Here once again is our ever-dependable friend Alberto Bellan's take on last week's substantive Katposts, specially designed to facilitate a swift catch-up for those good folk whose professional, academic, commercial or romantic commitments kept them from reading them when they first came out. This week's collection is the 53rd. Thanks again, Alberto, for all your hard work!
Case C 147/14 Loutfi Management Propriété intellectuelle SARL v AMJ Meatproducts NV, Halalsupply NV is a Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruling regarding trade marks containing both Arabic and Latin letters. It emanates from a reference asking whether the meaning of Arab words should be taken into account and give useful guidance for many trade marks that feature non-Latin script writes Jeremy.* Is UberPOP a transport service? A new reference to the CJEU
Many readers will be familiar with Uber, the on-demand ride-sharing platform which has revolutionised the concept of urban transport and which is in deep trouble in a number of EU countries due to its alleged non-compliance with laws and regulations governing on-demand transportation. Thanks to a Barcelona Court reference, the CJEU has been called on to enter the debate -- which goes far beyond taxis and concern the much broader relation between traditional and sharing economy, explains Katfriend Revital Cohen (Baker & McKenzie, Barcelona).* Jumpin' through hoops? A copyright claim that never got off the ground
Here's a note from Katfriend and occasional contributor Kevin Winters, who takes a look at a recent US copyright dispute concerning the alleged infringement of Michael Jordan’s iconic ‘”Jumpman” logo by Nike.* Payment for use of protected barley seeds: when prospects for dodging payment recede ...
Jeremy takes a look at Case C‑242/14 Saatgut-Treuhandverwaltungs GmbH v Gerhard und Jürgen Vogel GbR, Jürgen Vogel, Gerhard Vogel, a request for a preliminary ruling to the CJEU made by the Landgericht Mannheim (Germany), on a Community plant variety matter concerning reasonable compensation and farmers’ freedom to propagating purposes under Article 94(1) of Regulation 2100/94.* Letter from AmeriKat: Spiderman's web ensnares the US Supreme Court in Kimble v Marvel
Annsley gives an account of US Supreme Court’s decision in Kimble v Marvel, relating to a toy-patent allowing children to role-play as a "spider person" by shooting webs "from the palm of [the] hand" by way of pressurized foam string.* Patent Déjà vu - Hospira v Genentech and another patent dies
Darren sinks his claws in the latest decision in the apparently endless Hospira v Genentech saga. In this episode (Hospira UK Ltd v Genentech Inc [2015] EWHC 1796 (Pat)), Hospira is seeking to invalidate all of Genentech's secondary patents relating to the cancer drug trastuzumab (Herceptin) so that it can market a generic version now that the SPC for the basic patent has expired.* Are EU policy-makers fighting the right copyright battles?
Debate is currently being undertaken at the level of EU institutions as to whether the current legislative framework in the area of copyright should be updated, with initiatives characterised by a complete lack of support on the side of the public opinion. Is this the right direction to take, wonders Eleonora.* The IPKat and his friends: the latest round-up of our IP weblog news
Once every three months or thereabouts, the IPKat and Merpel post an update of the goings-on both on this weblog and on other IP-flavoured blogs to which members of the IPKat's blog team contribute. Here’s your chance to know all the relevant IP places of the blogosphere and to get to know the new guest and resident kats.* No go for GO: Skechers scupper trade mark applications
In the next few weeks, Jeremy will be posting on a number of cases that are still of interest though they are no longer "hot news", these being decisions on which was unable to comment at the time they were published since he was up to his whiskers in conferencing and foreign travel. The first of these is GO Outdoors Ltd v Skechers USA Inc II [2015] EWHC 1405 (Ch), a 19 May decision of Mrs Justice Rose, sitting in the Chancery Division, England and Wales, on an appeal from a decision of the UK Intellectual Property Office. The point, there, was the inherent distinctiveness of “GO walking” and “GO running” for rucksacks and bags (Nice Class 18) and retail services connected with the sale of clothing and accessories (Class 35).* Allfiled allegations and interim relief: balancing the interests of litigants -- and customers
Another in Jeremy's series of not-quite-so-recent cases that he is writing up now because they flashed past him when he was too busy to grasp hold of them a couple of months ago is Allfiled UK Ltd v Eltis & 16 Others [2015] EWHC 1300 (Ch), a 19 May 2015 decision of Mr Justice Hildyard, in the Chancery Division, England and Wales, in an action seeking an interim injunction to stop a total of 17 defendants -- former directors and employees and three companies -- from using its confidential information and intellectual property and from carrying on a trade similar to its own.* Uninsured -- and unregistrable: the OAEE 'victims' mark in Greece
In his debut post, new guest Kat Nikos tells us of an interesting story involving the (perhaps) first trade mark application refusal by the Greek Patent and Trade Mark Office. The application at stake belonged to an association meant to help lawyers and freelances to comply with (or survive) the Freelancers’ Social Security Organization. Unfortunately, it also included the latter organisation’s trade mark.* Icons, flags and the Hazzards of intellectual property toxicity
Viacom subsidiary TV Land has just decided to pull the plug on a current re-run on US screens following the tragic Charleston church massacre. While the Confederate flag is not a brand in the commercial sense, both flags and brands attract loyalties and generate passions that are often irrational and difficult, if not impossible, to suppress, reflects Jeremy.* Why Finland is not Silicon Valley: farewell Matti Makkonen, the "father of SMS"
Matti Makkonen, the Finnish father of SMS, passed away this week. He never patented his revolutionary invention, and diverging approaches to IP might be one of the reasons why creating a Silicon Valley in Europe is as easy as finding a Boldrin/Levine book based on a strict, scientific research. The floor goes to Neil.* Sofa, so good? How to lose both your two trade marks and still come out on top ...
The Sofa Workshop Ltd v Sofaworks Ltd [2015] EWHC 1773 (IPEC), is a recent decision of Judge Richard Hacon in the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court, England and Wales. As Jeremy recounts, it deals with genuine use, acquired distinctiveness, infringement, passing-off, and many, many sofas.* Ukunono, The Battle of the Ukulele Orchestras Plays its Last Tune
Jani introduces himself with The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain v Clausen & Another (t/a the United Kingdom Ukulele Orchestra) [2015] EWHC 1772, another trade mark decision regarding “The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain” soundly opposing The United Kingdom Ukulele Orchestra.* Arnold J rules on the Beatles, a documentary on their first US concert ever ... and US fair use
Can the unauthorised use of copyright-protected works amounting to nearly 42' in a 95' film be considered fair use under §107 of the US Copyright Act? This, together with other issues, is what Arnold J had been asked to determine in Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC & Another v WPMC Ltd & Another [2015] EWHC 1853 (Ch) (1 July 2015), an intriguing case decided earlier this week, having to do with the Beatles and a documentary concerning their first US concert ever. Eleonora tells all.* Le rouge et le noir: when colour hits the IP headlines
Jeremy pens this post on red roses and black cabs. Red roses are those which are included both in UK Labour and Scottish Labour Party’s trade marks, with the first not so happy with the second using a red rose, so that a dispute arose. The black cabs are those examined by Richard Spearman QC (sitting as a deputy Judge of the Chancery Division, England and Wales) in The London Taxi Corporation Ltd v Frazer-Nash Research Ltd & Ecotive Ltd [2015] EWHC 1840 (Ch), a curious tale of taxi look-alikes and bizarre surveys.******************PREVIOUSLY, ON NEVER TOO LATENever too late 52 [week ending on Sunday 14 June] - EU TM reform | Motivate Publishing FZ LLC and another v Hello Ltd | EPO’s Inventor of the Year: poll results | New network for new IP people | Delfi v Estonia | UPC fees | Smith & Nephew Plc v ConvaTec Technologies Inc | Canary Wharf Group Ltd v Comptroller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks | Actavis v Lilly | Council of Europe v EPO | Freedom of Panorama | TM reputation and brain scan | Case management decisions in the Lyrica case.Never too late 51 [week ending on Sunday 14 June] - GIs in France | IPBC Global 2015 | EPO recap | EPO and OAPI bff? | 3-D Lego trade mark | Garcia v Google | B+ subgroup | EU trade mark reform and counterfeits in transit | French v Battistelli | US v Canada over piracy | UK Supreme Court in Starbucks | BASCA v The Secretary of State for Business | Patent litigation, music, politics | Product placement in Japan.Never too late 50 [week ending on Sunday 7 June] - Swiss claims | Italian-sounding trade marks for cosmetics | “IP litigation and Enforcement” event | Saving WiFi | Spy scandal at the EPO | Rihanna v DC Comics | KitKat trade mark | Taste trade marks in the Netherlands | Connectivity and human rights | Trade secrets, client confidentiality and privilege | 3-d printing and counterfeiting | Ericsson v Apple in the FRAND battlefield.Never too late 49 [week ending on Sunday 31 May] - Another copyright-exhaustion-and-software reference to the CJEU | ORO trade marks and GC | Patent Reform in EU | Copyright in the Bahamas | More and more references to the CJEU: communication to the public and linking | Trade secrets and the FoMo phenomenon | Independence of EPO’s BoA.
Never too late: if you missed the IPKat last week ...
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Monday, July 06, 2015
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