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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
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Patent Trade mark Industrial design Utility model (petty patent)
Copyright
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PATENT Statutory privilege that gives an inventor, for a limited period, the exclusive right to use or sell a patented product or to use a patented method or process professionally TRADEMARK Statutory privilege granted to a manufacturer or merchant for a fixed period to exclude others from using the word, name, symbol or device or their combination adopted and used by him to identify his goods and distuinguish them from those of others COPYRIGHT Statutory right that gives the author of an artistic work, for a limited period, the exclusive privilege of making copies of the work and publishing and selling the copies
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SOURCES OF LAW IP law is typically regulated country by country
There are treaties and conventions, however, that attempt to make enforcement more international Nevertheless, you should always know the laws of the country in which you seek protection
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INTERNATIONAL SCOPE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
Bern Convention Paris Convention INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY ARTISTIC PROPERTY PCT EU: European Patent PATENT UTILITY MODEL COPYRIGHT Madrid Protocol EU: Community Trade Mark TRADEMARK EU: Community Design INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
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INTERNATIONAL SCOPE OF PATENT
European patent Application filed with the European Patent Office or through the national patent office => forwarded to the designated EU Member States => patent protection subject to the national provisions of each Member State separately International patent 1. Paris Convention Harmonized patent legislation in the signatory states Privileged period of 12 months to meet the novelty requirement 2. Patent Co-operation Treaty (PCT) Patent application filed with the national office or the international central organisation with a list of the designated states => International examination of novelty and patentability => Authorities of the designated states then examine the application and make the final decision according to the domestic provisions
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INTERNATIONAL SCOPE OF TRADEMARK
EU: Community Trade Mark Application filed with the national office => forwards it to the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market (OHIM) => grants Community Trade Mark if there is no previous similar trade mark in any EU country Valid for 10 years and infinitely renewable International trademark 1. Paris Convention Harmonized legislation Privileged period of 12 months to meet the novelty requirement 2. Madrid Protocol Application filed with the national office to be examined => sends it to the International Bureau of World Intellectual Property Organisation => examines it and forwards to the countries designated in the application => in these countries the protection is granted subject to their national provisions
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INTERNATIONAL SCOPE OF INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
EU: Community Design Application filed with the national office => forwards it to the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market (OHIM) => protection of design in the whole EU Paris Convention Harmonized legislation Privileged period of 6 months to meet the novelty requirement INTERNATIONAL SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT Bern Convention The contracting states have strongly harmonized their copyright laws Duration of copyright at least 50 years Protection not subject to registration, system of supervising organisations Protection must be applied in each country separately National treatment
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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS IN FINLAND
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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
OBJECT OF PROTECTION PREREQUISITES VALIDITY FORMALITIES PATENT Invention: Product, device, process, chemical substance capable of industrial application 1)Novelty 2) Inventive step 20 years Not renewable Registration filed at the National Board of Patents and Registration UTILITY MODEL ”petty patent” Product with new technical solution, form, structure or their combination Novelty 4 years Renewable first for 4 and then for 2 years Registration filed at the NBPR TRADE MARK Symbol that individualises the goods and services of an enterprise Distinguishability Valid indefinitely Registration must be renewed in every 10 years 1) Registration filed at the NBPR 2) Establishment COPYRIGHT Literary and artistic works Originality, intellectual creativity 50-70 years No formalities INDUSTRIAL DESIGN Design visible to eyes Novelty, visible distinguishability 5 years Renewable 4 times for 5 years Application filed at the NBPR
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PATENT Sole right to commercial exploitation of an invention granted by registration with the National Board of Patents and Registration of Finland (NBPR) The proprietor may Prohibit others from exploiting the invention commercially Give his consent to another person to exploit the patent Exceptions Non-commercial use Experiments and preparation of medicine Rights of prior use Exhaustion Compulsory licences, expropriation The exclusive rights are national
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PATENT Coverage The invention must Products, devices
Processes > Process patent Chemical compounds > Use patent The invention must Be of technical character Invention must be eligible for use in practice Have technical effect Lead to the desired outcome and work as it should Be capable of industrial application “Industry” including transport, construction, agriculture, fisheries, handicrafts Be replicable
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PATENT Conditions to patentability Novelty Inventive step
Absolute and objective novelty Public availability eliminates novelty Through books, journals, articles, prior patent applications in any country, lectures, public use or free access of public First-to-file principle Irrespective of who was first to make the invention Convention priority: Paris Convention gives priority within 12 months from the date of the first application in any member state Joint ownership constituted while two applications on the same day Inventive step Invention differs essentially from earlier inventions When assessing the requirement a hypothetical person skilled in the art is used
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PATENT Duration Ownership Transfer of ownership
Patentee has the exclusive right to the commercial exploitation of his invention for up to 20 years Not renewable Validity of medical patents can be extended by 5 years Ownership One or several individuals Legal person can acquire derived patent rights only Transfer of ownership Transfer of patent application Transfer of patent itself Assignment license Exclusive / non-exclusive right to use the patent Compulsory licences Registration of transfer not compulsory
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PATENT Employee inventions Employer is entitled to acquire
1. All rights to an invention If it is made as a result of the employee’s activity in fulfilling his professional duties or substantially through the application of experience gained in the employer’s enterprise Provided that the invention falls within the employer’s actual field of activities or made as a result of a detailed assignment given to the employee in the course of employment 2. The right to exploit the invention If it falls within the employer’s field of activities but is made in a looser employment relationship 3. Privilege to the rights to exploit the invention before employee offers them to anyone else If it falls within the employer’s field of activities but has been made outside the employment relationship Employee has the right to reasonable remuneration in compensation for the rights transferred
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PATENT Exhaustion The exclusive right does not apply to the use of a patented product that has been put on the market within the EEA by the proprietor or with his consent
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EEA GERMANY FINLAND Proprietor Subsidiary AG Company OYJ Product sold with the proprietor’s consent Exchaustion of rights Patent =>exclusive right to exploit € X-2 € X € X-1 Competitor AG
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PATENT Costs Infringement and remedies
Application fees Designation fees in international patents Annual renewal fees In international patents payable to the national patent offices of the designated countries Infringement and remedies For infringement of the exclusive right, court may Forbid from continuing or repeating the act Seize patented products Sentence to imprisonment or fine for the offence Remedies Reasonable compensation for the exploitation of the invention Damages
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TRADEMARK Sign that E.g. Individualizes the goods and
services of a given enterprise and Distinguishes them from those of others E.g. Strong trademarks : Invented words, pictures with high degree of distinctiveness Weak marks: suggestive words, simple geometrical figure, letters
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TRADEMARK Signs which serve as trademarks Service marks
Collective marks Association marks Control marks
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TRADEMARK Corporate sign Symbol to identify a company
Not regulated or protected as such in Finland => must be protected through Trademarks Act Collective marks Act Trade name Act Graphical secondary symbol can be protected by right of establishment but can’t be registered Unfair Trade Practices Act
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TRADEMARK 1. Registration The symbol acquires protection, if it is
Visual and capable of being reproduced on paper Distinctive A trademark identical to a prior mark for identical products is not registrable even if the holder of the prior mark agrees Descriptive or generic words can’t be registered in any major language BUT a descriptive trademark may acquire distinctiveness through use (Secondary meaning) Used in business Not misleading Not contrary to law, order or morality
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TRADEMARK Filing application for registration at the NBPR
Valid for 10 years Renewable International classification system for goods and services Registration in one or more of the classes May be registered in Finland even if the applicant conducts no business in the country The sign ® has no legal effect Prohibition The proprietor of an earlier mark must prohibit the use of a later mark within 5 years of the registration
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TRADEMARK Rekisterinumero:238625 Tila:Rekisteröity, väiteaika päättyy Merkki: Kuvan suurennos Hakemispäivä: Rekisteröintipäivä: Erääntymispäivä: Haltija:SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT (FINLAND) OY, Helsinki, FI Asiamies:Asianajotoimisto Heinonen & Co Oy Tavara/palveluluokat 9 16 25 28 30 32 33 41 luokitus NCL(8):n mukaan Väriselitys:Merkin värit ovat vihreä, vaaleanpunainen, punainen, musta, harmaa, ruskea ja valkoinen. International registrations Madrid protocol / Romarin register Mark: LORDI Community Trade Mark OHIM / CTM register Trademark name: LORDI
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TRADEMARK 2. Establishment The symbol acquires protection, if it
Has become generally known in the appropriate business or consumer circles in Finland as a symbol specific to the goods of its proprietor Must be used for several years or Has become established by effective advertising campaigns etc. The target group must know that the proprietor uses the symbol to individualise and distinguish his goods or services, but The identity of the proprietor doesn’t need to be known Even if the trademark can’t be represented graphically, it may acquire protection through establishment
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TRADEMARK Well-known marks
Widely and generally known trademarks may get stronger protection than ordinary trademarks They may get protection even in places where they were not used or registered Their protection may go beyond the boundaries of trademark classes Purpose of the stronger protection is to prevent companies from benefiting the reputation of others and from jeopardizing the reputation and goodwill of the trademark
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TRADEMARK Ownership Trademark can be acquired by anybody for goods and services purveyed in business May be licensed Unless otherwise agreed, a trademark accompanies the property when a firm changes owners
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TRADEMARK Scope of exclusive rights
No person other than the proprietor of the protected trademark may use for his goods any symbol liable to be confused with it Right to prohibit others from using a similar symbol in any way, even orally On goods or on their packaging In advertising In commercial documents
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TRADEMARK Limitations to the scope
The proprietor of a trademark can’t prohibit another from Using his own individual surname, address and trade name The fair use of a word indicating kind, quantity, quality, use, price, place or time of manufacture of the goods Misleading or unfair use is forbidden Independent manufacturers of spare parts may market their goods as “suitable for” But may not use the logotype of the protected mark
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TRADEMARK Case Gillette v. LA Laboratories Ltd Oy, 2005
The ECJ: Trade mark owners may not prevent third parties from using their trade marks if the use is honest and is necessary to describe the purpose of a product or service COMPETITOR’S BLADES The label on LA -Laboratories' own brand reads: "All Parason Flexor and Gillette Sensor handles are compatible with this blade"
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TRADEMARK Exhaustion The rights conferred by a trademark are exhausted for goods which have been put on the market within the EEA by the proprietor or with his consent => Parallel importation is allowed within the EEA But the importer is not allowed to use the logotype of the protected mark not allowed to alter or deteriorate the goods
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TRADEMARK Losing protection Protection by registration
Expires if not renewed every 10 years Expires if not used for 5 years Trademark may be withheld by the registering authority if it has become misleading or contrary to law and order or morality Protection by establishment Trademark loses protection if it ceases being established or Loses its distinguishing power
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TRADEMARK Infringement and remedies
Court may prohibit continuing infringement of the right to a protected trademark Compensation for damages Negligence is normally considered existing because it is the duty of the infringing party to investigate whether the mark in question was protected If reasonable, profits may be ordered to be transferred to the injured party Sentenced to a fine or to a term of imprisonment
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TRADE MARK Rekisterinumero:220696 Tila:Rekisteröity.
Hakemispäivä: Rekisteröintipäivä: Erääntymispäivä: Haltija:OY KARL FAZER AB, Helsinki, FITavara/palveluluokat 30 Väriselitys:Merkin väri on sininen, Pantone 280 C.Merkinselitys:Värirekisteröinti.
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TRADE MARK Rekisterinumero:139504 Tila:Rekisteröity.
Hakemispäivä: Rekisteröintipäivä: Erääntymispäivä: Haltija:JOHNSON & JOHNSON, New Jersey, US Asiamies:Berggren Oy AbTavara/palveluluokat 21 Merkinselitys:Ulkoasurekisteröinti.
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COPYRIGHT Categories Literary works Artistic works
Imaginary, scientific and descriptive literature in written or spoken form E.g. novels, poems, descriptive literature, computer programs (incl. computer games), databases, catalogues Artistic works Musical and dramatic work, cinematographic work, photographic work, work of fine art, product of architecture, artistic handicraft and industrial art
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COPYRIGHT Prerequisites The work must have
Intellectual creativity Originality No requirements on the quality of the work “Labour and skill” are not prerequisites for protection The work must be capable of being fixed in a tangible medium => protection is given to the expression of the work, not the idea The author is a physical person
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COPYRIGHT No registration
Copyright is not dependent on any formalities The sign © Has no legal effect on the protection Serves as a reminder that the concerned work is protected
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COPYRIGHT Employment relationship (applies also to commissioned work)
Initial ownership The employee acquires initial ownership of the copyright to a work Economic rights The parties are free to agree on the transfer of economic rights to the employer Unless otherwise agreed, the employer acquires the right freely to exploit the work within the employer’s field of activities even after the employment is terminated The employer may neither alter the work nor transfer it to others, unless otherwise agreed Exception: Computer programs created within the scope of the duties of an employment relationship Copyright passes to the employer
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COPYRIGHT Compilation works Altered forms and adapted works
Compilation work created by combining works or parts of works is subject to copyright E.g. multimedia works Altered forms and adapted works Subject to copyright if the original work meets the copyright requirements E.g. translations Joint works Joint proprietorship is created and the proprietors may exploit their copyright only together
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COPYRIGHT Exhaustion If within the EEA, a copy of a work has been sold or otherwise permanently transferred with the consent of the author or a work has been likewise published Then the copy may be further distributed but NOT rented the work may be publicly exhibited Copyright to the work itself remains with the author E.g. right of reproduction, public performance Copies of cinematographic works and computer programs can’t be neither loaned nor rented
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Exchaustion of rights EEA FRANCE FINLAND Producer
Sold with the consent of procucer French Subsidiary Finnish Record OYJ Exchaustion of rights Copyright =>exclusive right to sell € X-2 € X € X-1 Competitor SA
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COPYRIGHT Reproduction for private use
Generally not prohibited by copyright Private copy levy on black tapes Exceptions: Computer programs, artistic performances Downloading illegal copies on the Internet Downloading for personal use won't be punished, but it may lead to claims for damages, if the copier knows or should have known that the source is illegal Unauthorized file sharing can be punished as a crime, even though it wouldn't be done for profit Prohibition of circumventing copy prevention (§50 a) If the work is protected by an "effective technical measure” copying it even for personal use is prohibited Circumventing the protection to watch or listen to the work is however legal
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COPYRIGHT Further exceptions to copyright
Archives, libraries and museums may produce copies of works for internal use using whatever technique necessary Works may be copied using special techniques for people with disabilities without permission A published work may be presented publicly in services of worship and education without permission
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COPYRIGHT Term of protection
70 years counted from the death of the author Neighboring rights 50 years: Rights of performing artists Producers’ rights Radio and television transmission Photographs 15 years: Databases
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COPYRIGHT Assignment Economic rights are freely transferable
Terms of a licence are to be interpreted restrictively => rights which have not, explicitly or implicitly, been transferred to the licensee, remain in the licensor’s possession Moral rights can’t be transferred Can be waived
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COPYRIGHT Collecting societies
Represent the authors in matters of copyright Even authors which have not transferred their rights Collect remuneration, supervise the rights etc. E.g. Kopiosto ry Teosto ry Gramex ry Kuvasto ry
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COPYRIGHT Infringement and remedies Compensation and damages
Unauthorised copies may have to be destroyed by court order Altered copies altered or conveyed by court order Penal sanctions
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UTILITY MODEL "Petty Patent" Faster and cheaper to apply than a patent
New technical solution Materializes as a form, structure or their combination Must be susceptible of industrial application
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Source: PRH.Hyödyllisyysmallioikeusopas.1998
Utility model Source: PRH.Hyödyllisyysmallioikeusopas.1998
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Utility model ?
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INDUSTRIAL DESIGN Design which can be seen by eyes
Novelty is a prerequisite No artistic requirements
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