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  • February 17, 2025

    InterDigital Fails To Get Wireless Transmitter Patent At EPO

    InterDitigal cannot protect its wireless transmitter technology with a patent after it unlawfully broadened its application beyond the original blueprint, a European appeals panel said in a ruling released Monday.

  • February 14, 2025

    Independence Key For In-House Attorneys At Smaller Firms

    In-house counsel breathed a sigh of relief Wednesday when the Unified Patent Court held that they should not be de-facto barred from representing the companies they work for, but it remains unclear exactly where the court will draw the line for smaller businesses.

  • February 14, 2025

    Top Dutch Court Upholds Bristol-Myers' Apixaban Patent

    The top court in the Netherlands on Friday dashed Sandoz and Teva's latest bid to revoke Bristol-Myers Squibb's apixaban patent protections, upholding an earlier ruling that the patent is valid.

  • February 14, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Spice Girls star Mel B's ex-husband bring a defamation claim against the publisher of The Sun, a hotel sue a former director convicted of embezzling its funds for breach of fiduciary duty, and comedian Russell Brand face a sexual abuse claim. Here, 麻豆传媒360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • February 14, 2025

    Abbott Eats Up Danone Unit's Challenge To Food Patent

    European appellate officials have dismissed a Danone unit's bid to nix Abbott Laboratories' patented composition for nutritional food, ruling that its special mix of protein and compounds did generate a more absorbable and water soluble product.聽

  • February 14, 2025

    EasyGroup Can't Save European 'EasyTaxi' TM

    A cab company has successfully nixed what remained of easyGroup's "easyTaxi" trademark after the Spanish business convinced European trademark officials at the second attempt to slash the scope to only a handful of categories.

  • February 14, 2025

    Monster Energy Can't Block Supplement Maker's 'M' TM

    Monster Energy has failed in its bid to nix a German supplement brand's mark over the "M" letter, with European officials ruling that its clawmark logo might cover the same goods but looked far too different to confuse shoppers.聽

  • February 13, 2025

    Conde Nast, Politico Are Latest To Bring AI Copyright Fight

    Conde Nast, Politico LLC and other publishers and news organizations on Thursday hit artificial intelligence company Cohere Inc. with a copyright infringement lawsuit in New York federal court, the latest salvo in the high-stakes battle over AI companies' use of published materials to train their models.

  • February 13, 2025

    Patent Court Rules Out DIY Defense For Attys Party To A Case

    麻豆传媒yers cannot represent themselves at the Unified Patent Court if they are a party to a case, an appeals panel at the court has ruled.

  • February 13, 2025

    Billboard Biz Can Re-Up Infringement Claim At UPC

    The Unified Patent Court has given billboard advertising company Aim Sport the go-ahead to expand its patent dispute with a sports advertising rival to include a U.K. unit and cover infringement that allegedly took place in Germany and Spain.

  • February 13, 2025

    Dolby Ends UPC Claim Against Asus After Settlement聽聽

    Dolby has pulled its infringement case against Asus at the Unified Patent Court, after Asus agreed to license Dolby's video encoding technology as part of a broader deal with a patent administrator.聽

  • February 13, 2025

    Woolworth Nixes Rival Retailer's 'Lifa Infinity' TM聽

    European appellate officials have rejected a Norwegian retailer's bid to register a trademark for its line of "Lifa Infinity" waterproof clothing, ruling that its rival Woolworth had already captured the market using the "Infinity" name.

  • February 12, 2025

    Oil Company Wins Effort To Patent Improved Drilling Method聽

    National Oilwell Varco has won its bid to patent a faster, cheaper way of drilling boreholes after convincing European officials that skilled scientists wouldn't have stopped checking the rotational speeds of specific drill bits.聽

  • February 12, 2025

    EU Sinks SEP Proposals Among Deregulation Push

    The European Commission's surprise decision to ax controversial reforms to standard-essential patent licensing and several other major proposals could mark the latest in a global trend of deregulation and protectionism, experts say.

  • February 12, 2025

    UPC Cracks The Door Open For In-House Counsel To Appear

    The Unified Patent Court ruled in a decision released Wednesday that there is no blanket ban on in-house lawyers appearing at the court, handing them a lifeline after a recent ruling jeopardized their ability to represent their employers.

  • February 12, 2025

    Tom Ford Can't Get EU TM For Perfume Bottle Design

    Luxury fashion brand Tom Ford cannot get trademark protection for its fine-line illustration of a perfume bottle, with EU officials finding that the design was not obviously different from other perfume packaging.

  • February 12, 2025

    Blur Drummer's Class Action Claim Faces PRS Strike-Out Bid

    An organization that collects royalties on behalf of musicians in the U.K. on Wednesday asked the country's competition tribunal to toss out a claim brought by the drummer of rock band Blur, who alleged that it has been unfairly distributing cash.

  • February 12, 2025

    EU Shelves SEP Plan In Drive To Simplify New Regs

    The European Commission has withdrawn its bid to overhaul laws on standard-essential patents, announcing in its work plan for 2025 that there is "no foreseeable agreement" for the controversial proposal.

  • February 11, 2025

    ETSI Picks IP 麻豆传媒 Pro For New Chief Policy Officer

    Europe's telecommunications standards body has appointed a new chief policy officer with a background in intellectual property law and policy.

  • February 11, 2025

    Baccarat's TM Cut Down In EU Fight With Interior Design Co.

    An interior design company has convinced a European trademark authority to cut luxury homeware company Baccarat's trademark "Baccarat La Maison" for a swathe of categories, after officials found the famed French crystal maker could not show it was using the mark extensively.

  • February 11, 2025

    Saint-Gobain Grinds Out IP Win Over Robert Bosch Challenge

    European officials have upheld a patent for an abrasive material that reduces the imperfections caused to steel and other pieces, ruling that Saint-Gobain Abrasives' had used a special equation to generate a unique geometric pattern.聽

  • February 11, 2025

    Bristows Hires New UPC Chief In Dublin

    Bristows LLP has hired a new Unified Patent Court director to its Dublin office who aims to "sculpt" the firm's practice at the European forum.

  • February 11, 2025

    O2 Fails To Block Israeli Org's 'LMNT O2' Trademark Bid

    O2 has lost its attempt to foil an Israeli laser company's "LMNT O2" trademark application, failing to convince a European Union appeals panel that consumers could confuse the mark with its own branding.

  • February 11, 2025

    Edwards Halts Meril's Heart Valve Sales In Netherlands

    A Dutch court has ordered Meril to stop selling heart valves that infringe one of Edwards' European patents, rejecting Meril's bid to invalidate its rival's protections.

  • February 11, 2025

    Novartis To Buy US Pharma Biz Anthos For Up To $3.1B

    Novartis AG said Tuesday that it plans to buy Anthos Therapeutics Inc. for up to $3.1 billion, allowing the Swiss pharmaceutical heavyweight to return a drug that originated at the company back into its portfolio of cardiovascular therapies.

Expert Analysis

  • Best Practices For Navigating Europe's New Patent Process

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    Perhaps the most exciting development in the European Patent Office is the upcoming launch of the Unitary European Patent system. Europe has historically been a very expensive patent destination due to the need to validate in each desired country, prepare multiple sets of translations and pay annuity fees in multiple countries. For several decades, there has been discussion about a single patent that would confer protection throughout Europe, but no agreement on it has been reached until now, says Jeffrey Shieh of Inovia.

  • Declaratory Judgment Act: Must Suppliers Bet The Farm?

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    The Supreme Court in MedImmune v. Genentech established that a declaratory judgment plaintiff need not "bet the farm" or "risk treble damages" before being able to seek a declaration that its acts do not violate another鈥檚 rights. Nonetheless, a line of Federal Circuit cases indicate a trend toward requiring declaratory judgment plaintiffs to do exactly that 鈥 "bet the farm" by risking substantial investments in the manufacture or sale of a potentially accused product, say Chris Ryan and Syed Fareed of Vinson & Elkins LLP.

  • Kim Dotcom May Be Shooting Himself In The Foot

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    Internet tycoon Kim Dotcom has claimed that he is the patent holder of a two-step authentication method employed by social media sites such as Facebook and Google and has threatened to sue these companies if they do not agree to help alleviate his mounting legal fees resulting from his impending criminal case on unrelated grounds. Ironically, if the companies take his threats seriously, they may find that they have a strong invalidity challenge to his patent, say attorneys with Haynes and Boone LLP.

  • 13 FAQs About The EU Unified Patent Court Proposal

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    After 40 years of debate, the EU has approved a package of proposals that will create a single patent court system for most of the EU. Twenty-five of the 27 EU states have signed the unified patent court agreement, however extensive preparations are required before the UPC opens for business, say Frank Peterreins and John Pegram of Fish & Richardson PC.

  • Takeaways From UK's Vestergaard Trade Secrets Case

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    The U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision in Vestergaard Frandsen A/S v. Bestnet Europe Ltd. demonstrates a clear appreciation of the significance of intellectual property rights to the promotion of commercial enterprise and the need to balance this with the right of former employees to compete honestly with their former employers, say Akash Sachdeva and Ben Hitchens of Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP.

  • Myriad Ruling Vs. Biotech Patent Eligibility In Europe

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    After the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics Inc., practitioners need to ensure that clients鈥 patent applications are drafted and prosecuted in a way that valuable claims are still obtained in the U.S. while also taking into account the nuances of European biotechnology patent law, say Thomas Haag and Christian Kilger of Fanelli Haag & Kilger PLLC.

  • PPH 2.0 Offers Ways To Reduce Prosecution Time And Costs

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    Recent changes in the Patent Prosecution Highway open up new filing strategies for U.S. inventors who want expedited examination without the costs of Track 1 prioritized examination or who want greater flexibility and lower costs when building international patent portfolios, say attorneys with Foley & Lardner LLP.

  • The Patent Box 鈥 Unlocking The Potential In UK R&D

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    The recent introduction of the U.K.'s 鈥減atent box鈥 鈥 an initiative to drive down corporation tax for innovative and high-tech companies in the U.K. 鈥 should be of interest to companies and multinationals with, or considering acquiring, significant U.K. research and development and other technology-focused development operations, say Arun Birla and Ross McNaughton of Paul Hastings LLP.

  • Should You Use A Patent Practitioner Or Litigator For IPR?

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    Conflicting opinions have been expressed as to whether an experienced 鈥渓itigator鈥 or an experienced 鈥減atent practitioner鈥 is more suited to handling an inter partes review trial before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board. A patent practitioner, particularly one with considerable inter partes experience within the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, will usually be the best choice, says Gerald M. Murphy of Birch Stewart Kolasch & Birch LLP.

  • Italian Court's Google Decision: A Significant Precedent

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    The appellate court in Milan recently published its decision overturning the conviction of three Google Inc. executives for allowing video depicting the bullying of an autistic teenager to be uploaded to the Italian Google Video website. The opinion reduces the potential burdens facing content-hosting providers and other similar Internet companies, say attorneys with Jones Day.

  • How The EU Patent Court Will Protect Against Trolls

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    Many commentators in Europe have worried that the Unified Patent Court will support campaigns of meritless patent litigation comparable to those high-tech companies have seen in the U.S. However, a closer look at the proposed UPC agreement reveals that significant procedural and structural safeguards have been built into the court system to prevent this type of abuse, say attorneys with Ropes & Gray LLP.

  • Advantages Of Registering A Unitary European Patent

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    Any inventor can now introduce an application for a unitary European patent that guarantees a uniform protection and produces identical effects in the 25 states concerned. Since this new unitary patent system establishes a unique annual tax and does not require translations of the application into each national language, the cost of the patent will be drastically reduced, say Paul Van den Bulck and Evelina Roegiers of McGuireWoods LLP.

  • Inequitable Conduct: Rethinking 'Egregious Misconduct'

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    The Federal Circuit's decision in Outside the Box Innovations LLC v. Travel Caddy Inc., alone and collectively with the Federal Circuit's decision in Powell v. The Home Depot Inc., offers some much-needed insight as to the utility and applicability of per se material conduct. But with neither case yielding an affirmative finding of inequitable conduct, the egregious misconduct argument is the pinch hitter who has struck out twice in the batter鈥檚 box, say attorneys with Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP.

  • How The EU's New Unitary Patent System Will Work

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    After debating the single patent issue on and off for 40 years, the European Union is on track to complete approval of a package of proposals on Dec. 21, 2012, to create unitary patents for most of the EU and a unified patent court system. As a result, potentially lower cost patent protection and enforcement could be available throughout most of the EU as soon as April 2014, say Frank Peterreins and John Pegram of Fish & Richardson PC.

  • A European Patent Office Tool That Deserves Another Look

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    Well-crafted European Patent Office third-party observations can be highly valuable weapons in the battle for freedom-to-operate. In some circumstances, they can also be readily coordinated with U.S. Patent and Trademark Office submissions to challenge patent claims in both jurisdictions, say Martin Hyden and Elizabeth Doherty of Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP.

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