The Australian Federal Court hands down its judgement: Caffitaly System Spa V One Collective Group Pty Ltd [2020] FCA 803. Caffitaly alleged that One Collective’s coffee single-use capsules infringed three of its patents, the 627 Patent, 121 Patent and 388 Patent. A single-use coffee capsule contains coffee granules. The coffee machine pierces the front and rear ends of the capsule, …
IP Australia’s COVID-19 Relief Measures
In view of the continuing COVID-19 pandemic, IP Australia has decided to continue its streamlined process for requesting free extensions of time of up to 3 months until at least 31 January 2020. IP Australia is extending its COVID-19 relief measures to the end of January to give users of Australia’s IP system more certainty over the coming Christmas and …
Unfair Contract Terms – Upcoming Reforms and the ACCC’s Latest Enforcement Action
The unfair contract terms (UCT) regimes under the Australian Consumer Law (ACL) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (ASIC Act) have been high on the reform and enforcement agenda over the last 12 months. Not only has the ACCC commenced proceedings against Fuji Xerox in the Federal Court alleging that its standard form small business contracts contain …
Australian Patentees’ Rights Exhausted
On 12 November 2020, the High Court handed down a landmark judgment affecting the rights of Australian patent owners. Up until this judgment, the position in Australia for over a century had been that anyone obtaining a patented product from the patentee had an implied licence to use it in accordance with ordinary rights of ownership of goods (the implied …
Women of Wrays
+ Patent & Trade Marks Attorney + Biochemist, Molecular Biologist, Immunologist + Culinary Enthusiast What drew you to study STEM I have a vivid memory of when I was a child playing tag with my brother. For some reason …
Women of Wrays
+ Patent & Trade Marks Attorney + Chemist + Avid tennis player & watcher What drew you to study STEM I loved Maths at school, and I was encouraged by my parents. There weren’t too many choices when I went to uni …
Women of Wrays
+ Lawyer & Trainee Patent Attorney + Physiologist + Singer What drew you to study STEM I was always interested in science from when I was a child. Learning how something works or why something is the way that it is, has always fascinated me. I always wanted to science at university, but my specific interest in life …
Women of Wrays
+ Patent & Trade Marks Attorney & Lawyer + Biochemist + Wine Connoisseur & Collector What drew you to study STEM? I did very well in science and maths at high school in the seventies and had good results. At that stage, my plan was to study medicine, but at the time there was only one medical …
Women of Wrays
+ Patent & Trade Marks Attorney + Biochemist + Avid Sailor What drew you to study STEM My Dad. From as long as my childhood memory serves, my father was always sharing with me the science behind the vegetables we grew in our backyard, how the animals we kept as pets were born, lived and died (we …
Women of Wrays
+ Lawyer + Molecular biologist + Identical Twin What drew you to study STEM? I have always been curious about how things work, and I have loved science for as long as I can remember. My Dad was a neuroscientist and my twin sister, Sarah, also studied science at school and university, so a love for science …