PATENTING //
Practice Areas
/ Life Science
/ Engineering / Mechanical
> Electronics and Business Methods
Electronics, High Technologies, Software and Business Methods
- Inventions involving software or business methods may be patentable in the UK, Europe, USA or elsewhere.
- In the UK and Europe, software inventions are patentable if the invention makes a technical contribution with respect to the state of the art. For example, software inventions which improve the operation of computer hardware, provide a control system for the operation of a peripheral devices or improves the technical performance of hardware or software may be patentable. In the USA inventions do not need to have technical character to be patentable. Therefore a much broader range of inventions can be protected including business methods.
- Harrison IP has extensive experience in advising universities, SMEs and large companies on the patentability of software and business method inventions and in drafting and prosecuting patent applications for those inventions. We have particular expertise in the areas of image processing, financial systems, point of sale systems, encryption, internet security, online sales, computer modeling, operating systems and software control systems.
- In the field of electronic engineering we have experience in handling subject matter from single semiconductor devices through to complete network infrastructures. Recent examples of subject matter handled by this firm include field effect transistors, diodes, radio frequency, internet and satellite systems, amplifiers, resonators, radar systems micro electromechanical devices, battery management systems, wireless sensor networks and gaming machines. We also handle applications in the field of computer related hardware including processor design, and memory devices.
- Our expert attorney in this area is Alec Messulam.
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EU passes new law on geographical indicatiors
On 26 March 2024, the European Council adopted a new regulation on geographical indicators (“GI”) for agricultural products, wines, and spirits. Geographical indicators, sometimes also known as “protected designations of origin” confer rights that are not dissimilar to ordinary trade mark rights in the name of a place or region as it related to and insamuch … Read More
by Mark SmithEU trade mark registrations no longer cover Jersey (and haven’t for quite some time)
For the uninitiated, Jersey (formally “The Bailiwick of Jersey”) is a self-governing, British Crown Dependency (located just off the coast of France) with its own parliament and laws. Trade mark holders have long been able to obtain Jersey-specific trade mark rights via extension (or “re-registration”) of an already existing UK trade mark right registered nationally … Read More
by Mark SmithUK Court of Appeal finds for M&S against Aldi in Registered Design Battle of the Gin Bottles
Marks & Spencer’s registered designs to “snow globe” gin bottles were held to be infringed by Aldi’s look-a-like products in court of appeal Case No: CA-2023-000521. In the assessment of the registered designs, the court inspected a physical example of the M&S product. The court found that the designers of the M&S Product had had … Read More
by Julia D'Arcy