Intellectual Property UK

  • August 08, 2025

    BAE Unit Challenges Drone Patent In Infringement Case

    A BAE Systems unit has denied infringing a drone-maker's patent by selling heavy lift drones for rapid aid delivery, arguing that its rival's technology didn't deserve to be protected in the first place. 

  • August 08, 2025

    Calvin Klein Slashes Chinese Co.'s 'CKA' UK TM Bid

    Calvin Klein has persuaded U.K. officials to block the majority of a Chinese company's "CKA" trademark application, proving there is a risk of confusion with its famous CK branding.

  • August 08, 2025

    FujiFilm Can't Overturn Case For Chemical Container Patent

    A Siemens unit has convinced European officials that Fujifilm's chemical arm doesn't deserve a patent for a container that holds laboratory chemicals because a previous invention had already revealed a 3D structured opening for ease of use.

  • August 08, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission target a British investor over a $10 million microcap fraud scheme, Merck Sharp & Dohme move against Halozyme Inc. following a recent clash over its patented cancer medicine, and Birmingham City Council sue a school minibus operator years after ending its contract over DBS check failures. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K. 

  • August 07, 2025

    BioNTech's Acquisition Of CureVac Ends COVID Vax Case

    CureVac's case alleging Pfizer and BioNTech infringed patents related to messenger RNA technology is set to be dismissed after BioNTech announced in June that it would be acquiring CureVac, canceling what would have been the first-ever trial over COVID-19 vaccine patents in the U.S.

  • August 07, 2025

    Axel Springer Gets 2nd Shot To Prove Ad Blocker Infringes IP

    Axel Springer has won a second shot at proving that an ad blocker is infringing its copyright by modifying its computer program, after a federal court overturned an earlier ruling that influencing program flow didn't alter underlying software.

  • August 07, 2025

    French Orgs. Can't Get Unitary Protection For Biotelemetry IP

    France's largest research body has failed in its bid to extend protection for a small ingestible device that collects physiological data because the Unified Patent Court found that the three owners had missed the deadline to fix a key issue with its application.

  • August 07, 2025

    Top EU Court To Weigh File-Sharing Copyright Question

    A German court said in a ruling released Thursday that it has asked the European Union's top judicial body to clarify whether sharing a recording through a hyperlink counts as making it publicly available under the bloc's copyright laws.

  • August 07, 2025

    Cosmetics Co. Says Rival Copied LED Face Mask Style

    A British cosmetics company has told a London court that a French competitor infringed its intellectual property rights in the style of a popular LED light-therapy mask.

  • August 07, 2025

    German Car Parts Biz Says UK Rival Copied Brake Calipers

    A German car parts supplier has accused a British competitor of infringing its patents for brake calipers, telling a London court that its opponent has sold products that are "substantial copies" of its own goods.

  • August 06, 2025

    Crocs Beats Rival's Bid To Nix Design Through Amazon Sales

    Crocs Inc. has successfully defended itself against a German shoe company's bid to nix one of its footwear designs as a European intellectual property appeals board found that older designs sold on Amazon depicted a sufficiently different clog-style shoe.

  • August 06, 2025

    EU's Anti-Suit Win A Good Omen For China FRAND Complaint

    The World Trade Organization's recent decision to side with the European Union in a battle over Chinese standard essential patents hamstrings a tactic from licensees to bar patent owners from suing in other jurisdictions but bodes well for the bloc's parallel challenge to Beijing's unilateral rate-setting decisions.

  • August 06, 2025

    Infineon Wins Semiconductor IP Clash Against Chinese Rival

    Chipmaker Infineon has won its semiconductor patent fight with a Chinese competitor, persuading a German court to ban its rival's sales of certain products that infringe its patent.

  • August 06, 2025

    Sanofi Pauses Heart Disease Drug Patent Dispute With Amgen

    Sanofi and Regeneron persuaded the Unified Patent Court on Wednesday to pause their clash with Amgen over a patent for a heart disease drug while awaiting the outcome of an appeal in a parallel case.

  • August 06, 2025

    Freshfields-Led Sanofi Wraps Up $470M Vigil Buy

    Sanofi said Wednesday that it has completed the approximately $470 million acquisition of U.S. biotechnology company Vigil Neuroscience, which specializes in neurodegenerative diseases, strengthening the French pharma titan's early-stage medicine pipeline in neurology.

  • August 06, 2025

    IP Crime Unit Seizes Fake Football Merch Worth Over £5M

    A police unit that tackles intellectual property crime has said it has collared almost 68,000 counterfeit football kits since the start of 2025, preventing sales that would have been worth £5.1 million ($6.8 million) if the items were genuine.

  • August 05, 2025

    German Plastics Maker Wins IP Fight Against Chinese Rival

    A German manufacturer of high-performance plastics won a default judgment Tuesday against a Chinese rival after making the "convincing submission" the company was infringing a patent for a cable protection system in Europe's patent court.

  • August 05, 2025

    De La Rue Wins Patent For Secure Banknotes On Appeal

    Currency printer De La Rue has convinced European officials that its patent covering a special material to make banknotes and passports counterfeit-proof deserved protection despite a rival's objections. 

  • August 05, 2025

    Deutsche Telekom Loses Appeal For Network Tech Patent

    A European appeals panel has refused Deutsche Telekom's latest attempt to secure a patent for its telecommunications network technology, ruling that its application does not set out the invention in sufficient detail.

  • August 05, 2025

    Huawei Voids Samsung's UK TM For 'Gauss' AI Model

    Huawei has persuaded U.K. officials to invalidate Samsung's trademark for its "Gauss" artificial intelligence tool, proving that consumers could confuse the mark with its earlier "GaussDB" branding.

  • August 05, 2025

    MedTech Can't Sub Revised Patent Into UPC Fight With Philips

    The Unified Patent Court has told a U.S. neurodiagnostics company that it does not need to update its infringement claim against Philips to reflect a recently amended version of its patent.

  • August 04, 2025

    Roofing Co. Denies Infringing German Rival's Drainage Patent

    A British roofing company has denied infringing a German rival's patent for a rainwater drainage system, arguing the intellectual property protections should be nixed because engineers at the time would have thought it was obvious to build.

  • August 04, 2025

    AI Providers Must Start Sharing Training Sets Under EU Law

    The European Union has ushered in fresh copyright and transparency laws for general purpose artificial intelligence models, marking the latest in the gradual rollout of the bloc's landmark AI legislation.

  • August 04, 2025

    P&G Beats Henkel's Bid To Nix Laundry Detergent IP 

    Procter & Gamble has convinced an appellate board to uphold its rights over a patent covering a laundry detergent that disperses better on fabrics, despite Henkel's argument that the use of a brightening ingredient was obvious. 

  • August 04, 2025

    Builder Sues To Void License Deal For TM It Owned All Along

    A homebuilder has sued to recover the fees it paid out to use a trademark for "Miller Metcalfe," arguing that it had actually owned the rights to the mark for years after buying it from the owner. 

Expert Analysis

  • Failure To Launch: The Patent Thicket Delay Of US Biosimilars

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    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.

  • Huawei Case Might Mean UK Forum Sets Global FRAND Rates

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    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.

  • Must Inventors Be Humans? An Active Debate Over AI Patents

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    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.

  • Henry Schein Case Illuminates Maze Of Arbitrability Questions

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    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.

  • Using Global Dossier To Simplify USPTO Disclosure Duty

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    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.

  • The Unique Challenges Of Owning International Cannabis IP

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    Due to the cost of prosecuting patents and the uncertainty in obtaining and enforcing cannabis patents in foreign jurisdictions, building a global cannabis patent portfolio presents complex strategic questions, says Jayashree Mitra of Zuber Lawler.

  • IP Protection Still Elusive For Data Compilations In US And EU

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    As businesses continue to increase investment into artificial intelligence systems, questions arise as to whether they can own or legally protect data compiled by those systems. Currently, in the U.S. and EU, obtaining copyright protection for databases is difficult and trade secret protection requires policies and procedures to establish rights, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Perspectives

    Artisanal Miners' Roadblocks To Justice: Is A Path Clearing?

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    Efforts to give small-scale gold miners, who face displacement, pollution and violence at sites around the world, access to fair and functioning justice systems have met with apathy from politicians and fierce resistance from powerful business lobbies, but there are signs that this may be changing, says Mark Pieth, president of the Basel Institute on Governance.

  • How PTAB Is Applying New Patent Eligibility Guidance

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    Since the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office released its revised patent eligibility guidance in January, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board has been reversing Section 101 rejections at a higher rate, say Nick Anderson and Braden Katterheinrich of Faegre Baker Daniels.

  • Keys To Successful AI Patents In The US And Europe

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    Unsurprisingly, the World Intellectual Property Organization recently reported that patent filings for artificial intelligence inventions are increasing rapidly. Stakeholders should be mindful of maintaining quality during this filing surge, says Drew Schulte of Haley Guiliano LLP.

  • 9 Ways To Prepare Your IP Rights For Brexit

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    Those with a European intellectual property portfolio should be considering how Brexit — scheduled for March 29 — will affect EU trademarks and registered community designs, says Paula Jill Krasny of Levenfeld Pearlstein LLC.

  • 'Biosimilar V. Biosimilar' Patent Case May Be First Of Many

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    ​While the idea of patent disputes between makers of follow-on drugs is nothing new​, the complaint recently filed by Coherus against Amgen in Delaware federal court is unique in that it pits one biosimilar developer against another, say attorneys with Goodwin Procter LLP.

  • UK Patent Law: Hot Topics Of 2018 And What's Ahead

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    English courts have been active in the past year, grappling with patent topics like plausibility and equivalents, and 2019 promises to be another exciting year as English patent lawyers await developments on obviousness, insufficiency and employee inventor compensation, says Jin Ooi of Kirkland & Ellis LLP.

  • Coordinating Patent Strategies Across PTAB And EPO

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    The positions, arguments and prior art raised in U.S. post-grant proceedings at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board may influence European Patent Office oppositions involving counterpart cases. Understanding the procedural similarities and differences between the two jurisdictions is key, says Drew Schulte of Haley Guiliano LLP.

  • New EU Patent Guidelines May Affect Companies' AI Strategy

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    As compared to the European Patent Office’s guidelines for artificial intelligence and machine learning — which take effect on Thursday — the U.S. eligibility framework may prove to be more favorable to innovators, say Jennifer Maisel and Eric Blatt of Rothwell Figg Ernst & Manbeck PC​​​​​​​.

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