Highlights from the May 2016 issue

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Highlights from the May 2016 issue

MIP-May_2016

All the details of our 2016 awards winners, sports sponsorship, OEM trade mark infringement, design law in the US and EU, ambush marketing in Brazil and our latest UPC scenario are all featured in the bumper May 2016 issue of Managing IP

MIP-May_2016

The contents of the latest issue of Managing IP magazine are available to read online, and subscribers should also have received their copies in the post. 

If you're not a subscriber yet, take out a free trial online for temporary full access or visit our stand #207 at the INTA Annual Meeting in Orlando this month, where will have some samples available and details of our latest offers. 

Trade mark topics

This being the issue we distribute at the INTA Annual Meeting, there is lots of trade mark-related content, including an article on the all-important issue of OEM trade mark issues in China, including the Pretul and Dong Feng cases; a timely look at ambush marketing in Brazil ahead of this year's Olympics; how to protect your brand when your endorser goes rogue; and an analysis of the narrowing of the own name defence in Europe, which is possibly an overlooked aspect of the recent EU trade mark reforms (which we covered in depth in February).

DP-thumb

Regular readers will recall that in April I reported from the INTA/AIPPI Designs Conference in Singapore, and we continue to see more interest in design rights, following the controversial Trunki case in the UK and with the Apple v Samsung dispute pending at the US Supreme Court.

In this issue we have two articles on design law: one arguing that the jurisprudence of the European courts is improving, and one focusing on protection for GUIs in the US, which may provide an alternative means of protection for software companies who are finding it harder to get patents granted since the Alice ruling.

Undeterred by the potential implications of Brexit, we continue to look at how the UPC and Unitary Patent are likely to work in practice, with our latest UPC scenario taking a defendant's view of how a clear-the-way type pharmaceutical case might be handled. Remember that all our UPC coverage is available at managingip.com/UPC.

Awards photos

Awards Frohlinger

This issue also includes all the photos and reports from our two awards dinners in March, which took place in London (Global Awards) and Washington DC (North America Awards), including an interview with outstanding achievement winner Margot Fröhlinger. Thanks to everyone who attended the two memorable evenings. If you were there, see if you can find yourself in the photos. If not, maybe we'll see you next year?

This month marks the publication of our global list of the 250 top women in IP and my colleague Jennifer Ruther provides an introduction to that in the May issue.

Looking ahead, I preview this year's AIPPI World Congress, taking place in Milan in September, while our adventurous diarist Utynam reports from our recent Luxury Brand & Retail Forum in New York.

Plus we have 26 updates on recent cases and developments from our international briefing sponsors - from Africa to Vietnam. These are all free to read.

For information on subscribing, please contact my colleague Daniel Bloomer or visit our stand in Orlando!

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Lateral hires at Thompson Hine and Pierson Ferdinand said they were inspired by fresh business opportunities and innovative strategies at their new firms
The launch of a new IP insurance product and INTA hiring a former USPTO commissioner were also among the top talking points this week
The firm explains how it secured a $170.6 million verdict against the government in a patent dispute surrounding airport technology, and why the case led to interest from other inventors
Developments of note included the court partially allowing a claim concerning confidentiality clubs and a decision involving technology used in football matches
The firm said adding capability in the French capital completes its coverage of all major patent litigation jurisdictions as it strives for UPC excellence
Marc Fenster explains how keeping the jury focused on the most relevant facts helped secure a $279m win for his client against Samsung
Clients are divided on what externally funded IP firms bring to the table, so those firms must prove why the benefits outweigh the downsides
Rahul Bhartiya, AI coordinator at the EUIPO, discusses the office’s strategy, collaboration with other IP offices, and getting rid of routine tasks
A boom in transactional work and a heightened awareness of IP have helped boost revenue for the rebranded commercial services team
Clemens Heusch, head of global litigation and dispute resolution at Nokia, tells us why open conversations – and respectful challenges – lead to the best results
Gift this article