This week in IP: AIPPI kicks off, SCOTUS rejects key petitions, Van Halen dies
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This week in IP: AIPPI kicks off, SCOTUS rejects key petitions, Van Halen dies

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Managing IP rounds up the latest trademark, copyright and patent news, including some stories you might have missed

Managing IP reports from first virtual AIPPI World Congress and US Patent Forum

This week, the Managing IP editorial team has been busy covering the AIPPI’s first virtual World Congress. Max Walters and Charlotte Kilpatrick reported on several key panel discussions covering important topics such as bifurcation, artificial intelligence inventorship and inconsistency at intellectual property offices.

On the other side of the Atlantic, reporters covered Managing IP’s US Patent Forum, publishing stories on key USPTO changes, business budgeting strategies and AI patenting tactics.

Read our coverage and other Managing IP stories we published this week, here:

In-house: don’t be ashamed to admit you were conned

AIPPI panel: Lawyers hail benefits of bifurcation

AI inventorship takes (virtual) centre stage at AIPPI

Panel: What we would do if 20% of our patent budget were cut

Podcast: fighting counterfeits in Latin America and Caribbean

Why ‘non-trivial quizzes’ are needed to protect trade secrets

USPTO patent boss lays out big changes to exam times and routing

EUIPO lawyer: trademark disclaimers pose language difficulties

Could SCOTUS blow up biosimilars along with Obamacare?

Podcast: Dechert’s three Women in Business Law awards winners

Albright: ‘PTAB process is independent from mine’

How jury trials are affecting US IP: judges and lawyers

Brands reveal how to integrate trademark strategies in M&A

SCOTUS rejects three key IP petitions

In one fell swoop this week, the US Supreme Court knocked down several key petitions for writ of certiorari in IP matters: TCL v Ericsson, Chamberlain v Techtronic and a case involving the song Stairway to Heaven.

In the first petition, TCL had asked SCOTUS to overturn a ruling from the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit allowing juries, rather than judges, to decide royalty rates in standard essential patent cases. Managing IP published an analysis of seventh amendment issues earlier this week.

In the Chamberlain v Techtronic petition, the Chamberlain Group had argued that the Federal Circuit had picked its patent claims apart to an unfair degree when deciding on their validity under Section 101.

The appellate court had set out that the claims had to be viewed as a whole and not be broken down to “a single supposed point of novelty”.

In the Stairway to Heaven petition, Michael Skidmore had asked SCOTUS to overturn a March 2020 decision from the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit that Led Zeppelin’s classic song, Stairway to Heaven, did not infringe Taurus, a track written by Randy Wolfe in 1967. IP counsel called this outcome back in August.

However, the high court did not make a decision on the petition in Arthrex v Smith & Nephew, which concerns the constitutionality of administrative patent judges at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board. Managing IP reportedat the start of the year that while some practitioners were deeply concerned by the eventual outcome of this case, others were unfazed by it. 

SCOTUS also heard oral arguments this week in Google v Oracle, the biggest copyright case of the decade in the US, on whether copyright protection extends to a software interface. Americas reporter Rani Mehta wrote last month about how the case should focus on application programming interfaces.

Rock star Eddie Van Halen, inventor of a musical instrument support, dies at 65

Eddie Van Halen, lead guitarist of American rock band Van Halen and inventor of the musical instrument support, which led to perhaps the coolest-looking patent ever (pictured below), died at the age of 65 on Tuesday, October 6.

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Among his many accomplishments in the music industry, Van Halen received a patent from the USPTO in the 1980s for a supporting device for stringed musical instruments. It was designed to permit total freedom of the guitarist's hands to play the instrument in a new way.

The application (US4656917A) suggested that this support would allow the player to create new techniques and sounds previously unknown to any musician. Because the musical instrument is arranged perpendicularly to the player's body, it stated, the player has maximum visibility of the instrument's entire playing surface.

Van Halen, who passed away after a long battle with throat cancer, co-founded the band Van Halen in 1972 with his brother, drummer Alex Van Halen, along with bassist Mark Stone and singer David Lee Roth.

Daimler signs SEP licensing deal with Sharp

Less than a month after the Munich Regional Court ruled on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms, Sharp and Daimler have come to a licence agreement on standard essential patents related to the LTE standard, it was announced on Wednesday, October 7.

In its press release, Sharp did not mention the agreed cost of the licence nor any further specifics of the arrangement.

The German court in Munich had found in September that Daimler was an unwilling licensee, and granted an injunction which, it said, Sharp could enforce with a security of €5.5 million ($6.5 million).

That ruling came two months after Sharp and Huawei agreed a licence, which led the electronics company to withdraw parts of its lawsuits against Daimler.

CJEU rules industry ‘common practice’ not a factor in trademarks

Yesterday, October 8, the Court of Justice of the EU ruled that trademarks intended to be applied to specific goods do not need to be examined in light of standard commercial practices in a particular industry.

In its judgment in Aktiebolaget Östgötatrafiken (C‑456/19), the Tenth Chamber disagreed with the Swedish Patent and Registration Office’s rejection of three trademark applications covering a red-and-yellow pattern displayed on buses and trains.

The office had rejected these applications on the basis that they were purely decorative and did not differ significantly from the way in which other transport companies decorated their vehicles.

The CJEU said that the distinctive character of a mark should be assessed “on the perception of the relevant public of the affixing of that sign to those goods, without it being necessary to examine whether that sign departs significantly from the norm or customs of the economic sector concerned”.

This judgment comes after the Patent and Registration Office made a request to the CJEU for a preliminary ruling in the matter.  

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