“Sparking innovation”
This article shows how fireworks manufacturing depends on patents, designs, and trademarks to ensure product safety and brand trust. For IP professionals, it is a clear reminder that managing intellectual property also means monitoring suppliers, verifying licenses, and maintaining quality control. If your organization relies on seasonal or outsourced production, confirm that every partner is authorized to use your marks and designs. Strong oversight reduces the risk of counterfeits, IP dilution, and reputational harm before products reach customers.
Global Patent and Design Filings Reached New Records in 2024
WIPO’s latest global IP data shows that in 2024, patent and industrial design filings reached new record highs while trademark filings remained largely flat. For IP management professionals this matters because it reinforces two key trends: first, innovation continues to scale (pushing growth in patent and design activity) which means more competitive pressure on examination, budget and portfolio maintenance. Second, stagnation in trademark filings may signal shifting brand-strategy focus or cost pressures, suggesting you might want to assess your trademark investment and renewal priorities. It’s a timely prompt to audit where your filings sit relative to global trends and whether you’re resourcing accordingly.
Examining patents, trademarks & designs: the art of IP examiners
This WIPO Magazine article profiles IP examiners around the world, highlighting their role in maintaining the integrity of patent, trademark and design systems. The piece underscores how examiners balance innovation encouragement with public domain protection, and how their decisions influence global IP markets and risk exposure. For IP managers, this is a direct reminder that the front-end examination environment (e.g., how patents are granted and valid) affects enforcement, litigation risk and portfolio valuation downstream. It calls for stronger collaboration internally between operations, innovation-strategy and legal teams to anticipate how shifts in examiner practices may impact your assets.
Liability Risks Before the UPC
This analysis explains how U.S. companies face increased enforcement and injunction risks before the Unified Patent Court. The UPC is granting injunctions at a relatively high rate, meaning European patent disputes may now carry faster and broader commercial impact. IP teams should review which patents are opted in, update enforcement risk assessments and coordinate with EU counsel to prepare for cross-border exposure.
Monitoring these developments now helps reduce operational risk, improve strategic planning and ensure your portfolio, training and enforcement posture remain aligned with current IP conditions.



