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Edozo v Valos [2026] EWHC 93 (IPEC): strike-out; software functionality/‘user steps’ not protected by source code copyright; pleadings and alternative IP routes (literary/artistic works or patents)

Published on: 06 February 2026

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Edozo Ltd v Valos (UK) Ltd [2026] EWHC 93 (IPEC) What are the practical implications of this case?

The practical consequences of this judgment are significant and noteworthy for practitioners pursuing copyright infringement actions, particularly where the subject matter is software and its source code. Although His Honour Judge Hacon determined that the Valos Steps were not protected by copyright within the Valos source code, he nevertheless pointed to alternative routes by which the intellectual originality invested in devising them might have been safeguarded through other legal regimes. In particular, Hacon J indicated that literary or artistic copyright could have subsisted in the Valos Steps as works in their own right and, moreover, that if the Valos Steps were sufficiently inventive, Valos might have sought patent protection, provided the invention did not fall foul of Article 52(2) and (3) of the European Patent Convention. The takeaway for practitioners is to exercise caution when drafting pleadings and to reflect carefully and comprehensively on both the precise species of copyright asserted and the alleged acts of infringement when advising clients in matters involving software and source code...

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