Israel Patent Office Publishes Decision on Design for Kerb-Stone

December 14, 2009

 

In a  cancellation proceeding regarding Design Number 39519 to Ackershtein Ltd, Wolfman Industries Ltd. have managed to cancel a design for a kerb-stone.

The Law (Section 36 of the Patent and Design Ordinance) allows third parties to initiate design cancellation proceedings where a design was published in Israel prior to registration.

The case is interesting as grounds for the cancellation concerned what constitutes publication, both in terms of where and to whom, and in terms of whether a previously published single view of a three-dimensional object, which is rather less than generally required to register a design, is sufficient to cancel a registration by rendering it lacking in novelty.

The applicant apparently discussed the design at a closed meeting where a representative of Wolfman was present on 14 April 2004, which was prior to filing the application on 25 July 2004. Additionally, on the following day to that meeting, Yoval Winter, an employee of Wolfman, found the design on a website belonging to Brett Group and Profilebiton, where apparently the design was viewable from 2001 onwards.

The Arbitrator of Intellectual Property and Assistant Commissioner, Noah Shalev Shmulovits ruled that both the meeting and the internet publication constituted publication under Israel Law.

Furthermore, the fact that the bottom and back surfaces of the design were not published is immaterial, since the side that matters, i.e. that facing the road and viewable to the public when the kerb stone is in place, was published.

The assistant-commissioner ruled that the design registration was voided and further awarded 30,000 NIS costs to Wolfman.

One criticism I have is that the two Internet publications appear to be from abroad. One from Brett, a UK company, and the other from Profilbeton, apparently a German company. In a quirk of the Law, dating back to the mandate and never updated, designs in Israel require local novelty only. In circular M.N. 69, from December 2008, the commissioner of patents, Dr. Noam, extended this to include that published on the Internet and available from Israel. See http://blog.ipfactor.co.il/2008/12/28/new-israel-design-regulations/. At the time of the infringement, I would argue that the Law, though hopelessly out of date, required local novelty. Thus, I am not sure that the Internet publication can fairly be considered a publication.

That said, I agree that the meeting was sufficient to be considered a publication under the Law. Note - Profilbiton may be an Israeli company. I couldn’t find them on the Internet, although the Assistant Commissioner claims to have with no problem.


Israel Patent Office Goes Green!

December 14, 2009

In Circular M. N. 76, the Israel Commissioner of Patents, Dr. Meir Noam has announced a new class for classifying patents: the environmentally friendly class, to include technologies that counter global warming, reduce pollution of water or air, promote environmentally friendly agriculture and the like (sic).

Applicants may submit a letter when filing their application to explain why the technology should be so considered, and such applications, if accepted as being suitably green and eco-friendly, will be examined immediately, instead of having to wait their turn.

Furthermore, previously filed applications whose examination has not yet started, can be classified as green and accelerated by supplying such a letter. There is no cost for this service. It is offered free of charge.

Comment

As far as I am aware, this is the first time that the Israel Patent Office has offered accelerated examination for a type of technology. (Previously, accelerated examination has been allowed at Commissioner’s discretion, if a claim of due cause is made and submitted by an affidavit, and a fee is paid. Usually, this required showing that there was infringement or a danger of infringement, but no formal list of reasons has published, and in practice, every time I’ve requested accelerated examination in Israel for a client, I’ve been successful).

As a firm, we support this initiative. Back in July this year, we hosted a seminar on clean-tech patents, with guest speaker US Attorney, Jeffery Rothenberg of the Cleantech Group – Heslin Rothenberg Farley & Mesiti P.C., a US IP firm http://www.hrfmlaw.com/ that publishes a quarterly Clean Energy Patent Growth Index that is widely quoted by the main newspapers. See http://blog.ipfactor.co.il/2009/07/07/jmb-factor-co-s-cleantech-seminar-in-ono-a-success/  .

Furthermore, as part of our commitment to the community, to the environment and to education, JMB, Factor & Co. subsidized the travel costs for a delegation of students to participate in a WIPO conference in Geneva on IP and the Environment.

Nevertheless, this new open-ended classification is a little worrying. There is a trend for inventors to keep reinventing the same old wheels, and when something like green patenting becomes trendy, there is a real danger of more than one applicant coming up with the same or at least very similar ideas.

The new class presumably will attract more than its fair share of perpetual motion machines and other systems of dubious scientific basis that are energy-saving. More problematic, there are hardy perennials like improved solar heating panels and drip irrigation that I see variations of maybe 4 or 5 times a year, and suspect that other Israeli patent attorneys do as well. Some appear to be patentable, and are certainly aimed at saving energy and conserving fossil fuels.

In Israel, under the current classification system with examination of the first filed application, interferences are avoided by suspending examination until the examination of earlier filed applications with overlapping claims is completed and the application publishes. With the new classification being both optional and not necessarily including earlier filed applications, I fear a very real risk of later filed applications issuing before earlier filed applications for the same invention.

Incidentally, I don’t think that solar water heating systems in Israel generally recoup their installation costs from the electricity saved during their lifetime. Nor do they save more energy in their implementation than is consumed in their fabrication. then again, I am not convinced that global warming is fairly attributed to industrial pollution, although it clearly has an adverse affect on some ecosystems.


Larry Flynt Wins Trademark Fight With Nephews

December 14, 2009

Larry Flynt, the publisher of Hustler has won a legal battle with his nephews when a court in Los Angeles ruled they cannot use the Flynt name for their own line of porn. After a four-week trial, a federal court jury found in Flynt’s favor in a case brought on grounds of trademark infringement and false endorsement.

Flynt and his lawyers argued that the nephews were trying to capitalize on the his (sleazy) reputation as head of Larry Flynt Publications by marketing their own films using only their last name, Flynt. Following the verdict, the temporary injunction he received barring them from using the Flynt name will become a permanent one.

The case has a number of interesting points. The trademark rules can be used to prevent offensive marks from issuing under public order exceptions. Generally, one has the right to use one’s own name to sell goods. Here the mark Flynt is clearly not offensive per se and the jury appear to be convinced that there is a likelihood of confusion, and are protecting the public from purchasing poorer quality pornography, believing the nephews films to be up to (down to) Larry Flynt’s notorious, explicit standards.


Judge in Tenenbaum Case Condemns US Copyright Act

December 8, 2009

U.S. District Court Judge Nancy Gertner, the federal judge who presided over the recent file-sharing lawsuit against graduate student Joel Tenenbaum by the RIAA has called on the US Congress to reform the copyright law.

In a decision issued Monday, Judge Gertner stated “As this court has previously noted, it is very, very concerned that there is a deep potential for injustice in the Copyright Act as it is currently written. It urges — no implores — Congress to amend the statute to reflect the realities of file sharing… there is something wrong with a law that routinely threatens teenagers and students with astronomical penalties for an activity whose implications they may not have fully understood.”

The US Copyright Law currently provides for damages ranging from $750 to $150,000 per infringement, and this summer, a Boston jury under Ms. Gertner found Tenenbaum guilty of  using peer-to-peer software to share 30 recordings and ordered him to pay $22,500 per track, i.e. a total of $675,000.

So there you have it. A judge noting that the law is an ass.

Meanwhile, in an interesting development, it transpires that the Canadian recording  companies that lobbied so hard for stiffer penalties may owe royalties of perhaps billions to song-writers and artists for using songs in albums and compilations. See Prof. Michael Geist’s blog: http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/4596/135/


Sasha Baron Cohen Sued by Alleged Terrorist Wanting His Life Back

December 7, 2009

Comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, the actor behind the flamboyant character Bruno, is being sued for 70 million pounds in libel damages. See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luNK6Czp9hY

Ayman Abu Aita, is a representative of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party to the West Bank (Judean) town of Beit Sahor, which is a satellite of Bethlehem.

Abu Aita is also apparently a board member of the Holy Land Trust, a non-governmental organization promoting Palestinian rights and committed to nonviolence.

Abu Aita apparently served in Fatah’s Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades from 2000 until 2003, after which he did a two-year stint in Israeli prison on accusations that he was involved in shootings against Israeli soldiers operating in Bethlehem.

Anyway, Abu Aita currently describes himself as a Palestinian grocer and peace activist, and claims that Sasha Baron Cohen’s box office hit, “Bruno,” has ruined his life.

It is not clear if the problem is primarily him being depicted as a terrorist, or that he was tricked to appear in a film that depicts a homosexual character and containing scenes including full frontal nudity.

In the film, Abu Aita travels with Bruno, a gay fashion journalist, to the Ein El-Hilweh refugee camp in Lebanon to meet with a leader there. A caption that appears during the scene describes Abu Aita as a “Terrorist group leader, Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade.” Since the film’s release, Abu Aita alleges having received death threats and that he was originally tricked into meeting Baron Cohen in the first place, claiming that he thought Baron Cohen was a German producing a film about Palestinians, not an actor making a comedy.

Abu Aita alleges that when Baron Cohen spoke with David Letterman on TV last year, he said he had found a “real terrorist” through a contact at the CIA.

See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qk2oee2kjT8 

Abu Aita is now suing NBC Universal, Letterman and Baron Cohen.

“Bruno” has grossed about $137 million worldwide since it’s release in July.

I am reminded of Leon Uris ‘losing’ a libel suit to a character described in the book “Exodus”, a Dr Wladislav Dering, then living in the UK, who was depicted as a war criminal working on sterilization experiments in the Auschwitz Birkenau death camp. After having their genitals irradiated with Xrays, the ‘patients’ were sent to Dr. Wladislaw Dering, who removed women’s ovaries and castrated the men to test if the x-ray treatment had had the desired effect.

The UK court ruled in Dering’s favour in 1964, awarding him minimal (token) damages and made him pay court costs. Uris then went on to write a further novel, based on the trial QB VII (QB being the Queen’s Bench).

I suspect that Sacha baron Cohen will benefit more from this libel suit than Abu Aita.

Is the case different from a professional actor appearing on chocolate or coffee containers in perpetuity?

 Note: I have not seen the film Bruno and have no plans to do so. It’s not my type of humor. The trial looks like it may be entertaining though.


Israel district court refuses to hear parallel importing case concurrently with customs authority and awards expenses against plaintiff.

December 7, 2009

In Israel, Intellectual Property disputes are filed in the District Court and appealed to the Israel Supreme Court.

An Israel firm, Imperiat Toys Ltd.  hereunder, the “Importer”. contracted with a Far Eastern toy manufacturer to distribute Spinmaster LTD. toys (SEGA), carrying the Bakugan logo in Israel.

When the goods arrived in Israel, Customs impounded them, contacting the owner of the Israeli trademark application (TM 221845), Spinmaster LTD., and their distributors, Diamant Toys Ltd.

 The Importer responded by filing a motion with the Tel Aviv District Court requesting a declaratory judgement confirming their right to import the toys.

Although ruling that the goods in question that were imported were most likely legally manufactured in China, the judge dismissed the Importer’s motion, and ruled that since the Customs Authority had impounded the goods under the Trademark Ordinance,  the importer should settle the issue with customs, and that it was improper for the Importer to pursue a parallel action in the District Court, however, the importer could appeal Custom’s ruling to the courts. The judge awarded 20,000 NIS in costs against the Importer, but gave leave for this to be appealed as well.

The judge’s logic is apparently to disallow parallel legal proceedings.

the case:   019092/09 (001755/09) Imperiat Toys Ltd. vs. Diamant Toys Ltd and Asher Diamant


Judicial Review Officer at Israel Patent Office shows leniency to non-represented patent opposer

December 7, 2009

Patent Oppositions are tricky things. Apart from requiring a familiarity with the Patent Law and Ordinances, the parties are requires to be familiar with Civil Procedural Law, since this is used by the Patent Office as a default position.

Despite having read the Civil Procedural Law when I did my law degree, I don’t remember the small print and whenever I’ve been involved in oppositions, I’ve looked after the substantial stuff and had an attorney-at-law handling the formalities – there’s no shortage of Israel attorneys-at-law.   

Even when one knows the Law, commissioner circulars and the legal precedents, decisions can be surprising. 

Anyway, the unfortunately named Tami Bar (n. b. Tami Bar is a trademark for both a chocolate bar and a water filtration unit) is opposing IL 168574 to the Vulcani Institute of the State of Israel, represented by Reinhold Cohen group.  Dr. Bar is opposing the patent unaided, and has,  not surprisingly, filed the wrong papers at the wrong time, resulting in the lawyers of the applicant filing a request for the statement of claims to be deleted.

The Judicial Review Officer, Ms. Ya’ara Shoshani Caspi, has shown leniency to Dr. Bar regarding a number of formalities, noting that she is not represented and that she is essentially defending the public’s interest by opposing a patent from granting, so the case should be decided on its merits and not on formalities. She goes on to point out that she can award greater or lesser legal costs as a more moderate form of punishment for formal transgressions.

I am rather pleased with this ruling as I criticized the Deputy Commissioner of IP in an earlier case for punishing one of the parties for late admission of evidence, since with regard to patents issuing or not, I consider the substance more important than the formalities. I am, however, a little critical of a statement in the ruling, where “the late-filed statement of claims(pleadings) are canceled, since the evidence in the response essentially includes all the facts.”  – If papers filed at the wrong time  are cancelled where cancelling them has no effect on the outcome,  then what’s the point of cancelling them?

I would generally advise the opposer to employ professional counsel. Even serial opposers like Dr. Gil Tomer of Unipharm, who sometimes files oppositions unaided, then transfers the cases to an attorney when the applicant files a response. If Dr Bar has grounds for the opposition she should be able to recoup the expenses incurred.


Jordan raises trademark registration fees 600%

December 7, 2009

According to Jordan Ministerial Decree No. 128, which published on 1 December 2009 in the Official Gazette and became effective as of that time, there has been a dramatic increase of 600% or more in official trademark registration fees.

The increase is .


What is Software per se.?

December 7, 2009

Whilst Israel is reconsidering the patentability of software, the UK patent office and High Court are entrenched in technical effect and unpatentable mental acts.

The UK Intellectual Property Office has rejected the claims to a method of designing a better drill bit for use in oil drilling as being an unpatentable mental act. The hearing officer based this decision on obiter statements by Pumfrey J in Halliburton Energy Services, Inc v Smith International (North Sea) Ltd and others [2005] EWHC 1623 (Pat), 21 July 2005. He rejected the applicant’s argument that Pumfrey J’s approach was inconsistent with Aerotel because it did not assess the contribution as a matter of substance, and ruled that Halliburton was almost identical with the facts in this case and that that Halliburton was consistent with Aerotel. The claims would apparently be patentable subject matter if amended to include a suitable manufacturing step. Case: Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. BL O/372/09, 25 November 2009.

The UK High Court has also found electronic TV guide patents invalid, ruling that two patents relating to on-screen, electronic TV programme guides (EPGs) were invalid as being directed to unpatentable computer programs, with no relevant technical effect. Mann J also held that they were presentations of information “as such”, applying the same relevant technical-effect tests as UK law applies to computer programs. However, a third patent, which provided a facility for transferring recorded programs with their EPG metadata to another storage medium, was not excluded from patentability as it was considered as provided a relevant technical effect. However, all three patents were invalidated over prior art. Case: Gemstar-TV Guide International Inc and others v Virgin Media Ltd and another [2009] EWHC 3068 (Ch), 26 November 2009.


Israel’s Emblaze Accuses Apple of Patent Infringement

December 7, 2009

 Israeli technology company Emblaze Ltd. has accused Apple Inc. of patent infringement. the allegations concern a live video-streaming application that the technology giant plans to provide for its iPhone and iPod Touch.

It is not clear which application is intended, but Apple approved an application last week called “Knocking”, that is the first to allow live video streaming, on the 3G network, directly from one device to another.

Meanwhile, Emblaze recently announced its own mobile platform, known as ELSE, that will allegedly integrate the patented technology for streaming video between devices. Emblaze has announced that it is open to licensing its technology to Apple but has set a deadline at December 15th for the iPhone maker to respond.


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