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Intellectual Property UK
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February 16, 2026
Boots Trims Ex-Athlete's 'Boost By Borlée' EU TM Bid
Boots has persuaded European Union officials to partly reject a "Boost by Borlée" trademark application from a former Olympic runner, proving that shoppers could mix up the logo with its earlier "Boots" registration.
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February 13, 2026
Google, Meta Face AI Copyright Claims From Publishers
A group of independent U.K. publishers has set the ball rolling on copyright infringement claims against artificial intelligence developers, including Google and Meta, alleging that they might have trained models using protected works without permission.
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February 13, 2026
Spanish Brewer Can't Block Use Of 'Ambar' Trademarks
A Spanish brewery has failed to convince European appellate officials to prevent a Belarusian spirits maker from using its "Ambar" trademark on branding of beverages like brandy and vodka.
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February 13, 2026
TomTom Faces £5.2M Royalties Claim From Parking Biz
A company that indexes car park locations has sued TomTom for £5.2 million ($7.1 million) in a London court, accusing the navigation firm of failing to pay royalties it owes under their now-expired licensing agreement.
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February 13, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a former U.S. defense contractor convicted of tax evasion face legal action, French football club Olympique Lyonnais sued following a $97 million ruling against its owner John Textor, consulting giant Kroll targeted by a South African airline, and H&M hit with a claim alleging it copied protected sunglasses designs. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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February 13, 2026
Amazon Accused Of Infringing Data Processing Patent In UK
A U.S. technology business has accused Amazon at a London court of infringing its data processing patent by equipping its data centers with the protected technology without permission.
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February 12, 2026
Not Milk? Oatly Ruling Sets TM Limits For Alternative Foods
Plant-based alternatives will not be able to invoke the name of their dairy counterpart, lawyers say, after the U.K.'s top court drew a line in the sand that barred a leading brand from getting a trademark for branding with the word "milk."
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February 12, 2026
Van Graaf Blocks Rival From Using 'VG' TM For Clothing
Fashion retailer Van Graaf has convinced European Union officials to partially block a competitor from registering "VG" as a logo for clothing and accessories over fears consumers could mistake it for its own brand.
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February 12, 2026
Beautyblender Maker Loses Bid For 'Power Pocket Puff' TM
The U.S. cosmetics company behind the Beautyblender makeup sponge has lost its bid to secure European Union trademark protection for "Power Pocket Puff" for powder puffs.
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February 12, 2026
Siemens Knocks Bombardier's Train Testing IP Off The Rails
Siemens has persuaded a European appeals panel to revoke Bombardier's patent for a way of testing the reliability of trains, proving that the disputed blueprint does not lay out the invention in enough detail.
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February 11, 2026
UK Top Court Opens Path For AI Patents In 'Seismic' Ruling
The U.K.'s highest court tore down on Wednesday decades-old barriers that prevent any software from being patented, in a landmark judgment that lawyers say fundamentally reshapes Britain's patent landscape in a more AI-friendly image.
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February 11, 2026
Law Firm Sues AI Biz For Hijacking 'Wordsmith' TM
A law firm has accused a Scottish legal technology company of infringing its trademark over "Wordsmith," telling a London judge that the startup's use of an identical name to market artificial intelligence tools would "swamp" its own brand.
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February 11, 2026
Salt Bae Wins EU TM Row Over Rival's 'Salt' Food Truck
A subsidiary of celebrity chef Salt Bae's restaurant Nusr-Et has persuaded European officials to revoke a trademark application by a Middle Eastern company for "Salt" with Arabic text after arguing that consumers would confuse it with his existing "SaltBae" brand.
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February 11, 2026
European Patents Must Cover All EU States For Unitary Effect
An appeals judge at the Unified Patent Court has ruled that European patents cannot gain unitary effect unless it covers all EU member states that participate in the unitary framework.
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February 11, 2026
Oatly Can't Avoid Dairy Label Ban In TM Battle At Top Court
Britain's highest court has called time on Oatly's "post milk generation" trademark, ruling on Wednesday that the mark breaches European Union laws that prevent the term "milk" from appearing on non-dairy products.
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February 11, 2026
AI Network Qualifies For Patent Protection, Top UK Court Says
Britain's highest court ruled Wednesday that Emotional Perception's artificial neural network does not fall under typical laws that prevent computer programs from winning patent protection, a landmark ruling that opens the door for artificial intelligence patents in the U.K.
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February 10, 2026
Top EU Court Decision Could Drag Out TM Claims
The European Union's highest court has cleared the way for parties to delay trademark cancellations, in a decision on post-Brexit challenges that lawyers say will affect trademark claims long after the 2020 transition has become a distant memory.
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February 10, 2026
Easy Cash Partially Loses EU TM After Law Firm's Attack
Kilburn & Strode LLP has convinced European officials to partially revoke a French franchiser's trademark for "Easy Cash," as it had failed to prove that it genuinely used the mark for all the goods it had registered.
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February 10, 2026
AstraZeneca Unit Settles Soliris Feud With Samsung, Amgen
AstraZeneca subsidiary Alexion has settled its claims in the U.K. that Samsung and Amgen infringed a patent covering blood disease drug Soliris, closing the case several months after the Court of Appeal refused to block sales of the defendants' biosimilar drugs.
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February 10, 2026
Cambridge University Sinks Rowing Co.'s UK TM Bid
The University of Cambridge has persuaded U.K. officials to reject a trademark application for "Cambridge Rowing" from a company that runs rowing experiences, proving that the mark takes unfair advantage of its longstanding reputation.
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February 10, 2026
Smashburger Chain Can't Nix Rival's 'Smash Master' TM
Smashburger has failed to fight off a rival's bid to trademark "smash master," with officials finding the word "smash" is too widely used in the food sector to give the U.S. chain exclusive rights in Britain.
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February 10, 2026
P&G Patent Axed After It Abandons EPO Appeal Defense
Procter & Gamble has lost a European patent for adult incontinence products after an appeals board overturned an earlier ruling that had kept the patent in force.
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February 09, 2026
EU's Copyright Calls Too Late To Dent AI Boom
Recent calls from European lawmakers to apply stringent copyright provisions for artificial intelligence systems are radical and unrealistic, lawyers say, as the bloc mulls stronger regulations for the booming technology.
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February 09, 2026
Taxi Software Creator Sues Tech Biz For Trade Secret Theft
An entrepreneur has accused a taxi software provider of misusing confidential information relating to a taxi-journey optimization concept known as "Envi-Ride" that he created for driverless cars.
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February 09, 2026
Skechers Defends 'Go Walk' TM Bid At UKIPO
Footwear retailer Skechers has fought off a challenge to its "Go Walk" U.K. trademark application, proving that there is no risk of confusion with an earlier "G-Walk" mark belonging to a therapy company.
Expert Analysis
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UK Trademark Law May Further Diverge From EU Standards
The recently enacted Retained EU Law Act, which removes the principle of EU law supremacy, offers a path for U.K. trademark law to distance itself even further from EU precedent — beyond the existing differences between the two trademark examination processes, say David Kemp and Michael Shaw at Marks & Clerk.
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How Clinical Trials Affect Patentability In US And Europe
A comparison of recent U.S. and European patent decisions — concerning the effect of disclosures in clinical trials on the patentability of products — offers guidance on good practice for companies dealing with public use issues and prior art documents in these commercially important jurisdictions, say lawyers at Finnegan.
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Breaking Down The EPO's Revised Practice Guidelines
The European Patent Office's updated guidelines for examination recently took effect and include significant changes related to the priority right presumption, the concept of plausibility and artificial intelligence, providing invaluable insight on obtaining patents from the office, say lawyers at Finnegan.
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UK Amazon Ruling Spotlights TM Rights In International Sales
Highlighting the conflict between the territorial nature of trademark rights and the borderless nature of the internet, the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision — that Amazon's U.S. website could infringe EU and U.K. rights by targeting local buyers — offers guidance on navigating trademark rights in relation to online sales, say Emmy Hunt, Mark Kramer and Jordan Mitchell at Potter Clarkson.
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Comparing The UK And EU Approaches To AI Regulation
While there are significant points of convergence between the recently published U.K. approach to artificial intelligence regulation and the EU AI Act, there is also notable divergence between them, and it appears that the U.K. will remain a less regulatory environment for AI in the foreseeable future, say lawyers at Steptoe.
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Design Rights Can Build IP Protection, EU Lego Ruling Shows
The EU General Court's recent ruling in Delta Sport v. EU Intellectual Property Office — that Lego's registered community design for a building block was valid — helps clarify when technically dictated designs can enjoy IP protection, and demonstrates how companies can strategically use design rights to protect and enhance their market position, says Christoph Moeller at Mewburn Ellis.
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ECJ Ruling Clarifies Lawyer Independence Questions
The European Court of Justice's recent ruling in Bonnanwalt v. EU Intellectual Property Office, finding that a law firm had maintained independence despite being owned by its client, serves as a pivotal reference point to understanding the contours of legal representation before EU courts, say James Tumbridge and Benedict Sharrock-Harris at Venner Shipley.
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Spartan Arbitration Tactics Against Well-Funded Opponents
Like the ancient Spartans who held off a numerically superior Persian army at the Battle of Thermopylae, trial attorneys and clients faced with arbitration against an opponent with a bigger war chest can take a strategic approach to create a pass to victory, say Kostas Katsiris and Benjamin Argyle at Venable.
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Patent Plausibility Uncertainty Persists, EPO Petition Shows
While a recent petition for review at the European Patent Office — maintaining that the Board of Appeal misapplied the Enlarged Board of Appeal's order on whether a patent is "plausible" — highlights the continued uncertainty surrounding the plausibility concept, the outcome could provide useful guidance on the interpretation of orders, say lawyers at Finnegan.
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UMG-TikTok IP Rift Highlights Effective Rights Control Issues
Despite Universal Music Group's recent withdrawal of TikTok's licensing rights to its music catalog, the platform struggles to control uploads and reproductions of copyrighted material, highlighting the inherent tension between creative freedom and effective rights control in the age of social media, says Simon Goodbody at Bray & Krais.
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Bribery Class Action Ruling May Revive Bifurcated Processes
The Court of Appeal's recent decision allowing the representative bribery action in Commission Recovery v. Marks & Clerk offers renewed hope for claimants to advance class claims using a bifurcated process amid its general absence as of late, say Jon Gale and Justin Browne at Ashurst.
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Ocado Appeal Outcome Will Gauge UPC Transparency
As the sole Unified Patent Court case concerning third-party requests for court records, the forthcoming appeal decision in Ocado v. Autostore will hopefully set out a clear and consistent way to handle reasoned requests, as access to nonconfidential documents will surely lead to more efficient conduct of proceedings, says Tom Brazier at EIP.
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Businesses Using AI Face Novel Privacy, Cybersecurity Risks
Rapid advancements in artificial intelligence are resulting in complex privacy and cybersecurity challenges for businesses, and with the forthcoming EU AI Act and enhancement of existing laws to ensure a high common level of security, key stakeholders should be empowered to manage associated risks, say lawyers at Goodwin.
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Following The Road Map Toward Quantum Security
With the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent publication of a white paper on a quantum-secure financial sector, firms should begin to consider the quantum transition early — before the process is driven by regulatory obligations — with the goal of developing a cybersecurity architecture that is agile while also allowing for quantum security, say lawyers at Cleary.
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AI Is Outpacing IP Law Frameworks
In Thaler v. Comptroller-General, the U.K. Supreme Court recently ruled that artificial intelligence can't be an inventor, but the discussion on the relationship between AI and intellectual property law is far from over, and it's clear that technology is developing faster than the legal framework, says Stephen Carter at The Intellectual Property Works.