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Intellectual Property UK
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November 20, 2025
Nike Wins Appeal For Patent On Shoe Material Cutting Tech
European appellate officials have granted Nike a patent over a shoe manufacturing method despite previous refusals from examiners, ruling that other inventors at the time wouldn't have used multiple cameras to stitch a final image and identify patterns to be cut.
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November 20, 2025
Micron Sued By Chinese Rival Over Chip Patent Rights
A Chinese semiconductor manufacturer has asked a London court to restrain a U.S. rival from infringing three patents, marking the latest chapter in a long-running geopolitical dispute over vital technology for artificial intelligence.
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November 20, 2025
BlackBerry Accused Of 'Warehousing' $6M Claim For Years
A telecommunications business told a London court on Thursday that BlackBerry's $6 million claim over allegedly unpaid licensing fees should be struck out because it has provided no excuse for "warehousing" the claim for more than four years.
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November 20, 2025
TM Body Elects New President To Push 2026 IP Strategy
The International Trademark Association has named Deborah Hampton as its new president and chair of the board of directors as it prepares to roll out its new strategic plan in 2026.
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November 19, 2025
HP Ends Wi-Fi Patent Disputes By Joining Sisvel Pool
HP Inc. has ended its Wi-Fi patent litigation with Huawei, Philips and Korean development lab Wilus by joining Sisvel's patent pool as a licensee, following recent deals with companies like Acer and Cisco.
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November 19, 2025
Trademark Infringements Dominate £500M UK Counterfeit Haul
Britain's border control agency seized counterfeit goods worth more than £500 million ($654 million) between 2021 and 2023, with trademark infringement continuing as the most common intellectual property violation, a government report has revealed.
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November 19, 2025
'VC Law' TM OK For Bulgarian Firm Despite 'Vklaw' Challenge
A European court ruled Wednesday that a Bulgarian law firm should be able to register a trademark for "VC Law" despite several challenges from a Greek rival as clients looking for legal services would distinguish it from "vklaw."
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November 19, 2025
Epic Games Loses Out In 'Megaverse' UK TM Clash
Fortnite owner Epic Games has lost the right to use its "Megaverse" brand in the U.K. on virtual reality video games following a challenge from a British creative agency of the same name.
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November 19, 2025
Cosmetics Giant Coty Fends Off Challenge To 'Lancaster' TM
An Italian property firm has failed in its bid to nix beauty giant Coty's trademark for "Lancaster," after European officials found it hadn't provided evidence that it used its identical earlier sign.
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November 19, 2025
Monster Energy Keeps TM In EU Fight With Electronics Biz
Monster Energy has preserved the rights to its classic logo, as European Union officials ruled that the drinks giant caters to a completely different audience than that of an electronics company which sought to block it.
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November 18, 2025
YouTube Channel Can't Recover Costs In IP Fight After Appeal
A man who claimed co-authorship of a disclaimer notice used on a YouTube channel about mental health has persuaded an appellate court to set aside an order requiring him to pay the legal costs of the educational platform he was suing for copyright infringement after proving that the previous judge ignored key parts of his plea.
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November 18, 2025
Getty Loss Lays Groundwork For Future AI Copyright Claims
Rightsholders looking to follow in Getty Images' footsteps and bring the next high-profile infringement claim against generative artificial intelligence companies should ensure they have robust evidence of infringement in the U.K. to avoid the pitfalls faced by the stock image giant, lawyers say.
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November 18, 2025
Tommy Hilfiger Voids 'TX Tommy Exchange' TM
Tommy Hilfiger has convinced European Union officials to void an Italian entrepreneur's claim for the trademark "TX Tommy Exchange," finding that consumers could misinterpret the name as a sub-brand of the American clothing chain.
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November 18, 2025
Balmain Beats Turkish Co.'s 'Balmour' TM
Balmain has convinced European officials to nix a Turkish company's trademark for "Balmour," as shoppers might be misled into thinking that the Turkish brand's after-shave lotions and cosmetic products were linked to the Italian luxury fashion house.
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November 18, 2025
Habitat Stops German Rival Getting 'New Habitat' EU TM
Furniture retailer Habitat has persuaded European Union officials to block a German company's "New Habitat: Elevate Your Home" trademark application, proving there is a risk of confusion with its own long-standing branding.
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November 17, 2025
Sky Blocks Property Co.'s 'Skylark Estates' Trademark
Sky has convinced European officials to nix a real estate company's trademark for "Skylark" over a range of services, ruling that the broadcaster was so well-known that shoppers would likely think it was also behind Skylark Estate's services.
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November 17, 2025
Ericsson Sues Chinese Phone Maker Transsion In UPC
Ericsson has sued phone manufacturer Transsion in the Unified Patent Court and multiple other jurisdictions, accusing the Chinese company of tactically dodging a license after nearly a decade of talks.
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November 17, 2025
Birkenstock Wins Sandal Copyright Clash In Dutch Court
A Dutch court has ruled that a settlement in 2015 between Birkenstock and shoe retailer Scapino Retail BV provided some confidence that the sandal maker would leave the retailer alone, but that Birkenstock had never waived its right to act against infringing models.
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November 17, 2025
EUIPO Urged To Grant Logo TM For Lombardy Cheese
The International Trademark Association has urged a top European Union trademark appeal body to allow the registration of a collective mark displaying "SCCS" for an Italian cheese, arguing that previous refusals are "contrary to the aim of the EU legislator."
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November 17, 2025
Aldi Can't Void Gaming Co.'s 'Forgotten Playland' TM
A gaming developer has won the right to register its "Forgotten Playland" trademark in the European Union after officials found the mark's added word and stitched fabric design set it apart from Aldi's "Playland" toy range.
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November 14, 2025
Judge Declines To Trim News Orgs' AI Copyright Suit
A Manhattan federal judge declined to grant artificial intelligence firm Cohere's request to trim a copyright suit brought against it by a group of news organizations who say their content was used to train AI models, ruling that the news organizations had provided sufficient examples of allegedly infringing outputs to proceed.
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November 14, 2025
Sanofi Blocks COVID-19 Vaccine Trademark In EU
Sanofi's vaccine subsidiary has convinced officials at the European Union's Intellectual Property Office to block an Indian biopharma company's bid to trademark for 'Covaxin Bharat Biotech,' after arguing that consumers would likely confuse the trademark with its own tetanus vaccine Covaxis.
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November 14, 2025
Luxe Fashion House Can't Nix 'Alaïa Chalet' UK TM
British officials have rejected a luxury fashion house's bid to nix a Swiss skate park's "Alaïa Chalet" trademark, ruling that people wouldn't mix up its high-end clothing with the skate park's various cultural activities.
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November 14, 2025
Otsuka Wins Bid For Medical Device Patent
European appellate officials have upheld an Otsuka patent for an injectable drug system treating mental conditions such as schizophrenia, dismissing a slew of opponents' claims that its external freeze-drying process wasn't new or beneficial.
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November 14, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Freeths face a professional negligence claim from a Scottish car dealership, Rolls-Royce sue logistics giant Kuehne + Nagel, and a team of Oberon Investments Group investment managers sued by their former employer.
Expert Analysis
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Brexit And Supplemental Protection Certificates
The procedure for applying for patents through the European Patent Office will be entirely unaffected by Brexit because the EPO was established by a separate treaty unrelated to the European Union. EU law, however, is critical to the acquisition and enforcement of other intellectual property rights, including supplemental protection certificates, say William Hubbard and Barry Herman of Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice LLP.
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Q&A With GAO Directors: Improving Patent Quality
Overall, we were impressed by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's commitment to improving patent quality through their Enhanced Patent Quality Initiative. However, we still recommended that the USPTO take a number of actions, say John Neumann and Frank Rusco of the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
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EU Court Brings New Copyright Liability For Linked Material
The EU Court of Justice recently ruled that websites that merely link to infringing material can be liable for copyright infringement. If GS Media v. Sanoma stands, it threatens to disrupt common practices on a wide variety of websites and social media platforms, say Jennifer Stanley and Liwen Mah of Fenwick & West LLP.
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Best Of Times And Worst Of Times For International IP
While the intellectual property environment is healthy, the international trade environment is not. The troubling situation raises the question of whether prevailing anti-trade sentiment will undercut IP harmonization progress and jeopardize the future of the global IP system, say Jay Erstling and Amy Salmela of Patterson Thuente Pedersen PA.
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The Complicated Role Of Copyright In EU Pay-TV Case
While the European Commission's decision to close its antitrust investigation of Paramount Pictures does not mark the end of the pay-TV investigation, which continues against other studios and broadcasters, the history of the case and the terms of this settlement provide an interesting insight into the EC’s current views on the interaction between competition law and copyright, say Becket McGrath and Trupti Reddy of Cooley LLP.
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Deciding Where To File Patents Internationally In 2016
Staying tethered to old patent filing strategies can soothe the cognitive dissonance created by a rapidly changing world. But applicants should resist the siren song of the old standbys to optimally adapt their patent portfolios to a world in economic and political flux, says Stephen Keefe, patent counsel at the Getinge Group.
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What Brexit Means For EU Patents And Trademarks
Until the end of the negotiation period that will follow the Brexit vote, EU laws will continue to apply in the U.K., and intellectual property owners will likely experience no change in their rights in the U.K. until at least 2018, say Peter Pappas and Karissa Blyth of Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP.
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7 Reasons Revocation In EU Could Be As Popular As IPR In US
In addition to providing a forum for centralized enforcement of European patents, the Unified Patent Court will offer a new opportunity for challengers to invalidate a European patent centrally in a single action. There are some similarities between UPC revocation actions and the hugely successful inter partes reviews in the U.S., say Leythem Wall and Hazel Ford of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP.
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UK Supreme Court Clarifies Scope Of EU Design Protection
The U.K. Supreme Court's reasoning in a dispute involving children’s suitcase manufacturers raises important points for those filing community registered design right applications in Europe, says Dafydd Bevan of Marks & Clerk.
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A New Dawn For European Patents
The creation of a new European Unified Patent Court and a new patent with unitary effect — expected to come into force next year — is the most important change in the European patent system since the European Patent Convention came into effect in October 1977. It will fundamentally change the international patent litigation landscape, say attorneys with Jones Day.
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A Successful Follow-On Inter Partes Review Petition
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board's recent decision in World Bottling Cap shows that a second petition for inter partes review will be considered by the PTAB when the facts and additional prior art warrant, says Ted Baroody of Carstens & Cahoon LLP.
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Get Ready For EU Unified Patent Court And Unitary Patent
Big change is coming to European patent litigation — as early as January 2017, a new single Unified Patent Court will commence operation. The time for U.S. companies with European patents to start planning and preparing is now, say Ron Lopez and Jennifer Hayes of Nixon Peabody LLP.
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Effective IP Enforcement Is Taking Shape In China
As the Chinese economy grows and becomes more intertwined with other world economies, non-Chinese intellectual property rights holders in the energy sector must understand new enforcement mechanisms under the National Intellectual Property Rights Strategy Action Plan to maintain a competitive IP strategy, say Brad Chin and Kevin Tamm of Bracewell & Giuliani LLP.
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Privacy, Security, Risk: What You Missed At IAPP Conference
A few weeks ago, privacy and security professionals from around the globe gathered for the second joint conference between the International Association of Privacy Professionals and the Cloud Security Alliance Congress. Aravind Swaminathan, Antony Kim and Emily Tabatabai of Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP offer seven key takeaways.
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Approach To '2nd Medical Use' Claims Varies Across EU
A number of recent court decisions have highlighted important gaps and a lack of consensus between key EU member states on the law regarding infringement of second medical use patents. The rulings also demonstrate how differences in the drug dispensing and reimbursement systems between different EU countries can influence the nature of the relief available, say attorneys with Jones Day.