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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND YOUR RIGHTS Helen Johnstone Seminar 12 July 2006 EAST MIDLANDS INTERNATIONAL TRADE ASSOCIATION.

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Presentation on theme: "INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND YOUR RIGHTS Helen Johnstone Seminar 12 July 2006 EAST MIDLANDS INTERNATIONAL TRADE ASSOCIATION."— Presentation transcript:

1 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND YOUR RIGHTS Helen Johnstone Seminar 12 July 2006 EAST MIDLANDS INTERNATIONAL TRADE ASSOCIATION

2 Intellectual Property Practitioners Registered Patent Agents –Chartered Patent Agent (CPA) practise before UK Patent Office –European Patent Attorney (EPA) practise before European Patent Office Registered Trade Mark Agents

3 Eric Potter Clarkson LLP Patent Agents electronics electrical engineering computer technology software mechanical engineering textiles materials science biotechnology chemistry

4 Outline Obtaining intellectual property rights Types of rights available Extending protection to other countries Deciding where to obtain rights

5 Obtaining Intellectual Property Rights Keep confidential - initially Identify possible new aspects of inventions Seek protection in home country first (usually)

6 Types of Rights Available Patents Registered/unregistered designs Copyright Trade Marks

7 Patents: What Are They? a bargain between the inventor and the state –in return for disclosure of the invention, grant of a limited period monopoly last for twenty years –extensions for some pharmaceuticals aim to increase the pool of technical knowledge

8 Patents: What Rights Do You Get? exclude all third parties from commercial exploitation –product making, selling, offering for sale, using or importing the product –process using the process or offering it for use –products made by process selling, offering for sale, using or importing

9 What Sorts of Things Are Patentable? new inventive step industrially applicable

10 Novelty not forming part of the “prior art” –prior art all publicly available knowledge making up the state of the art measured at the date of filing or priority of the patent application

11 Inventive Step judge against “person skilled in the art” - but “unimaginative” any lateral thinking? overcome a technical prejudice or a particular technical difficulty? unexpected result? synergistic effect? application of a principle from a different technical field?

12 Exceptions to Patentability (Generally of Academic, Literary or Artistic Character) discovery, scientific theory or mathematical method literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, aesthetic creation scheme, rule or method for: –performing a mental act –playing a game –doing business program for a computer presentation of information

13 Patents: How Do You Get Them? See your patent attorney! identify what aspect(s) of the new product or process might be patentable draft patent specification lodge with patent office to get filing (priority) date Maintain confidentiality

14 The Patent Specification description –sufficient detail to work/make the invention –at least one working arrangement preferably more if principle is widely applicable claims –a legal definition of the monopoly abstract drawings

15 The Application Procedure 0 0-12 18 24 30-54 <54 48+ file the application request search publication request examination argue the case / amend grant (hopefully) annual maintenance fees

16 When to File MUST be before any public disclosure MUST be before your competitors! after sufficient development to allow a proper description consider publication date consider patent expiry date

17 Registered Designs “shape, configuration, pattern, ornamentation, texture” exclude: –method or principle of construction –features dictated solely by technical function –must fit –part of complex product

18 A Comparison of Rights (1) Patents –cover the functional principles of an invention rather than “specific embodiments” –how something works rather than its exact physical form Registered Designs –cover the appearance of an article rather than its function –individual character

19 Unregistered Rights Design Right Copyright

20 A Comparison of Rights (2) UK Unregistered Design Right –original –shape and configuration –automatically acquire upon creation of the design –no registration required Copyright –original literary, dramatic, musical or artistic works –sound recordings, films, broadcasts, cable programs –typographical arrangements

21 EU Design Rights Registered –similar to UK Unregistered –new –individual character

22 Extending Protection to Other Countries first file in UK (usually) Paris Convention –use UK filing date as “priority date” for later foreign filings –equivalent to “backdating” of foreign applications –priority period up to one year

23 Patents Priority period is 12 months

24 Extending Protection to Other Countries individual national applications single international application “PCT” regional patents

25 National Patents costs are front-end loaded –translations must be prepared up front –local filing fees and attorney costs extensive paperwork –assignments –powers of attorney –priority claims

26 PCT (International) Application file a single application –provisionally covers - over 100 countries file and prosecute in English international search international examination (optional) lodge application in each country separate national patents granted

27 PCT (International) Application much lower up-front cost if pursuing more than three or four countries can defer national applications for up to 30 months some prosecution work need not be repeated for each patent office

28 Regional Patents Europe, former USSR, Africa, Gulf countries European Patent Convention –31 countries –includes all EU member states except Malta –single application, search, examination and grant –must then be registered in each country –resulting separate patents are “national”

29 Registered Designs First file in UK or EU 6 month priority period

30 Unregistered Rights Vary from country to country

31 Where to Obtain Rights Must be based on business strategy Where are manufacturers based? Where are main markets?

32 Exploitation – Protection Relationship EXPLOITATION OBJECTIVES IP STRATEGY SUPPORTS DICTATES << <

33 And Finally….

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