YNet Sues Mig News for Copyright Infringement

March 3, 2009

YNet, Israel’s most popular news website, which is connected with Yediot Achronot, Israel’s most widely read (tabloid) newspaper, is suing Mig News for Read the rest of this entry »


Fake Rolex watches ordered destroyed, but no damages awarded against importer

February 22, 2009

In Rolex SA v Balloons and Entertainment Ltd (Case 2573/04, December 17 2008), the Tel Aviv District Court refused to award damages Read the rest of this entry »


Israel Patent Office Rejects Competence of Australian Counterpart

December 9, 2008

Under Section 17c of the Israel Patent Law 1967, a patent that has issued from one of a list of examining patent offices deemed as having an appropriate standard, may be used as the basis for allowing a corresponding Israel patent application without substantive examination as to novelty, inventive step, unity of the invention or enabling disclosure. Under the stewardship of current commissioner, Dr. Meir Noam, the list of patent offices considered as having adequate examination procedures has been extended to include:
Austria, Australia, Denmark, the European Patent Office, Germany, Japan, Norway, the Russian Federation, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. In a Patent Office Circular, Dr. Noam has extended the idea to include claims allowed in written opinions of the PCT, which is somewhat problematic as adequate disclosure is not something usually related to at all.
Anyway, in a surprising move, Dr. Noam has decided to remove Australian patents from the list of allowed patents that can be used as a basis for invoking Section 17c.

We view this development favorably since the Australian Patent Office does not have the most solid examination procedures. In practice, this development is unlikely to have many ramifications since it rare that Section 17c is invoked on the basis of Australian patents anyway.


Inventive Step is an Objective Criterion?!

February 28, 2008

In Opposition proceedings brought by Teva regarding IL 130424 to Pfizer, the IP Arbitrator Read the rest of this entry »


European Community Ranks Israel as an Innovation Leader

February 15, 2008

The EC Directorate-General for Enterprise and Industry commissioned an analysis of world rankings for innovation and Intellectual Property.

The analysis, based on 25 indicators Read the rest of this entry »


Status of Dependent Claims

October 20, 2007

Greg Aharonson, in the popular PatNews news letter asks the following:

    A QUESTION ON DEPENDENT CLAIMS’ (NON)OBVIOUSNESS

It is commonly said that the obviousness of dependent claims rise Read the rest of this entry »


Private Member’s Bill for Patent Applications to be Published 18 Months After Filing

July 2, 2007

Unlike most industrialized countries that publish patent applications 18 months after the Priority (First Filing) Date, the Israel Patent Authority only publishes allowed patent applications for opposition purposes once the Examination process is Read the rest of this entry »


Another Croc bites back

June 5, 2007

Three Chinese companies have been ordered to pay French clothing company Lacoste 760,000 yuan (approx. $98,700 US) in damages for trademark infringement. The award, by a Beijing court follows a suit Read the rest of this entry »


India Steamed Up Over US Yoga Patents

June 1, 2007

Well it is not just the US Government that protests the poor level of IP protection in other countries. With admirable Chutzpa, the Indian government has decided to lodge a protest against yoga-related patents issued by the US Patents & Trademarks Office.

The Indian Health Ministry is taking up the issue directly with the USPTO and the Indian Commerce Department is writing to the US Trade Read the rest of this entry »


Patent invalidation gets harder in Australia as threshold for Inventiveness is lowered

May 31, 2007

Australia’s High Court has upheld an appeal in a long-running patent dispute between rival locksmiths in Lockwood Security Products Pty Ltd v Doric Products Pty Ltd on May 23. In its ruling the Court set out the basic legal principles relating to inventive step and obviousness, stating that “a scintilla of invention” Read the rest of this entry »


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