Intellectual Property UK

  • September 03, 2025

    The Biggest UK IP Developments Of 2025 So Far

    British courts have opened the doors for brand owners to crack down on look-alikes, gone back and forth on whether parties should agree to a license mid-patent dispute, and are staring down the barrel of a future where European courts can rule on infringement of U.K. patents.

  • September 03, 2025

    HP Bars German Co. From Selling Rival Ink Cartridges In EU

    HP convinced Europe's patent court on Wednesday to stop a German shop from selling rival ink cartridges while it continues to fight HP's infringement claims because shoppers might permanently switch to cheaper knockoffs and irremediably undercut HP's market position.

  • September 03, 2025

    Japanese Biz Gets Brake Friction Material Patent Trimmed

    The European Patent Office has partly upheld an appeal by a German trade association, cutting a patent held by Japanese manufacturer Akebono Brake Industry Co. Ltd. over copper-free friction materials for brake pads.

  • September 03, 2025

    Warner Bros. Beats German Production Co.'s 'W&B' TM

    Warner Bros. convinced a European Union court on Wednesday to nix a German production company's trademark application for "W&B TV," after proving that the public would mix up the sign with its shield logo.

  • September 03, 2025

    Beats Electronics Can't Block Chinese Rival's 'Db Debra' TM

    Audio retailer Beats has lost its attempt to prevent a Chinese rival from getting a "Db Debra" trademark in the U.K. as it failed to prove that there is a risk of confusion because a similar "b" icon appears in its mark.

  • September 02, 2025

    Meril Forces Edwards To Help Pay Legal Costs In UPC Spat

    Meril Life Sciences convinced the Unified Patent Court on Tuesday to force Edwards Lifesciences to pay 25% of its legal costs because it had partially succeeded in its bid to nix the rival's heart valve technology.

  • September 02, 2025

    Boston Scientific Unit Defends Heart Valve Patent From Abbott

    A subsidiary of Boston Scientific has convinced appellate officials to uphold a patent for a stent device that props open damaged heart valves, showing that scientists wouldn't have similarly arranged pockets on its seal to prevent blood from leaking.

  • September 02, 2025

    Payments Co.'s NFT Patent Denied Over 'Flawed' Fraud Claim

    U.S. payments company Blackhawk Network Inc. has been denied a U.K. patent for a method of buying non-fungible tokens using a scannable code, after officials found that the system does not prevent fraud as the business had claimed.

  • September 02, 2025

    DexCom Loses EU Patent For Glucose Sensor Design

    European officials have deprived DexCom Inc. of its protections for a continuous glucose monitoring device, ruling that the medical device maker's description of the technology exceeded the scope of its original application. 

  • September 02, 2025

    EPO Won't Interpret Patents Narrowly Based On Descriptions

    A European Patent Office appeals panel has ruled that it will not perform "interpretive somersaults" to read the wording of patent claims more narrowly based on features set out in the description of the invention.

  • September 01, 2025

    J&J Units Can't Get Early UPC Injunction Over Stapling Tech

    Two Johnson & Johnson subsidiaries have failed to secure an injunction blocking a German distributor from selling surgical stapling instruments that allegedly infringe one of its patents, as Europe's Patent Court ruled they waited five months too long to file their request. 

  • September 01, 2025

    Thaler Loses Fight To Claim Invention He'd Credited To His AI

    An English court on Monday dismissed a bid by computer scientist Stephen Thaler to register divisional patent protections for an invention that he had previously claimed were created by his artificial intelligence system, DABUS.

  • September 01, 2025

    Bayer Can Keep Xarelto Profits Earned During Sales Ban

    A London court ruled Monday that Bayer can keep the profits it banked from selling blood-thinning treatment Xarelto during an interim sales ban that stopped generic-drugmakers infringing the now-revoked patent.

  • September 01, 2025

    Siemens Fails To Get Computer-Aided Design Patent At EPO

    Siemens has lost its latest attempt to secure a European patent for its computer-aided design technology as it failed to persuade an appeals panel that its application sets out the invention with the necessary clarity.

  • September 01, 2025

    Vogue Owner Blocks Entrepreneur's 'Vogue Couture' TM In UK

    The owner of Vogue magazine has blocked an individual from registering "Vogue Couture" as a trademark to sell clothing, convincing British officials that shoppers would think his products were a pricier catalog in the fashion magazine's brand.

  • September 01, 2025

    Gateley Buys IP Biz Groom Wilkes & Wright For Up To £9M

    Gateley (Holdings) PLC said Monday that it has bought Groom Wilkes & Wright, a boutique intellectual property firm, in a transaction worth up to £9 million ($12 million) as the professional services group seeks to broaden its business.

  • August 29, 2025

    Telecom Body Backs EU Bid To Revise Product Law Regime

    The European Telecommunications Standards Institute has backed the European Commission's plans to reform the New Legislative Framework for product marketing, specifically requesting that the bloc restore the presumption of conformity.

  • August 29, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Prosecco DOC Consortium bring an intellectual property claim against a distributor, the Serious Fraud Office bring a civil recovery claim against the ex-wife of a solicitor jailed over a £19.5 million fraud scheme, and law firm Joseph Hage Aaronson & Bremen LLP sue its former client, the bankrupt Indian tycoon Vijay Mallya. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • August 29, 2025

    Decathlon Trims Lidl's Patent Invalidity Counterattack In UPC

    Decathlon has convinced Europe's patent court to disregard part of Lidl's latest written response to the sports equipment retailer's patent infringement case over a pop-up camping tent.

  • August 29, 2025

    Tesco Sues Broadcom For £100M Over Software Licensing

    Tesco is suing Broadcom Inc. for more than £100 million ($135 million), alleging the tech giant has abused its market dominance after a $69 billion merger with cloud services provider VMware threatened to force price increases for critical software of almost 250%.

  • August 29, 2025

    EasyGroup Loses 'Rest Easy' TM Fight With Premier Inn

    EasyGroup lost its trademark infringement case against Premier Inn Hotels on Friday as a judge ruled that customers would not confuse its "rest easy" sign featuring a half moon with the low-cost giant's brands of easyHotel and Rest Easy Apartments.

  • August 28, 2025

    Wendy's Loses Another TM Battle To Dutch Snack Seller

    Wendy's can't register a trademark over its name after a long-standing Dutch rival convinced European officials that foodies might think it was linked to its fish and chip shop instead of the American hamburger giant. 

  • August 28, 2025

    Pharma Co. Fights Rival's Blood Pressure Drug Patent

    A pharmaceutical company has told a London court that a rival's treatment for high blood pressure infringes one of its patents, throwing a wrench in the rival's plans to keep selling its drug to British patients. 

  • August 28, 2025

    Bristol Myers Loses EU Patent For Cancer Antibodies 

    European officials have revoked a Bristol Myers Squibb patent for antibodies that help fight cancer because other scientists would have also focused on a unique feature of a protein that suppresses the immune system. 

  • August 28, 2025

    BMW Stops Ride-Hailing App From Using 'Mryde' TM For Cars

    BMW has convinced European officials to partially nix a private hire vehicle operator's trademark over "Mryde" for any products or services that might make shoppers mentally picture a car. 

Expert Analysis

  • Examining EU's Drift Toward US-Style Employer Pact Scrutiny

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    As European Union competition authorities express enforcement interest in employment issues such as no-poach and wage-fixing agreements — which have been the subject of U.S. enforcement action for some time — companies may need to recalibrate their training and compliance programs accordingly, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.

  • What SEP Holders Can Take Away From UK's Apple Ruling

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    A U.K. court's recent decision in the standard essential patent dispute between Apple and Optis Cellular Technology provides encouragement for SEP owners litigating their portfolios in the U.K. and reaffirms the country's place as a patentee-friendly jurisdiction, says Tess Waldron at Powell Gilbert.

  • AI Inventorship Decision Leaves Open Questions

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    A Virginia federal court's recent decision in Thaler v. Iancu, finding that artificial intelligence cannot be named as a patent inventor, highlights questions that will have to be answered as AI increasingly contributes to inventorship, especially in the pharmaceutical industry, say attorneys at DLA Piper.

  • What Patent Applications Signal About Green Energy Trends

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    Steadily increasing patent activity related to clean energy technologies suggests that the proportion of energy derived from green sources will also continue to grow — but smaller companies could be locked out of the patent race, even as sustainability becomes an inescapable business imperative, says Greg Sharp at Haseltine Lake.

  • Takeaways On Pre-Action Protocols From UK Patent Ruling

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    The U.K. High Court's recent patent ruling in Add2 Research v. dSpace instructs parties in proper pre-action discussions that avoid breaches of protocol, including how to provide materials in confidence, say Angela Jack and Emily Atherton at EIP.

  • 6 Ways To Guide Applications Under New Patent Classification

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    Intellectual property practitioners can navigate the recently implemented Cooperative Patent Classification system to direct applications to specific prior art units within the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, avoid especially difficult units, and improve clients' portfolios in newly emerging technologies, say Roberta Young and Brian Michaelis at Seyfarth.

  • Mitigating User Content Risk After EU Copyright Directive

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    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.

  • The Pandemic's Bright Spots For Lawyers Who Are Parents

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    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.

  • ITC Seems Unlikely To Stay Investigations For Parallel IPRs

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    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.

  • A Framework For Evaluating Willingness Of FRAND Licensees

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    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.

  • Opinion

    US Should Learn From German Courts Balancing SEP Rights

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    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.

  • Examining EPO's Strict Approach To AI Patent Disclosure

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    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.

  • ITC Dispute May Lead To PTAB Litigation Strategy Shifts

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    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.

  • Opinion

    US Courts Should Adjudicate FRAND Rates On A Global Basis

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    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.

  • UK Top Court Ruling May Be Problematic For Global SEP Suits

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    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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