Fri.Aug 30, 2024

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Trademarks as Assets: Selecting or Changing a Mark in the United States

JD Supra Law

As part of our series on trademarks as critical assets for businesses, this article discusses the importance of selecting and clearing a new or altered trademark for use and registration in the United States. Trademark selection and clearance are essential steps for avoiding costly and time-consuming disputes, securing exclusive rights, and building a strong brand identity.

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Trademark Rectification And Counterclaims: MadHC’s Views on the Interaction of Sections 47, 57 and 124

SpicyIP

On August 20, 2024, a single-judge bench of the IP Division of the Madras High Court (MadHC) issued an Order ( pdf ) with notable observations about the feasibility of allowing a counterclaim in a trademark rectification petition filed under Sections 47 (cancellation of trademark on the grounds of non-use) and 57 (rectification of trademark) of the Trademark Act, 1999 (“TM Act”).

Trademark 101
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Arguing Internet Availability to Establish Copyright Infringement Is Bananas

JD Supra Law

In an unpublished opinion, the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit affirmed a district court’s decision finding that a pro se Californian artist failed to establish that an Italian artist had reasonable opportunity to access the copyrighted work simply because it was available to view on the internet. Morford v. Cattelan, Case No. 23-12263 (11th Cir.

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Crayola trademarks the scent of their crayons

Olartemoure Blog

After a six-year legal battle, Crayola was able to trademark the distinct scent of its crayons, described as “slightly earthy soap with pungent, leatherlike clay undertones”. This move strengthens Crayola’s trademark identity by protecting a unique, nostalgic element that many consumers associate immediately with its business origin, proving that connections with consumers can also be made through non-conventional elements.

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Software Composition Analysis: The New Armor for Your Cybersecurity

Speaker: Blackberry, OSS Consultants, & Revenera

Software is complex, which makes threats to the software supply chain more real every day. 64% of organizations have been impacted by a software supply chain attack and 60% of data breaches are due to unpatched software vulnerabilities. In the U.S. alone, cyber losses totaled $10.3 billion in 2022. All of these stats beg the question, “Do you know what’s in your software?

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Judge Asks Why Hytera Didn't Seek Help To Avoid Contempt

IP Law 360

As Hytera Communications said Friday that its massive radio redesign was enough to show it shouldn't be held in contempt for allegedly continuing to use stolen Motorola Solutions trade secrets, an Illinois federal judge interrupted to ask why Hytera didn't ask the court for more guidance to better target its efforts.

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Operation Redirect: Police Anti-Malware Action Protects Music & Pirates

TorrentFreak

Most anti-piracy campaigns of the last four or five decades feature a direct order (Don’t Pirate) followed by some additional information for people to consider before making an informed choice. The direct order “Don’t Pirate” has never changed, but it only becomes effective when paired with a reason to abstain, ideally something that provokes consideration of the consequences.

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The Art of Losing Gracefully or How Koki’s appellate loss is truly a win.

Patently-O

by Dennis Crouch We have seen lots of ITC action recently. In the new Koki v. ITC decision, the Federal Circuit found that the accused infringer Koki lacked Constitutional standing to bring the appeal based upon a binding promise not to sue submitted by the patentee Kyocera. As I discuss at the end of this post, although Koki is the nominal loser, the company substantially advanced its position on appeal because Kyocera was forced to declare (and then clarify) its promise in order to obtain dis

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Blockchain+ Bi-Weekly: August 2024 #2

JD Supra Law

As Congress is on its August recess, litigation over digital asset issues continued with major developments in the Yuga Labs trademark case and the SEC cases against Kraken and Consensys. While these matters all involve factual underpinnings specific to blockchain technology, the resulting rulings will have implications far surpassing the specific facts of those cases, including how courts rule on certain trademark and venue disputes going forward.

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Other Barks & Bites for Friday, August 30: WIPO Publishes Top Technology Cluster List; Romania Joins Unitary Patent System; TikTok Trend Sparks Trademark Controversy

IP Watchdog

This week in Other Barks & Bites: The World Intellectual Property Office (WIPO) releases a list of the top technology clusters in the world; La Jolla Pharmaceuticals files lawsuit against USPTO to revive shock therapy patent; Romania joins the Unitary Patent System; "very demure, very mindful" trend leads to trademark drama.

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FTC continues to focus on competition in pharmaceutical markets, supports FDA guidance on biosimilars

JD Supra Law

On August 20, 2024, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed a comment letter in support of the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) June 2024 draft guidance on biosimilar interchangeability (the “Draft Guidance”). When finalized, the Draft Guidance will update a previously issued FDA guidance (the “2019 Interchangeability Guidance”) to remove a recommendation that a biosimilar applicant conduct switching studies to demonstrate the interchangeability of its biosimilar product with the.

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IPO Diversity in Innovation Toolkit

Women and diverse employees have the technical skill and knowledge, yet their contributions are not patented at the same rate as those of their male counterparts.This toolkit can help organizations move the needle on achieving gender parity in innovation.

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Organic search results aren't TM "use"

43(B)log

Alsa Refinish LLC v. Walmart Inc., 2024 WL 3914512, No. 2:23-cv-08536-SVW-MAR (C.D. Cal. Jul. 31, 2024) In 2024, people are still bringing keyword advertising cases. Walmart wins summary judgment. Alsa sells paint, including chrome paint, and claims common-law rights in “Alsa,” “Alsa Chrome Paint,” “Alsa Easy Chrome,” “Easy Chrome,” “Mirrachrome,” and “Mirra chrome.

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Jury Trial on Legal Issue Denied, But No Harm Done

JD Supra Law

The US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed a district court’s denial of a jury trial, concluding it was harmless error because the defendant would have been entitled to a directed verdict regardless. Overwell Harvest Ltd. v. Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc., Case No. 23-2150 (7th Cir. Aug. 12, 2024) (Kirsch, Pryor, Kolar, JJ.).

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DC Court of Appeals revives greenwashing suit against Coca-Cola

43(B)log

Earth Island Institute v. Coca-Cola Co., A.3d -, 2024 WL 3976560, No. 22-CV-0895 (D.C. Aug. 29, 2024) Earth Island sued Coca-Cola under the D.C. Consumer Protection Procedures Act, alleging that Coca-Cola engages in deceptive marketing that “misleads consumers into thinking that its business is environmentally sustainable, or at least that it is currently making serious strides toward environmental sustainability.

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[Audio] (Podcast) The Briefing: Deep Dive into the NO FAKES Act

JD Supra Law

A group of senators introduced an update to the ‘No Fakes Act,’ which protects the voice and visual likeness of individuals from unauthorized AI-generated recreations. Scott Hervey and James Kachmar discuss the changes to this act on this episode of The Briefing.

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IPEC serves up a hot trade mark exhaustion decision, with a side of Cofemel, in AGA Rangemaster v UK Innovations

The IPKat

In a recent decision ( [2024] EWHC 1727 (IPEC) ) on exhaustion of trade marks , the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court (IPEC), a section of the High Court of England & Wales, held that AGA Rangemaster Group Limited (AGA) had legitimate reasons to object to the sales and marketing activities of a company which sold second-hand AGA cookers retrofitted with an electronic control system.

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Well-Pleaded Factual Allegations Must Be Taken as True When Considering Motion to Dismiss

JD Supra Law

The US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in dismissing a trademark infringement matter under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim, ruled that a district court “erroneously assumed the veracity” of the defendants’ assertions over the “well-pleaded factual allegations” in the plaintiff’s complaint. Molzan v. Bellagreen Holdings, LLC, Case No. 23-20492 (5th Cir.

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Miami Gallery Sold Family $6M In Fake Warhols, Lawsuit Says

IP Law 360

A new lawsuit accuses a Miami gallery of selling over $6 million in fake Andy Warhol paintings and stringing a family of amateur art collectors along with an elaborate ruse involving the lure of "below-market prices" and "fictitious" employees from the Warhol Foundation and a New York auction house.

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Andersen v. Stability AI: Defendants' Motion to Dismiss Narrows the Case, But Only Slightly

JD Supra Law

In the lawsuit brought against them for using visual artists' work to teach their large language model, and producing near-identical copies in response to prompts, Stability AI, Midjourney, DeviantArt, and Runway AI moved to dismiss almost all of the claims asserted against them. .

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Align Tech Cuts $27.5M Antitrust Deal With 1.45M Consumers

IP Law 360

A proposed class of nearly 1.45 million SmileDirectClub teeth-aligner buyers urged a California federal judge Thursday to preliminarily sign off on Align Technologies Inc.'s $27.5 million cash and coupon settlement to resolve antitrust claims alleging the company colluded with the now-bankrupt SmileDirecClub to illegally restrict competition.

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Epitope Claims Live On at the European Patent Office

JD Supra Law

While the genus antibody claim was effectively killed by the U.S. Supreme Court in Amgen v. Sanofi, it lives on in Europe despite a few recent setbacks at the European Patent Office ("EPO") and the Unified Patent Court ("UPC").

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Wheeling & Appealing: The Latest Must-Know Appellate Action

IP Law 360

Appeals courts have awakened from summertime slumber and crammed their early autumn calendars with arguments of national significance, which Law360 previews in this edition of Wheeling & Appealing. We're also recapping August's top appellate decisions, exploring new polling about U.S. Supreme Court opinions and testing your knowledge of Fifth Circuit history.

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It’s All Grecco to Me: No “Sophisticated Plaintiff” Exception to Discovery Rule

JD Supra Law

In a case of first impression, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that there is no “sophisticated plaintiff” exception to the Copyright Act’s discovery rule, which provides that a copyright claim only accrues upon the copyright owner’s discovery of the infringement or when the copyright owner (in the exercise of due diligence) should have discovered the infringement.

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UK Drops Antitrust Probe Into School Software Co.

IP Law 360

A United Kingdom school software company is no longer facing antitrust scrutiny over alleged litigation threats against schools looking to switch providers, but the firm continues to suggest that it may take action against the "misuse of its intellectual property" that it says complaints to authorities were meant to hide.

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Natera, Inc. v. NeoGenomics Laboratories, Inc. (Fed. Cir. 2024)

JD Supra Law

In Natera Inc. v. NeoGenomics Laboratories, Inc. the Federal Circuit affirmed the District Court's grant of a preliminary injunction against NeoGenomics in patent infringement litigation involving Natera's U.S. Patent Nos. 11,519,035 and 11,530,454 directed to methods for amplifying targeted genetic material and methods for detecting variations in genetic material indicative for diseases and disorders, respectively.

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9th Circ. Won't Double Software Co.'s $13.5M Trade Secret Win

IP Law 360

The Ninth Circuit on Friday affirmed a lower court's denial of a request by software company Proofpoint Inc. for exemplary damages that could have doubled its $13.5 million trade secret theft verdict, ruling that any error the district court made in denying the damages is harmless.

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Later-Filed, Earlier-Expiring Patent Not an ODP Reference

JD Supra Law

Addressing invalidity due to obvious-type double patenting (ODP) based on later-filed-related patents, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reversed a district court’s application of In re Cellect (Fed. Cir. 2023) and held that the later-filed, earlier-expiring continuation patents were not available as ODP references against the earlier-filed, later-expiring patent.

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Full Fed. Circ. Urged To Review PTAB Estoppel Rule Case

IP Law 360

A Federal Circuit ruling that Patent Trial and Appeal Board decisions can render patent claims invalid in later U.S. Patent and Trademark Office proceedings is "contrary to the patent laws and congressional intent," a patent owner said Friday seeking rehearing in a case that could increase scrutiny of some patents.

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[Video] The Briefing: Deep Dive into the NO FAKES Act

JD Supra Law

A group of senators introduced an update to the ‘No Fakes Act,’ which protects the voice and visual likeness of individuals from unauthorized AI-generated recreations. Scott Hervey and James Kachmar discuss the changes to this act on this episode of The Briefing.

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Cisco Hit With $65.7M Verdict For Infringing Paltalk Patent

IP Law 360

A Western District of Texas jury hit Cisco Systems with a $65.7 million verdict on Thursday for directly infringing Paltalk's patent related to hybrid audio servers, finding that Cisco infringed and failed to prove certain claims were invalid.

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Trade Secret Damages Beyond the Actual Loss Suffered by Plaintiffs Become Harder to Obtain

JD Supra Law

The Southern District of New York vacates nearly $200 million in damages after remand from Second Circuit - On March 13, 2024, in Syntel Sterling Best Shores Mauritius Ltd. v. The TriZetto Group Inc., the Federal District Court in the Southern District of New York vacated a 9-figure damages award for TriZetto on its trade secret and copyright claims.

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Marketing Company Fights Texas Firm's Deception Claims

IP Law 360

An Oklahoma City legal marketing company has acknowledged in a court filing that it uses trademarks associated with a Texas lawyer in its online keyword advertising, but it said the practice is lawful and that the Texas lawyer waited too long to complain and hasn't shown actual harm from it.

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[Event] Navigating the IP Landscape: Implications and Considerations for Start-Up Success - September 19th, Washington, DC

JD Supra Law

Join Wolf Greenfield counsel Usha Parker and Ryan Van Olst as they lead a workshop covering intellectual property basics, implications, and considerations for early-stage companies. By: Wolf, Greenfield & Sacks, P.C.

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Actors Say AI Co. ElevenLabs Cloned Their Voices

IP Law 360

Two professional audiobook narrators have sued speech synthesis software company ElevenLabs Inc. in Delaware federal court, saying the company used generative artificial intelligence to clone their voices without consent or compensation and is now profiting by letting customers use their voice clones "Bella" and "Adam" for free.

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Blurred Vision: Appeal Dismissed for Lack of Standing

JD Supra Law

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit dismissed a patent challenger’s appeal in an inter partes review (IPR) because the challenger could not meet the injury-in-fact requirement for Article III standing. Platinum Optics Tech. Inc. v. Viavi Solutions Inc., Case No. 23-1227 (Fed. Cir. Aug. 16, 2024) (Moore, Taranto, JJ.; Checchi, Dist. J, sitting by designation).

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Manilow Says IP Biz Didn't Deliver 'Copacabana' TikTok Trend

IP Law 360

Singer Barry Manilow has hit British music royalties outfit Hipgnosis with a California federal court lawsuit alleging he was falsely promised a "Copacabana dance trend" on TikTok, the marketing of a "Copacabana" drink kit and over a million dollars in bonuses.

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