
"This week in Other Barks & Bites: Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) returns to lead the Senate IP Subcommittee during the 119th Congress; the Federal Circuit finds that Judge Boyle of Eastern North Carolina erred in admitting untimely expert reports and reassigns the case on remand for objectionable statements by the judge; the CJEU clarifies the rights of online marketplace operators to protect personal data under the General Data Protection Regulation;"
"the European Patent Office issues a study showing that Europe outpaces the United States in total number of oncology startups; and the Ninth Circuit holds that inheritors who receive copyright interests through a will are not beholden to the copyright termination notice requirements of statutory heirs under the Copyright Act. Bites IPWatchdog is Expanding with IPWatchpuppies! - Gene and Renee Quinn's five-year old German Shorthaired Pointer, and IPWatchdog's Chief Barking Officer and Director of Employee Enrichment, Luna,"
Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) returns to lead the Senate IP Subcommittee during the 119th Congress. The Federal Circuit found Judge Boyle erred in admitting untimely expert reports, remanded the case, and ordered reassignment because of objectionable judicial statements, and a Federal Circuit decision addressed rHSA patents, concluding infringement persists despite albumin aggregation during import. The Court of Justice of the European Union clarified that online marketplace operators may protect personal data under the General Data Protection Regulation. The European Patent Office issued a study showing Europe outpaces the United States in total number of oncology startups. The Ninth Circuit held that inheritors who receive copyright interests through a will are not subject to statutory heirs' copyright termination notice requirements.
Read at IPWatchdog.com | Patents & Intellectual Property Law
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