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Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) are legal rights that arise from intellectual activities in various fields, protecting creations such as inventions, artistic works, and trademarks. The protection of IPR is essential for promoting creativity, ensuring fair trading, and safeguarding the rights of creators and the public. Different types of IPR include patents, copyrights, trademarks, and industrial designs, each with specific characteristics and durations of protection.
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What is IPR?
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR):
legal rights which result from intellectual
activity in the industrial, scientific, literary
and artistic fieldsIntellectual Property (IP)
Literary, artistic and scientific works,
performances of performing artists, phonograms and
broadcasts,
inventions in all fields of human endeavour,
scientific discoveries,
industrial designs,
trademarks, service marks and commercial names and =
designations, G&
protection against unfair competition.
VE
ner
LWhy protect IP?
* To give statutory expression to the moral and
economic rights of creators in their creations and
the rights of the public in access to those
creations.
* To promote creativity and the dissemination and
application of its results and to encourage fair
trading which would contribute to economic and
social development. fu
NPTELTypes of IPRs
Patents
Trade Marks
Copyright
Industrial Design
Plant Variety Protection
Trade Secrets
Geographical
Indications
Layout of
Semiconductor ChipsMeaning of ‘right’ in IPR
* What is a ‘right’:
“KA legal entitlement which is recognized and
can be protected and the violation of which
is deemed as ‘unlawful’ and leaves the right-
holder with a remedy.Meaning of ‘right’ in IPR
* Rights can be used in 2 ways:
* as a liberty (gives the right-holder freedom to
do certain acts)
* as a licence (right to do something because
someone has given you the consent)Meaning of ‘right’ in IPR
* Certain rights manifest are inherent ina human
being (Eg: human rights, right to vote, right to
privacy), while certain rights manifest themselves
outside human beings (Eg: rights in property)
+ Aright must be recognized by law.
* Rights can be general i.e. claimed by every citizen
(e.g. right to protection by the State) or exclusive
i.e. the right-holder can stop others from doing
certain acts without his consent (e.g. right to
9 property)Meaning of ‘right’ in IPR
* IPR refers to rights which emanate from IP
which are capable of being protected (Eg:
copyright, patent).
* Violation of IPR refers to ‘infringement’.
* Patent law protects the right to use/make/sell/
import the invention.Meaning of ‘property’ in IPR
* Property is a form of regulation
* Property can be of 2 kinds: public and
private
* Public property is property which is held in
common (also known as ‘the commons’),
whereas, private property is owned by an
individual.Meaning of ‘property’ in IPR
* Real property (land) has physical
boundaries & can be distinguished from the
property of another
* The owner of land & its boundaries can be
ascertained from the property deed.Cn
Meaning of ‘property’ in IPR
+ Real property (land) has physical
boundaries & can be distinguished from the
property of another
+ The owner of land & its boundaries can be
ascertained from the property deed.
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752
759
8:07
8:13
8:21
8:27
Intellectual property because itis not readily
discernible, because the rights do not
manifest
itself in time and space in a tangible on a
‘tangible form, we find it difficult to settle
disputes on intellectual property rights. When
it
comes to patent that is why we have a
requirement
of every invention to be expressed in writing
disclosed in great detail, differentiating itself
with every other invention that went before
it, which is close to it or proximate to it
and then explaining the contribution made by
the
invention inventor, with regard to what has
gone
oO } qdCo hd
Meaning of ‘property’ in IPR
+ Real property (land) has physical
boundaries & can be distinguished from the
property of another
+ The owner of land & its boundaries can be
ascertained from the property deed.
®
———
x
< Transcript
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9:27. then we would look at the patent
specification,
‘the document that encompasses it. Now you
may
9:33 _be wondering; so, is it easy to get an
intellectual property right | just need
9:37 to put everything in writing that is not
the case. If you put everything in writing,
9:41 there is a scrutiny that is done by the patent
office. In India it is done by the Indian patent
‘9:46 office and only when you pass the tests that
the
Indian patent office will subject your written
9:52 _ description to will you be granted a patent,
which will give you a title and a protection
9:57 fora limited period of time, provided you
keep it alive by paying the required fees.
oO } qdMeaning of ‘intellectual’ in IPR
‘Intellectual’ refers to ‘products that
come out of our intellect’
* Intellect is our ability to think and
understand ideas
An idea is a product of careful thinking®
Meaning of ‘intellectual’ in IPR
* Inventions are products of creative human
labour.
* Intellectual effort cannot be perceived by
others.
* Intellectual effort is special to the inventor
and cannot be attributed to machines.Common Characteristics of IP
* Protectable by law i.e. enforceable right
* Intangible
* Capable of being described and
registered (copyright does not require
compulsory registration).Common Characteristics of IP
* Can be easily replicated
* Requires intellectual effort for its creation.
* Has commercial value
* Economists view IP as ‘public goods’:
* non-rivalrous
* non-excludableDefinition of IPR
Rights which protect application/
expression of ideas & information which
are of commercial value
Rights which protect products of human
creative labour (E.g.: patents, copyright)
Inclusive definition given by WIPO
Patents protect technological inventions®
Definition of IPR
Copyrights protect creative works (e.g. literary &
artistic works)
Designs protect visually appealing works & not their
functional aspect
Trademarks protect works/symbols which act as
source indicator of goods/services
Geographical indicators (GI) protect source of goods
Trade secrets protect secret information related to
trade.Defining IPR
Subject matter
- Invention — Protected by Patent
- Expression — Copyright
- Aesthetic Design — Registered Design
Registration (Government)
Exclusive Set of Rights
DurationRegistration
Form by which IP is protected
What the right holder has claimed
Process by which IPR is recognised
Backed by law
Done by the GovernmentPatents Specification
* Has to explain the entire invention in detail
including:
— Working of the invention
— Features
— Advantages
— Variations
— What went before the invention
— Illustration
— Clai
® aimsScrutiny by Patent Office
Done in great detail
First Examination Report
Right holder is asked to justify his invention.
Two types of Objections - Technical or Substantial
E.g. of substantial objection:
— Not patentable
— Preceded in the art
— Obvious for a person skilled in the art to doPatent Prosecution
* Process of raising an objection over a patent
* Different from other IP prosecution
* There is a lot of analysis is involved
®
wereCopyright
Right to print, publish, perform or record the subject
matter
Expression of idea
Forms of expression be captured in a medium
Right to make copies
Copyright regime requires the work to be recorded
or copied to some mediumSet of exclusive rights
Making copies implies a medium being there
E.g. print is recorded on paper, films on tape
IP rights first came up in the industrial revolution
IP rights are commercially valuable
Tied to an idea that can be shared, expressed or have an
application out of it
Industrial revolution was tied to ideas and dissemination
of ideasKind of IPRs
Copyright gives the creator the right to make more
copies in different forms
Trademark — using a symbol or word legally
registered or established by use
Patent — right to make, sell, use, offer for sale or
import an invention@
were
Duration
Can be for a fixed term or renewed
In trademarks a right that has not been renewed or
used it cannot be enforced
Right as long as right holder wants to keep it alive
— Pay official fee
— Needs to take action against people who are using it
Trademark is an unlimited life IPTwo types of IP
* Limited life IP - can go to public domain
* Unlimited life IP - subject to renewal
* Duration of patent 20 years from the date of Application
— By virtue of TRIPS Agreement
— A Patent is not technology specific
— Originally the patent term was 14 years
— It was an exclusive privilege
®
ere* Copyright — Life of author + 60 years
* If institution — from date of publication + 60 years
* Trademarks — granted for 10 years can be renewed
thereafter
®
nereL®
ere.
Copyright
Exclusive Right
Conferred by the Government/upon creation
Print, Publish, Perform, film, record etc.
Duration: Life of Author + 60 years
No separate registration needed for
enforcementTrade Mark
Exclusive Right
Conferred by Government/Established by use
Symbol, word, mark etc.
Marks help to identify the company
Duration: Unlimited; subject to renewalTrade Mark
+ Exclusive Right
+ Conferred by Government/Established by use
+ Symbol, word, mark ete.
+ Marks help to identify the company
+ Duration: Unlimited; subject to renewal
®
_ 7
< Transcript xX
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3:21 The company’s act has a noun for it,
registering
a domain name does not come under
copyright
328 law.
3:29 Thereis a domain ah registration service,
where you can go lke private link manages
3:34 ityou can get tas long as you keep renewing
the name you can have it,
3:38 So, those things are itis not subject matter
Of copy right, they maybe some industry
arrangement
3:44 _they may be some other statutes like the
companies
act, by which you can register company
names.
3:49 And now these rights pertain to multiple
oO } qdCia
Trade Mark
+ Exclusive Right
+ Conferred by Government/Established by use
+ Symbol, word, mark ete.
+ Marks help to identify the company
+ Duration: Unlimited; subject to renewal
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< Transcript xX
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ininaia.
5:09 _If someone an Indian manufacturer starts
using
IKEA, IKEA could still come and stop that
5:16 person, because there a right to the mark
is established by use international use.
5:23 And they have a reputation and there is,
another
branch of law, as | mentioned earlier a law
5:27. _of passing of can come to IKEA rescue to
stop
people from using it though, they may not
5:33 _ have business here, and they may not have
registered it in India so, itis possible.
5:39 __So, that is why we say that trademarks, when
we say trademarks in that sense, we also
include
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Conferred by Government
Shape, configuration, pattern etc. (aesthetic)
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Transcript
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8:01
8:09
a4
8:19
8:26
8:33
8:43
8:50
So, an innovative solution could either result
in an innovation or it could result in an
invention, innovation is a very broad term
intellectual property is more concerned about
invention, because patents would protect
inventions.
We do not say that all innovations can be
protected we only say that inventions can
be protected by way of patents and invention
is the subject matter of patent law.
So, when we look at the problem solution
approach
in or when we look at creativity as a process
of problem solving, you have a problem for
which we find the solution and if the solution,
is creative then we call that as innovation
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12:45 which the law requires you to prove.
For instance, in the case of copyright
12:51 you need to prove originality; in the case of
Patents you need to show inventive step. So,
12:57 these are some of the restrictions on the
rights that have been conferred by
intellectual
13:03 property rights we will be looking at this
in greater detail in these specific lectures
13:07 Now, we found that the distinguishing feature
of
intellectual property is that it offers property
Property Protection
13:15 protection over intangibles. And intangibles,
by themselves offer us a way to create
multiple
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Transcript xX
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5:34
5:40
5:45
5:52
5:58
6:03
6:08
@ group of countries. Now, this could also
allow
for recognition of intellectual property rights
of one country in another country. And you
have something called the soft law. Soft law
or nothing but treaties which are not signed
by delete last few words; soft law is nothing
but an international arrangement where if
something has to be accepted as a treaty,
you first release it in the form of a soft
law. Itis a guideline for countries to follow;
eventually it may take the shape of a treaty
if there is consensus across countries.
So, a national system, for instance, if you
take
the India’s patent system comprises of the
patent
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6:20 we have the Intellectual Property Appellate
Board or the IPAB and any enforcement
mechanism,
6:28 _the patent is granted somebody is infringing
the patent goes to the courts and in India we
6:33 _ have the High Court and the Supreme Courts,
So, this is the national patent regime.
6:37 Youhave an office, the Intellectual Property
Office which grants the patents. If there are
6:43 appeals overt, it goes to the tribunal which
is the IPAB and if a granted patent is
questioned
6:49 _before a court or if there is an action
with regard to enforcement say
infringement,
6:54 _it.goes to the High Courts. And eventually
if there is an appeal from the High Court,
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wich
ontyha an eect on the procedural agpect
o
Patent ow. This an important ditncon
to understand because patent law comprises
tut cubstatve provisions for instance
wat
canbe patented ia substatve provision
nd Rao comprises of procedural apes
Now, ho can fie patent, hat should
bethe extra fran applcat,
what shouldbe te fea that shouldbe pad,
nha re he administrative methods by
wich
you can intervene inthe patont office, these
be allrocedural aspects ofthe patent
tor
Now the most important agreement ie what
‘callthe PARIS convention. The PARISfotos
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Transcript xX
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8:05
812
8:21
8:32
8:36
Now, the most important agreement is what
we
call the PARIS convention. The PARIS
convention
created certain substantive changes in the
patent
regime. Then we had the WTO and what we
call the
TRIPS agreement. Now, on the procedural
side,
we have an agreement called the or the
treaty
called the patent cooperation treaty which
allows applicants from one country to file
applications in another country and we also
had something called the patent law treaty,
Which tried to make some changes,
but it was not widely accepted.
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10:41
10:48
10:56
11:02
11:08
BERNE
convention. The BERNE convention made it
easy for
copyrighted works to be enforced across the
globe.
It did not make, it did not make registration
‘a mandatory condition for enforcement,
so that ensured that copyrights you could get
a
copy you could have a copyrighted work
created in
fone country, and it could be enforced in
another
country even without registration. Then we
had
the universal copyright convention we also
have
the ROME convention, we had the TRIPS
agreement,
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10:34
10:41
10:48
10:56
11:02
11:08
Now, copyright regime in itself comprises of
various conventions. First you have the
BERNE
convention. The BERNE convention made it
easy for
copyrighted works to be enforced across the
globe.
It did not make, it did not make registration
‘a mandatory condition for enforcement,
so that ensured that copyrights you could get
a
copy you could have a copyrighted work
created in
fone country, and it could be enforced in
another
country even without registration. Then we
had
the universal copyright convention we also
have
the ROMF canventinn we had the TRIPS,
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11:08
11:13
11:19
11:25
11:29
11:33
Wat
the universal copyright convention we also
have
the ROME convention, we had the TRIPS
agreement,
and a host of WIPO treaties, Now, what did
all these arrangements or conventions do.
One they brought in a principle of national
‘treatment; they also brought in the principle
of most favored nation treatment. Now, these
are two principles in international law,
Which says that the protection
that you offer to your nationals,
your citizens should be offered to foreigners
{as well. So, you treat foreigners as equals
when
they are within your territory. The most
favored
nation treatment is another equality
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