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Intellectual Property UK
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May 02, 2025
BAT Wins Major Battle With Heated Tobacco Patent Ruling
A subsidiary of British American Tobacco PLC has persuaded a European appeals panel to reject most of a challenge to its heated tobacco patent from Imperial Brands PLC, leaving its rival's hopes of voiding the patent hanging by a thread.
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May 02, 2025
Drone Maker Disputes University's Claim To Autopilot Tech
A cargo drone manufacturer has told a London court that an academic project at the University of Southampton did not form the basis of its patented autopilot technology, disputing the university's claim to ownership of the innovation.
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May 02, 2025
Dolby Loses Patent Over Audio Boosting System
A European appeals panel has stripped Dolby of its patent over an audio processing device that helps to improve sound quality, ruling in a decision published Friday that the blueprint does not lay out the invention clearly enough.
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May 01, 2025
Getty Loses Most Late Case Additions As AI Trial Looms
A London judge refused Thursday to let Getty Images go ahead with the bulk of its late-stage additions to its case against the company behind Stability AI, ruling that there was not enough time to address fresh claims about the disclosure of new datasets so close to trial.
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May 01, 2025
Shareholders Claim Biogen Skipped $50M Drug Payment
Former shareholders of a U.K.-based drug company accused Biogen of failing to make a $50 million payment under a deal to acquire the company and its nerve pain medication, on the first day of trial on Thursday.
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May 01, 2025
Marine Charity Makes Jolly Roger TM Walk The Plank
A marine conservation charity has successfully slashed a trademark application bearing a skull atop a trident, with trademark officials ruling that the likeness between their marks means it can be registered only for some categories such as towels, insurance and legal services.
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May 01, 2025
UEFA Supplier Gets Rival's Offside Detection Patent Voided
A company that supplies technology to the UEFA has persuaded the Unified Patent Court to revoke a rival's patent over a way of helping referees spot offsides in football matches, arguing that the tool isn't inventive.
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May 01, 2025
Apple Hit With $502M SEP License Rate In Optis Appeal
An appeals court hiked on Thursday the amount Apple must pay for a license to equip its iPhones with Optis' essential 4G patents from $56 million to $502 million, plus interest, saying the technology giant had strategically held out to try to secure a lower rate.
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April 30, 2025
Lufthansa Gets $5M Interest Bump Over Patent Infringement
A London judge on Wednesday ordered a Panasonic unit and two aircraft hardware manufacturers to pay Lufthansa over $5 million in interest for selling in-flight charging systems that infringed its patented technology.
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April 30, 2025
'Vagisan' Too Close To 'Vagisil' For EU Pharma TM, Court Says
A German pharmaceutical company has failed to revive its efforts to get a trademark for "Vagisan" in the European Union because of its likeness to rival feminine health product "Vagisil."
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April 30, 2025
Stability AI Says Getty's Late-Stage Filings 'Intolerable'
The company behind generative artificial intelligence model Stable Diffusion asked a London judge Wednesday to throw out what it says is Getty Images' fresh pleadings that it infringed its intellectual property during development and training, saying the document inflicts on the defendant a copious workload as the clock ticks down to the summer trial.
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April 30, 2025
Philip Morris Beats Attack By BAT Unit On E-Cigarette Patent
European appellate officials have granted Philip Morris a patent over special cartridges used in electronic cigarettes, ruling that a British American Tobacco unit couldn't prove that the technology was obvious in the latest dispute between the two giant tobacco rivals.
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April 30, 2025
Calvin Klein Blocks Look-Alike 'CK' Eyewear Trademark
Calvin Klein has blocked a Chinese eyewear company's "CK" trademark, with European officials concluding that the brand's lettering mark was so similar in style to Calvin Klein's trademark that consumers could mistake it for a variation.
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April 29, 2025
AstraZeneca Loses IP Shield For Diabetes Drug
AstraZeneca has failed to convince a London judge to uphold supplementary patent protections for its billion-dollar diabetes drug dapagliflozin, in a ruling that helps clear a path for generic competition in England and Wales.
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April 29, 2025
Polo Club Brand Owner Beats 2nd EU TM Challenge
The owner of the Beverly Hills Polo Club brand has rebuffed a bid to revoke its trademark protections for its brand name, after appellate officials dismissed arguments that a lower panel mischaracterized the trademark as a "geographical designation."
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April 29, 2025
L'Oréal Fends Off Bulgarian Cosmetics Co.'s Ó Trademark
French cosmetics giant L'Oréal successfully challenged a Bulgarian cosmetics retailer's figurative trademark containing the letter Ó, after convincing European officials that the public may confuse the mark with its Ô figurative mark used for its Ô de Lancôme perfume.
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April 29, 2025
US Biotech Firm To Quit London Listing After IP Deal
Biotechnology company LungLife said Tuesday that it has convened a shareholder meeting to approve plans to delist from the Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange after it reached a deal to sell its intellectual property assets.
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April 29, 2025
'Bezos' TM Voided For Bad-Faith Link To Amazon Founder
A European Union panel has revoked a "Bezos" trademark belonging to the co-founder of a logistics company, ruling that he acted in bad faith by registering a mark bearing the name of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.
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April 29, 2025
Nissan Inks 5G Vehicle Cellular Patent License With Avanci
Nissan and Avanci have reached a deal that gives the Japanese carmaker the license to use a pool of essential cellular patents in its 5G-connected vehicles, the pool operator has announced.
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April 29, 2025
Ex-Russells Partner Denies Role In Alleged Share Sale Plot
Russells Solicitors and a former partner have denied being part of an alleged plot to hide plans for a $40 million takeover of a celebrity intellectual property licensing company to get a former director to sell his shares cheaply.
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April 28, 2025
Swiss Perfume Trader Blocks 'Scentologia' Perfume TM
A Switzerland-based perfume trader has persuaded the U.K. Intellectual Property Office to block the owner of a perfume brand from registering a trademark for "Scentologia," saying it clashes with the Swiss company's "Scentology" brand.
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April 28, 2025
Welsh Rugby Union Can Try Again For 'Welsh Rugby' TM
The governing body of rugby in Wales has won another shot at getting a full set of protections over the "Welsh Rugby" brand, convincing European Union officials that an earlier decision trimming its trademark application was flawed.
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April 28, 2025
Honda Latest Carmaker To Ink 5G License With Avanci
Automotive manufacturer Honda has struck a deal with Avanci to use one of its pools of essential patents linked to 5G connected vehicles, joining the array of other automakers in the U.S. license operator's 5G program.
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April 28, 2025
Boeing Wins 2nd Shot At Securing UV Disinfectant Patent
The Boeing Co. has revived its hopes of getting a patent over a disinfectant that uses ultraviolet light after it disproved an earlier ruling that the blueprint lacks sufficient detail, a European appeals panel has said.
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April 28, 2025
Sullivan & Cromwell-Led Merck To Buy SpringWorks For $3.9B
Merck KGaA said Monday it has agreed to acquire U.S. biotech company SpringWorks Therapeutics for $3.9 billion, as the German science and technology group aims to grow its cancer drug business and its global presence.
Expert Analysis
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Examining EPO's Strict Approach To AI Patent Disclosure
Because a recent decision by the European Patent Office Boards of Appeal takes a potentially problematic strict approach to disclosure requirements for machine learning-related patent applications, U.S. applicants filing in the EU should disclose several specific data training sets, says Ronny Amirsehhi at Clifford Chance.
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ITC Dispute May Lead To PTAB Litigation Strategy Shifts
A pending motion to stay the dispute between AutoStore and Ocado at the U.S. International Trade Commission highlights competing timelines of the ITC and Patent Trial and Appeal Board, and has the potential to reshape the typical forum selection strategies for patentees and defense tactics for challengers, say attorneys at Reichman Jorgensen.
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Opinion
US Courts Should Adjudicate FRAND Rates On A Global Basis
Following the U.K. Supreme Court's recent Unwired Planet v. Huawei decision, U.S. courts should analyze compliance with contracts on fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms by assessing them on a worldwide basis, because global licenses are the only technically and financially sound way to license standard-essential patents, say attorneys at McKool Smith.
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UK Top Court Ruling May Be Problematic For Global SEP Suits
There are several reasons to question the wisdom of the U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling that English judges have the power to set extraterritorial licensing royalty rates for standard-essential patents, including that it encourages forum shopping, says Thomas Cotter at the University of Minnesota Law School.
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UK Ruling Shows Global SEP Enforcement Dilemma
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling that U.K. judges have the power to set extraterritorial licensing royalty rates for standard-essential patents highlights a problem with global patent enforcement coordination and efficiency that could potentially be solved through the Patent Cooperation Treaty, says Roya Ghafele at Oxfirst.
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Time To Reassess Your Patent Cooperation Treaty Strategy
In light of the trends outlined in the World Intellectual Property Organization's recent annual Patent Cooperation Treaty review, applicants should make decisions on which international search authority to use based on immediate cost, total cost and quality, says Karam Saab at Kilpatrick.
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German FRAND Decision May Shape Global SEP Landscape
The German high court's recent decision that patent owner Sisvel didn't breach its fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory patent licensing obligations by refusing to grant Haier a license represents a shift in the standard-essential patent landscape in favor of SEP holders' enforcement freedom, say Erik Puknys and Michelle Rice at Finnegan.
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Sustainable Food Progress May Close Global Regulatory Gap
As the need for sustainable food production grows, the European sector will likely align with less stringent U.S. regulatory standards, which will further enable U.S. companies to expand globally and lead to more sophisticated intellectual property strategies in all regions, say Jane Hollywood and Fiona Carter at CMS Legal.
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Cos. Should Assess IP, Contractual Protections For Their AI
Companies should understand the three types of intellectual property protection for safeguarding proprietary artificial intelligence — which is crucial to fighting the pandemic — as well as tools for creating protections when statutory means fall short, say Lori Bennett at Aetion and attorneys at Mayer Brown.
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Tips For Accelerating Patent Prosecution In China
In light of recent Chinese patent statistics showing at least eight to 10 months to first office action and an average of 22.7 months to final disposition from the date of filing, there are several strategies applicants may explore to speed through examination, say Aaron Wininger at Schwegman Lundberg and Lei Tan at Pujing Chemical.
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Use Of AI To Treat COVID-19 Shows Novel Inventorship Issues
As technology and medical companies collaborate to deploy artificial intelligence to combat COVID-19, questions arise about how best to protect AI innovations as well as who should get credit as an inventor, say attorneys at Cadwalader.
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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.