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Âé¶¹´«Ã½ UK

  • March 28, 2025

    Pharma Co. Sues Ex-VP For Trade Theft To Benefit Rival

    A pharma company has sued its former senior vice president, accusing him of secretly downloading confidential information in order to share it with a rival weeks before he resigned. 

  • March 28, 2025

    MSD Loses Appeal Over Ruling It Broke 'Merck' Branding Ban

    A London appeals court upheld on Friday a ruling that U.S.-based Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC breached a court order blocking its use of the name "Merck" in a move to safeguard German rival Merck KGaA's trademark rights.

  • March 28, 2025

    AstraZeneca Can't Stop Generic Diabetes Drug Launch

    AstraZeneca has lost an attempt to prevent pharmaceutical company Glenmark from launching a generic version of its $1 billion diabetes drug Forxiga, as a London court refused on Friday to stop the generic maker before a decision on whether AstraZeneca's patent is valid.

  • March 27, 2025

    AstraZeneca Fights Generic Diabetes Drug Launch

    AstraZeneca on Thursday asked a London court to block pharmaceutical company Glenmark from launching a generic version of the drug giant's $1 billion Type 2 diabetes treatment Forxiga, ahead of a decision on whether AstraZeneca's patent is valid.

  • March 27, 2025

    Warner Bros 'Multiversus' UK TM Gets Green Light

    Warner Bros. can register a trademark for its online multiplayer game Multiversus, after British officials ruled that gamers would think it was entirely disconnected from a rival firm's "Versus" brand.

  • March 27, 2025

    Parties Can Dodge Costs By Surrendering Patents, UPC Says

    Parties facing challenges to their patents can swerve liability for their opponent's costs by giving up their intellectual property protections at the outset of the dispute, an appeals panel at the Unified Patent Court has ruled.

  • March 27, 2025

    Beverage Biz Can't Corner The Market For 'Norwich City' TM

    U.K. trademark officials have chucked a drinks maker's bid for a "Norwich City" trademark for alcoholic drinks, rejecting the company's argument that it should be allowed because the city's football club already owns a trademark for "Norwich City FC."

  • March 27, 2025

    Top EU Court Urged To Uphold €60M Teva Pay-For-Delay Fine

    An adviser to the European Union's top court said Thursday that it should uphold €60.5 million ($70.7 million) in fines against Teva and its subsidiary Cephalon for an alleged conspiracy to keep a generic version of Provigil off the shelves.

  • March 27, 2025

    Unitary Patent Uptake 'Surpassing Expectations,' EPO Says

    The European Patent Office has said it received more than 28,000 requests for unitary protection in its second year as more than a quarter of applicants sought to protect their inventions under the new framework.

  • March 26, 2025

    Claims Firm Beats Whistleblower's Fraud Case

    A claims manager didn't blow the whistle on forged signatures at an insurance claims handler because he had waited until his resignation day to alert senior management, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • March 26, 2025

    Software Developer Loses 'Baidu' TM On Appeal

    A Dutch provider of software for TV channels has lost its rights to use "Baidu" as a trademark, after a European court found that it hadn't used the name to market goods and services it had applied for.

  • March 26, 2025

    Bacardi Halts Counterfeit Grey Goose Bottles At Dutch Court

    Bacardi has convinced a Dutch court to bar a Hong Kong drinks trader from selling counterfeit Grey Goose vodka in the Netherlands, after the court found the company had infringed Bacardi's protected branding.

  • March 26, 2025

    Cannabis Event Biz Loses Bid For 'Cannafair' TM

    A European court threw out a challenge by cannabis trade fair company Cannafair on Wednesday over the decision by European trademark officials to refuse a trademark for the name of its event, ruling that its name was a literal description of the event.

  • March 26, 2025

    Lotus Biscoff Loses EU Appeal To Register Color TM

    Lotus Bakeries NV has lost another bid to protect the red and white coloring of its biscuit packaging after failing to convince European officials that shoppers would immediately recognize its brand.

  • March 26, 2025

    EU Court Upholds Polish Biz's Rights To Public Toilet Design

    A European Union court has rejected a Polish company's latest bid to quash a rival's protections for a public toilet design, ruling Wednesday that the design was new and consequently valid.

  • March 25, 2025

    Portuguese Bag Maker Can't Nix Rival 'Cavallini' TM

    European officials have ruled that an Italian designer can sell leather goods and clothing using the trademark "about a boy Erika Cavallini" because shoppers would understand it wasn't related to Cavalinho-branded bags and accessories. 

  • March 25, 2025

    Amazon Can't Make Last-Minute Tweaks In Nokia UPC Clash

    Amazon has lost its bid to file additional grounds of appeal in a patent dispute with Nokia over video-coding technology after Europe's patent court held that it wouldn't be fair to its Finnish rival.

  • March 25, 2025

    Roche Voids Biogen's Protein Production Patent At EPO

    The European Patent Office has stripped Biogen of its protein production patent amid Roche's protests, ruling in a decision released Tuesday that the tech lacks novelty in light of a key ruling from the agency's top appeals panel.

  • March 25, 2025

    Ex-Private Equity Exec Denies Data Theft, Alleges Misconduct

    A former manager at private equity firm Appian Capital Advisory LLP has denied stealing the company's data and poaching staff and clients, telling a London court the business sued him after pushing him out because he voiced concerns about his boss's misconduct.

  • March 25, 2025

    Football Shirt Biz Can't Show Red Card To Rival's TM Bid

    A retro football shirt retailer has lost its attempt to boot out a competitor's "Scoreline" U.K. trademark application, failing to prove that shoppers could confuse the mark with its own "Score Draw" branding.

  • March 24, 2025

    Zara Owner Narrows Tanzanian Safari Co.'s Trademark

    Zara's parent company has persuaded U.K. trademark officials to trim the scope of a Tanzanian tour company's "Zara Tours" trademarks but failed to convince them that its right to use the mark should be scrapped entirely.

  • March 24, 2025

    Chinese Co. Avoids Sales Ban In Videoconference Patent Feud

    A Belgian technology company has lost its bid to block a Chinese rival from selling videoconference devices ahead of a full patent infringement trial because the request was filed too late.

  • March 24, 2025

    PepsiCo's Cheetos Brand Can't Block Rival's 'Cheezo' TM

    PepsiCo has failed to convince British officials to stop a rival from registering "Cheezo" as a trademark, ruling that shoppers wouldn't think the Cheetos-maker had expanded into the chocolate wafer market.

  • March 24, 2025

    UPC Reiterates Right To Rule On Infringement Of UK Patents

    The Unified Patent Court has doubled down on asserting its jurisdiction over claims involving U.K. patents, citing a recent ruling that courts in the European Union can assess the validity and infringement of patents from outside the bloc.

  • March 24, 2025

    Honeywell Unit Settles UPC Barcode Scanner Patent Feud

    A Honeywell unit has checked out of its barcode scanner patent infringement claim at the Unified Patent Court, bagging its opponent's attempt to quash its intellectual property.

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    Solution To Patent Eligibility Quagmire Lies In Constitution

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    A lack of clarity on patent eligibility has undermined the credibility of the patent system, and a possible resolution is for courts or Congress to define judicial exceptions to patent-eligible subject matter in their most concise form — in line with constitutional guarantees, says Indi Rajasingham at the Mmillenniumm Group.

  • 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 Âé¶¹´«Ã½yers 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.

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