Dr. Jacqueline Lui, Managing Director of Eagle IP Ltd., gave a speech titled “Being a Defendant in China” at the Intellectual Property Law in China 2013 conference in Central London, UK.

我們過去活動

Recommended Insights

Narrow Claim Scope of a Chinese Utility Model Patent Fuels Design-Arounds by Failing to Curb Competing Products:

2020年10月28日
Learning from a 2019 China’s Top 50 Representative IP Case The number of patent applications in China is now the highest in the world, with more than half the applications filed as utility model applications (UMs). For example, there were more than 2 million UMs filed in 2018 alone (for the difference between a utility […]

Finally a unified “Court of Appeal” for technology IP in China

2019年1月22日
On October 26, 2018, China’s Supreme People’s Court (“SPC”) received approval to establish a specialized intellectual property court within the SPC to handle appeal cases involving technology-related IP for both civil (e.g., patent infringement) and administrative (e.g., patent invalidity) judgments. Technology-related IP includes invention patents, utility models, new plant species, IC design, trade secret, software, […]

RNAi Patent Success in China: Overcoming “Comprising” Claim Challenges

2025年3月10日
An Update on Sufficiency and Inventiveness of RNAi Patents in China RNAi is a fast-developing technology that has gained traction in the pharmaceutical industry as a promising therapeutic agent. It is important to follow closely RNAi patent proceedings to learn how different examination boards and courts understand and handle these new technologies. The first-ever invalidation […]

How the Chinese Patent Office Rejected a Plate-Making Method Based on Food Safety Law

2022年10月19日
Previously we published an article about CNIPA rejecting a patent application claiming a food that could also be used to treat or prevent diseases based on the food’s alleged non-compliance with Food Safety Law. China’s Food Safety Law includes a provision which states any use of a composition as a food must be strictly separated […]
Top crossarrow-right