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  • Experience suggests we should not expect clear guidance from the US Supreme Court on patent eligibility. Yet many practitioners still hope that, this time, things will be different
  • A new police IP crime unit launches in the UK this week. Counterfeiters should look out, but there are also lessons for rights owners
  • Irwin Mitchell and Mishcon de Reya have both recruited partners, in the latest moves in the UK IP market
  • Companies that transfer their technology to China could find that they do not own improvements made to it if they fail to pay attention to the country’s tech transfer rules
  • At Managing IP’s Global IP & Innovation Summit last week, legal experts discussed differences in litigation between European jurisdictions and how decisions in one country can affect battles in others
  • A jury in the US District Court for the Western District of Washington has awarded Microsoft more than $14 million in damages and costs in its FRAND dispute with Motorola (now owned by Google)
  • The US Supreme Court should act to bring clarity to the law on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions in the US, according to a brief filed this week
  • A patent application for software that moves data between computers using email has been held to be unpatentable subject matter under Section 1(2) of the UK Patents Act, which corresponds to Article 52 of the EPC
  • Daniel Holt, senior patent counsel at Hewlett-Packard, explains factors such as language skills may be more important than experience when selecting a patent attorney
  • IP owners who think their products are being infringed often want just one thing: for the infringement to stop (not patent trolls, of course, but that’s another story). In China, however, stopping infringement can be trickier than usual