Did you miss the IPKat
last week? Don’t worry, because our good friend Alberto
Bellan is back with his 20th round-up of all the Kat-items
that were posted while you were away.
* "Desperately seeking the Big Picture": live
and on stream ...
Last
week IPKat’s blogmeister Jeremy delivered the first episode of this year's
Francis Gurry Lecture on Intellectual Property -- the sixth in the series --
under the title ""IP in Transition: desperately seeking the Big
Picture". Find out some juicy details on the last IPKat’s adventure in
this post!
* Toy marks under scrutiny: is there a rift between OHIM
Appeal Boards?
(Again)
from Australia, (this time) by an Australian, (always) with love. Jeremy gives
the floor to Bill Ladas (King & Wood Mallesons), who compares two groups of
decisions of OHIM Fourth and Fifth Boards of Appeal, concerning registrability
of fanciful animals’ devices as 2D and 3D trade marks. The outcomes of those
rulings were at the Antipodes (also) in terms of assessing distinctiveness. So which
Board got it right, wonders Bill?
* Dimensions from patent drawings
EPO
decision T 1488/10 considers a new twist on a hoary old question: can one rely on
measurements taken from a prior art drawing to invalidate a patent? Find out in
this post by David -- which also provides a very measured list of EPO’s case
law on this very topic.
* Apologies: IPKat emails causing problems
Those
who enjoy blaming Google will find more reasons here.
* Mr Kohl and his ghostwriter... the Regional Court of
Cologne decides
The
Regional Court of Cologne banned journalist Heribert Schwan from including a
list of quotes attributed to former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl in his
recently published book “The Kohl Protocols”. Apparently those are extracts of
conversations that took place while Schwan was working as Helmut’s ghostwriter
-- and Germans take confidentiality very seriously, Birgit explains.
* Patents In, Garbage Out? When machine translation
mangles the prior art
David
reports on EPO decision T 1343/12, which concerns a very bad machine translation of a prior art
Japanese reference used in an inventive step objection. Examining the ambiguous
translation, the Board was unable to reach a conclusion as to its meaning, and
remitted the case back to the Examining Division “for re-consideration of the issue of inventive step in the light of a
certified translation of D1.” But who has the legal responsibility of
procuring this certified translation and who is expected to pay for it, wonders
David?
* Damages for trade mark infringement: the "user principle" and a Haconian ruling
* Damages for trade mark infringement: the "user principle" and a Haconian ruling
Here’s
a guest post from fellow blogger
Barbara Cookson. She reports on National Guild of Removers and Storers Ltd v
Statham t/a Marrubi's Removals & Storage [2014] EWHC 3572
(IPEC), a decision that Judge Hacon recently issued
in the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court, England and Wales. Considering the
criteria for calculating damages for trade mark infringement, the judge sensibly
decided not to apply the user principle that was used in the past. It’s all
about the good/bad willing of the infringer, says Jeremy, while Merpel launches
the brand-new word “Haconian” – which carries a rather different meaning from Draconian.
* Monday Meraviglia & Les Fantaisies
du Vendredi
How lovely these continental variations are.
PREVIOUSLY, ON NEVER TOO LATE
Never too late 19 [week ending Sunday 9 November] – Copyright over Kim Kardashian’s bottom | EPO
under EU Parliament’s investigation?
| Rights on photographs of fake social
profiles | IPEC hears big claims | Spanish copyright reform | Court
of Appeal for England and Wales’ decision in Interflora v M&S | IPEC on confusing business names in Anglian
Windows Ltd v Anglian Roofline Ltd | Ford
Denied Well-Known Trademark Protection in Russia | Crayola
suit to prevent genericide and dilution in the US |
Copyright: monopoly or exclusive right?
| The 17th draft of UPC Rules of
Procedure.
Never too late 18 [week ending Sunday 2 November] -- The Limerick Competition results | More on CJEU
in BestWater | The GC in Laguiole | France to
review its IP Code | Reports on the “no patents round-up for non-techie people”
event | Renting an orphan work in the UK | Aldi and look-alikes | The UK
Supreme Court in Servier v Apotex | Are patent trolls really a
problem? | Last developments over linking in EU.
Never too late 17 [week ending Sunday 26 October] -- A forthcoming conference on TM agreements | UK
Cartier rulings analysed | Obviousness and common general knowledge in the
UK | CJEU and registrability of 3D TMs | New EPO Unity Procedural Rules |
Patentability of perpetual motion | BGH decision on colour TM | Arnold J's
biggest blocking injunction | French Court on Copyright and Free Movement of
Goods | Amazon.com and its ancestors | Merpel on EPO strike ballot | CJEU on
video framing and copyright | Can pizza flavour be a TM? | Who can use "Duke"
as TM in the US?
Never too late 16 [week ending Sunday 19
October] -- The Court of Appeal for England
and Wales in Nampak Plastics Europe Ltd v Alpla UK Ltd |
Former Eagle member claims infringement of his name in the US | The Court of
Appeal for England and Wales in Specsavers v Asda | A change
in format for the European Patent Attorney exam | Reflections over IP5
patent filing figures | ‘Common Sense For Copyright’ initiative to be
rejected in Finland | Converse brings 3D TM infringement proceedings in the US
| Arnold J’s blocking injunction in Cartier and others v various ISPs | Copyright
on shoes according to the Tribunal de Grande Instance de Paris|
Are The Economist’s competitions over innovation really innovative?
| A Limerick competition | UPC and International
law | The EU General Court over the ‘Galileo’ trade mark
| UK IPO UPC prototype tested.
Never too late! If you missed the IPKat last week
Reviewed by Eleonora Rosati
on
Monday, November 17, 2014
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