Intellectual Property UK

  • November 24, 2025

    L'Oréal, Henkel Fail To Block Rival's Hair Dye Kit Patent

    Cosmetics giants L'Oréal and Henkel have failed to overturn a patent covering a rival's hair bleaching and coloring kit, after European patent officials ruled the invention was not an obvious development on existing methods.

  • November 21, 2025

    Top Court Poised To Set UK Path On FRAND With Apple Case

    The U.K. top court's promise to outline the "correct" approach to global patent licensing spats will bring much needed clarity following five years of disparate rulings on just what counts as a fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory, or FRAND, rate for standard essential patents, lawyers say.

  • November 21, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Clyde & Co. face a claim from Yorkshire firm GWB Harthills, a property developer previously investigated over suspected bribery and corruption sue the general counsel and solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs, and sportswear giant Gymshark bring an intellectual property claim against its co-founder's rival company, AYBL. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • November 21, 2025

    Thaler Loses Appeal In AI-Patent Inventor Case

    A London judge once again refused to let a computer scientist obtain inventor credits for artificial intelligence-made technology on Friday, dismissing claims that his ownership of an AI-model should give him rights over a divisional patent. 

  • November 21, 2025

    EasyGroup Can't Stop Van Rental Biz's Use Of 'Easihire'

    EasyGroup lost its trademark infringement case against van rental firm Easihire, after a judge held Friday that the low-cost giant did not show genuine use of the mark for car hiring services.

  • November 21, 2025

    Ex-Playtech Staffer Wins Bid To Toss Trade Secrets Case

    A former Playtech employee and the Latvian company he now works for succeeded in throwing out the gambling company's accusations of misuse of trade secrets and copyright infringement Friday, with the Court of Appeal saying the case does not belong in the English courts.

  • November 21, 2025

    Motorcycle Biz Can't Stop 2nd Look In Luxury Watch TM Battle

    Swiss watchmaker Longines' challenge to a motorcycle brand's trademark application for a badge is set for another round of review after an EU court refused to hand the German vehicle maker a full win. 

  • November 20, 2025

    Holographer Claims Rights Over Queen Elizabeth II Portraits

    A British holographer has sued a contemporary artist, accusing him of breaching his moral rights over two holographic portraits of the late Queen Elizabeth by falsely claiming sole ownership over the works.

  • November 20, 2025

    Luggage Co. Heinrich Sieber Can't Nix Rival Tote Bag Design

    A European court has rejected a luggage wholesaler's bid to nix an individual's decade-old design for a tote bag, ruling that the company was wrongly claiming that the registration actually protected two products instead of one. 

  • 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. 

  • 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. 

  • 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.

  • 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. 

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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." 

  • 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.

  • 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. 

  • 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.  

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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. 

Expert Analysis

  • 5 Ways University Students, Faculty Risk Forfeiting IP Rights

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    Although academic institutions recognize the value of translating research into patents, licenses and commercial products, there remains a strong scholastic motivation for faculty and students to publish their research findings in journals and at academic conferences to advance their reputation and career. As a result, intellectual property is often an afterthought, say attorneys with Meunier Carlin & Curfman LLC.

  • EPO Set To Clarify Priority And Divisional Application Problem

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    In a recent decision, one European Patent Office Board of Appeal finally decided that the question of the possibility of poisonous priority and divisional applications should be settled once and for all. The Enlarged Board of Appeal may simply do away with poisonous applications or possibly formulate detailed criteria for the assessment of partial priority, say attorneys with CH KILGER Anwaltspartnerschaft mbB.

  • EU High Court Sets Important SEP Precedent

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    The EU high court's recent ruling in Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. v. ZTE Corp. provided a significant amount of guidance on standard-essential patents, injunctions and abuse of dominance but addresses only some of the legal questions that SEP holders and alleged infringers face in these situations, and even the questions addressed are in part expressed in very broad terms inviting different interpretations, say Axel Gutermuth and Christopher Stothers of Arnold & Porter LLP.

  • Procuring Personalized Medicine Patents In US Vs. Europe

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    In the United States, many patent claims related to personalized medicine are being challenged based on patentable subject matter, whereas in Europe, most claims are questioned based on novelty and inventive step, says Gabriela Coman of Dickstein Shapiro LLP.

  • Rival Global Views On Patent Disclosures

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    When it comes to patent disclosure requirements, terminology varies widely across the world. But the major national patent players seem to break down into two chief opposing views on just how much support patent claims and amendments require in originally filed applications, says Stephen Keefe of Rabin & Berdo PC.

  • Use Strategic Continuation Practice To Monetize IP

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    Continuation patent applications provide a useful mechanism to raise the overall quality of patents within a given portfolio, says Michael Moore, intellectual property and deputy general counsel at Rambus Inc.

  • Using Patents To Curtail Climate Change: A Proposal

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    Last fall, 74 countries and more than 1,000 businesses signed a declaration calling on all nations to price carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, yet the prospects of meaningful government action are dim. We see a possible solution in our patent system — impose a flexible license fee tied to greenhouse gas emissions, say attorneys with Klarquist Sparkman LLP, Green Patent Law, Robins Kaplan LLP, Burns & Levinson LLP and Susman Godfrey LLP.

  • 22 Ways Congress Can Save Section 101

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    As delightful as the post-Alice patent-invalidating trend may be to patent defendants, it has created enormous consequences for companies that rely on patent protection to protect crucial technology assets, including the loss of business contracts, disrupted partnerships and increased difficulty in obtaining venture funding. It is time for Congress to act, says Robert Sachs of Fenwick & West LLP.

  • Top 5 IPR Discovery Tips For Patent Owners

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    Recent Patent Trial and Appeal Board orders shed some light on how parties can use the inter partes review discovery periods to their best advantage, says Carly Levin of Venable LLP.

  • What To Know About Extending Patent Term In Southeast Asia

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    For pharmaceutical products, the most general form of extended patent protection available in Southeast Asia is currently data exclusivity, says James Kinnaird of Marks & Clerk.

  • New Guidelines Suggest A Friendlier European Patent Office

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    While many of the changes in the latest European Patent Office guidelines reflect the current practice of the EPO’s boards of appeal, they also suggest that the first-instance departments of the EPO may be moving toward a less rigid and formalistic approach to some issues, say Philip Cupitt and Hazel Ford of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP.

  • Why Canada's Patent Prosecution Highway Is A Huge Success

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    Canada's Patent Prosecution Highway program has positioned the country as a highly cost-effective jurisdiction in which to procure patent protection with exceptional speed and efficacy, says Elliott Simcoe of Smart & Biggar.

  • An Update On The Status Of EU Unitary Patents

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    There no longer appears to be much doubt that the EU Unified Patent Court Agreement will receive the minimum required ratification, however the schedule is stretching out. While implementation was initially expected in 2015, the Unified Patent Court and unitary patent now appear unlikely to be available before spring 2016, say Frank Peterreins and John Pegram of Fish & Richardson PC.

  • The Most Important New Changes To Russian IP Law

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    New amendments bring Russian intellectual property law more into line with practices in other jurisdictions and will have a positive effect on the protection and enforcement of IP rights in Russia, says Irina Stepanova of Baker Botts LLP.

  • Good News For Originators Of Antibody Products

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    In Eli Lilly and Company v. Human Genome Sciences Inc., the English Patents Court recently gave its interpretation of the EU Court of Justice’s most recent decision on supplementary protection certificates. In doing so, the court confirmed that SPCs are available based on patents with claims that define the product in functional terms only, say Andrew Sharples and Emma Muncey of EIP.

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