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Intellectual Property UK
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January 07, 2025
Honeywell Saves Hydrogenation Catalyst Patent At EPO
U.S. conglomerate Honeywell International has won its case to protect its patent for a refrigerant compound, convincing European patent officials that its process was inventive and would not be obvious based on existing research in the field.
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January 07, 2025
Tech Biz Slams Door On Self-Storage Firm's 'Janus' TM Bid
A technology company has persuaded U.K. officials to block almost all of a trademark application by self-storage builder "Janus," proving that consumers could confuse the sign with its own "Janus C4" mark.
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January 06, 2025
Huawei, Netgear Reach Global Settlement Over Wi-Fi 6 SEPs
California networking company Netgear has agreed to a license for Wi-Fi 6 technology from Europe's largest patent pool Sisvel, bringing an end to a global litigation campaign between Netgear and one of the pool's key contributors, Huawei.
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January 06, 2025
Gap Blocks TFL's 'Mind The Gap' TM For Accessories
Transport For London can't register the trademark "Mind the Gap" over purses and other accessories because it had previously promised not to cover those goods when it settled an earlier dispute with clothing retailer Gap Inc.
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January 06, 2025
Ex-Ashfords Paralegal Misled Firm Over Client Emails
A former paralegal at Ashfords LLP has been barred from the profession after she lied to the firm to conceal her failure to remind a client to renew a trademark, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said.
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January 06, 2025
Social Care Co. Denies Using 'Inicio' TM As A Weapon
A care company has told a London court that it denied registering its "Inicio" trademark in bad faith to use it as a "weapon," hitting back in a battle with a school trust over the brand.
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January 06, 2025
Law Firm Can Look At UPC Docs In Harvard, NanoString Clash
The Unified Patent Court has granted a Finnish law firm's request to look at documents from Harvard's sample testing patent feud with NanoString, ruling that the firm's "general interest" in seeing the documents was sufficient.
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January 06, 2025
Moncler Blocks Chinese Co.'s 'Northcler' TM Bid
Moncler has blocked a Chinese company's bid to revive its "Northcler" trademark application, convincing a European Union appeals panel that the mark unfairly leans on the Italian brand's reputation.
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January 13, 2025
Morgan Lewis Hires IP Pro From Baker McKenzie In Munich
Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP said Monday it has recruited a senior patent litigator from Baker McKenzie in Germany to enhance its intellectual property offering to clients, particularly in disputes involving technology and life sciences.
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January 03, 2025
Netgear, Huawei Settle Calif. RICO Suit Over Wi-Fi SEPs
Netgear and Huawei informed a California federal judge Friday that they have resolved their racketeering dispute and asked for a 30-day stay to finalize their deal, weeks after Netgear sought to block Huawei from seeking injunctions through patent actions pending in foreign courts and a German court found Netgear infringed Huawei's Wi-Fi patents.
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January 03, 2025
Alexion Can't Halt Amgen, Samsung Selling Soliris Biosimilars
A Unified Patent Court appeals panel has rejected Alexion's bid to stop Amgen and Samsung Bioepis selling biosimilar versions of Soliris in Europe, ruling that Alexion's patent over the blood disease treatment is potentially invalid.
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January 03, 2025
Dealer Of Unreleased Famed Musicians' Tracks Avoids Prison
A dealer of stolen unreleased music by famous artists obtained through cryptocurrency exchanges on the dark web was handed a suspended prison sentence on Friday for 14 counts relating to buying and selling copyrighted music without the consent of artists or labels.
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January 03, 2025
Early Learners Nursery Sues 'Early Day Learners' Over TM
A nursery has accused a rival of infringing its trademark by using the same concept of "early learners" and colorful building blocks in its signage.
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January 03, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Chris Eubank Jr. hit with a libel claim from a boxing promoter, a perfume boss face proceedings from his businesses following sanctions violations claims, and Israeli broadcasters file intellectual property claims against BT and Sky. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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January 03, 2025
Shoosmiths Adds 6-Member Locke Lord IP Team In London
British law firm Shoosmiths LLP began the new year with a bang, adding a six-member intellectual property team to add "strength and depth" to its London IP muscle as well as new high-profile clients in the technology, financial services and consumer brands sectors.
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January 03, 2025
Bathroom Biz Says Rival Copied Toilet Cistern Design
A bathroom company has accused a rival of copying its toilet cistern design, telling a London court that there is no other explanation for the alleged resemblance.
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January 03, 2025
Brussels Court Clarifies Requirements In Samsung Patent Win
The Brussels Enterprise Court has held that Samsung Bioepis complied with requirements to waive supplementary patent protection for a biosimilar version of Amgen's osteoporosis treatment Denosumab, rebuffing Amgen's bid to halt its competitor's product.
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January 03, 2025
'Anti-IP Initiatives' May Hinder Green Tech, Patents Chief Says
The intellectual property industry must combat the international rise of "anti-IP initiatives" or they could stifle green technology, the new chief of the Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys has said.
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January 02, 2025
Italian Golf Apparel Biz Can't Nix Sportswear Co.'s TM
British sports clothing brand Reflo Sports Ltd. has beaten a challenge against its trademark from an Italian golf clothing brand after the U.K. Intellectual Property Office ruled British consumers would not confuse the two brands.
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January 02, 2025
Panasonic, Xiaomi Withdraw UPC Suit Over 4G Patent
Rival telecoms giants Panasonic and Xiaomi have agreed to withdraw a long-running intellectual property dispute in the United Patents Court, bringing to an end another arm of a sprawling fight over 3G and 4G technology.
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January 02, 2025
London Bakery Blocks Coffee Shop's Hummingbird TM
A bakery chain has won its challenge against a London coffee shop's application for a "Roastery Club" trademark, after trademark officials found the hummingbird motif in the companies' marks could lead customers to think they were connected.
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January 02, 2025
GiffGaff-Owner Axes Rival's 'GibGab' UK TM
Telefonica has persuaded British officials to nix a rival's "GibGab" trademark, because the Spanish mobile telecommunications giant had already cornered the market with its GiffGaff brand.
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January 02, 2025
Tech Firm's 'Standout' Logo Not Distinctive Enough For EU TM
A Norwegian technology company cannot get a trademark for "Standout" because it is not sufficiently distinctive, European Union officials have ruled.
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January 01, 2025
Patent Litigation Trends To Watch In 2025
Litigation funding resulting in more heated disputes, artificial intelligence tools becoming a fact of life for patent attorneys and increased use of patent reexaminations are among the trends attorneys will be keeping tabs on in the coming year.
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January 01, 2025
Intellectual Property Cases To Watch In 2025
Although 2025 might be a quieter year for U.K. intellectual property claims, experts are still watching high-profile cases ranging from how ongoing copyright claims over artificial intelligence models play out, to the continued divergence between European and English courts in the year ahead.
Expert Analysis
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Mitigating User Content Risk After EU Copyright Directive
As the deadline approaches for member states to implement the European Union’s new copyright directive, which will hold certain online content service providers liable for copyright infringement pertaining to user-uploaded content, companies should have risk-mitigation strategies in place, say attorneys at MoFo.
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The Pandemic's Bright Spots For Lawyers Who Are Parents
The COVID-19 crisis has allowed lawyers to hone remote advocacy strategies and effectively represent clients with minimal travel — abilities that have benefited working parents and should be utilized long after the pandemic is over, says Chelsea Loughran at Wolf Greenfield.
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ITC Seems Unlikely To Stay Investigations For Parallel IPRs
The U.S. International Trade Commission's recent order denying Ocado's attempt to stay a dispute with AutoStore pending resolution of its inter partes review petitions signals that an ITC complainant's patents are effectively shielded from IPR challenges, at least under current Patent Trial and Appeal Board practice, say attorneys at Reichman Jorgensen.
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A Framework For Evaluating Willingness Of FRAND Licensees
As an increasing number of standard-essential patent cases turn on whether a manufacturer is willing to pay a fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory royalty for SEPs, Jorge Contreras at the University of Utah identifies conduct that typically indicates willingness or unwillingness, as well as conduct that should be viewed as indeterminate.
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Opinion
US Should Learn From German Courts Balancing SEP Rights
The German high court's recent decision in Sisvel v. Haier set a productive tone in balancing the rights of patentees and implementers in standard-essential patent disputes, and its understanding of negotiation realities should be followed by the U.S., say Cravath's David Kappos, former U.S. Patent and Trademark Office director, and Daniel Etcovitch.
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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.