ARTICLE
28 September 2017

UK Government Issues Brexit Stance On IP Protection

H
HLK

Contributor

HLK is a global cooperation combining Haseltine Lake Kempner LLP and HL Kempner Partnerschaft mbB and provides a full suite of IP services advising across the entire IPR Lifespan™ in all technical and scientific disciplines. With offices in London, Bristol, Munich, Leeds, Glasgow, and Guangzhou (China), HLK provides IP services across the globe. HLK’s resources and expertise are exclusively dedicated to IP protection: safeguarding the inventions, creative designs, brand identities and other innovations of its clients. HLK advises on the strategy, identification, protection, opposition and appeal, exploitation and enforcement of IP rights, and defends its clients from allegations of infringement by focusing on acquiring competitive advantage for its clients. HLK is privileged to work with some of the most exciting and forward-looking businesses in the world which are at the forefront of innovation and product development in their various spheres.
The UK government has now issued a white paper setting out its position on Intellectual Property rights once the UK has left the European Union, which is currently scheduled to happen in March 2019.
UK Intellectual Property
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

The UK government has now issued a white paper setting out its position on Intellectual Property rights once the UK has left the European Union, which is currently scheduled to happen in March 2019. The publication includes some good news for IP rights holders, as the government have indicated that they believe that current holders of IP rights with unitary character should have a comparable right in the UK post-Brexit and that the implementation of this principle should not result in financial costs for the IP owners.

IP rights with unitary character include European trade marks, registered and unregistered community design rights, community plant varieties, protected geographical indications and registered geographical indications. Current owners of such rights can therefore be reassured that, post-Brexit, they will still hold equivalent rights in the UK, even if this means that specific legislation needs to be introduced.

The government also intends to make the maintenance of unitary rights as streamlined as possible for rights holders in the UK post-Brexit by enabling rights holders to renew their rights on the same schedule (e.g. with the same deadlines) that would have applied to the unitary right.

With respect to trade marks, the government intends to uphold the same principles of priority and seniority that apply under community legislation and furthermore, also intends to apply the same rules regarding "genuine use requirements" and "reputational rules". Priority principles will also apply to any relevant design rights.

The situation for applications for unitary rights that are pending at the time of Brexit is a little different, in that the government's position seems to be that such applications will not automatically transition into equivalent applications in the UK post-Brexit. Rather, applicants will need to make separate applications in the UK if their unitary applications are not granted at the point of Brexit. Applicants should be able to keep the benefit of any priority date associated with the pending application, however.

In summary, this white paper seems to offer reassurance to unitary rights holders that the government intends to offer a hassle-free and cost-free transition of unitary rights into equivalent UK rights post-Brexit. Let's hope that this intention is realised.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

We operate a free-to-view policy, asking only that you register in order to read all of our content. Please login or register to view the rest of this article.

ARTICLE
28 September 2017

UK Government Issues Brexit Stance On IP Protection

UK Intellectual Property

Contributor

HLK is a global cooperation combining Haseltine Lake Kempner LLP and HL Kempner Partnerschaft mbB and provides a full suite of IP services advising across the entire IPR Lifespan™ in all technical and scientific disciplines. With offices in London, Bristol, Munich, Leeds, Glasgow, and Guangzhou (China), HLK provides IP services across the globe. HLK’s resources and expertise are exclusively dedicated to IP protection: safeguarding the inventions, creative designs, brand identities and other innovations of its clients. HLK advises on the strategy, identification, protection, opposition and appeal, exploitation and enforcement of IP rights, and defends its clients from allegations of infringement by focusing on acquiring competitive advantage for its clients. HLK is privileged to work with some of the most exciting and forward-looking businesses in the world which are at the forefront of innovation and product development in their various spheres.
See More Popular Content From

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More