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Intellectual Property UK
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March 04, 2025
Accor Can't Nix Developer's £43M Botched Hotel Project Claim
Multinational hospitality company Accor can't strike out a property developer's £43.7 million ($55.6 million) claim after a London court ruled that the allegation Accor scuppered a hotel project in Scotland by demanding last-minute changes is sufficiently pled.
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March 04, 2025
Creators Need New Forum To Shield IP In AI Era, Gov't Told
The government must set up a new forum to allow creators to enforce their intellectual property rights amid the rise of artificial intelligence, the Trades Union Congress has said.
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March 03, 2025
Investor To Pay £2M For 'Unashamed' Software Copying
An investment firm must pay over £2.1 million ($2.7 million) in damages for "unashamedly misappropriating" a software developer's application designed to help the elderly care industry, a London court ruled Monday.
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March 03, 2025
Packaging Maker's Biz Can't Expand UPC Infringement Claim
Europe's patent court has refused a packaging maker's bid to broaden its infringement action against a rival by covering another country, ruling that it should have filed its request weeks earlier.
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March 03, 2025
Nissan Can't Revive European Patent For EV Power Device
Nissan has failed to convince a European patent authority to overturn a decision nixing its patent for a power transmission device for electric vehicles, after officials sided with German rival ZF.
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March 03, 2025
Thai Brewer Gets 2nd Shot To Block Rival 'Singha' TM
European officials have ruled that Singha-branded Thai beer might be famous enough to prevent a rival from using the image of a mythological Thai lion to sell toilet paper and market advertising services.
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March 03, 2025
EPO Pilots Shift To Electronic Priority Documents
The European Patent Office has begun to trial a shift from paper to electronic priority documents as it moves toward a fully digitalized process for granting patents.
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February 28, 2025
Hague AG Asks Top Court To Reject Puma TM Appeal
An adviser has urged the Netherlands' highest court to refuse Puma's efforts to stop a rival from using the term "nitro" to market running shoes.
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February 28, 2025
Ericsson Rebuked For Denying Lenovo Interim License
A London appeals court held Friday that a "willing licensor" in Ericsson's shoes would have handed Lenovo a short-term license to use its essential cellular tech, condemning the Swedish company's bid to "coerce" its rival into a more favorable deal.
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February 28, 2025
Viacom's Delayed-Broadcast Patent Request Fails At EPO
Viacom has lost its bid to patent a device that delays the airing of a TV show, with European officials ruling that the features allowing for simultaneous broadcasting and recording for later time zones weren't in the original application.
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February 28, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen the billionaire Zakay brothers, founders of Topland Group, become embroiled in a legal dispute with each other, Unilever sue three major perfume companies over alleged illegal price-fixing, and the publisher of Vogue magazine file an intellectual property suit against Cornucopia Events. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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February 28, 2025
Telefónica Suffers Blow In Squabble Over 'E-Plus+' Brand
Communications giant Telefónica has failed to reverse a decision to revoke one of its "E-Plus+" trademarks in the European Union, marking the latest twist in its tussle with a U.S. technology company over the brand name.
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February 27, 2025
Uncertainty Looms As AI Copyright Consultation Closes
The U.K. government is unlikely to back down from its plans to overhaul current intellectual property law to allow companies to scrape copyright material to train artificial intelligence systems, despite consistent calls from creatives to tighten the leash, lawyers say.
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February 27, 2025
Slush Puppie Owner Gets £20M Freezing Order Rescinded
A London judge on Thursday rescinded an injunction Slush Puppie's owner had won freezing over £20 million ($25.2 million) worth of a rival slurpee maker's assets, ruling that the previous judge didn't know all the facts.
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February 27, 2025
Barry Manilow Pushes Dispute Over Royalties To LA Court
A London judge ruled Thursday that claims by British music royalties outfit Hipgnosis over unpaid royalties against singer Barry Manilow must be dealt with by a court in Los Angeles before proceedings in the U.K. can move forward.
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February 27, 2025
Whoop Gets Rival's Sports Bra Patent Revoked In UK
Wearable technology company Whoop convinced a London court on Thursday to revoke a rival's patent over a sports bra that measures the heart rate of the wearer — though the judge held that the tech would otherwise have infringed the patent.
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February 27, 2025
Getty, Stability AI Clash Over Evidence On Cusp Of Trial
The company behind Stable Diffusion criticized Getty's "piecemeal and obscure" claims on Thursday as the two sides prepare for a summer trial, demanding greater clarity because of the importance of the first U.K. case over training a generative AI model on copyrighted material.
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February 26, 2025
Schweppes Wins 2nd Shot At Russian Tea Co.'s TM Challenge
A European court ruled Wednesday that trademark officials must take another look at a Russian tea brand's challenge to the Schweppes "May Tea" trademark, saying the IP appellate board overestimated the risk of confusion.
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February 26, 2025
Makeup Co. Denies Lifting Lash Curler Design
A cosmetics company has fired back at allegations that it lifted a French plastics manufacturer's design to create its "GrandeFANATIC" mascara brushes, arguing that the protections covered technical features that the whole industry needed to use.
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February 26, 2025
Life Magazine TM Owner Trims French Co.'s Bid To Use 'Life'
European officials have partially nixed a French company's trademark over "Life," ruling that shoppers might think it is somehow linked to Life magazine, which is famous for pioneering photography-led stories.
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February 26, 2025
Samsung Fails To Capture 'Photo Assist' TM In Europe
European Union officials have shuttered Samsung's hopes of getting a "Photo Assist" trademark in the bloc, ruling that the phrase does not merit protection as it merely describes the purpose of the photo-editing software.
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February 26, 2025
UK Seeks Input On Modernizing Design IP Protection
The U.K. Intellectual Property Office has asked designers, legal professionals, trade bodies and IP experts to share their views in a survey to help to inform its approach to Britain's design protection system.
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February 25, 2025
Creatives Urge Gov't To Scrap AI Copyright Exemptions
A coalition of U.K. creative industry bodies has urged the Labour government to rethink proposals to introduce exemptions to intellectual property laws to help bolster artificial intelligence development, as a government consultation on copyright and AI draws to a close.
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February 25, 2025
Optis Makes Case For Do-Over In Apple FRAND Ruling
Optis urged an appeals court on Tuesday to upend a decision setting a fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory license for Apple Inc. to use its suite of 4G patents, saying that the trial judge was wrong to substitute his own method for determining the value of the patents.
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February 25, 2025
EU Courts Can Assess Validity Of Patents From Outside Bloc
The European Union's top court held Tuesday that courts in member states may consider the validity of patents granted outside the bloc if a party seeks to void a patent to dodge an infringement claim.
Expert Analysis
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Trademark Ruling Brings Clarity To Product Defect Liability
The recent Court of Justice of the EU ruling in Fennia v. Philips, its first concerning the trademark aspect of producer liability in Article 3(1) of Directive 85/374, brings greater clarity to the question of compensation in the event of a claim for defective products, say Radboud Ribbert and Thomas van Weeren at Greenberg Traurig.
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Appointments Shape EU Unified Patent Court Before Launch
A series of judiciary appointments at the EU Unified Patent Court help put the court on track for its April opening, while also reflecting a patent-friendly enforcement system, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.
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5 Considerations In Preparing For EU's New Patent System
With the upcoming implementation of the unitary patent and Unified Patent Court, Europe gets closer to its long-term goal of one EU patent that can be enforced in one court, and non-EU patent owners and applicants will have strategic decisions to make, say Fabian Koenigbauer at Ice Miller and Thomas Kronberger at Grünecker.
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Reexamining Negative Limitations After Novartis Patent Ruling
The Federal Circuit's decision and denial of rehearing in Novartis v. Accord has created exacting standards that must be met in order for negative limitations in patent claims to satisfy the written description requirement, but whether the dissent is correct that the majority opinion heightened the standard is an arguable point, say Jonathan Fitzgerald and Jaime Choi at Snell & Wilmer.
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UK Courts' 3rd-Party Disclosure Rule Sets Global Precedent
The quiet change about to take place in the English Civil Procedure Rules, enabling U.K. courts to require pre-action disclosure of information from overseas third parties, is uncharted territory and will have profound implications for any organization that handles assets on behalf of a party, says Simon Bushell at Seladore Legal.
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Zara TM Ruling Shows Prefiling Clearance Is Always Advisable
The recent Trade Mark Tribunal decision regarding Zara and House of Zana demonstrates the importance of conducting prefiling clearance investigations, so that where opposition may be anticipated, a strategy can be put in place, says Melanie Harvey at Birketts.
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Dutch Merger May Promote Behavioral Remedies Across EU
A Dutch tribunal's recent clearing of the Sanoma-Iddink deal might further encourage merging parties in the EU to offer — and government agencies to accept — behavioral remedies, which was rarer when more emphasis was put on divestments, says Robert Hardy at Greenberg Traurig.
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How Will UK Address AI Patent Infringement?
As artificial intelligence-related patent litigation activity inevitably approaches, a review of U.K. principles of direct and indirect liability offers insight into how courts may address questions involving cloud-based technology and arguments related to training AI models, say Alexander Korenberg at Kilburn & Strode and Toby Bond at Bird & Bird.
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Law Commission's 'Data Objects' Proposal Is Far-Reaching
The Law Commission’s proposals to recognize data objects as a new category of personal property would bring fundamental changes were they to be implemented, and would have significant ramifications for finance litigation, say attorneys at Norton Rose.
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UK Rulings Give Chinese Courts Wide Powers In IP Disputes
The recent rulings in Nokia v. Oppo and Philips v. Oppo open the door for Chinese courts to adjudicate worldwide rate-setting terms for standard-essential patents, and in so doing present a timely wake-up call as to China's influence, say F. Scott Kieff at George Washington University Law School and Thomas Grant at the University of Cambridge.
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Swatch V. Samsung Offers IP Warning To Platform Operators
The recent U.K. High Court decision of Swatch v. Samsung demonstrates that while platform operators may wish to exercise greater control over the apps distributed on their platforms, this carries with it a corresponding duty to apply due diligence to protect the intellectual property rights of third parties, say Alex Borthwick and William Hillson at Powell Gilbert.
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Opinion
The USPTO Should Give Ukraine Even More Help
The U.S. Patent and Trademark office should take three direct steps to help confer upon Ukraine's patent office the same benefits it previously granted to Russia's Rospatent, in addition to the sanctions the USPTO has already conferred in response to the attack on Ukraine, say David Kappos at Cravath, Teresa Summers at Summers Law Group and Andrew Baluch at Smith Baluch.
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International Law May Protect Foreign Investors In Russia
Investment treaties that allow eligible foreign investors to bring claims for compensation by way of international arbitration may offer a better, or the only, avenue to recover losses for assets that have been seized by Russia, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Amazon TM Ruling Proves Important For Global Websites
The U.K. Court of Appeal recently found that Amazon infringed Lifestyle Equities' trademark, and its analysis of whether there was an intention to target particular customers, provides welcome relief for brand owners and lessons on avoiding infringement for the operators of global websites, say Steven James and Hattie Chessher at Brown Rudnick.
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Sheeran Ruling Raises Burden For Copyright Plaintiffs
In requiring proof of access, rather than proof of the possibility of access, the U.K. High Court’s decision in Ed Sheeran’s recent copyright case will provide some security to those in the music industry, say David Fink and Armound Ghoorchian at Venable.