Log in

CLASS 99


The blog for design law, in Europe and worldwide. This weblog is written by a team of design experts and fans. To contribute, or join us, or for any other reason, email class99@marques.org.

Want to receive Class 99 by email?
Click here subscribe for free.

Who we all are...
Blog Administrator
David Musker
Henning Hartwig
Hidde Koenraad
Krystian Maciaszek
Peter Gustav Olson
FRIDAY, 5 APRIL 2013
Design law: a Fordham Conference session
Trying to understand EU design law: before (left) and after (right)
A session of this year's Fordham IP Conference was devoted to design.  Moderated by Professor Jeremy Sheff, the session was opened by Gordon Humphreys (OHIM), who explained the mysteries of Case C-102/11 P (Baena Grupo, see illustration of grumpy gnomes above), together with the unfathomable topics of the informed user, crowded prior art, freedom of design and the consequences of using dotted lines in Community design registration.

Gordon was followed by Alain Strowel (Covington & Burling, right), who touched on the key issues relating to the "battle of the tablets" between Apple and Samsung. Alain investigated the "new animal in the zoo", the "informed user", in the light of the CJEU ruling in PepsiCo v Grupo Promo (the Pogs case, here). The collision between design right and copyright also affected the Apple-Samsung dispute, since the EU's unharmonised copyright law will protected manufactured products in some countries.

US design patents formed the subject of John Richards' talk. Emphasising the patent dimension to the protection, John observed that obviousness was increasingly being raised as an objection.  The protection is not for articles themselves, but for designs for articles if they are ornamental. The claim is crucial, since it defines and limits the protectable ornamental content of the design patent.  So far as infringement is concerned, expert evidence is disfavoured: the test is that of the consumer who might purchase the one product believing it to be the other.

The session then turned to discussion.  Myles Jelf (Bristows) noted that, with markedly different laws, the US and EU came to broadly the same conclusions as to the Apple/Samsung infringement issue.  Annette Kur pointed out the flaw of EU design law, which measures the degree to which an earlier registered trade mark is unprotected against a later design application in terms of the test of design infringement, not trade mark infringement. Jeremy Phillips emphasised the degree of potential overlap which is available to products in the EU. Remedies were then discussed: Jeremy spoke of the successes of the Patents County Court, and Alain observed that interim injunctive relief was key.
Posted by: Blog Administrator @ 14.45
Tags: EU design, Fordham 2013, US design,
Perm-A-Link: https://www.marques.org/blogs/class99?XID=BHA448

MARQUES does not guarantee the accuracy of the information in this blog. The views are those of the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect those of MARQUES. Seek professional advice before action on any information included here.


The Class 99 Archive






 

 

 

 

 

 


CONTACT

info@marques.org
+44 (0)116 2747355
POST ADDRESS

9 Cartwright Court, Cartwright Way
Bardon, Leicestershire
LE67 1UE

EMAIL

Ingrid de Groot
Internal Relations Officer
ingrid.de.groot@marques.org
Alessandra Romeo
External Relations Officer
aromeo@marques.org
James Nurton
Newsletter Editor
editor@marques.org
Robert Harrison
Webmaster
robertharrison@marques.org
BLOGS

Signup for our blogs.
Headlines delivered to your inbox