in the Court of Appeal's high-profile Lenovo decision should apply in the company's own licensing dispute over 4G and 5G standard-essential patents.

  • September 26, 2024

    Huawei's Comms Network System Not Inventive, EPO Says

    Huawei cannot get a European patent for its communications network configuration system because it lacked an inventive step compared with earlier technology of two mobile phone operators, officials held in a decision published Thursday.

  • September 26, 2024

    Son Hits Back At Father In Spat Over Parking Software

    A former director of a parking company has hit back in a copyright battle with his father over the ownership of software, claiming that the rival business shut him out and took his technology.

  • September 25, 2024

    Barry Manilow Sued By Hipgnosis Over Sony Royalties

    Music rights heavyweight Hipgnosis has sued Barry Manilow in London for allegedly failing to pay it royalties after Sony Records paid the American singer for his recordings, violating a more than $7.5 million deal that saw Hipgnosis acquire his catalog of 917 songs.

  • September 25, 2024

    Lego Partially Blocks Minifigure TM Challenge In Europe

    European officials slightly narrowed a Lego trademark for the shape of its iconic minifigures, after ruling that the toymaker couldn't prove it had used the sign to sell shoes.

  • September 25, 2024

    Music Rights Collective Fights Bands' Antitrust Claim

    The Performing Right Society has denied abusing a dominant market position by imposing fees and requirements on artists, hitting back at a claim by three rock bands and their rights management company.

  • September 25, 2024

    Pfizer, BioNTech Get New Shot To Ax Moderna's MRNA Patent

    Pfizer and BioNTech have won another shot at challenging the validity of one of Moderna's key mRNA vaccines as a judge ruled Wednesday that their appeal had a reasonable prospect of success.

  • September 25, 2024

    Roche Unit Retains Trimmed Cancer Drug Patent At EPO

    A Japanese Roche subsidiary can keep a snipped version of its European patent for a cancer drug after proving that its blueprint is detailed enough for a skilled person to carry it out, an appeals panel held in a ruling published Wednesday.

  • September 25, 2024

    Unilever Unit Gets OK To Rejig Case In UPC Packaging Spat

    The French subsidiary of Unilever can amend its requests for security of costs and delayed remedy enforcement in a patent infringement claim brought by a pharmaceutical packaging company because the tweaks are not "substantial," the Unified Patent Court has ruled.

  • September 25, 2024

    EU, Patent Office Ink Cooperation Deal To Boost Innovation

    The European Patent Office has teamed up with the executive arm of the EU to help startups and research institutes find ways to bring new technologies to market.

  • September 24, 2024

    Pilates Co. Stretches Patent Campaign To ITC

    A San Francisco pilates equipment maker has persuaded the U.S. International Trade Commission to hear its patent infringement case against an assortment of companies that one of its lawyers calls "Chinese knockoff artists."

  • September 24, 2024

    Finnish Research Center Loses Computer Architecture Patent

    A Finnish research facility has lost its bid to patent technology that optimizes the memory module architecture of certain processors for laptops and other devices, after European officials ruled that a key feature went beyond the original application.

  • September 24, 2024

    European Panel Revokes GE Unit Patent On Wind Park Voltage

    European appellate officials nixed a General Electric unit's patent related to offshore wind parks, finding that an amendment had broadened the scope of a claim beyond what was in the original application.

  • September 24, 2024

    EPO Staff Warn About Special Treatment For Big IP Players

    Staff at Europe's patent office have voiced concerns about a specific unit that checks patents from moneyed tech giants, claiming that some of the bloc's biggest patent holders are getting special treatment.

  • September 24, 2024

    MedTech Co. Can't See Docs In Meril, Edwards UPC Feud

    The Unified Patent Court has dismissed a medical device maker's request to look behind the curtain of Meril's bid to revoke one of Edwards' heart valve patents, ruling that the Swedish company failed to establish a sufficient interest in seeing the parties' documents.

  • September 24, 2024

    Swarovski Wins 'Una' TM Over Label Maker's Challenge

    Swarovski won its bid to trademark "Una" over a range of jewelry-related products, after European officials ruled that a smart label company had not captured the gemstone market with an earlier mark.

  • September 23, 2024

    Champagne Group Gets 2nd Chance To Bottle Up Rival TM

    The Champagne industry trade group got a second shot at eliminating a U.S. grill maker's trademark for "Champaign" after European appellate officials ruled that previous examiners didn't take into account new rules about the dilution of such marks.

  • September 23, 2024

    Online Gambling Co. Must Publicize It Plagiarized Rival's Code

    A London judge ordered an online gambling software developer on Monday to publicize that it had plagiarized copyrighted code when producing products which competed with the online betting game Slingo.

  • September 23, 2024

    Merck Loses Patent For Cancer Diagnostic Tool On Appeal

    European appellate officials revoked a Merck patent related to cancer treatment, ruling that its patented claims went beyond what the company originally filed in its application.

  • September 23, 2024

    Swedish Court Extends Infringement Ruling For IPTV Network

    Sweden's patent appeal court has extended the prosecution period for two individuals who provided streaming services for illegal Internet Protocol TV networks, increasing their number of daily fines.

  • September 23, 2024

    Tesco Can't Nix Lidl's EU Trademark Over Blank Logo

    Tesco has failed to strip Lidl of key parts of its trademark protections over a blank version of its yellow and blue logo, with European Union officials ruling that Lidl had put the sign to "genuine use" over its foodstuffs.

Expert Analysis

  • Taking A Long-Term View On Russia's Patent Landscape

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    The imposition of sanctions following the invasion of Ukraine has raised questions about the future of patent procurement and enforcement in Russia, but companies should not dismiss their Russian patents prematurely, especially in industries such as energy, agriculture, electronics and cybersecurity, say Soniya Shah and Ming-Tao Yang at Finnegan.

  • Assessing Litigation Uses Of USPTO 5G Development Study

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    Jonathan Putnam at Competition Dynamics evaluates the arguments for and against studies like the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's recent examination of 5G developers' patent activities, analyzing whether such assessments are reliable for litigation.

  • Latest Song Copyright Rulings Clarify What's Protectable

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    Recent copyright infringement decisions in favor of musicians Ed Sheeran, Katy Perry and Led Zeppelin should help turn the tide against frivolous music copyright lawsuits, says Gerald Sauer at Sauer & Wagner.

  • How To Wind Down Patents In Russia Over Next 3 Months

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    With June 23 approaching as the last day on which U.S. businesses may pay anything to the Russian patent office for filing patents directly or through international Patent Cooperation Treaty applications, practitioners should begin making crucial filing and search decisions now to avoid liability, says Mark Mathison at Kilpatrick.

  • Evaluating M&S Bottle Design Infringement Case Against Aldi

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    A central issue in Marks & Spencer's recently filed intellectual property infringement suit over Aldi's Gold Flake Gin Liqueur bottles may be whether the informed user would have the same overall impression from the M&S registered bottle design and the Aldi designs, say Alex Borthwick and Fraser Simpson at Powell Gilbert.

  • Brexit's Effect On UK Trademarks, 1 Year Later

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    Charlotte Wilding at Wedlake Bell discusses the status of U.K. trademark rules and regulations one year post-Brexit, including a potential increase in intellectual property rights and challenges, delays at the Intellectual Property Office and a growth of innovation and divergence.

  • Opinion

    Filing For Patents In Ukraine Is A Viable ESG Strategy

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    As part of their environmental, social and corporate governance efforts, U.S. companies should consider seeking patent protection in Ukraine, supporting the country in a way that may pay off financially as Ukraine modernizes its economy and integrates with Europe, says Mark Mathison at Kilpatrick.

  • Germany's Google Controls Illustrate Global Antitrust Trend

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    Germany's recent move to rein in Google with extended restrictions on anti-competitive behavior provides an example of the new aggressive stance regulators around the world are adopting as tech giants grow their power in the digital economy, says Andrea Pomana at ADVANT Beiten.

  • Opinion

    Solution To Patent Eligibility Quagmire Lies In Constitution

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    A lack of clarity on patent eligibility has undermined the credibility of the patent system, and a possible resolution is for courts or Congress to define judicial exceptions to patent-eligible subject matter in their most concise form — in line with constitutional guarantees, says Indi Rajasingham at the Mmillenniumm Group.

  • Examining EU's Drift Toward US-Style Employer Pact Scrutiny

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    As European Union competition authorities express enforcement interest in employment issues such as no-poach and wage-fixing agreements — which have been the subject of U.S. enforcement action for some time — companies may need to recalibrate their training and compliance programs accordingly, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.

  • What SEP Holders Can Take Away From UK's Apple Ruling

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    A U.K. court's recent decision in the standard essential patent dispute between Apple and Optis Cellular Technology provides encouragement for SEP owners litigating their portfolios in the U.K. and reaffirms the country's place as a patentee-friendly jurisdiction, says Tess Waldron at Powell Gilbert.

  • AI Inventorship Decision Leaves Open Questions

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    A Virginia federal court's recent decision in Thaler v. Iancu, finding that artificial intelligence cannot be named as a patent inventor, highlights questions that will have to be answered as AI increasingly contributes to inventorship, especially in the pharmaceutical industry, say attorneys at DLA Piper.

  • What Patent Applications Signal About Green Energy Trends

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    Steadily increasing patent activity related to clean energy technologies suggests that the proportion of energy derived from green sources will also continue to grow — but smaller companies could be locked out of the patent race, even as sustainability becomes an inescapable business imperative, says Greg Sharp at Haseltine Lake.

  • Takeaways On Pre-Action Protocols From UK Patent Ruling

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    The U.K. High Court's recent patent ruling in Add2 Research v. dSpace instructs parties in proper pre-action discussions that avoid breaches of protocol, including how to provide materials in confidence, say Angela Jack and Emily Atherton at EIP.

  • 6 Ways To Guide Applications Under New Patent Classification

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    Intellectual property practitioners can navigate the recently implemented Cooperative Patent Classification system to direct applications to specific prior art units within the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, avoid especially difficult units, and improve clients' portfolios in newly emerging technologies, say Roberta Young and Brian Michaelis at Seyfarth.

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