Rihanna tops

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 31 January 2013

New entries in the US Apple v Samsung dictionary: D (definite) is in, W (willful) is out

Posted on 03:07 by Unknown
Four IP judgments in one day? Awesome!
(c) Jean-Yves Lamoureux
"On August 24, 2012, after a thirteen day trial and approximately three full days of deliberation, a jury in this patent case reached a verdict..."

A casual reader could mistake this sentence for the introduction to an interesting novel, but IP attorneys will certainly remember that these words spell another chapter of the Apple v Samsung saga, on which Merpel reported here. The jury, in the trial unfolding at the Northern District of California, found that certain Samsung devices infringed Apple's utility patent (US Patent No. 7,469,381 relating to "list scrolling and document translation, scaling and rotation on a touch-screen display", US Patent No. 7,844,915 relating to an "application for programming interfaces for scrolling operations" and US Patent No. 7,864,163 relating to a "method for displaying at least a portion of a structured electronic document") and design patents (US Patent Nos. D504,889, D593,087, D618,677 and D604,305), awarding $1.05 billion in damages. It also found that Apple had not infringed any of Samsung's patents. Both parties filed motions for judgment as a matter of law (and/or new trial) on several of the jury's findings, including the patents' validity and infringement, the willfulness of Samsung's infringing conduct and the award of damages enhancements. Two days ago, Judge Koh delivered four Orders (which can be found here and here) which address these motions.

D as definiteness: Samsung's claims of invalidity under 35 U.S.C. § 112 are rejected

The first Order dealt with Samsung's motion concerning the invalidity of Apple's design patents and one claim of utility patent '163 due to indefiniteness. "The purpose of this definiteness requirement", noted the court, is "to ensure that the claims delineate the scope of the invention using language that adequately notifies the public of the patentee’s right to exclude" (Datamize LLC v. Plumtree Software, Inc.). Indefiniteness as a ground for invalidity targets claims which are not "amenable to construction" or "insolubly ambiguous".

In relation to the utility patent, Judge Koh examined the notion of "substantially centered", found in claim 50. She made ample reference to previous case law, which accepts the use of "words of approximation, such as 'generally' and 'substantially', [as] descriptive terms commonly used in patent claims to avoid a strict numerical boundary to the specified parameter" (Anchor Wall Systems, Inc. v. Rockwood Retaining Walls, Inc.). Although she explained that "a court need not, and indeed may not, construe such terms to give them greater precision, absent a standard for imposing a more precise construction in the specification", she rejected the equivalence between lack of precision and lack of construability. Accordingly, the court held that the term "substantially centered" was not indefinite, as further demonstrated by the testimony of the parties' experts.

The examination of the four design patents moved from similar considerations, as "indefiniteness requires a determination whether those skilled in the art would understand what is claimed" (Young v. Lumenis, Inc.). The court observed that little precedent exists on the matter and argued that the evaluation of the indefiniteness of design patents is closely linked to the test for infringement. If the latter tries to establish whether "an ordinary observer, familiar with the prior art designs, would be deceived into believing that the accused product is the same as the patented design" (Crocs, Inc. v. Int'l Trade Com'n), it is necessary to verify whether such person could tell what is claimed by the design patent.

Assessing the arguments raised by Samsung, Judge Koh made several interesting point, which the IPKat summarizes below:
  • "[T]here is no per se rule that inconsistent use of dotted [and broken] lines [and shading] renders a patent invalid", as indefiniteness arises only if a claim is not amenable to construction. The court stated that claim construction implies construing the use of drafting techniques (Egyptian Goddess, Inc. v. Swisa, Inc.) and that, once issued, the patent enjoys a strong presumption of validity.
  • The fact that a patent depicts "a design in different orientations merely shows that the particular orientation – landscape or portrait, head-on or perspective – is not part of what is claimed". It does not allow one to infer that a feature invisible in one of the figures, due to the drawing's orientation or rotation, is not part of the design [Laws of Physics 1 - Samsung 0, whispers Merpel].
  • The existence of multiple embodiments of the same design patent does not imply its indefiniteness [the court does not rule out this possibility, but suggests that the claimant should provide strong proof of the irreconcilable differences of the embodiments, in order to overcome the patent's presumption of validity]. 
  • A design patent should be evaluated on the basis of the overall impression that it produces, which is the visual standard for comparison. Accordingly, if the relative position of an element in relation to the surface (below, on or on top) cannot be positively identified, no issue arises "as long as any of those could produce interchangeable visual effects that would appear substantially the same to the ordinary observer". If this is not the case, this situation merely shows that different embodiments of the same design patent are possible.
    The court underlined the importance of distinguishing between drafting inconsistencies and actual ambiguity, as the first may be overcome when it is possible to construe the drafting techniques. It found that "all of Samsung’s alleged sources of indefiniteness concern how the design is represented, rather than the nature of the design itself" and that "[t]hese ambiguities are not fatal to patents that this Court must view with a strong presumption of validity". Thus, it rejected Samsung's claims, confirming the validity of Apple's design patents.

    W as (un-)willful: the Court finds that Samsung's infringement was not willful

    Judgment as a matter of law? Not for us!
    In its second Order, the court examined Samsung's motions for a new trial and for judgment as a matter of law on a series of issues, which included Samsung's willfulness in relation to the acts of patent infringement, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50 and 59. A district court may grant judgment as a matter of law, Judge Koh said, "when the evidence permits only one reasonable conclusion and the conclusion is contrary to that reached by the jury" (Ostad v. Oregon Health Scis. Univ.): the party, therefore, must show that the verdict is not supported by "substantial evidence". If the verdict is contrary to the clear weight of evidence, instead, a court may grant a new trial, if necessary to prevent a miscarriage of justice.

    This brave Kat ventured through the 40-page long judgment, to catch a glimpse of all the six claims analyzed in the Order. The following is a recap of what caught his attention:

    (a) Validity and infringement of Apple's design patents
    Judge Koh rejected Samsung's claims that no reasonable jury could have found Apple's design patents valid and infringed. She held that the jury had been properly instructed on the elements to be assessed and the standards to be applied. Concerning the evaluation of functional elements, the court clarified that it was neither necessary nor beneficial to provide an element-by-element construction to the jury:
    "[t]he cases do not suggest that this type of claim construction is appropriate when instructing a jury", as it "could divert the jury's attention from the design as a whole". 
    Further, it concluded that Samsung had failed to provide evidence that the overall design portrayed by the patents was primarily functional. The scrutiny of obviousness, conducted to evaluate "whether the claimed design would have been obvious to a designer of ordinary skill who designs articles of the type involved", through a two-step process (Titan Tire Corp. v. Case New Holland, Inc.), did not support Samsung's assertions.

    (b) Protectability and dilution of Apple’s Registered iPhone Trade Dress and Unregistered iPhone 3G Trade Dress
    The court reviewed Samsung's arguments concerning functionality and applied the Disc Golf Ass’n, Inc. v. Champion Discs, Inc. test. It also evaluated secondary meaning ("the purchasing public associates the trade dress with a particular source") and fame, which allow the party, if other elements coexist (use in commerce, after the trade dress became famous, and likelihood of blurring - see Jade Toys, Inc. v. Mattel, Inc., 518 F.3d) to show dilution ("the whittling away of the value of a trademark when it’s used to identify different products", Mattel, Inc. v. MCA Records, Inc.). Samsung's motions were again denied, as the jury's findings were not against the clear weight of evidence.

    (c) Validity and infringement of Apple's utility patents
    Samsung's claims contesting the jury's findings were rejected. Judge Koh conceded that, in relation to one of the patents, the jury's verdict contained inconsistencies, but refused to grant a new trial, noting that courts should set aside a verdict only when absolutely necessary. The question, in fact, "is whether the verdict can be reconciled on any reasonable theory consistent with the evidence" (Ward v. City of San Jose): the court clarified that "[o]nly verdicts that entail two legal conclusions that cannot logically coexist, such as an award of damages and a finding of no liability, rather than a mere inconsistent view of facts, warrant the Court’s intervention".

    (d) Willfulness
    This is perhaps the most interesting point of Judge Koh's Order. The court recalled that the evaluation of willfulness, in relation to patent infringement, requires a two-prong analysis: "[t]he objective inquiry is a question for the Court, and the subjective inquiry is a question for the jury" (Bard Peripheral Vascular, Inc. v. W.L. Gore & Associates, Inc.). Since the jury had found that Samsung’s infringement was subjectively willful for five of the seven patents, Judge Koh moved to analyze whether there Samsung had an objectively reasonable defense to infringement of Apple's patents. Her findings supported Samsung's motion for judgment as a matter of law. Thus, she declared that Samsung's infringement of the utility (for reliance on invalidity defenses on various grounds) and design (relying on reasonable non-infringement defenses) patents was not willful.

    (e) The liability of Samsung Electronics Corporation (SEC)
    Samsung argued that SEC, the Korean parent company, had not committed patent infringement in the United States, as it had merely sold the accused devices to the US subsidiaries Samsung Telecommunications America (STA) and Samsung Electronics America (SEA). Rejecting the argument, the court found that "SEC ships the phones directly into the United States, albeit having first transferred title to STA and SEA", an arrangement which could determine liability in light of Litecubes, LLC v. N. Light Prods. Evidence that SEC exerted a high degree of control over SEA and STA activities in the US further supported the court's conclusion.

    (f) Samsung's affirmative cases
    Judge Koh examined and denied Samsung's motions related to the infringement of some of its patents by Apple's devices. The most interesting question involved the jury's findings of exhaustion and non-infringement, in relation to Samsung's patent '516. The court observed that "[w]ithout infringement or evidence of infringing use, there can be no exhaustion": accordingly, it declared Samsung's patent non exhausted (but still not infringed, in light of the jury's finding).

    (g) The trial was not manifestly unfair
    The court found that "the trial was fairly conducted, with uniform time limits and rules of evidence applied to both sides". A new trial, then, would be contrary to the interests of justice.

    The other two Orders: damages enhancements and Apple's motion for judgment as a matter of law

    With its third Order, Judge Koh denied Apple's motion for damages enhancements under the Patent Act, 35 U.S.C. § 284, and the Lanham Act, 15 US.C. § 1117(a). As § 284 requires a finding of willful infringement, its applicability was ruled out. Judge Koh, instead, addressed the relationship of § 1117(a), which aims at compensating the party for additional losses not included in the jury's award, with § 289 of the Patent Act, finding that the latter provision (a party “shall not twice recover the profit made from the infringement") did not preclude the applicability of the former.

    The court noted that "all six products that the jury found to dilute trade dress were also found to infringe design patents" but the jury correctly "returned a single damages number that also incorporates design patent infringement damages". It also held that Apple had not given proof of any additional damages which warranted the application of the Lanham Act enhancements, which "are designed to compensate plaintiffs for losses, not to disgorge ill-gotten gains". Accordingly, it rejected Apple's motion.

    Finally, Judge Koh considered Apple's motion for judgment as a matter of law on some of the jury’s findings and on other issues that the jury did not reach. The motion was granted only in relation to the invalidity of claims 10 and 15 of Samsung's US Patent No. 7,675,941, as Apple presented clear and convincing elements to establish anticipation. Apple also argued that Samsung breached the European Telecommunications Standards Institute’s (“ETSI’s”) Intellectual Property Rights (“IPR”) Policy, a claim rejected by the jury. The court refused to overturn the jury's verdict on the issue, noting that Apple had not provided sufficient evidence of a causal link between the alleged breach and harm.
    Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
    Posted in apple v samsung, damages enhancements, design patents, indefiniteness, infringement, judge koh, utility patents, willfulness | No comments
    Newer Post Older Post Home

    0 comments:

    Post a Comment

    Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

    Popular Posts

    • Milan Court of First Instance rules in favour of Guess in the Gucci/Guess saga
      IPKat team members' keyring Can IP litigation stories be as appealing to the general public as Italian gossip characters'  weddings ...
    • Losing its fizz: the end of the Euro-Bud dispute?
      Could this be the final decision in the Battle of the Buds?  Today the General Court gave its ruling in regard to four cases which have been...
    • Wake up and smell the coffee: Arnold J gets real with consumables and indirect patent infringement
      What happens when coffee and Kats combine - something too cute to drink The AmeriKat loves many things. Fresh lemonade. Kittens' paw pa...
    • IP blogging: a couple of ethical issues
      Information received from anonymous sources The IPKat regularly receives correspondence from impeccable sources who wish to disseminate info...
    • Spain takes Parliament and Council to Court over Unitary Patent Package
      The battle between David and Goliath is entering the second round. Spain has brought two last minute actions before the Court of Justice (Ca...
    • Can it really be? Consumers sue for trade mark dilution
      "If it's clear, it must be water, vodka or gin", muses Miffy. "... Oh, my goodness -- it's actually beer!" Most ...
    • Friday fantasies
      Around the weblogs .  PatLit is hosting an appeal by Kingsley Egbuonu for UK intellectual property litigants to participate in his short onl...
    • Coming soon: CIPA and IPAG's Big Events
      Citius, Altius, Fortius ...  CIPA Congress: of turtles and early birds .  The Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys' annual gathering ...
    • Challenges to EPO decisions: a rational basis for irrationality
      Sean Gilday When he posted "The IPKat and his Blogging Friends -- a 2013 Round-up", here , last week, this Kat concluded with a ca...
    • Which comes first - patent infringement or FRAND? "Patent infringement", says Birss J (Part I)
      The AmeriKat has figured out one strategy: keeping warm in the garden during the English summers (courtesy of Joe Delaney ) As a litigator, ...

    Categories

    • .amazon (1)
    • §43(a) Lanham Act; App Store/Appstore (1)
    • #inta13 (3)
    • 2009 Belgian precedent (1)
    • 2012 statistics (1)
    • 35 usc 112(f) (1)
    • 3D trade marks (1)
    • abuse (1)
    • abuse of dominant position (1)
    • abuse of rights (1)
    • acquired distinctiveness (2)
    • actual damages (1)
    • ad campaigns (1)
    • added matter (1)
    • advertising (1)
    • advocate general's opinion (2)
    • AdvoKat (1)
    • aereo (1)
    • AGA Medical (1)
    • AGCOM (1)
    • agency (1)
    • AIPPI UK seminar (1)
    • AIPPI UK talk (1)
    • All Saints (1)
    • Allan Zelnick (1)
    • Allergan v Sandoz (1)
    • ALRC paper Copyright and the Digital Economy (1)
    • Alzheimer's Disease (1)
    • amazon (1)
    • Amazon Kindle Worlds (1)
    • Amazon.com (1)
    • America Invents Act (1)
    • AmeriKat (15)
    • analogue vs digital copies (1)
    • analogy (1)
    • anonymity of recipient of injunctive relief (1)
    • antibody (1)
    • anticounterfeiting (1)
    • antitrust law (1)
    • appeal (2)
    • appeal or rehearing (1)
    • apple (7)
    • Apple brand (1)
    • Apple stores (1)
    • Apple v Amazon (1)
    • apple v samsung (5)
    • applicable law on infringement (1)
    • application for stay (1)
    • appstore (1)
    • Arnold J (1)
    • array of objects (1)
    • art (2)
    • Article 10 ECHR (1)
    • Article 101 TFEU (2)
    • ARTICLE 19 (1)
    • Article 3(1) InfoSoc Directive (2)
    • Article 4(2) of Directive 2001/29 (1)
    • Article 5(2) Directive 2001/29/EC (1)
    • Article 53(1)(c) CTMR (1)
    • Article 7(1)(b) and 7(1)(c) of Regulation 207/2009 (1)
    • Article 8(4) CTMR (1)
    • Articles 2 and 5 InfoSoc Directive (1)
    • Ashby Donald and Others v France (1)
    • Assessment of importance of IP (1)
    • Association for Molecular Pathology (1)
    • at-risk launch (2)
    • attorney general (2)
    • Australian perspective (1)
    • author's original creation (1)
    • author's rights (1)
    • Authors Guild v Google (1)
    • authorship (1)
    • autocomplete (1)
    • Babycham (1)
    • backlists (1)
    • bad faith (3)
    • balancing fundamental rights in the EU (1)
    • ballon d'or (1)
    • Bambi (1)
    • Batmobile (1)
    • battle of the Buds (1)
    • battle of the tablets (3)
    • BBC radio programme (1)
    • Be Happy (1)
    • beer (1)
    • behavioural economics (1)
    • Belgium (1)
    • Best Practices in IP conference (4)
    • BGH (1)
    • bifurcation (2)
    • bilateral agreements (1)
    • Bill Patry (1)
    • BlackBerry (1)
    • blind people (1)
    • block exemption (1)
    • blogroll (3)
    • Board of Appeal (1)
    • Bobbi McFerrin (1)
    • Bohemian Rhapsody (1)
    • Book review (2)
    • book notice (1)
    • book notices (5)
    • Book reviews (1)
    • books (1)
    • borrowing from culture (1)
    • Boston (1)
    • Bowman v Monsanto (2)
    • Branding (2)
    • brands (1)
    • breach of confidence (4)
    • breach of injunction (1)
    • British Brands Group (1)
    • broadcasting (1)
    • broadcasting rights (1)
    • broken lines (1)
    • browsing (1)
    • brussels regulation (1)
    • Budweiser dispute (1)
    • Bundesgerichtshof (2)
    • Bunny dispute (1)
    • burden of proof (1)
    • but everyone else does it (2)
    • BuzzFeed (1)
    • cadbury (1)
    • call for help (1)
    • Canada (1)
    • Capitol Records (EMI) v ReDigi (2)
    • Card and board games (1)
    • Case C-128/11 UsedSoft (2)
    • Case C-128/11 UsedSoft v Oracle (2)
    • Case C-170/12 Peter Pinckney v KDG Mediatech AG (1)
    • Case C-283/11 Sky Osterreich v Osterreichischer (1)
    • Case C-348/13 BestWater International (1)
    • Case C-466/12 Svensson (1)
    • Case C-521/11 Amazon.com (1)
    • Case T-396/11 (1)
    • Case T-442/08 CISAC v European Commission (1)
    • Case T-498/10 (1)
    • Case T-579/10 (1)
    • cDna (1)
    • celebrity rights (2)
    • Champagne (1)
    • change of company name (1)
    • Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (1)
    • chiang (1)
    • China (2)
    • chocolate (1)
    • chocolate bunnies (1)
    • CIPA Congress 2013 (1)
    • Civil procedure (1)
    • CJEU (1)
    • CJEU reference (14)
    • CJEU references (4)
    • CJEU ruling (9)
    • class certification (1)
    • class headings (3)
    • co-authorship (1)
    • co-ownership (1)
    • Code of Public Health (1)
    • Coexistence agreements (2)
    • coexisting trade marks (1)
    • Colin Kaepernick (1)
    • collecting societies (1)
    • color trademarks (1)
    • Combigan (1)
    • combination products (1)
    • comment (1)
    • commercial ecosystem (1)
    • commercial exploitation (1)
    • communication of information (1)
    • communication to the public (2)
    • Community design infringement (1)
    • Community patent (1)
    • Community plant varieties rights (1)
    • Community registered design (4)
    • Community trade mark (13)
    • Community trade mark application (1)
    • Community trade mark opposition (1)
    • competition (2)
    • competition law (3)
    • Competition result (1)
    • composite marks (1)
    • compulsory licences (1)
    • computer language (1)
    • Computer mouse (1)
    • computer software patents (1)
    • computers and printers (1)
    • conference (2)
    • construction (1)
    • consultation (2)
    • consultations (1)
    • consumables (1)
    • Consumer response to perceived change in branded goods (1)
    • contempt of court (1)
    • contractor (1)
    • contributory infringement (2)
    • conversion (1)
    • cool (1)
    • copyright (20)
    • copyright and freedom of expression (1)
    • copyright and puns (1)
    • copyright boundaries (1)
    • Copyright exceptions (3)
    • copyright hub (2)
    • copyright in tattoos (1)
    • Copyright infringement (9)
    • copyright law (1)
    • copyright levies (1)
    • copyright levy (1)
    • copyright licensing (1)
    • copyright reform (1)
    • copyright registration (1)
    • copyright term extension (1)
    • correlation of patent filing with public debt (1)
    • cost (1)
    • Costs (3)
    • costs budgeting (1)
    • costs order (1)
    • council (1)
    • Council Regulation (EC) No 207/2009 (1)
    • counterfeit drug products (1)
    • Cour de Cassation (1)
    • course syllabus (1)
    • Court of Appeal (2)
    • court of appeals (1)
    • Court of Justice of the European Union (1)
    • covenant not to sue (1)
    • covenants not to sue (1)
    • CPVO (1)
    • creativity (1)
    • credibility of witnes (1)
    • criminal libel (1)
    • Croatian accession (1)
    • crowd-funded litigation (1)
    • crowdsourcing (1)
    • CTM (1)
    • CTM appeal (1)
    • cybersquatting (1)
    • damages (1)
    • damages enhancements (1)
    • damages for infringing an invalid right (1)
    • data and market exclusivity (2)
    • data supporting utility (1)
    • David Kappos (2)
    • David Latham (1)
    • David Stone (1)
    • Debate (1)
    • Decision No 6095/2013 Gucci v Guess (1)
    • declaration of non-infringement (1)
    • deer (1)
    • defamation (2)
    • definition of format (1)
    • Derek Seltzer v Green Day (1)
    • descriptive sign (1)
    • design and trade mark overlap (1)
    • Design around (1)
    • design patents (1)
    • Design protection (1)
    • designs (1)
    • devoid of distinctive character (1)
    • digital afterlife (1)
    • digital goods (1)
    • dilution (1)
    • Dilution Act (1)
    • Directive 2010/13 (1)
    • Directive 2011/77/EU (1)
    • disciplinary proceedings (1)
    • Disclosure (3)
    • dissatisfied inventors (1)
    • Distance learning in copyright (1)
    • distinctiveness (1)
    • divisional application (1)
    • Divisional patent applications (1)
    • divisionals (1)
    • DNA (1)
    • doctrine of equivalents (1)
    • domain name (1)
    • domain name registration (1)
    • domain names (1)
    • Don't Worry (1)
    • dormant therapies (2)
    • draft online copyright enforcement regulation (1)
    • dubbers' rights (1)
    • due cause (1)
    • due diligence joke (1)
    • dvr (1)
    • E-commerce directive (1)
    • eastern district of texas (1)
    • eBooks (1)
    • ECHR (1)
    • Economics (1)
    • eli lilly (1)
    • emails as information (1)
    • embedding (1)
    • employer-employee (1)
    • employment (1)
    • endowment effect (1)
    • England and Wales (6)
    • english court (1)
    • enhanced cooperation (3)
    • Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act (1)
    • Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill (4)
    • entitlement proceedings (1)
    • EPA (1)
    • epi (1)
    • epo (4)
    • EPO appeals (1)
    • epo consultations (1)
    • eqe (1)
    • equitable remuneration (1)
    • Ericsson (1)
    • Essex (1)
    • estoppel (2)
    • EU (1)
    • EU Commission (1)
    • EU copyright (1)
    • EU copyright policy (2)
    • EU customs (1)
    • EU law-making (1)
    • EU patent (3)
    • EU patent package (1)
    • EU patent proposals (1)
    • EU trade mark law (1)
    • EU trade mark reform (1)
    • European Copyright Society (1)
    • European Court of Human Rights (1)
    • European Court of Justice (1)
    • European legislative process (1)
    • european parliament (1)
    • European Patent Institute (1)
    • European patent law (1)
    • European Patent Office (1)
    • European Qualifying Examination (1)
    • european trade marks (1)
    • european union (2)
    • European unitary patent (6)
    • evidence (1)
    • evidence of consent (1)
    • evidence-based copyright reforms (1)
    • Evil Empire (1)
    • examination results (1)
    • exceptions/limitations to right of reproduction (1)
    • excluded subject matter (1)
    • Exclusions from patentability (2)
    • exhaustion (1)
    • exhaustion of rights (2)
    • expert (1)
    • extended collective licensing (3)
    • extended passing off (1)
    • Facebook (1)
    • fair compensation (3)
    • fair use (6)
    • fair use poll (1)
    • fairytale (1)
    • fait maison (1)
    • fashion design (1)
    • fast-track patents (2)
    • Faulkner (1)
    • FDA (1)
    • federal circuit (1)
    • Ferrero (1)
    • financial retribution (1)
    • First Amendment (1)
    • First sale (1)
    • first sale doctrine (4)
    • first-to-file (1)
    • first-to-invent (1)
    • fiscal practices (1)
    • fleas (1)
    • Flora (1)
    • Florian Mueller (1)
    • flowcharts (1)
    • floyd j (1)
    • Forbes (3)
    • Fordham 2013 (10)
    • Fordham 2013; EU copyright (1)
    • Fordham 2013; news aggregators (1)
    • Fordham Conference 2013 (1)
    • Formulaic songs (1)
    • Forthcoming events (1)
    • framing (1)
    • france (4)
    • France Brevets (1)
    • FRAND (5)
    • FRAND licences (3)
    • FRAND licensing (2)
    • free speech (1)
    • freedom of art (1)
    • Freedom of expression (1)
    • French agreement (1)
    • French chefs (1)
    • Friday fantasies (18)
    • Frommer's (1)
    • Fross Zelnick Lehrman and Zissu (1)
    • FTA (1)
    • functionality (3)
    • functionality of computer software (1)
    • G logo (1)
    • GAO (1)
    • General Court (1)
    • generic names (1)
    • generic top level domains (1)
    • generics (4)
    • genes (1)
    • genetically modified wheat (1)
    • Genuine use of trade mark (1)
    • geographical indication (1)
    • geographical indications (3)
    • geographical indications of origin (1)
    • George Alexander Louis Windsor (1)
    • Germany (9)
    • Gita Hall May v Lionsgate Entertainment (3)
    • glaxo genentech (1)
    • Gleevec (2)
    • Glivec (3)
    • golden balls (1)
    • goods in transit (1)
    • goodwill (1)
    • google (3)
    • Google Adwords (1)
    • Google autocomplete and related searches (1)
    • Google Books Library Project (1)
    • Google Inactive Account Manager (1)
    • Google Inc v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2013] HCA 1 (6 February 2013) (1)
    • Google News (3)
    • Google News agreement in Belgium (1)
    • Google Tax (1)
    • gorillas (2)
    • Got Milk? campaign (1)
    • graduated response (1)
    • Greek yoghurt (1)
    • Griggs v Evans (1)
    • grounds of appeal (1)
    • Grumpy cat (1)
    • gTLDs (3)
    • Gucci trademarks (1)
    • Hargreaves review (1)
    • Hargreaves Review of IP and Growths (1)
    • harmonisation (1)
    • harmonised trade mark law (1)
    • hash oil (1)
    • hearing (1)
    • high-fashion brands (1)
    • hold up (1)
    • Hollande (1)
    • Honest (1)
    • honest descriptive use (1)
    • honest use of own name (1)
    • Hong Kong (1)
    • Hooper Report (1)
    • Hrdy (1)
    • Hungary (1)
    • hybrid audience (1)
    • Hyperlinks as copyright infringement (1)
    • IBM (1)
    • ICANN (2)
    • ILO (1)
    • image marks (1)
    • Image rights (1)
    • Imatinib (1)
    • immunity (1)
    • implied contract (1)
    • implied endorsement (1)
    • indefiniteness (1)
    • india (2)
    • Indian Supreme Court (2)
    • indirect patent infringement (2)
    • indiscriminate collection of levy (1)
    • individual character (2)
    • industrial espionage (1)
    • Infopaq string of cases (1)
    • information from anonymous sources (1)
    • infringement (5)
    • infringement. construction of claims (1)
    • Innocent (1)
    • innovation and copyright (1)
    • insufficiency (5)
    • INTA (1)
    • INTA 2013 (3)
    • INTA Meeting 2013 (1)
    • INTA Scholarships (1)
    • Intelellectual Ventures (1)
    • Intellectual Property and gender (1)
    • Intellectual Property Bill (1)
    • intention to create legal relations (1)
    • intention to target (1)
    • interflora (1)
    • interim injunctive relief (1)
    • interim relief (1)
    • internal market (1)
    • international law (1)
    • internet browsing (1)
    • internet streaming (2)
    • INTERPOL (1)
    • interpretation (1)
    • invalidation (1)
    • invalidity (4)
    • invention (1)
    • inventive step (3)
    • IP (1)
    • IP + retail (1)
    • IP and apps (1)
    • IP and Digital Entertainment conference (3)
    • IP and Digital Entertainment conference: Part IV (1)
    • IP and innovation (1)
    • IP and Retail conference report (2)
    • IP and Retail Conference: session 3 (1)
    • IP and Retail Conference: session 4 (1)
    • IP and retailers (1)
    • IP blogging and ethics (1)
    • IP driven growth (1)
    • IP fiction (1)
    • IP in family history (1)
    • IP lawyer (1)
    • IP license (1)
    • IP Licensing (1)
    • IP litigation (1)
    • IP Minister (3)
    • IP ownership (1)
    • IP rights (1)
    • IP Translator (8)
    • IPAG Conference 2013 (1)
    • IPKat 10th birthday event (2)
    • IPKat/1709 blog joint poll (1)
    • IPO (1)
    • IPO consultation (2)
    • IPO consultation procedure (2)
    • IPO logo (1)
    • IPO parody reports (1)
    • IPO patent opinions (1)
    • IPReg (1)
    • Ireland (3)
    • irony (1)
    • isolated dna (1)
    • ISP liability (4)
    • issue estoppel (1)
    • Italy (3)
    • ITC (3)
    • jackson reforms (1)
    • Janssen Alzheimer Immunotherapy (1)
    • Japan (1)
    • Jeremy Phillips (1)
    • Joachim Low (1)
    • Joined Cases C-403/08 and C-429/08 QC Leisure (1)
    • Joined Cases C-457-460/11 VG Worth (1)
    • joint authorship (1)
    • judge koh (1)
    • Judicial appointment (1)
    • jury awards (2)
    • justification of patents (1)
    • Kaepernicking (1)
    • Kat opinion (1)
    • Kate Moss (1)
    • Katnews (3)
    • Katonomics (1)
    • Katpoll (1)
    • Keywords (1)
    • Kirtsaeng v Wiley (2)
    • Kit Kat (1)
    • knowledge of earlier mark (1)
    • knowledge workers (1)
    • Knut (1)
    • later evidence (1)
    • law firm branding (1)
    • law reform (1)
    • Law Society of Ireland (1)
    • lease (1)
    • Legal Board (1)
    • legal reasoning (1)
    • Lescure (1)
    • Let's Plays (1)
    • Lex Google (1)
    • lex specialis (1)
    • licences and exhaustion (1)
    • Licences for Europe (3)
    • license without fixed term (1)
    • licensing agreements (1)
    • likelihood of confusion (1)
    • likelihood of congfusion (1)
    • likeness (2)
    • limited liability (1)
    • literary figures (1)
    • litigation (2)
    • live sports (1)
    • Loi Hadopi (1)
    • Lookalikes (3)
    • lord justice kitchin (1)
    • louboutin (1)
    • Lundbeck (2)
    • macros (1)
    • Mad Men lawsuit (2)
    • MadMen (1)
    • making (1)
    • makro (1)
    • Malarone (1)
    • Managing Intellectual Property (1)
    • Mark Cuban (1)
    • marks spencer (1)
    • Marrakesh (1)
    • massively multiplayer online games (1)
    • Max Planck Institute (1)
    • Mayer (1)
    • means for (1)
    • Meher Baba (1)
    • merial (1)
    • Merpel (1)
    • metatags (2)
    • microsoft (1)
    • Minnesota (1)
    • misappropriation (2)
    • Miscellany (1)
    • misleading and deceptive conduct (1)
    • mobile technology (2)
    • MODDERN Cures Act (2)
    • Monday miscellany (24)
    • Monday miscellany II (1)
    • monsanto (1)
    • moral rights (1)
    • motorola (1)
    • MPHJ (1)
    • mr justice birss (4)
    • multi-forum dispute (1)
    • multi-territorial licences (1)
    • music copyright (1)
    • mylan (1)
    • myriad (2)
    • Myriad Genetics (3)
    • Myth/Fact IPO note (1)
    • names as trade marks (1)
    • nascar (1)
    • national IP systems (1)
    • Neij and Sunde Kolmisoppi v Sweden (1)
    • nestle (1)
    • Netflix (1)
    • New York Yankees (1)
    • New Zealand (1)
    • news aggregators (1)
    • newspapers's headlines and snippets (2)
    • Newsweek magazine (1)
    • NFL Players Association (1)
    • nice classifications (1)
    • Nike (1)
    • Nike Pro Tattoo Tech (1)
    • NLA v Meltwater [2013] UKSC 18 (1)
    • non practicing (1)
    • notion of fair compensation (2)
    • Novartis (3)
    • novelty (4)
    • novelty-only prior art (1)
    • NPE (1)
    • NPE's (2)
    • npes (1)
    • nugtella (1)
    • nutella (1)
    • obviousness (4)
    • Occlutech (1)
    • offensive trade marks (1)
    • OHIM (1)
    • OHIM Board of Appeal (1)
    • Olympic trade marks (1)
    • omnipharm (1)
    • One Direction's Best Song Ever (1)
    • online advertising (2)
    • online content (1)
    • online copyright (2)
    • online copyright infringement (1)
    • online defamation (1)
    • online details of registrable transactions (1)
    • online drug sales (1)
    • opposition (4)
    • opposition grounds (1)
    • OQT (1)
    • originality (1)
    • Orphan works (4)
    • own name defence (1)
    • owners vs lesses (1)
    • ownership of IP rights (1)
    • packaging (1)
    • PAE (1)
    • Parody (2)
    • part-time employment (1)
    • Passing off (7)
    • patent (7)
    • patent assertion (1)
    • patent assertion entities (2)
    • patent claims (1)
    • Patent Cooperation Treaty (1)
    • patent discosure (1)
    • patent examiners (2)
    • patent exhaustion (1)
    • Patent fund (1)
    • patent infringement (5)
    • patent injunctions (2)
    • Patent litigation costs (1)
    • patent monetization entities (3)
    • patent prior art (1)
    • patent rankings (1)
    • patent reform (1)
    • patent standards (1)
    • Patent statistics (1)
    • patent trolling (1)
    • patent trolls (5)
    • patentability (9)
    • patentability of computer programs (1)
    • patentable subject matter (2)
    • patented soybean seeds (1)
    • patently absurd (1)
    • patents (11)
    • Patents Act 1970 (1)
    • Patents County Court (3)
    • patents court (1)
    • payment (1)
    • PCT (1)
    • PDO (1)
    • peer assessment (1)
    • performance (1)
    • performance rights (1)
    • perpetual license (1)
    • personality right (1)
    • Personality rights (1)
    • PGI (1)
    • pharmaceutical industry (4)
    • photographs (1)
    • pirate bay (1)
    • plain packaging (2)
    • PME (1)
    • poisonous divisional; divisional application; priority application; Article 54(3) EPC (1)
    • poisonous divisional; divisional application; priority application; Article 54(3) EPC; Section 2(3) Patents Act (1)
    • poisonous priority (1)
    • polar bear cub trade marks (1)
    • Poll results (1)
    • Prägetheorie (1)
    • precedent H (1)
    • preliminary injunction (3)
    • prepatory committee (1)
    • press freedom (1)
    • principle of exhaustion (1)
    • print edition (1)
    • prior art (2)
    • priority (2)
    • priority based on US provisionals (1)
    • PRISM logo (1)
    • Privacy (1)
    • private copying (3)
    • privity (2)
    • privity of estate (1)
    • privity of interest (1)
    • Product placement (1)
    • professional conduct (1)
    • Professor Mark Lemley (1)
    • proof of use (1)
    • Proposal for a Directive on collective rights management (1)
    • proprietary interests in infringing goods (1)
    • Prosecco vs Prošek (1)
    • prosecution history estoppel (1)
    • protectable subject-matter (1)
    • Protection of Geographical Indications (1)
    • protocol on privileges and immunities (1)
    • pseudonym (1)
    • public performance (1)
    • publication (1)
    • Pun competition (2)
    • puns as copyright subject matter (1)
    • pursuit of alleged peer-to-peer file-sharers (1)
    • PwC (1)
    • quality patents (1)
    • Queen's Bench Division (1)
    • radio interviews (1)
    • rapper (2)
    • ratification (1)
    • readers poll (1)
    • rebroadcasting (1)
    • Recent publications (1)
    • redaction (1)
    • ReDigi (1)
    • regional agreements (1)
    • registered community design (2)
    • Registered Community designs (1)
    • registrability (2)
    • regulation (1)
    • Regulation (EC) No 207/2009 (1)
    • regulation 44/2001 (1)
    • regulation 6/2002 (1)
    • Regulation 772/2004 (1)
    • relevant consumer (1)
    • renewal agencies (1)
    • rent-seeking (1)
    • replacement parts as patent infringements (1)
    • representation (1)
    • reprographic levies (1)
    • requirement of knowledge (1)
    • res judicata (4)
    • resale pf digital copies (1)
    • Resolution Chemicals (2)
    • reverse domain name hijacking (1)
    • reverse payment settlements (1)
    • reverse product placement (1)
    • revocation (4)
    • Ricard (1)
    • right in one's own image (1)
    • right of attribution (1)
    • right of privacy (1)
    • right of publicity (1)
    • right to oblivion (1)
    • Robert Thicke's Blurred Lines (1)
    • rocket docket (1)
    • roundtables (1)
    • royalties (1)
    • Royalty rates (1)
    • rule 36 epc (1)
    • rules of procedure (3)
    • rules of thumb (1)
    • ruling (1)
    • same-sex marriages (1)
    • samsung (4)
    • scams (1)
    • Schlitz (1)
    • Schütz v Werit (1)
    • scope of infringement (1)
    • scope of protection (1)
    • Scotland (2)
    • Scream Icon (1)
    • search (1)
    • second circuit (1)
    • second-hand books (2)
    • second-hand digital files (2)
    • Section 1(2) (1)
    • section 112(f) (1)
    • Section 3(d) (1)
    • Section 5 Markengesetz (1)
    • section 60(2) (1)
    • self-replicating technology (1)
    • settlement (1)
    • Shield Act (1)
    • shutz v werit (1)
    • similarity of goods (1)
    • similarity of marks (1)
    • Sir Robin Jacob (1)
    • smart machines (1)
    • SMEs (1)
    • software and other subject-matter (1)
    • software directive (1)
    • software manuals (1)
    • software patents (1)
    • software transactions (1)
    • solanezumab (1)
    • solum (1)
    • song formats (1)
    • songs (1)
    • Spain (1)
    • SPCs (2)
    • Special 301 (1)
    • speedy patent grants (1)
    • Spicy IP (1)
    • Spider Man (1)
    • sports licensing (1)
    • spring breakers (1)
    • standard essential patents (7)
    • standard setting (2)
    • standard setting organisations (1)
    • state involvement (1)
    • state law (1)
    • state patents (1)
    • statement of objection (1)
    • statements of working (1)
    • statistics (1)
    • Statutory damages (1)
    • stay (1)
    • stay of proceedings (1)
    • stem cells (1)
    • Stieg Larsson (1)
    • Stop43 (1)
    • Student sponsorship (1)
    • sufficient skill labour and effort (1)
    • Sun Valley (1)
    • super injunctions (1)
    • superheros (1)
    • Superman (1)
    • Supplementary Protection Certificate (2)
    • Supreme Court (1)
    • Survey evidence (4)
    • swartz (1)
    • Sweden (1)
    • Swiss Made (1)
    • tablet computers (2)
    • tatau (1)
    • tattoos (2)
    • TechCrunch (1)
    • technical function (2)
    • technology transfer (1)
    • television (1)
    • terms of employment (2)
    • territoriality of copyright (1)
    • text and data mining (1)
    • thank you (1)
    • The 12 most disruptive names in business (1)
    • The Hound of the Baskervilles (1)
    • The Right to Share (1)
    • The Scottish Premier League Ltd v Lisini Pub Management Company Ltd (1)
    • The Strange World of IP Consents (1)
    • theft of patents (1)
    • theft of trade secrets (1)
    • three dimensional shape (1)
    • three-dimensional mark (2)
    • three-dimensional trade mark (1)
    • Thursday thingies (6)
    • tick the box (1)
    • tmdn (1)
    • toilets (1)
    • trade dress (1)
    • trade mark (2)
    • trade mark amendment (1)
    • Trade Mark and Design Network (1)
    • Trade mark application (1)
    • trade mark bullying (1)
    • trade mark classification (3)
    • trade mark conference (1)
    • trade mark confusion (1)
    • trade mark infringement (13)
    • trade mark opposition (4)
    • Trade mark registrability (1)
    • trade mark search report (1)
    • trade marks (15)
    • trade secrets (1)
    • trademark (2)
    • trademark infringement (1)
    • transformative use (3)
    • transmission (1)
    • Treaty (1)
    • Tribunale di Milano (2)
    • TRIPs (2)
    • triviia (1)
    • trolling (1)
    • Trolls (2)
    • TSG (1)
    • Tufty's Law (1)
    • Tushnet (1)
    • UK (1)
    • UK copyright reform (1)
    • UK IPO Private Copying report (1)
    • UK legislative reform (2)
    • uk patent infringement (4)
    • UK Unregistered Design Right (1)
    • UKIPO (2)
    • Ukraine (1)
    • unauthorised use of likeness (1)
    • unfair advertising (1)
    • Unified Patent Court (13)
    • Unified Patent Litigation System (6)
    • unitary patent (7)
    • unitary patent proposals (1)
    • Unitary patents (1)
    • United Kingdom (4)
    • United Nations Commission on Human Rights (1)
    • United States (15)
    • United States IP system (1)
    • United States patent litigation (1)
    • university property (1)
    • unmonopolisable therapies (2)
    • upc (4)
    • Urban Outfitters (1)
    • US (2)
    • us copyirght (1)
    • US copyright (1)
    • US copyright act (1)
    • US Copyright Office (1)
    • US fair use defence (1)
    • US false advertising (1)
    • US IP legislation (1)
    • US law (1)
    • US patent damages (1)
    • US patent infringement (1)
    • us patent litigation (1)
    • us patents (1)
    • US provisional patent claims (1)
    • US publicity rights (1)
    • US Supreme Court (5)
    • US trade mark infringement (3)
    • us trade marks (1)
    • US Trade Representative (1)
    • USA (2)
    • use of own name (1)
    • useful purpose (1)
    • user-generated content (2)
    • users rights (1)
    • users' rights (1)
    • USPTO (7)
    • utility (1)
    • utility patents (1)
    • validity (4)
    • VEGF (1)
    • vermont (2)
    • Victoria Beckham (1)
    • Video Games (2)
    • voss (1)
    • watches (1)
    • Wayback machine (1)
    • Wednesday whimsies (12)
    • wikipedia (1)
    • willfulness (1)
    • WIPO (2)
    • wisdom of the crowd (1)
    • WTO dispute resolution (1)
    • ysl (1)

    Blog Archive

    • ▼  2013 (490)
      • ►  August (49)
      • ►  July (72)
      • ►  June (56)
      • ►  May (63)
      • ►  April (73)
      • ►  March (62)
      • ►  February (54)
      • ▼  January (61)
        • The Determinator strikes Fred -- and bans the C-word
        • New entries in the US Apple v Samsung dictionary: ...
        • Instant response! IPO bows to Kat comment, change...
        • Feeling insecure? IPReg's first disciplinary action
        • "Save Analytical Software"? That's not what SAS st...
        • UFO? No, L2Pro: new tool for SMEs
        • Kaepernicking: When Sports Meets IP
        • Monday miscellany
        • German Moo Coup: the tale of Paula the cool Kuh
        • Unitary Patent: the Brussels problem
        • TV tantrums in America: a split over "public perfo...
        • Road Humps and Sidewalks: a book review
        • Are fashion photographs a human right? The answer ...
        • Friday fantasies
        • IP and Retail: first the conference, now the compe...
        • AG Sharpston's VG Wort Opinion: another case on co...
        • Of courts and consultations: a call for action
        • The Battle of the Tablets: Dutch follow the Court ...
        • The Itch That Couldn't Be Scratched: Merial lose ...
        • Wounded patent endures further - Smith & Nephew v ...
        • The (low) cost of balancing broadcasting rights wi...
        • Losing its fizz: the end of the Euro-Bud dispute?
        • Trade Mark Search Results and Client Behaviour: "P...
        • If you've skipped IP TRANSLATOR up till now, or ev...
        • Monday miscellany
        • The Case of the Pixelated Privates: Sun restrained...
        • ReDigi to launch in Europe: what's the legal regul...
        • Trade mark for three-balled vibrator is functional...
        • "Got Milk?" How About That for Generic Branding?
        • How to eradicate unwanted Ivy
        • A week of copyright in the news: a roadmap for the...
        • Why not everyone is happy to tick the box
        • A non-English native speaker's perspective on puns...
        • Subsistence of copyright in puns: a follow-up
        • Classes, clarity and confusion: the legacy of IP T...
        • Are puns protected by copyright? A competition
        • Something to look forward to, er, in 2013+1
        • Challenges to EPO decisions: a rational basis for ...
        • Student scholarships: thank you, INTA!
        • Monday miscellany
        • Letter from AmeriKat: USPTO and SCOTUS warm thing...
        • Is Disclosure a Justification for Maintaining the ...
        • Friday fantasies
        • Go with the Flos? AIPPI debates copyright in indu...
        • Two Ministers: separated at birth -- and still the...
        • Wednesday whimsies
        • We don't envy the Americans their IP system -- or ...
        • Bad news: Posh Spice didn't get the job
        • Of provisionals and priority: can you help?
        • Invisible man disappears; no-one notices. Time to ...
        • The IPKat and his blogging friends -- a 2013 round-up
        • Katonomics: Why Bother?
        • UK implementation of Directive 2011/77: have your ...
        • Monday miscellany
        • Intellectual property and gender: a Katonomist wri...
        • "Don't Worry, Be Happy"--The Back Story
        • Rule of thumb, rule of paw: royalty fix or somethi...
        • Apple growers get second bite at the cherry
        • Use of term "appstore" is not deceiving, rules US ...
        • Letter from AmeriKat: Happy New Year!
        • Online games and shared creativity: who owns it?
    • ►  2012 (9)
      • ►  December (9)
    Powered by Blogger.

    About Me

    Unknown
    View my complete profile