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ÃÛÌÒÊÓÆµ UK
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May 12, 2025
Mancunian Law Firm Sues To Block Firm With Same Name
Amicus Solicitors, a firm in northwest England, has asked the High Court to prevent a rival firm from using the name Amicus Solicitors London, arguing that it has a long-standing reputation associated with the name.
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May 12, 2025
Novartis Hit With Challenge To Blood Pressure Drug IP
Generics drugs manufacturer Accord has taken aim at Novartis' protections over a blend of two blood pressure drugs, telling a London court that the combination of both medicines is not inventive.
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May 09, 2025
CMA Weighs Viagogo Bid To Buy Back IP From StubHub Sale
The U.K.'s competition watchdog said Friday it has launched a consultation into a request from online ticket reseller Viagogo to reacquire the rights to some non-British domain names and trademarks from its former business StubHub International.
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May 09, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a subsidiary of State Street Corp. sue British sports betting giant Entain, Manolete Partners and HSBC tackle action just weeks after signing a £17 million revolving credit facility agreement, and a commercial fraud claim launched by EFG Bank against Mirabaud & CIE.
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May 09, 2025
UK-US Trade Deal Needs Work On Pharma And IP, Pros Say
The U.K.-U.S. trade deal is a starting point for closer economic ties, but the agreement needs more work on pharmaceuticals and intellectual property before it's finalized, according to professionals.
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May 09, 2025
Appeals Court Blocks Attack On UK Design 'Cloned' From EU
A London appeals court said Friday that a fencing company cannot attempt to void a rival's U.K. design protection because it is a "clone" of a European Union community design right that it has already tried to revoke.
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May 09, 2025
Belfast Sandwich Shop Can't Get 'Hero' TM In UK
A Swiss food manufacturer has dashed the hopes of a sandwich company of getting a U.K. trademark over its "Hero" logo, proving that there is a risk of confusion with its own earlier Hero brand.
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May 09, 2025
Spotify Revives Bid For Voice-Command Playback Patent
Spotify can try again for a patent over its voice-command playback technology because the reasons behind an earlier decision to reject the application were patchy, a European appeals board said in a ruling published Friday.
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May 08, 2025
Chinese Co. Loses Fight In UPC Heating Pump Claim
Danish pump maker Grundfos convinced the Unified Patent Court on Thursday to bar a Chinese rival from selling heat pumps in Germany, France and Italy, with judges agreeing that the pumps infringe one of Grundfos' patents.
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May 08, 2025
Boehringer Can't Halt Production Of Generic Fibrosis Drug
The Unified Patent Court on Thursday refused pharmaceuticals giant Boehringer Ingelheim's attempt to stop a rival from making a generic version of its lung disease medicine, ruling there is no risk of "imminent" patent infringement.
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May 08, 2025
Ex-Man United Goalkeeper Saves 'DDG' Trademark
Former Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea Quintana has kept his hands on a trademark bearing his initials "DDG," despite attempts by a German board games company to convince a European court it is too much like its "DOG" mark.
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May 15, 2025
Akin Hires Tech And IP Pro From Orrick To Boost Deals Team
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP has recruited a tech and intellectual property lawyer from Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP to add to better advise clients on the use, acquisition and protection of technology.
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May 08, 2025
EU Nations Fined For Delay In Adopting Copyright Law
The European Union's top court on Thursday slapped Portugal, Bulgaria and Denmark with millions of euros in fines after they took too long to implement the bloc's copyright directive into national law.
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May 08, 2025
EU Moves To Revamp 20-Year-Old Merger Control Rules
The European Commission called on Thursday for responses to plans to overhaul its 20-year-old merger control rules as it seeks to give weight to innovation, sustainability and security needs when it assesses deals taking place between competitors in the bloc.
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May 07, 2025
Pharma Wary Of UK-India Trade Deal Despite IP Promises
The U.K.'s new trade deal with India promises a robust suite of intellectual property provisions, but some have voiced concerns about the still-under-wraps life sciences provisions.
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May 07, 2025
Taylor Wessing Launches New Patent Practice In Paris
Taylor Wessing LLP said Wednesday that it has hired Pinsent Masons' head of intellectual property in Paris and three other lawyers to launch a new patent practice in the French capital.
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May 07, 2025
Media Giant RTL Suffers Blow In TM Appeal At EU Court
A European Union court on Wednesday refused RTL's attempt to restore its full set of trademark protections over its name, ruling that the media giant has not always put the sign to proper use.
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May 07, 2025
Construction Biz Denies Owing Costs For Rival's Lost Sales
A construction product company has told a London court that its rival deserves only minimal compensation for its infringement of a wall paneling patent, claiming the competitor licensed the patent but never sold the product itself.
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May 07, 2025
Ericsson Drops UPC Case Against Folded Payments Biz
Ericsson has cut an insolvent payments company out of its video-coding patent infringement claim against computer maker Asus and a logistics company, the Unified Patent Court said Wednesday.
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May 06, 2025
Apple's $502M License Bill May Draw SEP Owners To UK
Technology companies may steer clear of bringing licensing disputes over standard-essential patents to the U.K. after the Court of Appeal's landmark decision to increase the amount Apple must pay for a suite of 4G patents by almost tenfold.
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May 06, 2025
Leica Faces Setback In Fight For Magnification Patent
An appeals panel has dealt a blow to Leica's European patent over a way of boosting magnification, ruling in a decision released Tuesday that the patent in its current form isn't sufficiently new.
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May 06, 2025
Souvenir Seller Admits Paddington Bear Copyright Violations
A London-based souvenir company accused of selling unauthorized Paddington Bear merchandise has admitted that it was behind the sale of some items featuring the famous bear — but says it wasn't responsible for all the infringing products.
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May 06, 2025
Disney Flips InterDigital's UPC Claim From German To English
The Unified Patent Court has allowed The Walt Disney Co. Ltd. to fight InterDigital's infringement claim in English rather than German, citing a previous ruling that the defendant's preference is the "decisive factor" when picking a language for a case.
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May 06, 2025
Huawei Fails To Get Patent For Smartphone Multitasking Tech
Huawei has failed to get a patent over its method of displaying multiple windows on a smartphone screen because it is not inventive, a European appeals board said in a ruling published Tuesday.
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May 02, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Premier League football club Newcastle United FC sue the owner of the land next to its stadium, Laurence Fox face a defamation claim by TV presented Narinder Kaur and a further sexual assault claim filed against actor Kevin Spacey.
Expert Analysis
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EU Medicine Reboxing Ruling Gives Guidance To Pharma Cos.
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.
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A Look Ahead At Key UK ÃÛÌÒÊÓÆµ Cases
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.
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Lessons That May Be Learned From The Demise Of Made.com
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.
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Teva Case Aims Europe's Pharma Crackdown At IP Loophole
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.
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Determining Whether To Opt Out Of New Unified Patent Court
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.
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10 Things To Know About The Coming EU Unified Patent Court
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.
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7 Key Takeaways For Litigating Willful Patent Infringement
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.
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Trademark Ruling Brings Clarity To Product Defect Liability
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.
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Appointments Shape EU Unified Patent Court Before Launch
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.
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5 Considerations In Preparing For EU's New Patent System
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.
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Reexamining Negative Limitations After Novartis Patent Ruling
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.
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UK Courts' 3rd-Party Disclosure Rule Sets Global Precedent
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.
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Zara TM Ruling Shows Prefiling Clearance Is Always Advisable
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.
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Dutch Merger May Promote Behavioral Remedies Across EU
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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How Will UK Address AI Patent Infringement?
As artificial intelligence-related patent litigation activity inevitably approaches, a review of U.K. principles of direct and indirect liability offers insight into how courts may address questions involving cloud-based technology and arguments related to training AI models, say Alexander Korenberg at Kilburn & Strode and Toby Bond at Bird & Bird.