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April 25, 2025
Seoul Semiconductor Unit Wins UPC Fight Over LED Patent
The Unified Patent Court has ordered a Korean company and a French firm to stop selling three LED chips in France, ruling that they infringe a semiconductor business' patent over an ultraviolet LED device.
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April 25, 2025
Unite Blocks Anglican Group's TM Bid As Filed In Bad Faith
Unite the Union has dashed a group's trademark hopes amid an ongoing discrimination dispute, convincing U.K. officials that the organization filed its "Unite Faith Workers' Fellowship" application in bad faith.
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April 25, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen pub operator Stonegate sue insurance broker Marsh, a human rights lawyer sued for defamation by Russian businessman Ovik Mkrtchyan, and British toy-maker The Character Group reignite an employment dispute with a former finance director. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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April 25, 2025
Crypto Firm Denies Joint Venture Claim From Tether Unit
A crypto trading firm has hit back against a claim by a unit of the blockchain company Tether over a soured bitcoin mining joint venture, arguing it owns any trade secrets or proprietary information generated by its investments.
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April 25, 2025
MoD Supplier Says Ex-Worker Leaked Classified Warship Info
An engineering firm has accused a former employee of handing a rival classified data linked to its supply of components for warships to the Royal Navy, telling a London court that his actions have damaged its relationship with the Ministry of Defence.
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April 24, 2025
DC Comics Gets Judge To Toss Superman IP Suit
A New York federal judge on Thursday tossed a copyright infringement suit that a nephew of late Superman co-creator Joseph Shuster lodged against DC Comics on behalf of his uncle's estate ahead of a July film release on the iconic superhero, saying the court lacked jurisdiction over the case.
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April 24, 2025
Dutch Court Asks Experts To Weigh Meta Copyright Licensing
A Dutch court has appointed three experts to consider the best method for calculating the license fees that Meta must pay for using copyrighted images on Facebook and Instagram.
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April 24, 2025
IBM Rival Gets Sales Ban Stayed In Reverse-Engineering Fight
A London court said Thursday it will delay an order banning a Swiss company's sales of technology that it unlawfully reverse-engineered from IBM's software, holding fire while awaiting the outcome of a potential appeal.
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April 24, 2025
Philip Morris Beats BAT Unit's Challenge To Vape Patent
European officials dismissed a British American Tobacco unit's attacks against a Philip Morris patent related to vaping devices, ruling that other inventors had not thought to make one of the system's key parts reusable.
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April 24, 2025
Scaffolding Biz Denies Infringing Rival's Safety Gate Patent
Brisko Scaffolding has denied claims from rival company National Tube Straightening Service that its "Stay Safe" gate infringed the rival's patent, and has also asked a London court to declare National Tube's patent invalid.
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April 24, 2025
Theranos-Linked IP Feud Split Between 2 UPC Divisions
The Unified Patent Court has allowed separate panels in Germany and Italy to hear a dispute over a patent linked to shuttered blood-testing startup Theranos, divorcing the infringement action from a counterclaim seeking to void the patent.
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April 23, 2025
EU Appeals To Revive WTO Fight Over China SEP Rate-Setting
The European Union has appealed a decision by the World Trade Organization to dismiss the bloc's complaint that a Chinese court engaged in unfair trade practices by setting royalty rates for European-owned 5G technology.
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April 23, 2025
Canal+ Can't Block Software Co.'s Cube TM In UK
French media giant Canal Plus has failed to convince the U.K. sa国际传媒 Office that a Chinese software company's trademark 'Cubenergy' has too much in common with its own trademark '+ LE Cube.'
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April 23, 2025
Philips Loses Bid To Block Dutch Rival's Toothbrush Design
A Dutch court on Wednesday rejected Philips' claim that a rival infringed its copyright and design protections over an electric toothbrush, ruling that the competing devices are sufficiently different.
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April 23, 2025
Rockwell Wins Patent Over Computer-Linked Devices
Rockwell Automation won its bid to patent techniques for improving input-output devices, after European officials rejected a rival's claims that a feature to display statuses on a terminal was previously known.
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April 23, 2025
UKIPO Not Corrupt For Rejecting Patent, Judge Rules
A judge has dismissed a case against the head of the U.K. sa国际传媒 Office, finding that an inventor had waited years after his patent was rejected to bring baseless claims of malice and corruption.
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April 23, 2025
Swiss Drug Developer Veraxa To List In US In $1.6B SPAC Deal
Swiss life sciences investor Xlife Sciences said Wednesday that its portfolio company, Veraxa Biotech, will merge with blank-check business Voyager Acquisition Corp. in a $1.64 billion deal to list on Nasdaq.
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April 22, 2025
Academic Says Journal Infringed Nanotube Paper Copyright
An American bioengineering聽researcher argued at the start of a London trial Tuesday that a scientific journal had wrongly published a paper related to carbon nanotubes without her consent, urging the judge to rule that it had infringed her copyright.
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April 22, 2025
Pornhub Owner Can't Use US Docs In UPC Feud With Dish
Europe's patent court has refused to let Pornhub's owner submit fresh arguments against DISH Technologies based on a U.S. case, ruling that the fact a related patent might be interpreted differently didn't matter here.聽
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April 22, 2025
Moderna Can't Buy Time To Defend COVID Vax UPC Claim
The Unified Patent Court has refused to hand Moderna an extra month to file its defense against a claim that its COVID-19 vaccine infringed a drugmaker's patents in Europe.
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April 22, 2025
Kodak Fails To Pause Sales Ban In UPC Dispute With Fujifilm
Kodak has lost its attempt to pause an order halting sales聽of its lithographic printing products, failing to convince an appeals panel at the Unified Patent Court that an earlier ruling that it infringed a Fujifilm patent had obvious flaws.
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April 22, 2025
Nyetimber Sues Distillery In 'Product Of England' TM Row
English sparkling winemaker Nyetimber has hit a Devon distillery with a claim for trademark infringement, accusing the gin maker of benefiting from its established reputation by copying the wine producer's "Product of England" branding on its bottles and labels.
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April 17, 2025
Coty Wins Bid To Block Gray Market Hugo Boss Perfume Sale
Multinational beauty brand Coty聽has convinced a Hague court to block a Benelux cosmetics company from selling bottles of Hugo Boss perfume that were not permitted for sale in the European Union.
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April 17, 2025
Music Royalties Co. Hipgnosis Revives UK Fight With Manilow
British music royalties firm Hipgnosis can forge ahead with its unpaid royalties case against singer Barry Manilow in the U.K., after an appellate panel on Thursday overturned a pause imposed because of parallel proceedings in Los Angeles.
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April 17, 2025
Goya Foods Not Reputable Enough To Nix Rival's 'Goya' TM
A Spanish olive oil maker has failed to stop a German consultancy from registering the trademark "Goya" over telecommunication services, after European officials found that shoppers wouldn't get confused because the companies' products were worlds apart.
Expert Analysis
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Law Commission's 'Data Objects' Proposal Is Far-Reaching
The Law Commission鈥檚 proposals to recognize data objects as a new category of personal property would bring fundamental changes were they to be implemented, and would have significant ramifications for finance litigation, say attorneys at Norton Rose.
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UK Rulings Give Chinese Courts Wide Powers In IP Disputes
The recent rulings in Nokia v. Oppo and Philips v. Oppo open the door for Chinese courts to adjudicate worldwide rate-setting terms for standard-essential patents, and in so doing present a timely wake-up call as to China's influence, say F. Scott Kieff at George Washington University Law School and Thomas Grant at the University of Cambridge.
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Swatch V. Samsung Offers IP Warning To Platform Operators
The recent U.K. High Court decision of Swatch v. Samsung demonstrates that while platform operators may wish to exercise greater control over the apps distributed on their platforms, this carries with it a corresponding duty to apply due diligence to protect the intellectual property rights of third parties, say Alex Borthwick and William Hillson at Powell Gilbert.
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Opinion
The USPTO Should Give Ukraine Even More Help
The U.S. Patent and Trademark office should take three direct steps to help confer upon Ukraine's patent office the same benefits it previously granted to Russia's Rospatent, in addition to the sanctions the USPTO has already conferred in response to the attack on Ukraine, say David Kappos at Cravath, Teresa Summers at Summers Law Group and Andrew Baluch at Smith Baluch.
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International Law May Protect Foreign Investors In Russia
Investment treaties that allow eligible foreign investors to bring claims for compensation by way of international arbitration may offer a better, or the only, avenue to recover losses for assets that have been seized by Russia, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Amazon TM Ruling Proves Important For Global Websites
The U.K. Court of Appeal recently found that Amazon infringed Lifestyle Equities' trademark, and its analysis of whether there was an intention to target particular customers, provides welcome relief for brand owners and lessons on avoiding infringement for the operators of global websites, say Steven James and Hattie Chessher at Brown Rudnick.
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Sheeran Ruling Raises Burden For Copyright Plaintiffs
In requiring proof of access, rather than proof of the possibility of access, the U.K. High Court鈥檚 decision in Ed Sheeran鈥檚 recent copyright case will provide some security to those in the music industry, say David Fink and Armound Ghoorchian at Venable.
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Litigants Eager To Prove The Song Remains The Same
Recent lawsuits against Ed Sheeran and Dua Lipa, alleging their hit songs infringed others' copyrights, suggest that, despite the difficulty of proving musical plagiarism has occurred, the appetite for this type of litigation may be growing, says Nick Eziefula at Simkins.
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ECJ Ruling Strengthens German Patent Owners' Rights
Following the European Court of Justice's recent ruling in Phoenix Contact, it is expected that German courts will issue more preliminary injunctions in patent cases, making Germany, and particularly Munich, an even more attractive venue for patent enforcement, says Sandra Mueller at Squire Patton.
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Taking A Long-Term View On Russia's Patent Landscape
The imposition of sanctions following the invasion of Ukraine has raised questions about the future of patent procurement and enforcement in Russia, but companies should not dismiss their Russian patents prematurely, especially in industries such as energy, agriculture, electronics and cybersecurity, say Soniya Shah and Ming-Tao Yang at Finnegan.
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Assessing Litigation Uses Of USPTO 5G Development Study
Jonathan Putnam at Competition Dynamics evaluates the arguments for and against studies like the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's recent examination of 5G developers' patent activities, analyzing whether such assessments are reliable for litigation.
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Latest Song Copyright Rulings Clarify What's Protectable
Recent copyright infringement decisions in favor of musicians Ed Sheeran, Katy Perry and Led Zeppelin should help turn the tide against frivolous music copyright lawsuits, says Gerald Sauer at Sauer & Wagner.
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How To Wind Down Patents In Russia Over Next 3 Months
With June 23 approaching as the last day on which U.S. businesses may pay anything to the Russian patent office for filing patents directly or through international Patent Cooperation Treaty applications, practitioners should begin making crucial filing and search decisions now to avoid liability, says Mark Mathison at Kilpatrick.
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Evaluating M&S Bottle Design Infringement Case Against Aldi
A central issue in Marks & Spencer's recently filed intellectual property infringement suit over Aldi's Gold Flake Gin Liqueur bottles may be whether the informed user would have the same overall impression from the M&S registered bottle design and the Aldi designs, say Alex Borthwick and Fraser Simpson at Powell Gilbert.
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Brexit's Effect On UK Trademarks, 1 Year Later
Charlotte Wilding at Wedlake Bell discusses the status of U.K. trademark rules and regulations one year post-Brexit, including a potential increase in intellectual property rights and challenges, delays at the sa国际传媒 Office and a growth of innovation and divergence.