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Intellectual Property UK
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June 04, 2025
Pharma Biz Denies Infringing Rival's Blood Pressure Patent
Roma Pharmaceuticals has fought back against claims that it infringed SyriMed's blood pressure treatment patent, claiming that its rival should not have received protections because the drug was not new.
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June 04, 2025
Sky Switches Off Chinese Audio Biz's 'Snowsky' EU TM Hopes
Sky has persuaded European Union officials to reject a Chinese audio company's "Snowsky" trademark application, proving that the logo might strike the same chord with consumers as its existing "Sky" brand.
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June 04, 2025
EU Copyright Rules Not Built For AI Training, Lawmakers Told
The European Union's existing copyright exceptions for data mining should not extend to the development of artificial intelligence models, experts argued on Wednesday in the bloc's Parliament.
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June 04, 2025
Fujifilm Can't Give Kodak The Hurry-Up After UPC Win
The Unified Patent Court has denied an attempt by Fujifilm to force Kodak to disclose the extent to which it infringed a lithographic printing patent, ruling that there is no fixed time period for Kodak to come clean.
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June 03, 2025
Pac-Man Maker Loses Real-World Game Patent
British officials have ruled the company behind the Pac-Man and Elden Ring computer games cannot patent a method that gathers players at real-life locations because the application in question merely makes use of "computer programs running on standard hardware."
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June 03, 2025
Novartis Seeks To Block Rival's Generic Blood Pressure Drug
Novartis has asked a London court to halt a competitor's plans to sell a generic version of its blood pressure medication, arguing that a replica drug will infringe its extended patent protections over the treatment.
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June 03, 2025
UPC Stands Firm On Jurisdiction Over Pre-2023 Events
An appeals panel at the Unified Patent Court has denied a claim from a printing company that it cannot rule over disputes dating from before it opened its doors in June 2023, declining to ask the EU's top court to consider the matter.
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June 03, 2025
Italian Bike Gear Biz Partially Freezes UPC Case Against Rival
An Italian biking clothing company has put on hold one of its patents in a Unified Patent Court infringement claim against a rival, as a parallel spat at the European Patent Office means the text might change.
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June 03, 2025
AI Software Biz Sundae Bar Launches London Float
Sundae Bar PLC, an artificial intelligence software business, began trading on Tuesday on the London Stock Exchange after it raised £2 million ($2.7 million) from the sale of 25 million shares to investors.
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June 02, 2025
Peers Go To Bat Again Over AI Copyright Concerns
Peers voted once more on Monday to introduce an amendment requiring artificial intelligence companies to be transparent about the copyrighted works they are training data on, in the third round of pingpong over the issue.
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June 02, 2025
Belkin Can't Dodge Fine For Delayed Info In Philips UPC Feud
The Unified Patent Court has rebuffed an attempt by Belkin, an electronics company, to avoid a fine for delaying disclosure of how extensively it infringed a Philips patent, upholding the penalty even though the company has now provided the information.
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June 02, 2025
Italy Fashion NGO Bags Partial Win In 'Fashion Week' TM Bid
An Italian fashion association cannot get a full-fledged trademark for its yearly "Milano Fashion Week," after European officials found that it was nothing more than a literal description of the event for most of the categories the group sought to cover.
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June 02, 2025
NYC Cookie Chain Can't Bake Up 'Levain' TM In EU
New York bakery chain Levain has lost its quest for a trademark over its name in the European Union, failing to convince officials that the word is distinctive enough to identify its hefty cookies.
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June 02, 2025
Ginmaker Denies Imitating Winery Nyetimber's Label Design
A Devon gin distillery has told a court that it has not copied the "product of England" labeling of Nyetimber, arguing it did not perceive the sparkling winemaker as a rival — although it admitted to some stylistic similarities in their brands.
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June 02, 2025
EUIPO Expands Mediation Service To All Trademark Disputes
Parties involved in all levels of European Union trademark proceedings can now ask to solve their dispute through mediation, the bloc's intellectual property agency said Monday.
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May 30, 2025
Valve Scrapes Win In 'Source' TM Fight In UK
Gaming giant Valve Corp., the company behind the game-making software Source Engine, has convinced the U.K.'s Intellectual Property Office to trim trademark protections for "database engine," and "software" from a trademark application for the name "Source."
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May 30, 2025
UK's Status Quo On Exhaustion Regime Favors Trade Over IP
The government ultimately opted not to change the country's existing regime for exhaustion of intellectual property rights despite toying with reforms after Brexit, a move lawyers say missed out on creating a more IP-friendly alternative that would limit parallel imports from Europe.
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May 30, 2025
Bodum Hits Back At Shein In Coffee Press Copyright Clash
A Bodum unit has doubled down on its claim that Shein infringed the intellectual property behind its French press and drinking glass designs, telling a London court that it holds copyright for both products.
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May 30, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Entain face yet more investor claims in the fallout from its bribery probe, UEFA face class action from Liverpool fans over chaos at the 2022 World Cup, and a venture capitalist sue journalists for misuse of his private information over a forged police report. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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May 30, 2025
Dutch Hose Co. Can't Block Supplier From Selling To Rivals
A Dutch court has rejected all claims brought by firefighting equipment company Hytrans against one of its former suppliers, concluding that there was no breach of patent or exclusivity agreements when it sold similar hose and pump systems in the Netherlands.
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May 30, 2025
Royal Institute Of British Architects Can't Block 'RIBA' TM Bid
A Swedish real estate firm has fought off the Royal Institute of British Architects' attempt to block its "RIBA" trademark application in the European Union.
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May 29, 2025
Cochlear Implant Rivals Call Truce Ahead Of UPC Ruling
Two cochlear implant heavyweights have quietly settled their global patent dispute, with both parties agreeing to dismiss a U.S. appeal on Thursday, bringing an abrupt end to the transatlantic clash.
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May 29, 2025
Disney Can't Stop Brazil Court Injunction In IP Row, For Now
A California federal judge has denied The Walt Disney Co.'s request to block a Brazilian court from taking injunctive action against it in a patent dispute with wireless technology developer InterDigital Inc., saying the entertainment giant has not shown it's likely the Brazilian court will issue a preliminary injunction barring the use of certain video codec technology.
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May 29, 2025
Tech Founder Accused Of Disparaging Company To Clients
An anti-piracy technology business that supplies Sky and the Premier League has sued one of its founders at a London court over allegations that he made disparaging comments about the business to clients and misused its confidential information.
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May 29, 2025
LG Electronics Joins Qi Wireless Charging Patent Pool
Patent pool administrator Via Licensing Alliance has added Korean electronics giant LG Electronics Inc. to its Qi wireless charging patent pool as both licensor and licensee in a move that boosts its share of standard-essential patents in the fast-growing sector.
Expert Analysis
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Series
In A 'Barbie' World: Boosting IP Value With Publicity Machines
Mattel's history of intellectual property monitoring, including its recent challenge against Burberry over the "BRBY" trademark ahead of the "Barbie" film, shows how IP enforcement strategies can be used as publicity to increase brand value and inform potential collaborations, says Carly Duckett at Shepherd and Wedderburn.
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UPC Revocation Actions Offer An Attractive Patent Strategy
As the Unified Patent Court gains momentum after an initial period of nervousness around the recently launched forum, more businesses may be starting to realize the value of running revocation actions as an alternative route to knocking out patents across Europe, say Oliver Laing and Georgia Carr at Potter Clarkson.
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5 Takeaways For Litigants From Early EU Patent Court Ruling
One of the first Unified Patent Court ex parte preliminary injunctions was recently granted in myStromer v. Revolt Zycling, demonstrating the court's ability to decide cases extremely quickly, but parties should be careful in phrasing their motions and sufficiently substantiating them to achieve the desired result, says Antje Brambrink at Finnegan.
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Copyright Cheat Sheet: Finding Substantially Similar Songs
Using the recent copyright infringement case against Ed Sheeran over his hit song "Thinking Out Loud" as a case study, forensic musicologist Ethan Lustig provides an overview for attorneys of which musical elements do and do not, when altered, create the sense of a new or distinct composition — a determination increasingly sought from experts in court.
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Barbie Deals Should Remind Brands Of IP Licensing Benefits
Mattel Inc.'s recent licensing of the Barbie trademark — one of the biggest licensing campaigns of recent history — illustrates that, as long as risks are managed properly, intellectual property licensing can form part of the overall business strategy and benefit both parties, say Maria Peyman and Anousha Vasantha at Birketts.
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Lessons On Cricket Patent History And IP Protection At UPC
On the heels of the creation of the Unified Patent Court in Europe, Susan Bradley at Marks & Clerk looks at how its development is interwoven with the history of cricket, and why inventors in that field have always taken advantage of the latest developments in intellectual property protection.
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Factors To Consider In Protecting Software With Trade Secrets
With trade secrets protecting subject matter that would not otherwise be eligible for a patent now a mainstay of many multinationals’ intellectual property strategies, software developers have a number of considerations in deciding whether this is a viable alternative to protect their invention, says Dave Clark at Potter Clarkson.
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A Look At US Injunctive Relief Trends Amid UPC Chatter
While much remains to be seen regarding how the new EU Unified Patent Court will treat injunctive relief in practice, recent data shows that the U.S. framework may be turning in favor of injunction, despite a perception that it can be nearly impossible to obtain in the U.S., say Nirav Desai, Patrick Murray and Roberta Lam at Sterne Kessler.
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Navigating Europe's New Game-Changing Unified Patent Court
Europe's recently opened Unified Patent Court has ushered in a new era in patent law focused on the power of provisional relief, and adapting to both broad protections and compressed timelines is essential for plaintiffs and defendants alike, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.
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Copyright Trial Defense Tips From 'Thinking Out Loud' Case
The twofold defense strategy that earned Ed Sheeran his recent "Thinking Out Loud" copyright trial victory revealed the strength of a musician's testimony, the importance of a consistent narrative and the power of public policy arguments when combating infringement claims, say Jonathan Phillips and Latrice Burks at Larson.
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Getty Case Will Be Pivotal For Generative AI Copyright Issues
The Getty v. Stability AI litigation in the U.K. and U.S. raises legal ambiguities on who owns generative artificial intelligence output, and the outcomes will set a major precedent on copyright practices for businesses in both countries and beyond, say Victoria Albrecht at Springbok AI and Mark O'Conor at DLA Piper.
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Global M&A Outlook: Slow But Moving Along
Global merger and acquisition markets had a tough start to the year, with inflation, rising interest rates and the Ukraine conflict knocking sentiment, but in the macroeconomic, deal makers have continued to unearth pockets of activity to keep deal volumes ticking over, say lawyers at White & Case.
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Emmentaler Case Elucidates Recipe For EU Food Trademarks
In light of the EU General Court recently rejecting the Emmentaler cheese trademark application for lacking distinctive character and not meeting the geographical indication requirements, producers must ensure to protect their trade names before they become commercially generic, says Lars Karnoe at Potter Clarkson.
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Unified Patent Court Advantages Leave US Trailing Behind
Amplifying the shortcomings of litigation in the U.S., including inter partes reviews that significantly threaten the validity of patents, the recently launched Unified Patent Court regime will put further pressure on American legislators and add to Europe's attractiveness as a litigation venue, say lawyers at Sisvel and Franzosi Dal Negro.
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The Path Forward For Blockchain Patents In The UK And EU
The U.K. Intellectual Property Office's recent refusal of an IGT patent application highlights that certain blockchain innovations, including those relating to improved security, are more likely to be patentable than others, which is consistent with the overall European approach and available data, says Andrew Rudhall at Haseltine Lake.