Other Barks & Bites for Friday, July 3: Google White Paper Says Only AI Outputs Infringe Copyright; CJEU Upholds €4.1B Fine for Android Abuses; and CAFC Orders Remand to Review Indefiniteness Ruling Under Dyfan

This week in Other Barks & Bites: the UK Supreme Court hears oral arguments in Apple’s appeal of a $502 million judgment setting a global 4G licensing rate with Optis Technology; the Federal Circuit remands a Delaware district court ruling invalidating TrackTime’s patents for reconsideration under intervening precedent on indefiniteness analysis from Dyfan v. Target Corp.; and more.

House IP Subcommittee, Witnesses Urge Action on Site Blocking Mechanism, NO FAKES

The House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial Intelligence, and the Internet held a hearing on Tuesday, titled “A Midlife Crisis? IP and the Internet After 40.” The hearing examined the changes that have occurred over the last four decades of the internet and featured witnesses including celebrities, academics and computer and media experts.

SEP Litigation Trends Show Why Brazil Remains a Serious Patent Enforcement Venue

Over the past year, while advising clients on standard essential patent (SEP) matters and following the rapid development of SEP litigation in Brazil, I found myself revisiting a question that foreign clients often ask: Is Brazil really a jurisdiction where patent rights can be effectively enforced? The question is particularly common among technology companies evaluating enforcement strategies across multiple jurisdictions. While Brazil is one of the world’s largest markets, many foreign patent owners remain less familiar with its courts than those of the United States, Europe, China or Japan. Recent SEP litigation provides an interesting lens through which to answer that question.

Patent Bots is Seeking a Product Specialist

Patent Bots is a SaaS company built by patent attorneys, for patent attorneys. Our tools help IP professionals at some of the world’s top firms and corporations work smarter, from drafting and prosecution to examiner analytics and prior art research. We’re a small team with a big footprint in the IP world, and we’re looking for a Product Specialist to be the human face of our product for attorneys who are already knocking on our door. Patent attorneys and IP professionals will come to you curious, evaluating, or mid-trial, and your job is to turn that curiosity into confidence. You’ll run demos, answer hard product questions, and help prospects figure out whether Patent Bots is the right fit for their practice.

Federal Circuit Affirms Ruling Blocking Generic Nuedexta

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) issued a precedential decision today in Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc. v. Hetero Labs Limited, affirming a preliminary injunction that blocks Hetero Labs Limited from launching a generic version of the neurological drug Nuedexta. The court also vacated a district court order that had excused Otsuka from posting a bond pending appeal, remanding the issue for further proceedings. Circuit Judge Dyk dissented in part from the majority’s claim construction and would have reversed the injunction.

Reforming 35 U.S.C. § 132(a): Why New Matter Amendments Shouldn’t Require a New Application

Most patent attorneys know the Jerome Lemelson story—the prolific inventor whose aggressive use of continuation and continuation-in-part applications resulted in some patents remaining pending for decades, earning the label of “submarine patents.” While Lemelson’s tactics sparked controversy and eventual legislative reforms aimed at curbing undue delays, one principle emerged clearly from his experiences: new matter in patent law must receive a new priority date…. To patent applicants, 35 U.S.C. § 132(a) means that the detailed description of their non-provisional patent applications must be perfect when filed, and that even if new information is discovered after filing, no changes can be made. In practice, this is an extremely harsh standard, and is disproportionately punitive to small business inventors who lack the deep pockets to absorb repeated filing costs and years of delay.

MON AMI Too Similar to AMÌ, Affirms CAFC

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC), in a Per Curiam opinion, today affirmed a Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB) ruling that the mark MON AMI is confusingly similar to the previously registered mark, AMÌ, and that MON AMI could therefore not be registered.

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