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  • The Court of Justice of the EU has ruled that member states can grant negative supplementary protection certificates (SPCs), which will help pharma companies win six-month research extensions
  • Would you like to buy a patent management and outsourcing company? Do you have $1.1 billion to spare?
  • The European Commission wants businesses that have signed technology transfer agreements to tell it how it should update its rules on applying EU antitrust law to the deals.
  • This week long-awaited proposals for a patent box in the UK were released. But despite some optimism, fears remain that it is too narrow and complex to achieve its aims
  • The European Commission is to hold a second hearing for rights holders and users before it reveals its proposals to update the rules on enforcement
  • UK inventor and entrepreneur James Dyson claimed this week that China favours local companies when it grants patents, issuing them with IP rights up to five times faster than foreign applicants. But is he right?
  • During the oral argument in Mayo v Prometheus on Wednesday, the justices asked a series of hypothetical questions in an attempt to illustrate the complexities of each side’s proposed view of the proper test for patent eligibility
  • Supreme Court justice Stephen Breyer, author of the well-known dissent in LabCorp v Metabolite expressing scepticism over the patent eligibility of diagnostic method claims, pressed the parties in Mayo v Prometheus today to better explain how the Court should determine when a law of nature has been sufficiently applied to make it patentable
  • In the last of five copyright cases heard this week by the Supreme Court of Canada, justices weighed arguments as to whether broadcasters and cinema owners must pay a separate tariff for the performance of soundtracks
  • To what extent teachers' textbook copying is "fair dealing" was debated before the Supreme Court of Canada on Wednesday, one of three copyright-related cases the High Court is considering this week.