Intellectual Property UK

  • June 11, 2025

    Carlsberg, Heineken Must Face Attacks On Barley Drink Patent

    European officials will have to reconsider a patent for a barley-based beverage owned by Carlsberg and Heineken, after an appeals board ruled that a decision rejecting oppositions to the invention suffered from "fundamental deficiencies."

  • June 11, 2025

    Sherwin-Williams Lays Farrow & Ball 'Dead Flat' TM To Rest

    Luxury paint company Farrow & Ball has lost its trademark "dead flat" after a U.S. rival convinced U.K. trademark officials that the mark is merely an industry-standard description of a type of paint finish.

  • June 11, 2025

    Baklava Biz Denies Trying To Pass As Established Coffee Co.

    A London dessert shop has denied claims that it copied the trademarks of a 150-year-old Turkish coffee brand to mislead consumers into buying baklavas and other regional treats. 

  • June 11, 2025

    McDonald's Wins Big Mac TM Battle With Irish Fast Food Biz

    McDonald's has persuaded European Union officials to block two trademark applications from Supermac's, an Irish fast food chain, leaving its opponent in a pickle after proving there was a risk of confusion with its "Big Mac" branding.

  • June 11, 2025

    EasyGroup Keeps 'EasyPod' UK TM Hopes Alive

    Value brand company easyGroup has fought off an attempt to block its "easyPod" trademark application in the U.K., convincing officials that consumers will not confuse the sign with a storage company's "Pods" brand.

  • June 10, 2025

    Stability AI Chides Getty's 'Cynical' Bid To Find Infringing Pics

    Stability AI, the makers of generative AI model Stable Diffusion, fired back Tuesday at claims that it had infringed Getty Images' intellectual property, claiming that Getty has failed to point to any instances of real world infringement. 

  • June 10, 2025

    MPs Shun Peers' AI Copyright Transparency Pleas Once More

    MPs voted again on Tuesday to reject an amendment from peers to a pending bill that would require artificial intelligence developers to be transparent about the copyrighted material they use to develop their models.

  • June 10, 2025

    IBM Seeks £1.6M After Winning Reverse-Engineering Claim

    IBM has said that LzLabs must pay over £1.6 million ($2.2 million) in damages for reverse-engineering its software products in order to build a rival platform, adding to the Swiss company's £20 million bill.

  • June 10, 2025

    Nokia Loses Patent For 5G-Segmentation Method

    European appellate officials refused to grant Nokia a patent for a system to improve network transmissions, ruling that a previous system already revealed its key method for breaking down large data packets into smaller segments.

  • June 10, 2025

    Gene-Editing Biotech Says Rivals Infringed CRISPR Patent

    A Korean biotech company has accused several companies of infringing its CRISPR gene-editing patent in the U.K., telling a London court that they must enter a license to use the technology.

  • June 09, 2025

    Australian Beauty Biz Can't Register 'XTendlash' Mascara TM

    A cosmetics company based in Sydney, Australia, has lost its attempt to register the trademark "Xtendlash" for mascara, after European trademark officials found that "extend" and "lash" was a direct description of the purpose of the eye makeup product.

  • June 09, 2025

    Researcher Can't Get UK Patent For Colon Cancer Treatment

    U.K. intellectual property officials have rejected a researcher's application for a patent covering a colon cancer treatment, ruling that it isn't sufficiently new over one of her own earlier publications.

  • June 09, 2025

    Orange Loses TM Protections For Physical Products

    French telecoms giant Orange has lost some of the rights covered by its "Orange" trademarks after U.K. officials agreed with a Romanian businessman that the signs for physical goods could literally describe the products as having an orange color.

  • June 09, 2025

    Getty's 'Day Of Reckoning' Begins As Stability AI Trial Opens

    Getty Images opened its landmark copyright infringement case against Stability AI Monday by accusing the technology company of building its generative AI model on millions of images with "complete indifference" for underlying intellectual property protections.

  • June 09, 2025

    Music Co. Fails To Secure Piano Key TM In EU

    A musical instrument retailer has lost its quest for a trademark over a logo that depicts five piano keys, failing to convince European Union officials that the mark is distinctive enough to identify its goods.

  • June 06, 2025

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

    The past week in London has seen MGM and the owners of the "Addams Family" trademark sue a private equity firm, two Cambridge colleges file for injunctions against Pro-Palestine student protest groups and a former NBA player brings a claim against Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP.

  • June 06, 2025

    Getty Case To Set Stage For AI Copyright Law

    The High Court is set to hear on Monday Getty's copyright claim over the use of its images to train Stability AI, a first-of-its-kind case that will set the stage for how the new technology intersects with intellectual property law.

  • June 06, 2025

    Top EU Court Urged To OK IP Rates In Czech Hotel Music Row

    An adviser to the European Union's top court has held that installing TVs and radios in empty hotel rooms constitutes a "communication to the public" that triggers royalty payments, contradicting a ruling by a Czech watchdog to fine a copyright management organization.

  • June 06, 2025

    DAZN Loses Appeal Over Coupang FIFA Broadcast Deal

    Streaming platform DAZN failed to convince the Court of Appeal on Friday to overturn a finding that it had entered into a contract to provide Coupang with a license to broadcast the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup in South Korea.

  • June 06, 2025

    Atty Fees Can Fall Under Confidentiality Rules, UPC Says

    Insulet Corp. has partially won its bid to keep information about how much it was paying its attorneys confidential in its infringement case against EOFlow Co. Ltd. over an insulin device, with Europe's patent court holding Thursday that the information provided some commercial advantages. 

  • June 06, 2025

    PornHub Owner Dodges Another Claim From Dish At UPC

    PornHub's owner beat another video-streaming patent infringement claim from a satellite television and internet protocol television company on Friday, landing its second victory at the Unified Patent Court in recent weeks.

  • June 06, 2025

    EU Knocks Out European Boxing Confederation's TM Hopes

    The European Union has rejected a pair of trademark applications from a governing body for boxing, ruling that its "confederation" and "championships" signs are too descriptive to work as trademarks.

  • June 06, 2025

    Lenovo Unit Beats Tech Entrepreneur's 'Newlife' TM

    Lenovo subsidiary Medion AG, which makes a smart home ecosystem and associated app branded "Life+," has won its challenge to an Italian tech entrepreneur's "Newlife" trademark, arguing there is a risk that consumers would mistake the two as being connected.

  • June 05, 2025

    Apple Loses 'WeatherKit' TM In EU Over Distinctiveness

    European officials have refused Apple's trademark application for "WeatherKit," ruling that the name of the information tool kit for app developers was too descriptive of the services the tech giant provided.

  • June 05, 2025

    Canal+ Nixes Cannabis Business's 'Canna Plus' EU Trademark

    Groupe Canal+ has convinced European officials to deny a cannabis brand's trademark application for "CannaPlus" because shoppers might mix up the signs. 

Expert Analysis

  • Europe's New Unitary Patent System Will Affect IP Agreements

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    Marco Stief at Maiwald discusses key points in intellectual property agreements that legal practitioners will need to consider in Europe's soon-to-open centralized patent court, including regional exclusivity in different contracting member states.

  • EU Medicine Reboxing Ruling Gives Guidance To Pharma Cos.

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    The recent landmark decision of the Court of Justice of the EU in Novartis Pharma on repackaging medicines has provided pharma companies with a much-needed framework, with better protections for trademarks and clearer protocols for handling imported products, say Ulf Grundmann and Elisabeth Kohoutek at King & Spalding.

  • A Look Ahead At Key UK Intellectual Property Cases

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    Anticipated 2023 U.K. intellectual property decisions include robotics, artificial intelligence, and clean energy matters that have also been heard in the U.S., while other areas to watch include global fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory issues, as well as COVID-19 patent litigation, say Tom Oliver and Claire Robinson at Powell Gilbert.

  • Lessons That May Be Learned From The Demise Of Made.com

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    With Made.com going into administration, companies that may face similar challenges should take on board that the earlier adequate preemptive planning is considered, the more financial and legal options there will be to avoid last minute firefighting and to focus instead on strengthening the business, says Eleni Michaela at Faegre Drinker.

  • Teva Case Aims Europe's Pharma Crackdown At IP Loophole

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    The European Commission's recent allegations against Teva signal not only the EU competition watchdog's continued focus on intellectual property violations in the pharmaceutical sector but also its new enforcement interest in exclusionary disparagement, say Robert Bell and Malgorzata Janiec at Armstrong Teasdale.

  • Determining Whether To Opt Out Of New Unified Patent Court

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    The new United Patent Court, made up of judges from all European Union member states, will cover the new unitary patent and European patents unless the owner chooses to opt out during the transition period, so patent proprietors must consider whether to opt out for each patent family, say Steffen Steininger and Anna-Katharina Friese-Okoro at Hogan Lovells.

  • 10 Things To Know About The Coming EU Unified Patent Court

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    When the Unified Patent Court opens next year, it will represent a paradigm shift for adversarial patent proceedings in Europe, and practitioners should familiarize themselves now with this new, centralized litigation system, say Fabian Koenigbauer at Ice Miller and Thomas Kronberger at Grünecker.

  • 7 Key Takeaways For Litigating Willful Patent Infringement

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    Brian Nolan and Manuel Velez at Mayer Brown explore the impact of the Federal Circuit's 2021 SRI International v. Cisco Systems decision, and six other areas recent parties have focused on when litigating willful infringement in the latest case law.

  • Trademark Ruling Brings Clarity To Product Defect Liability

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    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.

  • Appointments Shape EU Unified Patent Court Before Launch

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    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.

  • 5 Considerations In Preparing For EU's New Patent System

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    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.

  • Reexamining Negative Limitations After Novartis Patent Ruling

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    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.

  • UK Courts' 3rd-Party Disclosure Rule Sets Global Precedent

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    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.

  • Zara TM Ruling Shows Prefiling Clearance Is Always Advisable

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    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.

  • Dutch Merger May Promote Behavioral Remedies Across EU

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    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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