- Patents allow inventors to block rivals from making commercial use of their inventions without their approval for a certain period of time while trademarks give intellectual property owners’ an exclusive and perpetual right to their designs, logos, phrases or words as long as they use them
The toy, invented in 1974 by Hungarian Erno Rubik, is popular among young and old, with more than 350 million cubes sold worldwide.
British company Seven Towers, which manages Rubik’s Cube intellectual property rights, registered its shape as a three-dimensional EU trademark with the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) in 1999.
Patents allow inventors to block rivals from making commercial use of their inventions without their approval for a certain period of time while trademarks give intellectual property owners’ an exclusive and perpetual right to their designs, logos, phrases or words as long as they use them.
The German company took its case to the Luxembourg-based European Union Court of Justice (ECJ) after EUIPO and a lower EU court dismissed its lawsuit.
ECJ judges agreed with Simba Toys’ arguments.
Their decision is final and cannot be appealed.
“In examining whether registration ought to be refused on the ground that shape involved a technical solution, EUIPO and the General Court should also have taken into account non-visible functional elements represented by that shape, such as its rotating capability,” they said.
Their decision is final and cannot be appealed.
“In examining whether registration ought to be refused on the ground that shape involved a technical solution, EUIPO and the General Court should also have taken into account non-visible functional elements represented by that shape, such as its rotating capability,” they said.
EUIPO will now have to issue a new decision based on the ECJ judgment.
Litigation over trademarks on three dimensional objects have repeatedly been escalated to Europe’s top court.
Last year, the court ruled that Nestle’s request to trademark the shape of its four-fingered Kit Kat bar in Britain did not comply with EU law, supporting a complaint by rival Mondelez International. — Reuters
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