Last week was another busy one at the IPKat, so it may not be surprising if some missed a post or two. Thankfully our own Alberto Bellan has once again come to rescue readers with his 31st consecutive "Never Too Late" round-up of Kat-items.
So here we go with the usual Albertian review of last week's posts:
Never too late 30 [week ending Sunday 18 January] -- Julia Reda’s EU copyright revolution | GC on trade-marketing bottle shapes in (T-69/14 and T-70/14) | IPKat and BLACA’s event on Sensory copyright | IP Cross-Border Enforcement | US Supreme Court in Teva v Sandoz | On-line copyright infringement in Spain | GC on the ‘Pianissimo’ trade mark for vacuum cleaners in Case T‑11/14 Grundig Multimedia AG v OHIM | Judicial Independence - the EPO Responds to Sir Robin Jacob's Letter | Second medical use claims, skinny labels, and public policy in Warner-Lambert Company, LLC v Actavis Group Ptc EHF & Others | CJEU on exhaustion of copyright in Case C-419/13 Art & Allposters | CJEU confirms accessibility jurisdiction criterion for copyright infringement cases in Hejduk | the Court of Appeal for England and Wales takes Rihanna’s passing off claim under its umbrella | EPO invites its examiners to perform non-examining functions | Trade mark troubles in the Galapagos Islands | C5's 7th Forum on "Pharma & Biotech Patent Litigation" | Strategies for patenting biotech inventions | US Court of Appeals on first-sale doctrine in Omega v Costco.
So here we go with the usual Albertian review of last week's posts:
Last week the IPKat reviewed "A woman's
place is in ... the lead: thoughts on an upcoming IP Forum", a
forthcoming International Women's Leadership Forum on IP. MIP's Emma Barraclough timely
explained the sense of the event and responded to the criticisms that it has
attracted. But has IP any peculiarity woman-wise, wonders Jeremy?
Eleonora hosts a guest piece by a mysterious reader
who tells about a possible new Dutch reference to the CJEU on linking to
unlawful content -- wasn't it enough to take a look to the IPKat analysis of Svensson [Katposts here] and BestWater [here]?
The EPO saga has been extensively covered by Merpel, who gave the floor to the protests
of almost the entirety of the internal members,
and many (here and here) of the external members of the Enlarged Board of
Appeal against the so-called "house ban" imposed on a member of the
Board of Appeal, which were also backed by many European judges in a letter by Sir Robin Jacob. In this post, she hosts
another legal analysis of the situation, this time by Catarina
Holtz, a former member of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office.
The EPO has paid for an article promoting the
career path of an EPO Examiner on the New Scientist. Does the EPO
really need to open its pockets in order to attract suitable candidates,
wonders Merpel?
Oh-la-la, a French court has just stopped two
French parents from naming their baby girl ‘Nutella’, after the famous
Ferrero’s trade mark. How sweet, says Jeremy.
Suleman reviews Case C‑631/13, Arne
Forsgren v Österreichisches Patentamt, a decision where the CJEU addressed
the issues of whether a Supplementary Protection Certificate (SPC) could
be obtained for a product per se in ‘separate’ form when the
marketing authorisation was for a medicine in which the product is covalently
bonded to other ingredients and whether a SPC could rely on a marketing
authorisation which only described the product as a ‘carrier protein’ and did
not provide any information about an independent therapeutic effect.
Eleonora hosts a piece from Katfriend and
fellow blogger Yannos Paramythiotis (@Paramythiotis_Y), who reports on a
recent decision in which the District Court of Athens dismissed five
Greek collective management organisations’ application for a blocking order against
pirate websites.
Katfriend Barbara Cookson pens
a guest piece on Haiss v Ball [2015] EWHC 74 (IPEC), a decision of the Intellectual Property Enterprise
Court (IPEC), England and Wales concerning bondage machines where the costs
happened to become significantly greater than the damages in issue. Keep your
eyes open when you go to IPEC, suggests Jeremy.
How might the profile of a typical successful
patent practitioner be in 20 years's time? Much better than today, Jeremy
thinks, also announcing a £300 discount for practitioners who read this
weblog and wish to attend the Managing Intellectual Property’s International
Patent Forum 2015.
Katfriends Stijn Debaene and Hakim Haouideg report
of a fresh reference to the CJEU from the Antwerp Court of Appeal as
regards compliance with Art 14 of the IP Enforcement Directive of national
systems limiting the recovery of legal fees to amounts far lower than the one
actually spent by the winning party. Albeit potentially disruptive, might that
reference draw any practical change, wonders Jeremy?
Katfriend Rutger M. Kleemans (Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
LLP, Amsterdam) reports on the Hague Court of Appeal’s summary ruling in a
case between Novartis AG and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries BV. The case
concerned indirect infringement by a so-called skinny label. Not only did the Dutch Court
disagree with the Courts of England and Wales on the matter of priority
entitlement and hence validity , but also this ruling appears to be in
contrast to the case last week [for which see Katpost here for the first instance and here and here for the appeal judgment] where Arnold J permitted
Actavis to launch a product with a skinny label without requiring further
measures such as overpackaging, observes Darren.
‘SO WHAT DO I DO WITH MY MONEY’? ‘INVESTING FOR A
NEW WORLD’! This is not a hippie answer to a yuppie question, but two slogans
whose registrability as trade mark was investigated by the General Court in
Case T-609/13 and Case T-59/14, explains Valentina.
Darren writes a further chapter on the Nestec’s
Nespresso wars. It is not the appeal from the Nestec v
Dualit High Court decision [on which see here and here], but a brand new case that the Ethical Coffee
Company (ECC)
has initiated in France, alleging Nestlé’s Nespresso machines infringement of
on of its European patent.
Innovation is a new factor depressing trust,
in at least part of the developed world. This augurs a long-term threat to the
acceptance of IP as well, observes Neil.
Patent actions are highly unusual territory where
to see successful summary judgment applications, writes Katfriend Paul England while commenting the IPEC’s ruling in Global
Flood Defence Systems & Another v Van den Noort Innovations BV & Others [2015]
EWHC 153 (IPEC). Instead of the normal difficulty of proving infringement or
invalidity summarily, though, this decision is about the defence of
justification in the context of making unwarranted threats to sue for patent
infringement that were based only on a patent application.
The recent CJEU ruling in Case C-419/13 Art & Allposters [on which see Eleonora’s
earlier post here] left some tricky questions unanswered. For
instance: when does the alteration of objects incorporating the protected work
involve a new authorisation from the right holder? And how does that ruling
interact with CJEU and national courts’ earlier case law on exhaustion of
digital goods? Find out in this piece by Tom!
After the earlier 5 posts on biotech [that can be found here (introductory); here (ethics); here (case law); and here (strategies for protecting biotech inventions], Suleman provides the sixth one
of the series, this time focusing on financing and protecting research into new
therapies.
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PREVIOUSLY, ON NEVER TOO LATE
Never too late 30 [week ending Sunday 18 January] -- Julia Reda’s EU copyright revolution | GC on trade-marketing bottle shapes in (T-69/14 and T-70/14) | IPKat and BLACA’s event on Sensory copyright | IP Cross-Border Enforcement | US Supreme Court in Teva v Sandoz | On-line copyright infringement in Spain | GC on the ‘Pianissimo’ trade mark for vacuum cleaners in Case T‑11/14 Grundig Multimedia AG v OHIM | Judicial Independence - the EPO Responds to Sir Robin Jacob's Letter | Second medical use claims, skinny labels, and public policy in Warner-Lambert Company, LLC v Actavis Group Ptc EHF & Others | CJEU on exhaustion of copyright in Case C-419/13 Art & Allposters | CJEU confirms accessibility jurisdiction criterion for copyright infringement cases in Hejduk | the Court of Appeal for England and Wales takes Rihanna’s passing off claim under its umbrella | EPO invites its examiners to perform non-examining functions | Trade mark troubles in the Galapagos Islands | C5's 7th Forum on "Pharma & Biotech Patent Litigation" | Strategies for patenting biotech inventions | US Court of Appeals on first-sale doctrine in Omega v Costco.
Never too late
29 [week ending Sunday 11 January] -- Martin Luther King’s movie ‘Selma’ and copyright
problems | CJEU’s copyright decisions awaited in 2015 | The Modern Law of Patents reviewed | China becoming a ‘protector’ of patent
rights | ‘Je suis charlie’ trade mark in France and OHIM| UK IPO logo’s licensing
system | High Court for
England and Wales in Enterprise Holdings Inc v Europcar
Group UK and Another [2015] EWHC 17 (Ch) | Spain without Google News |
CJEU on database protection in Case C-30/14 Ryanair | Can UPC
and national law of infringement diverge? | GC on ‘Monaco’ trade mark in Case
T-197/13 Monaco v OHIM | Corriere della Sera major
infringement in Charlie Hebdo case | GoPro and Apple patent | Biotech patent
case law.
Never too late 28 [week
ending Sunday 11 January] -- German Minister for Agriculture against GIs |
Europe’s 2015 resolutions re innovation | All the must-read IP blogs | UK and
EU Parliaments v the EPO | The bizzarre EPO BoA’s Business Distribution Scheme
| UPC location in London | New spare-part reference to the CJEU | Sir Robin
Jacob and other Europe Judges for judicial independence (at EPO) |Reform of EPO
Boards of Appeal | Data brokers and IP | The Research Handbook on
Cross-Border Enforcement Of Intellectual Property, a review | China’s
patent targets for 2020 | Reproduction of Charie Hebdo cartoons without
permission | Bioderma trade mark litigation | Biotech ethics.
Never too late 27 [week
ending Sunday 4 January] -- The Irish PTO on well-known TMs’ extended
protection in Stone Electrical Ltd v British Sky Broadcasting Group plc |
The Irish PTO on revocation for non-use in HBI Branded Apparel
Enterprises LLC v Dunnes Stores Ireland Company | Criminal penalty for
infringement in Sweden | Congratulations to Trevor Graham Baylis | Australia
copyright reforms and copyright enforcement on-line | The new guest Kats | New
USPTO guidance on Patent Matter Eligibility | Confusion between TM with little
distinctiveness | 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Pom Wonderful
LLC v Hubbard et al | Biotech inventions: controversies, case law,
uncertainties and financing.
Never too late: if you missed the IPKat last week ...
Reviewed by Eleonora Rosati
on
Monday, February 02, 2015
Rating:
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