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Intellectual Property UK
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June 19, 2025
Nestlé's Crunch Crumbles After Fitness Brand Challenge
Nestlé has lost its "Crunch" trademark for a chocolate bar after it left a bid by a British sports nutrition company to nix the mark unchallenged, with officials finding the food giant had not put the mark to good use.
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June 18, 2025
Cycling Brand's 'Brooks' TM Row Gets Fresh Air In Appeal Win
A bicycle gear company has revived its attempt to block a trademark registration by U.S. rival Brooks Running, having convinced an EU appeals board that its saddlebags are a little too close to athletic bags and backpacks aimed at runners.
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June 18, 2025
Artist Defends 'Fishrot' Apology Spoof As Free Expression
An Icelandic artist urged a London appellate judge Wednesday to give him a chance to override a decision that he could not successfully defend against a claim from the country's largest seafood company alleging he created a spoof website to publish a false apology over a bribery scandal.
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June 18, 2025
Standards Org. Halts 'Bluetooth Karaoke Microphone' TM Bid
A Bluetooth standards organization has persuaded European Union officials to block a "Bluetooth Karaoke Microphone" trademark application, proving that consumers could connect the mark to the Bluetooth brand.
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June 18, 2025
EU Court Affirms Decision To Publicize Pesticide Ingredients
An agrochemical company lost its appeal at a European court on Wednesday to block the European Food Safety Authority from releasing a confidential list of ingredients in one of its pesticides in the interest of public knowledge.
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June 18, 2025
US Biotech Biz Says Rival's Gene Editing Patent Is Invalid
A U.S. biotech company and two manufacturers have denied they infringed a South Korean rival's gene-editing patent, urging a London court to declare the patent invalid.
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June 17, 2025
EasyGroup Appeals TM Loss To 'Easy Live' Auction Co.
U.K. venture capital conglomerate easyGroup on Tuesday urged a London appellate court to overturn the rejection of its trademark infringement and revocation case against an online auction services provider, arguing a lower court judge had wrongly disregarded evidence of confusion among consumers.
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June 17, 2025
UPC Backs Sales Ban On Kits Infringing 10x Genomics Patent
The Unified Patent Court's Local Düsseldorf Division has ruled that Curio Bioscience's Seeker Spatial Mapping Kits infringed patents by 10x Genomics, upholding an injunction against the U.S. biotech company's rival in Germany, France and Sweden.
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June 17, 2025
Music Samples Not Copyright Exempt, Advocate General Says
The pastiche exemption in European Union copyright law does not apply to the reuse of a musical sample in a new song, an adviser to the bloc's top court said Tuesday.
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June 17, 2025
Hat Co. Claims Rival's Dupes Caused 'Greenwashing' Gripe
A hat brand has accused a rival of selling counterfeit headgear of an inferior quality and hurting its environmentally friendly brand, as consumers were leaving negative reviews accusing it of "greenwashing."
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June 17, 2025
Spanish Law Firm Voids Danish Outfit's 'Legaltech' TM
A Spanish law firm has persuaded European Union officials to void most of a Danish organization's protections over its "Legaltech" name, proving that the word is too descriptive to function as a trademark.
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June 17, 2025
Spiritual Org. Says Publisher's Amazon Sales Infringed IP
A spiritual society has accused a book publisher of infringing its copyright over a set of letters from the 1940s, telling a London court that it did not have the right to sell copies of the works on Amazon.
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June 16, 2025
Bratz Maker Beats Rival's £90M Claim Despite Antitrust Breach
MGA Entertainment Inc., the company behind Bratz dolls, owes no compensation to a rival despite running a campaign of "undeniable" antitrust violations and making unjustified threats of patent infringement litigation, a London judge said Monday.
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June 16, 2025
Taxi Payment Business Accuses Ex-Director Of Copying App
A company providing card payment services to taxi drivers has accused a former director of breaching his duties and infringing its copyright by poaching senior developers to set up a rival payment system.
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June 16, 2025
TotalEnergies Can't Nix Dow's Sports Turf Patent
Chemical producer Dow Global Technologies defeated a challenge to its patent on a method for making artificial turf and sports tracks, after European officials rejected TotalEnergies' arguments that an earlier invention had already revealed how to make a specific polymer.
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June 16, 2025
Royalties Body Says Blur Drummer's Class Action Is 'Weak'
An organization that collects royalties for musicians in the U.K. continued its fight on Monday to fend off a claim brought by the drummer of rock band Blur, who alleges it unfairly distributes money, branding the case as "exceptionally weak."
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June 16, 2025
Venom Singer Claims Copyright Over Band's Satanic Designs
Heavy-metal singer Conrad Lant insisted on Monday that he was the creator of designs associated with the band Venom, as he gave evidence in his dispute with former bandmate Anthony Bray and a music distributor over branded merchandise.
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June 16, 2025
US Tech Biz Saves Quantum Computing Patent In Europe
A California-based technology company has fought off a challenge to its quantum computing patent in Europe, persuading an appeals panel to uphold an amended version of the blueprint in a decision released Monday.
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June 16, 2025
Water Drainage Biz Sues UK Rival For Copying Rooftop Patent
A German water drainage company has sued Radmat Building Products, a U.K. construction materials supplier in London, accusing its competitor of unlawfully copying its patent for drainage technology used for a type of flat roof.
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June 13, 2025
Baby-Clothes Maker Fights Amazon Ban In Bike Design Row
A baby-clothes maker has sued a homewares retailer for getting one of its Amazon product listings struck off the site, arguing that it didn't infringe the retailer's registered design because the bike accessory concept wasn't new.
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June 13, 2025
UPC To Roll Out New Case Management System In 2 Stages
The Unified Patent Court has said that it will roll out its new case management system in two stages, explaining that lawyers will have to continue using the existing system to file cases and applications until September.
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June 13, 2025
LG Secures Patent For Video Compressing Device
South Korean tech conglomerate LG Electronics has swayed officials at the European Patent Office to overturn a decision refusing its patent for a video compression technique aimed at reducing memory use and processing demands.
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June 13, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Tottenham Hotspur FC kick off against Manchester United co-owner Ineos Automotive following a soured sponsorship deal, Acer and Nokia clash over patents for video coding technology, and two investors reignite litigation against the founders of an AI exercise bike business that unlawfully pocketed $1.2 million in investments to fund their own lifestyles. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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June 13, 2025
American Furniture Brand Can TM 'Furnico' Despite 'Furneco'
A furniture maker has won its bid to register "Furnico" as a trademark despite a rival U.K. company having already registered "Furneco," after British officials ruled that its presence on the U.S. market for almost 20 years gave it a leg up.
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June 13, 2025
Philip Morris Loses Bid To Invalidate E-Cigarette Patent
A subsidiary of the tobacco company behind Golden Virginia and Rizla has held on to its electronic smoking device patent at a European appellate board, snubbing opposition by Philip Morris.
Expert Analysis
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Israel's Generic COVID-19 Drug Licensing Lacks Due Process
The Israel attorney general's special compulsory license for imported generic versions of Abbvie's patented antiviral drug Kaletra to treat COVID-19 does not provide a right of response, a hearing or direct judicial review, says Ephraim Heiliczer at Pearl Cohen.
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New US Policy On SEP Remedies Restores Critical Balance
The new joint U.S. Department of Justice-U.S. Patent and Trademark Office policy on standard-essential patents, clarifying that injunctions are available in accordance with general remedies law, helps restore a power balance between technology innovators and users, and realigns U.S. patent law with other jurisdictions, say attorneys at McKool Smith.
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Vaccine IP Under Microscope With Coronavirus Outbreak
The coronavirus global outbreak, which has focused attention on the role patent systems play in encouraging investment in vaccines and cures, affords an opportunity to examine the tension among patent rights, investments, governments and public health, say Gaby Longsworth and Robert Greene Sterne at Sterne Kessler.
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EU Lacks Effective Tool For Resolving Border Disputes
The European Court of Justice recently found that it did not have jurisdiction over Slovenia's claim to enforce an arbitration award against Croatia, indicating that EU legal framework cannot be used to resolve intra-EU border disputes, and that a new mechanism should possibly be developed, says Akshay Sewlikar at Linklaters.
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Rebuttal
AI Can't Accurately Predict Case Length And Cost — Yet
A recent Law360 guest article argued that artificial intelligence can precisely estimate the length and cost of a new case, but several limitations will likely delay truly accurate predictions for years to come, says Andrew Russell at Shaw Keller.
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Trade Agreements With EU Will Still Be Elusive Post-Brexit
Although a post-Brexit transitional arrangement largely preserves the status quo between the U.K. and the EU through the end of the year, intense trade negotiations for key industries are still to come, with the possibility of a no-deal exit in 2021, say attorneys at Baker Botts.
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Surefire Marketing Methods To Build Your Legal Practice
Attorneys who take the time and the risk to showcase their talents through speaking, writing and teaching will find that opportunities will begin building upon themselves, says Daniel Karon of Karon LLC.
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Some Clarity On Inventor-Employee Compensation In The UK
The recent U.K. Supreme Court decision in Shanks v. Unilver swept away a perception that some employers are simply too big to pay inventor compensation under the U.K.’s statutory compensation provisions, and may offer some hope to prospective employees, say attorneys at Haseltine Lake.
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The Rise Of Patent Wars In Europe's Gene Therapy Space
Drug companies can prepare for increasing competition and a rise in contentious patent proceedings in Europe’s gene therapy industry by aligning patents, orphan designations and data exclusivity where possible, say Jane Hollywood and Frances Denney of CMS Legal.
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Self-Driving Vehicles' Neural Networks Present IP Conundrum
While autonomous vehicles' use of artificial intelligence through neural networks is highly innovative, the position of these networks within intellectual property has yet to be cemented, and a debate is ongoing as to whether they are best protected by patent, database rights or copyright, say Rajvinder Jagdev and Lin Liu of Powell Gilbert.
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Failure To Launch: The Patent Thicket Delay Of US Biosimilars
Almost 10 years after enactment of the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act, AbbVie’s assertion of 18 patents against three Humira biosimilars shows that patent thickets remain an obstacle to launching follow-on biologics and help explain why U.S. launches lag behind those in Europe, say attorneys at Axinn.
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Huawei Case Might Mean UK Forum Sets Global FRAND Rates
The U.K. Supreme Court’s eventual opinion in Unwired Planet v. Huawei will decide whether English courts are a proper forum for determining global fair license terms for standard-essential patents, and there are several reasons to question the English courts' creation of this approach, says Thomas Cotter of the University of Minnesota Law School.
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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.