4. COPYRIGHT LAW (EU and Turkey) A) EU

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Intellectual Property Patents Designs Copyright Trademarks.
Advertisements

Introduction to Copyright Principles © 2005 Patricia L. Bellia. May be reproduced, distributed or adapted for educational purposes only.
Vivien Irish, Patent Attorney, WIPO and TPI, January 2005 Copyright and related issues for SMEs Vivien Irish Consultant Patent Attorney.
Intellectual Property Ronan Fitzpatrick School of Computing, Dublin Institute of Technology. September 2008.
Intellectual Property OBE 118 Fall 2004 Professor McKinsey Some property, very valuable property, exists only in our minds, in our imagination. It is intangible.
Chapter 5 Intellectual Property & Internet Law
IP=Increased Profits How to Make Your IP Work For You Rachel Lerner COSE Fall 2006.
A2 Technology Product Design Systems and Control Notes DT4 - Exam.
IPR-INSIGHTS CONSULTING AND RESEARCH 1116 BUDAPEST, KONDORFA U. 10. TEL.: (+36-1) FAX: (+36-1)
Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States Presented by: Daniel Waymel UT Dallas – August 2013.
© 2007 by West Legal Studies in Business / A Division of Thomson Learning CHAPTER 7 Intellectual Property.
Copyright  2009 Pearson Education Canada Chapter 17 Intellectual Property.
Intellectual Property Intellectual Property. Intellectual Property Intellectual effort, not by physical labor Intangible property Lawsuits involve infringement.
WELCOME. What is IP? Trade Marks Designs Copyright Patents.
Protecting your product What is Intellectual Property (IP)? Legal rights that result from intellectual activity in the industrial, scientific, literary.
An Overview of Intellectual Property Law, Policy, and Controversy Michael J. Madison University of Pittsburgh School of Law February 16, 2006.
COPYRIGH T LAW of the PHILIPPINE S. a legal concept, enacted by most governments, giving the creator of an original work exclusive rights to it, usually.
What is Copyright? Copyright is a form of intellectual property protection granted under Indian law to the creators of original works of authorship such.
Intellectual Property. Copyright The right to copy or reproduce a created work –federal legislation gives this right to author or owner and controls infringements.
What is intellectual property?
© 2007 West Legal Studies in Business, A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 5 Intellectual Property.
Copyright and related rights n The Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works (1896). Important revisions in 1967 and Latest.
1001 Some notes on IP, copyright… Prof. LR Shade October 29, 2013.
CETAK COPY RIGHT Written by Asma’ Humaira Binti Suhaimi.
Intellectual Property Legal Implications. What is Intellectual Property? The product of creativity and intellectual endeavour Intellectual Property Rights.
Intellectual Property Law Introduction Victor H. Bouganim WCL, American University.
Ignite Technology Transfer Office INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS Lily O’Brien IP & Commercialization Contracts Manager Ignite Technology Transfer Office.
CISB 412 Social and Professional Issues Understanding Intellectual Property.
Copyright, Intellectual Property, and Privacy 1 Lesson Plan: BMM A9-4.
Intellectual Property. An original (creative) work, invention or information protected by law through a trademark, patent, copyright or trade secret.
©2001 West Legal Studies in Business. All Rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 7: Intellectual Property.
Intellectual property (IP) - What is it?. Intellectual property (IP) Refers to creations of the mind, such as inventions; literary and artistic works;
Intellectual Property and Public Policy: Application of Flexibilities in the International IP and Trade system --Limitation and Exceptions for Education.
Intellectual Property. An original (creative) work, invention or information protected by law through a trademark, patent, copyright or trade secret.
©2005 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Fundamentals of Business Law 6 th Edition Chapter 5 Intellectual Property and Internet.
Protecting Innovation
01. Intellectual Property An introduction BELAJAR DARI : Tutor: Moh. Isrok, SH.,CN.,MH Sentra HKI Univ. Muhammadiyah Malang.
Unit 3 Seminar International Issues in IP Law. Unit 3 – International Issues in IP Law Unit 3 will focus on Chapters 8, 16 & 21 –Make sure to download.
Intellectual Property Basics for Business Owners David M. Knasel, Esq. Dominion Business Law PLC Tysons Corner | Leesburg, VA
Week 14: National Intellectual Property Office of Sri Lanka IT and Society
Chapter 10 Intellectual Property and Internet Law.
Professional Engineering Practice
Intro to Intellectual Property 3.0
Essentials of the legal environment today, 5e
How many of the following companies can you identify in 1 minute?
Intellectual Property
Intellectual Property, Patents, Trademarks, Copyright, and Franchising
Intellectual Property
Intellectual Property Law
INTELECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
4. COPYRIGHT LAW IN EU AND TURKEY A) EU
IP Protection under the WTO
COPYRITGHT The Moral Right
Intellectual property
Topic :- Intellectual Property Right
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
Intellectual Property Rights
BROADCAST LAW COPYRIGHT TERMS.
Community protection of geographical indications :
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
Copyright law 101 Nicole Finkbeiner
BROADCAST LAW COPYRIGHT TERMS.
Christoph Spennemann, Legal Expert
Overview of IP Protection Mechanisms in the United States
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
Protecting Your Idea.
Global Business & Legal Issues
Protecting your product
Intellectual Property Considerations in Forming and Scaling a Business
Presentation transcript:

4. COPYRIGHT LAW (EU and Turkey) A) EU 1) No general legislation re: IP law 2) Uses “directives” and “resolutions” to protect copyrights 3) Each one addresses a specific aspect of CR protection B) Turkey 1) Largely grounded in Berne Convention principles 2) As a WTO member, also bound to TRIPS 3) Turkey’s Law No. 5846 a) Authorship, b) Categories, c) Specific rights, d) Exceptions (next 2 slides)

b. Categories of Protected Works a. Authorship – Only Real persons can be authors (joint authors recognized); Legal persons may use economic rights originating from employee work (with exceptions) b. Categories of Protected Works Literary and Scientific: Books, speeches, technical drawings, blueprints, computer programs Musical: Compositions (with or without words) Fine Art: Painting, drawing, calligraphy, photography, sculpture, handcrafts, miniatures Cinematographic: Films Adaptations/Compilations: Anthologies, collections

c. Specific Rights Conferred Economic: Copy, distribute (sale/rent/lending copies), perform, broadcast; rights last 70 yrs after death; waiver/transfer of economic rights must be in writing Moral: Right of attribution, integrity of work, first communication to public; honor the author’s expression Derivative: Performers, radio/TV broadcasters d. Exceptions and Limitations Public: Gov’t works, teaching, quotations, reuse of news Private: Private use copy, test/back-up copy computer programs

5. PATENT LAW (EU, U.S., and Turkey) A) Function of Patents 1) Grant limited “monopoly” rights 2) Invention must be new, reproducible, have tech. application B) Limitation of Patent Rights 1) Do not attach automatically 2) Standard exceptions for things like testing 3) Time -- property becomes public after patents expire C) EU Patent Law (3 sources) 1) Euro Patent Conven - EPO grants patent; recognized in all EU a. Requirements – new; inventive step; industrial application b. Exceptions - plants/animals, bio processes, public morality/order 2) Directive 98/44 - Biotechnology/genetic engineering inventions 3) National laws - Distinct from EPO patents; national laws also handle enforcement

D) U.S. Patent Law 1) Patent & Trademark Office - Patents normally granted 20 yrs. 2) U.S. Constitution - Art. 1 authorizes Congress to make laws, to encourage and protect invention rights 3) Patent Statute - Congress responded: Allows patents for new process, machine, manufacture, improvements - Does not protect abstract ideas 4) U.S. Supreme Court - Says the following are not patentable: * Ideas * Natural phenomena/Laws of nature * Algorithms * Solutions to a problem * Result of a process (process itself can be patented)

E) Turkish Patent Law 1) Turkish Patent Institute - www.tpe.gov.tr/portal/default.jsp (also handles TM registration) 2) Applicable Laws - Patent Decree Law No. 551 - Implementing Regulation 3) Timeframe - Patents expire after 7-20 years

6. TRADEMARK LAW (EU and Turkey) A) Generally 1) What is a TM? a. An industrial sub-category of IP b. Logo, symbol, feature that can be represented visually c. Helps distinguish one firm’s goods from another 2) TM Functions: a) identification, b) quality, c) communication 3) TM Categories a. Three Types Recognized in Turkey: - Individual TM (1 firm or person), - Guarantee marks (entities under control of 1 owner) - Collective marks (association members) b. Nice Classification System (for registration) - 34 classes of goods, 11 classes of services - TMs are protected in whatever category(ies) they are registered

B) TM Protection in the EU 1) Community TM a. Created by 2 different EC regulations b. TM is registered centrally with OHIM & recognized throughout EU c. First to file/register gets protection (first use of TM is irrelevant) 2) Directive 2008/95/EC a. Goal is to eliminate different TM law provisions within the EU b. Made common set of rules related to TM recognition & protection c. EU members can make own rules re: TM registration procedures

C) Turkish TM Law (apply to Turkish Patent Institute) 1) General a. 1995 Decree -- based on EU Community TM b. Known as Law No. 556 2) Symbols/Signs a. Can be represented graphically/visually b. Words, names, letters, numbers, designs, shapes, sounds c. Tastes or smells? 3) Grounds for Refusal (Law 556 - Arts. 7 and 8) a. Absolute grounds - Devoid of any distinctive character, - Identical or confusingly similar to previously- registered mark - Generic (name of company, common words) - Deceptive as to nature, quality, origin - Religious symbols - Contrary to public policy/morality b. Relative grounds - If TM would conflict w/prior TM rights

4) Opposition to TM Registration a. Have 3 months to contest it b. Can be based on absolute or relative ground 5) Rights Conferred by TM a. Generally – Owner has exclusive use of mark on goods/services b. Limitations: - Must be approved by government authority - Owner can waive his/her right (license/franchise) - Only protects again infringements like identical symbol used for similar goods, or similar symbol it will cause consumer confusion 6) Well-Known TMs a. Mostly protected by 1883 Paris Convention & 1994 TRIPS treaty b. Whether a mark is “well-known” is determined by country law * Turkish Patent Institute (TM & Patents) - http://www.tpe.gov.tr/portal/default.jsp