
Pernambuco Court Pulls Injunction Following Federal Decision Suspending Developer’s Exclusivity Claims
The Court of Justice of Pernambuco (TJPE) has officially revoked the preliminary appellate relief previously granted to software developer Spribe OÜ in its high-stakes intellectual property litigation regarding the AVIATOR trademark in Brazil. The reversal stems from a substantial shift in the legal and factual landscape governing the ongoing dispute.
The monocratic decision, delivered by Justice Andrea Epaminondas Tenorio de Brito, determined that the foundational elements supporting the initial injunction have dissolved. This local court action follows a critical intervention by the Federal Court in Brasília, which provisionally suspended the legal power of Spribe’s domestic trademark registration. The federal mandate ordered Spribe to immediately halt any exclusivity assertions under that registration while overarching federal nullity proceedings are underway.
Material Shifts in Intellectual Property Enforcement and Trademark Validity
The core of the legal reversal relies on the shifting validity of Spribe’s corporate intellectual property registrations before the Brazilian National Institute of Industrial Property (INPI). In its initial review, the Pernambuco Court operated on the legal presumption that Spribe’s INPI trademark files were fully valid, active, and enforceable. This foundational status allowed the studio to secure early protective injunctions to lock down its dominant crash game branding across the fast-evolving Brazilian iGaming landscape.
However, the subsequent ruling by the Federal Court in Brasília materially disrupted this administrative baseline. By provisionally freezing the legal effects of the registration, the federal branch nullified the presumption of absolute enforceability that the local court had relied upon. Consequently, the TJPE declared that the operational reality of the case had changed, necessitating an immediate termination of the developer’s interim relief under the rules of Article 296 of the Brazilian Code of Civil Procedure.
Broader Implications for the Brazilian Crash Game Market
The technical and legal unwinding of Spribe’s trademark exclusivity occurs at a highly sensitive time for the Brazilian gaming sector, which is currently executing major federal regulatory and licensing overhauls. Aviator has long stood as an industry-wide vertical leader, serving as a primary point of user acquisition and revenue generation for hundreds of white-label platforms and operators across the country.
By freezing Spribe’s ability to assert brand exclusivity during the nullity lawsuit, the court orders temporarily lower the barriers for competitive operators and alternative development studios utilizing related branding strategies. This shifting legal baseline underscores the complexities that international B2B software suppliers face when trying to defend their localized intellectual properties in multi-layered, state and federal judicial structures.