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Intellectual Property UK
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March 26, 2025
EU Court Upholds Polish Biz's Rights To Public Toilet Design
A European Union court has rejected a Polish company's latest bid to quash a rival's protections for a public toilet design, ruling Wednesday that the design was new and consequently valid.
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March 25, 2025
Portuguese Bag Maker Can't Nix Rival 'Cavallini' TM
European officials have ruled that an Italian designer can sell leather goods and clothing using the trademark "about a boy Erika Cavallini" because shoppers would understand it wasn't related to Cavalinho-branded bags and accessories.
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March 25, 2025
Amazon Can't Make Last-Minute Tweaks In Nokia UPC Clash
Amazon has lost its bid to file additional grounds of appeal in a patent dispute with Nokia over video-coding technology after Europe's patent court held that it wouldn't be fair to its Finnish rival.
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March 25, 2025
Roche Voids Biogen's Protein Production Patent At EPO
The European Patent Office has stripped Biogen of its protein production patent amid Roche's protests, ruling in a decision released Tuesday that the tech lacks novelty in light of a key ruling from the agency's top appeals panel.
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March 25, 2025
Ex-Private Equity Exec Denies Data Theft, Alleges Misconduct
A former manager at private equity firm Appian Capital Advisory LLP has denied stealing the company's data and poaching staff and clients, telling a London court the business sued him after pushing him out because he voiced concerns about his boss's misconduct.
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March 25, 2025
Football Shirt Biz Can't Show Red Card To Rival's TM Bid
A retro football shirt retailer has lost its attempt to boot out a competitor's "Scoreline" U.K. trademark application, failing to prove that shoppers could confuse the mark with its own "Score Draw" branding.
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March 24, 2025
Zara Owner Narrows Tanzanian Safari Co.'s Trademark
Zara's parent company has persuaded U.K. trademark officials to trim the scope of a Tanzanian tour company's "Zara Tours" trademarks but failed to convince them that its right to use the mark should be scrapped entirely.
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March 24, 2025
Chinese Co. Avoids Sales Ban In Videoconference Patent Feud
A Belgian technology company has lost its bid to block a Chinese rival from selling videoconference devices ahead of a full patent infringement trial because the request was filed too late.
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March 24, 2025
PepsiCo's Cheetos Brand Can't Block Rival's 'Cheezo' TM
PepsiCo has failed to convince British officials to stop a rival from registering "Cheezo" as a trademark, ruling that shoppers wouldn't think the Cheetos-maker had expanded into the chocolate wafer market.
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March 24, 2025
UPC Reiterates Right To Rule On Infringement Of UK Patents
The Unified Patent Court has doubled down on asserting its jurisdiction over claims involving U.K. patents, citing a recent ruling that courts in the European Union can assess the validity and infringement of patents from outside the bloc.
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March 24, 2025
Honeywell Unit Settles UPC Barcode Scanner Patent Feud
A Honeywell unit has checked out of its barcode scanner patent infringement claim at the Unified Patent Court, bagging its opponent's attempt to quash its intellectual property.
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March 24, 2025
Spacecraft Propulsion Tech Isn't Patentable, Judge Rules
A London judge has refused to order the grant of a patent over a purported way of propelling spacecraft using magnets, upholding an earlier decision that the tech has no industrial application because it breaches the laws of physics.
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March 21, 2025
UK Licensing Group Allows AI Use Of Copyrighted Content
The Copyright Licensing Agency will allow both private and public customers to use its members' material to prompt AI models — though not to train them.
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March 21, 2025
Shein Added To E-Commerce IP Enforcement List
The U.K.'s Intellectual Property Office has updated guidance for rightsholders looking to crack down on copycat products listed on Chinese e-commerce giant Shein.
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March 21, 2025
Bose Headphone Patent Appeal Falls Flat At EPO
Bose Corp. left a European patent office appeal board empty-handed after its attempt to overturn a decision scrapping its headphones patent, with officials echoing the lower board's finding that the design lacked originality.
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March 21, 2025
Huawei Gets 2nd Shot At Patenting Data Migration Tech
European appellate officials have given Huawei a second chance at securing a patent for transferring data between devices, ruling that previous examiners had blindsided the Chinese firm by relying on new evidence in their final decision.
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March 21, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a sub-postmaster sue the Post Office and Fujitsu, Russian insurer Ingosstrakh hit the Financial Times with a defamation claim, and Britvic-owned Robinsons Soft Drinks file a passing off claim against Aldi. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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March 20, 2025
Dutch Bioscience Giant Loses 2 Infant Formula Patents
A London court on Thursday rejected the bulk of Dutch bioscience giant DSM's claim that its rivals infringed its microbial oil patents in the U.K., ruling that two of its patents over the infant formula ingredient are invalid.
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March 20, 2025
Mercedes-Benz's Bid For SUV Silhouette TM Derails In EU
A European court has rejected Mercedes-Benz Group's appeal to overturn a decision scrapping its bid for a trademark showing an off-road vehicle driving uphill, finding that the image was too run-of-the-mill to justify trademark protection.
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March 20, 2025
Thyssenkrupp Wins 2nd Shot To Patent Phoned Elevator Unit
European officials have given Thyssenkrupp's elevator unit a second shot at securing a patent for a method of operating an elevator using a phone, rejecting a challenge from rival Otis Elevator.
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March 20, 2025
PE Firm Says Ex-Exec Stole Data, Poached Staff And Clients
A mining private equity firm has sued a former vice president for £140,000 ($181,000) in a London court, alleging that the executive stole confidential documents, and tried to take the company's business and poach its staff after he left the company.
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March 20, 2025
Zaha Hadid Can't Renew Bid To Exit IP Licensing Deal
Zaha Hadid's architectural firm cannot revive its bid to escape a deal signed before her death in 2016 that gave the practice a license to use her trademarks, as a judge ruled Thursday that it had no prospect of succeeding.
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March 19, 2025
BMW Can't Put Brakes On Toyota's Car Panel Patent In Europe
Toyota has steered clear of BMW's attempt to revoke its European patent over a car panel that helps withstand the impact of a crash, convincing an appeals panel in a ruling released Wednesday that the design is both new and inventive.
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March 19, 2025
Oatly Heads To UK's Top Court With Battle Over 'Post Milk' TM
The U.K.'s top court will weigh in on whether oat drink maker Oatly AB should be barred from registering the trademark "Post Milk Generation" under retained European Union law that restricts certain uses of the word "milk" to dairy products.
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March 19, 2025
Medtronic, Abbott Block Boston Scientific Heart Valve IP
European officials have nixed a Boston Scientific patent for a stent to replace diseased heart valves, ruling that it was unclear how its frame was meant to maintain an elliptical shape when some valve openings have different shapes.
Expert Analysis
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Why Canada's Patent Prosecution Highway Is A Huge Success
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.
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An Update On The Status Of EU Unitary Patents
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.
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The Most Important New Changes To Russian IP Law
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.
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Good News For Originators Of Antibody Products
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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Tips On Disclosing Embodiments In Patent Apps Overseas
Getting too used to permissive rules for claim amendment support before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office can catch up with American patent attorneys as they prosecute and enforce intellectual property rights abroad, says Stephen Keefe, an attorney with Rabin & Berdo PC and former patent examiner at the USPTO.
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How To Protect In-House Legal Privilege Internationally
Many companies regularly communicate with in-house legal advisers all over the globe. Are these communications privileged? By answering five questions, companies and attorneys can perform a high-level, initial assessment of legal privilege protection in a multijurisdictional context, says Martje Verhoeven-de Vries Lentsch of De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek and Haynes and Boone LLP.
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Inter Partes Review's Day Has Come For Pharma IP Cases
Gnosis SpA v. South Alabama Medical Science Foundation and Gnosis SpA v. Merck & Cie, among other cases, represent the tipping point for the inter partes review process, making it the default, go-to option for pharmaceutical-related patent cases, says Joseph Cwik of Husch Blackwell LLP.
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Misconceptions About The European Unitary Patent
Some believe the EU's proposed unitary patent system will make obtaining European protection cheaper, but the cost of obtaining and maintaining patent protection in Europe will be higher under the unitary patent system for most users, say Ilya Kazi and Caroline Warren of Mathys & Squire LLP.
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A Framework For Drafting Global Patent Applications
Putting market strength and patent strength on a sliding scale, and using strength in one area to prop up weakness in the other area, the two criteria can form a framework to help optimize globally oriented patent drafting, says Stephen Keefe of Rabin & Berdo PC.
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What To Expect From Growing AIA Patent Challenges
With over 1,000 inter partes reviews and covered business method reviews already filed and post-grant review-eligible patents beginning to issue, can we expect similar growth of PGR filings? One way to anticipate what to expect is by looking to European Patent Office opposition practice, says John Stephens of Sedgwick LLP.
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Good News From The Patent Prosecution Highway
It is quite clear that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's Patent Prosecution Highway has done a great job extending its pavement internationally. However, most if not all USPTO applicants are primarily concerned with the road conditions on the so-called highway. Based on a review of certain statistics, it appears that things are indeed speeding up on the highway, says Aslan Ettehadieh of Birch Stewart Kolasch & Birch LLP.
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Conjunction Junction: PTAB Tackles 'And/Or' In Claims
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board's recent decision in Ex Parte Gross sets forth its “preferred verbiage” for alternative claim limitations. While the PTAB indicated that “and/or” is acceptable, but disfavored, a patentee should take care when following this guidance, as the courts have read such claims much more narrowly, say Clifford Ulrich and Michael Turner of Kenyon & Kenyon LLP.
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SPCs — We Wait In Vain For Clarity From Europe
In Europe, patent holders can obtain compensation for regulatory delays in bringing a new medicinal product to market via the award of a supplementary protection certificate. The system was intended to be clear and easy to implement, but after more than 20 years, courts and practitioners remain unsure as to how key terms in the legislation are to be interpreted, despite three recent EU Court of Justice judgments, say Matthew Jones and Andrew Sharples of EIP.
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Why Litigants Continue To Use Anti-Suit Injunctions
Recent cases reveal that courts on both sides of the Atlantic are reluctant to use anti-suit injunctions to stop arbitration. However, upon a sufficient showing, courts will be prepared to issue such injunctions to restrain foreign judicial proceedings that unreasonably threaten to undermine an arbitral agreement — even if no arbitration proceeding is under way, say attorneys with Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP.
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What We've Learned From The 1st Year Of 1st-To-File
While the conversion to a first-inventor-to-file patent system is in a transitional stage and will leave many issues of first impression for the courts, the first year of implementation offers lessons on securing an early filing date, the risks associated with racing to the patent office, and documentation of prior inventor activities for challenging rejections and for establishing a defense for potential patent infringement, says Michael Turner of Brooks Kushman PC.