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April 04, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Russian industrialist Oleg Deripaska target the intelligence arm of CT Group with a commercial fraud claim, Big Technologies sue its former CEO for allegedly concealing interests in several shareholders, and an investment firm tackle a professional negligence claim by Adidas. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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April 04, 2025
Events Biz Can't Corner Music Label For 'Dice' TM
An events company has largely failed in its bid to nix a U.K. record label's "Dice Recordings Music" trademarks, with the U.K. ÃÛÌÒÊÓÆµ Office ruling that the label can still use the mark for clothing and entertainment.
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April 11, 2025
HSF Hires Patent Litigator From EIP In Germany
Herbert Smith Freehills LLP has hired a new intellectual property partner to its Düsseldorf office from EIP, with the new arrival saying Friday that the draw of working at a global firm led him to jump ship.
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April 04, 2025
BAT Unit Can't Nix 'Blu' Vape Owner's Patent On Appeal
European officials have allowed an Imperial Brands subsidiary to amend its patent for a leak-resistant vape, ruling that its use of buffer spaces to hold any released liquid was new and inventive despite a British American Tobacco unit's claims.
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April 04, 2025
Scaffolding Biz Says Rival Infringed Safety-Gate Patent
A scaffolding company has accused a rival of infringing its patent over a loading bay safety-gate by marketing its own version with an "identical" structure, asking a London court to block any further sales of the competing goods.
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April 03, 2025
4 Questions For Mishcon De Reya IP Chief David Rose
By any measure, Mishcon de Reya LLP's soft intellectual property team had a good 2024. The team advised on three of the year's largest trademark cases, in a particularly busy year at the U.K. courts.
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April 03, 2025
Orange Beats 'Inflammatory' Challenge To Square Logo TM
A European Union appeals panel has upheld the majority of Orange's trademark over its square logo, rejecting allegations that the telecoms company has tried to monopolize a "banal" word.
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April 03, 2025
Kobe Steel Beats Rival's Attack On Cold-Rolled PatentÂ
A major Japanese steel manufacturer has convinced European officials to reject a rival's claims that its patent wasn't inventive, pointing to dozens of examples in its application showing that its steel-making methods worked.Â
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April 03, 2025
Lenovo, Ericsson End Patent Spat With Cross-Licensing Deal
Lenovo has settled all ongoing litigation with Swedish telecoms giant Ericsson after the two companies struck a cross-licensing deal for their respective standard-essential patents, Lenovo said Thursday. Â
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April 03, 2025
Door Maker Denies Design Infringed Rival's Copyright
A door manufacturer has admitted copying the design of a rival's bottom roller for sliding doors, but denied infringing any copyright because the product had no original features.
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April 03, 2025
Unilever Wins Patent Battle With P&G Over Laundry Detergent
Appellate officials at a European patent authority have tossed a challenge by Procter & Gamble against Unilever's patent for a type of laundry detergent, finding that the patent covers a unique formula for stabilizing the product and reducing discoloration.
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April 02, 2025
Nokia Sues Acer, Asus, Hisense For Patent Infringement
Nokia is suing Acer, Asus and Hisense for patent infringement in Europe, kicking off a fresh round of litigation over its video coding tech on the back of its license agreement with Amazon.
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April 02, 2025
UPC Won't Assess Patents That Lapsed Before 2023
The Unified Patent Court said Wednesday that it cannot assess infringement of national parts of European patents that lapsed before the court opened its doors in June 2023, ruling that jurisdiction over such disputes lies with national courts.
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April 02, 2025
Royal Mail Database IP Claim Gets Off To Rocky Start
Royal Mail Group and the operator of an address search website argued Wednesday that software firm Codeberry Ltd. copied millions of addresses from the courier's postcode data without permission, as the High Court case opened without counsel for defendants.
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April 02, 2025
Safestand Wins Appeal To Protect Scaffolding Design
An appellate judge on Wednesday reinstated a scaffolding manufacturer's three registered designs for builders' trestles, ruling that its many components all formed a single product rather than several alternative goods.
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April 02, 2025
Microsoft Sued In Germany Over Video Coding Patents
Three licensors in Via LA's patent pool have sued Microsoft in Germany for allegedly infringing their essential video-coding patents through its sales of Windows and Xbox products, their lawyer said Wednesday.
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April 02, 2025
Toy Seller Denies Copying Rival's 'Paw Bear' IP
A toy seller has fought back against claims that it copied a teddy bear design to steal customers, arguing that its rival was not the first company to give the stuffed animals a neck bow and rough patches.
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April 02, 2025
Paddington Bear Owner Sues Souvenir Seller Over Copyright
The owner of Paddington Bear has hit a souvenir wholesaler with a copyright infringement claim in a London court, accusing it of using copies of the iconic bear on products without its permission.
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April 01, 2025
AstraZeneca Keeps Generics Off Shelves Ahead Of Appeal
Counsel for AstraZeneca convinced the Court of Appeal on Monday to review a decision to let rival Glenmark release its generic version of a billion-dollar diabetes treatment under an agreement that the company can ship supplies of the drug already packed in trucks as long as it doesn't move ahead with retail sales in the meantime.
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April 01, 2025
BAT Unit Can't Nix Philip Morris E-Cig Patent On Appeal
Philip Morris has retained its patent for a method of heating electronic cigarettes, with European officials tossing a challenge from a British American Tobacco unit after finding that Philip Morris' amended claims made the invention new.
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April 01, 2025
Pfizer, Merck Lose Appeal To Patent Cancer Drug DosageÂ
European officials have rejected Pfizer and Merck's second bid to patent a specific cancer drug dosage, ruling that the pharmaceutical giants didn't provide any new justification to protect the treatment they developed together.Â
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April 01, 2025
Nestlé's Smarties Brand Beats Low-Sugar 'Smart Sweets' TM
Nestlé has beaten a Canadian low-sugar candy maker's bid for a "Smart Sweets" trademark after European officials were persuaded that confectionery lovers were likely to confuse the brand with the multicolored chocolate Smarties.
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April 01, 2025
Fire Alarm Patent Not New, Electrical Supplier Argues
An electrical equipment supplier has told a London court that a rival fire alarm manufacturer's patent for fire and carbon monoxide alarm systems is not viable because the supplier's competitor sold similar alarm systems before the patent was filed.
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April 01, 2025
Hydrogen Tech Biz Must Hand IP To Inventor In Dutch Row
An inventor has persuaded a court in the Netherlands to order an energy company to hand over a group of applications for patents to extract hydrogen from water after concluding that he is the rightful owner.
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April 01, 2025
Candey Denies Mishandling Client's Funds In Libel Dispute
Disputes firm Candey Ltd. has denied a claim by a former client that it mishandled her money following a settlement in a trademark dispute, while pressing home its allegation that her one-star Google review of its performance was defamatory.
Expert Analysis
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US Patent Practice Drifting Toward Approach Prevalent Abroad
Post-Alice cases on technical problems and technical solutions show that a problem-solution standard similar to the one adopted in Europe, Australia, China and Japan is seeing express endorsement by U.S. courts adjudicating Section 101 challenges, say Gurneet Singh and Harold Laidlaw of Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC.
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Tips For Addressing The IP Challenges Of 3-D Printing: Part 1
The intellectual property rights of both manufacturers that use 3-D printing and manufacturers that don't may suffer through claim drafting that does not take into account the opportunities provided by 3-D manufacturing, say attorneys with Marks & Clerk.
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EU Unified Patent Court Will Proceed In 2017 — Now What?
Although it is sensible to be cautious and plan accordingly, we believe that the European Union's Unified Patent Court will, after a possibly extended teething period, become a significant forum in which patents are litigated, say Trevor Cook and Anthony Trenton, leaders of WilmerHale's IP litigation practice in Europe.
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Comparing Patent Quality At The USPTO And EPO
In this latest article in an ongoing series on patent quality, Professor Colleen Chien of Santa Clara University School of Law and Professor Jay Kesan of University of Illinois College of Law provide a snapshot of comparative patent inputs, processes and outcomes at the European Patent Office and U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
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Brexit And Supplemental Protection Certificates
The procedure for applying for patents through the European Patent Office will be entirely unaffected by Brexit because the EPO was established by a separate treaty unrelated to the European Union. EU law, however, is critical to the acquisition and enforcement of other intellectual property rights, including supplemental protection certificates, say William Hubbard and Barry Herman of Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice LLP.
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Q&A With GAO Directors: Improving Patent Quality
Overall, we were impressed by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's commitment to improving patent quality through their Enhanced Patent Quality Initiative. However, we still recommended that the USPTO take a number of actions, say John Neumann and Frank Rusco of the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
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EU Court Brings New Copyright Liability For Linked Material
The EU Court of Justice recently ruled that websites that merely link to infringing material can be liable for copyright infringement. If GS Media v. Sanoma stands, it threatens to disrupt common practices on a wide variety of websites and social media platforms, say Jennifer Stanley and Liwen Mah of Fenwick & West LLP.
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Best Of Times And Worst Of Times For International IP
While the intellectual property environment is healthy, the international trade environment is not. The troubling situation raises the question of whether prevailing anti-trade sentiment will undercut IP harmonization progress and jeopardize the future of the global IP system, say Jay Erstling and Amy Salmela of Patterson Thuente Pedersen PA.
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The Complicated Role Of Copyright In EU Pay-TV Case
While the European Commission's decision to close its antitrust investigation of Paramount Pictures does not mark the end of the pay-TV investigation, which continues against other studios and broadcasters, the history of the case and the terms of this settlement provide an interesting insight into the EC’s current views on the interaction between competition law and copyright, say Becket McGrath and Trupti Reddy of Cooley LLP.
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Deciding Where To File Patents Internationally In 2016
Staying tethered to old patent filing strategies can soothe the cognitive dissonance created by a rapidly changing world. But applicants should resist the siren song of the old standbys to optimally adapt their patent portfolios to a world in economic and political flux, says Stephen Keefe, patent counsel at the Getinge Group.
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What Brexit Means For EU Patents And Trademarks
Until the end of the negotiation period that will follow the Brexit vote, EU laws will continue to apply in the U.K., and intellectual property owners will likely experience no change in their rights in the U.K. until at least 2018, say Peter Pappas and Karissa Blyth of Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP.
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7 Reasons Revocation In EU Could Be As Popular As IPR In US
In addition to providing a forum for centralized enforcement of European patents, the Unified Patent Court will offer a new opportunity for challengers to invalidate a European patent centrally in a single action. There are some similarities between UPC revocation actions and the hugely successful inter partes reviews in the U.S., say Leythem Wall and Hazel Ford of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP.
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UK Supreme Court Clarifies Scope Of EU Design Protection
The U.K. Supreme Court's reasoning in a dispute involving children’s suitcase manufacturers raises important points for those filing community registered design right applications in Europe, says Dafydd Bevan of Marks & Clerk.
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A New Dawn For European Patents
The creation of a new European Unified Patent Court and a new patent with unitary effect — expected to come into force next year — is the most important change in the European patent system since the European Patent Convention came into effect in October 1977. It will fundamentally change the international patent litigation landscape, say attorneys with Jones Day.
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A Successful Follow-On Inter Partes Review Petition
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board's recent decision in World Bottling Cap shows that a second petition for inter partes review will be considered by the PTAB when the facts and additional prior art warrant, says Ted Baroody of Carstens & Cahoon LLP.