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1 UNIDO-WIPO National Seminar on Managing IP of SMEs in the High-Technologies Park Minsk, Belarus, January 23-25, 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "1 UNIDO-WIPO National Seminar on Managing IP of SMEs in the High-Technologies Park Minsk, Belarus, January 23-25, 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 UNIDO-WIPO National Seminar on Managing IP of SMEs in the High-Technologies Park Minsk, Belarus, January 23-25, 2007

2 2 Intellectual Property Issues in a Company Website Lien Verbauwhede Koglin Consultant, SMEs Division World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)

3 3 1. Introduction

4 4 (1) What elements of your website can be protected?

5 5 TS, ©, patent software Elements of website Website design © Business names, logos, domain names trademarks Creative content © Confidential buss. info Trade secrets

6 6 Patent? Business method Elements of website database ©, sui generis Web pages, screen displays, GUI, graphic symbols ©, industrial design

7 7 (2) How to protect your website?

8 8 1. Protect your IP rights Register trademarks Register domain name (+ as TM) Register website and © material Measures to protect trade secrets Patent business methods? Gather proof of ownership + date watermark, time stamp, fingerprints

9 9 Register Domain Name gTLD (.com,.net,.org) not associated with specific country. Refers to character/nature of the site ccTLD (.by) associated with specific country. Search : www.whois.net; www.tld.by Registration –domain name registries (e.g. VeriSign) –national registries (tld.by for Belarus) –agents: represent requests in many countries (e.g. Marcaria) Price: (for.by) 70 USD, renewal 50 USD p/y

10 10 2. Let people know that the content is protected + what use they can make Notices - TM, ®, “Patent”, ©, “Confidential” - e.g. LienPak™ software Warning and user statements –restrictions on use –allowed use

11 11 Example Confidentiality Notice for Unpublished materials This is an unpublished work containing LIEN’s confidential and proprietary information. Disclosure, use, or reproduction without authorization of LIEN is prohibited.

12 12 Example Restrictions on Use of Trademarks Listed below are trademarks for the company LIEN Inc., plus other recognized trademarks that you are likely to encounter. Nothing contained on this site should be construed as granting any license or right to use any trademark displayed on this site without the express written permission of LIEN or such third party that may own the trademark. LienCORP® is a registered trademark of LIEN Minsknet® is a registered trademark of Company. Inc., used under license...

13 13 Example Restrictions on Use of Copyright Material All materials contained on this site are protected by copyright law. Copyright © 2007 LIEN. No part of the materials, including graphics or logos, available through the lien.com site may be copied, photocopied, reproduced, translated or reduced to any electronic medium or machine-readable form, in whole or in part, without prior written consent of LIEN. Any other reproduction in any form without the permission of LIEN is prohibited. Distribution for commercial purposes is prohibited. Written requests for reprint or other permission should be mailed, faxed or E-mailed to:...

14 14 Example Permission Certain Uses of © Material All materials contained on this site are protected by copyright law. Copyright © 2007 LIEN. The materials contained on this site may be copied for non-commercial personal use only. Or The materials contained on this site may be freely copied and distributed so long as our copyright notice and website address are included.

15 15 Example Statement Used in Software This software is protected by copyright law. Copyright © 2007 LIEN. The software may not be copied, reproduced, translated or reduced to any electronic medium or machine-readable form without prior written consent of LIEN, except that you may make one copy of the program disks solely for back-up purposes.

16 16 Online agreements 3. Control access and use of website CONTENT Technological protection measures  Encryption  Access control or conditional access systems  Versions of lower quality Interest: e.g., if you sell software online Limit access to works on website only to visitors who accept conditions and/or have paid

17 17 4. Monitor violations Random snippets of text / graphics Web crawler or spider programs Fingerprints

18 18 (3) Can you use material owned by others on your website?

19 19 Current technology  easy to use material created by others Film, TV clips Music Graphics Photographs Software Text, etc Using material without getting permission (assignment or license) can have dire consequences!

20 20 1.Using technical tools or software owned by others E-commerce system, search engine, technical Internet tool, software  written license agreement

21 21 Photos, videos, graphics, music, software, clips, text, paintings, images, (HTML code) Written permission Even if just part of a work –14 lines of source code out of a total of 186,000 lines Material stored on the Internet is protected! Free uses/fair use Finding the copyright owner –Collective Management Organization (BELAT) Don’t forget the moral rights 2. Using copyright works owned by others

22 22 Permission from copyright owner Permission to use subject matter? –Building (architect) –Artwork (artist) –Image of person (publicity & privacy rights) 3. Using photographs owned by others Marc Chagall

23 23 4. Finding works in public domain –libraries –national archives –collective management organizations –online portals George Castaldo L. da Vinci Botero Warhol

24 24 Software Images –e.g. www.epicture.com Clipart, artwork, photos –e.g. creativecommons.org Backgrounds, wallpapers Etc 5. Using freeware

25 25 Freeware Do not assume that you can use freeware without limitation Often certain conditions –e.g. not allowed to change the images –e.g. must give some type of credit to the author –e.g. use for non-commercial purposes only –e.g. derivative works must also be open source

26 26 6. Using trademarks owned by others Identifying competitor’s products is all right Don’t use TM that might cause confusion Beware of using TM in –meta-jacking –linking & framing (below) –domain names

27 27 Cybersquatting Cybersquatters register names of trademarks, famous people or businesses with which they have no connection Exploit first-come, first-served nature of domain name registration system gTLD: Trademark holder can initiate proceeding under Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) Registrant of gTLD domain name must submit to such proceedings (< Terms & Conditions for registration). www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/

28 28 ADMINISTRATIVE PANEL DECISION Beiersdorf AG v. Alecsey Sorokin Case No. D2000-1760 Beiersdorf AG = leading cosmetic product company. Owns trademark "NIVEA" Individual from Minsk registers Decision: No rights or legitimate interests in respect of the Domain Name. Domain Name has been registered and is being used in bad faith. Domain name transferred to Beiersdorf AG

29 29 (4) Who owns IP rights in your website?

30 30 –Typical website is collage of components owned by different persons navigation software photographs, graphics, text, sound design etc FIND OUT WHAT YOU OWN WHAT YOU HAVE RIGHTS TO USE AND IN WHAT WAY !

31 31 Website developed by your employees who are employed for this purpose –Belarus Copyright Law Art. 14: Moral rights < employee Economic rights < employer (unless otherwise provided) –OTHER COUNTRIES: different rules

32 32 Belarus Copyright Law - Article 14 Copyright in Service-Related Works (1) The moral rights in a work created in the course of an assignment or service obligation (service-related work) shall belong to the author of the work. (2) The economic rights in service-related works shall belong to the employer, unless otherwise provided by the contract concluded between the employer and the author. (3) The author of a service-related work may not prohibit the employer from disclosing the work.

33 33 Website developed by freelance web developer (work for hire) “I paid for it, so I own it” is not always true ! –Belarus Copyright Law ?? –OTHER COUNTRIES: different rules

34 34 (5) What to keep in mind when negotiating a web development agreement?

35 35 Web Development Agreements –Scope of work Maintenance and update Consulting services Registering domain name –Ownership of material Material created by web developer Material provided by you Who owns copyright in the web design? What can you do with elements in which website designer owns rights?

36 36 –Who obtains clearances for “third party” material incorporated in the web design? –Liability Designer’s warranty that it is their original work –Confidentiality –Timetable for delivery of the website –Payment –Website Escrow? Deposit e.g. source code & related computer files (executable program files, cgi script, graphic image files, etc.) used by website developer to create and maintain Client’s website

37 37 (6) What to keep in mind when creating your website?

38 38 The idea of creating a website about how to invent wisely in the stock market is not protected by copyright Question: Can you copy the functionality or ‘look and feel’ of another website? 1. The idea is free

39 39 Navitaire vs. easyJet U.K.,30 July 2004 easyJet engaged online development company Navitaire to develop online ticketless booking system for their flights. Relationship with Navitaire ended. easyJet engaged other developer to create system with exact same command structure and ‘look and feel’. New developer no access to source code. Did not decompile.

40 40 No copyright in a pudding... Navitaire: easyJet copies functional idea of the system, its ‘business logic’ –same ‘look and feel’ of the software (way of setting out the computer screen) –same commands entered by the users Judge: computer program cfr. secret recipe for pudding. While recipe itself could be literary work, if someone eats and makes similar pudding without access to the recipe  no copyright infringement in the recipe even though similar result was achieved.

41 41 –Linking »visitor from lien.com visits other website »visitor from lien.com visits other page within lien.com –Deep links »visitor from lien.com visits page other website, but not its homepage –Framing »visitor from lien.com view content from other site inside a frame supplied by lien.com –Inlining »visitor of lien.com can view a graphic file that comes from another website, without leaving lien.com 2. Linking

42 42 Get Website Linking Agreement Links to illegal content / software Link uses fanciful logo as its pointer Deep links to advertising-rich commercial sites Framing may trigger disputes under Copyright (alters content) and TM (confusion) law Inline links: –Fan website displays Dilbert cartoons from official site –search engine displays full-size photographs Dilbert

43 43 Deep Linking The Shetland Times v. The Shetland News Shetland News offered his readers a menu that contained a mix of his own headlines and the headline texts from Shetland Times. So by clicking on a headline about a 'council cock- up', browsers could be passed on to the rival Shetland Times’ site and read their copy.

44 44 The Shetland Times sued the Shetland News, alleging breach of copyright. They claimed the Shetland News were seeking to earn money from their website by selling advertising on their front page. Judge held that headline text had copyright. Actions of The Shetland News in copying them for reproduction on its own website is infringement.

45 45 3. Domain name What is a good domain name? http://www.wipo.int/sme/en/documents/ wipo_magazine/08_2003.pdf

46 46 4.People’s personal data User privacy : data protection laws & privacy laws (especially in the E.U.) Privacy policy 5.Online sales Enforceable agreement: –Terms must be reasonable apparent –Mechanism to indicate assent Shrink-wrap agreement Click-wrap agreement

47 47 SW downloaded, airline ticket booked online, etc. customer clicks “I accept” button which is preceded by terms and conditions SW sold in comp.store terms on outside of package enforceable if customer had chance to see the terms either prior to the sale or prior to opening and accessing the product. "By breaking this seal you agree to abide by the following terms and conditions" Click-wrap Shrink-wrap Accept Decline

48 48 6.Don’t disclose trade secrets 7.Don’t prematurely disclose patent related information or new designs 8.Immediately remove infringing material Liability for subsequent violations Liability for persons who facilitate violation of copyright

49 49 9.Other legal issues: Advertising Marketing practices (comparative advertising, unsolicited emails, discount schemes, etc) Distance selling regulations Regulations to protect children Tax regulations Jurisdiction, applicable law Dispute resolution Etc.

50 50 (7) What to do when someone infringes your trademark / copyright on his website?

51 51 Screen shots of all relevant pages Cease and desist letter (demand removal) Notice of infringement to search engine (demand removal) Notice of infringement to website hosting company or ISP (demand removal) Prosecution

52 52 Conclusions

53 53 Websites are common target for infringement lawsuits : –Others may copy the look and feel, some features or contents of your website  if you are not cautious, you may lose your IP rights –You may be accused of unauthorized use of other people’s intellectual assets  if you are not cautious, you may be liable for infringement

54 54 1. Before going online, consult with specialized Internet attorney - IP is just small piece of the big legal pie 2. Regularly: website audit 3. Key person responsible

55 55 Thank you ! Lien Verbauwhede Koglin www.wipo.int/sme/ Thank you ! Lien Verbauwhede Koglin www.wipo.int/sme/


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