Showing posts with label legal attorney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legal attorney. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2011

China Ranks 6th in International Trademark Registry Applications

China became the world's sixth largest applicant for International Trademark Registry this year, up one place from 2010, a deputy director general of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) said on Sept 6.
The country is the among the world's most active applicants in terms of the number of applications, said Wang Binying, the deputy director general.
The WIPO received a total of 39,687 applications worldwide in 2010. Among them, 1,928 came from China, up 42.2 percent year-on-year, the second fastest increase worldwide after the Republic of Korea, Wang said at the 4th China Trademark Festival being held in Chengdu, capital of southwest China's Sichuan province.
Meanwhile, China's domestic trademark registry applications are also rapidly increasing, with the number of applications exceeding 1.4 million so far this year, according to Wang.
Wang said this reflects the steadily rising comprehensive national strength of China and its strong economic growth. It also shows that the government has made substantial progress in intellectual property rights protection.
Despite the massive number of Chinese trademark applications, the country lacks well-recognized trademarks. "Actually, we cannot yet name a truly internationally-recognized Chinese brand," said Zhang Yumin, an intellectual property rights researcher with the Southwest University of Political Science and Law.
Meanwhile, trademark protection is not adequate in the country, said Yuan Qi, an official with the Trademark Department of the State Administration for Industry and Commerce.
Yuan said this has led to rampant trademark rights violations.
Zhang urged enterprises to form specialized departments for managing intellectual property rights and to actively register their trademarks.
The government should also crack down on trademark violations and punish the parties involved, Zhang said.

Patent reform bill gets Senate approval

The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, also known as the latest version of the patent reform bill, was approved by the U.S. Senate today. The legislation now heads to President Barack Obama for his signature.

The bill, which Bloomberg reports as having passed 89-9 today, is the fourth such attempt to reform patent legislation in the U.S., following similar proposals in 2005, 2007, and 2009. It was approved by the House in late June.

Among the major changes in the legislation is turning the U.S. patent system into a first-to-file patent system as opposed to a first-to-invent system. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's current use of the first-to-invent system awards a patent based on the conception of the invention, not necessarily when it's filed. The first-to-file system, as the name suggests, awards a patent to the first person who files for it.

Proponents, including technology companies like Microsoft, Google, and Apple have rallied for the first-to-file system, saying it makes our intellectual-property system more competitive with those in foreign countries. While smaller businesses have said the change in filing standards puts them at a disadvantage.

Among the other changes in the bill is the capability for the USPTO to set and collect its own fees for new patent filings. The bill also introduces a review process for challenging granted patents, and a change to the grace period wherein the inventor has time to file for a patent after disclosing it.

"The supplemental examination procedure allows patent owners proactively to make voluntary disclosures of information to the PTO after patent issuance to correct or remedy missing information in the original patent prosecution," explains intellectual property expert Bruce Wexler. "Overall, this allows for stronger patents and protects patent owners from charges later in litigation that they committed fraud in the original patent prosecution. Until enactment of this law, patent owners had no way to cure defects in patents like this."

Patents and intellectual-property protection have become an increasingly important topic in technology, with companies building up massive patent collections to fend off, as well as go on the offensive against, other companies. Most recently that's been the high-profile feud between Apple and Samsung, with the two companies suing one another in courts around the world for patent infringement. There has also been the spat between Google and Oracle, and Apple and HTC.

Companies are now buying up troves of patents from others, including last year's acquisition of Novell for $2.2 billion (which was later altered by the Justice Department); the $4.5 billion purchase of Nortel's patents by a consortium of companies led by Apple, Microsoft, and Research In Motion; and the expected upcoming sales of patent collections from InterDigital and Eastman Kodak.