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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
» Intellectual property (IP) is a term referring
  to a number of distinct types of creations of
  the mind for which a set of exclusive
  rights      are     recognized—and         the
  corresponding fields of law.
MUSIC
LITERARY
  ART
           DISCOVERY
           INVENTION

SYMBOL
DESIGN
PATENT
                          INDUSTRIAL
     TRADEMARK              DESIGN
                            RIGHTS




COPYRIGHTS       IPR             TRADE
                                SECRETS
FOR MOST PRODUCTS EVERY FORM OF
  INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS CAN BE
                 OBTAINED



                      CAMERA


―PATENT‖  FOR EVERY INDIVIDUAL IMPROVED
MECHANISM
―DESIGN‖  FOR OUTER SHAPE & CONTOUR /
CONFIGURATION
“TRADE MARK”   BRAND NAME OR LOGO FOR GOODS   DENOTED AS
®
―COPY RIGHT‖ FOR INSTRUCTION / MANUAL
BOOKLET DENOTED AS ©
Music played on the
                    CD player is
Industrial design   protected by
protection for 3D   copyright
shape


                            Various
                        technical parts
                        & mechanisms
                          are subject
                           mater of
Brand name-               protection
registered under         under Patents
trademark
» Meet international obligations while
  safeguarding national interests
» Modernize;        and
» Move ahead
» THE PATENTS ACT, 1970
  • PRODUCT PATENT
  • PATENT TERM OF 20 YEARS
  • PUBLIC HEALTH SAFEGUARDS
  • PROTECTION TO TK
» THE TRADE MARKS ACT, 1999
  • SERVICE MARKS AND COLLECTIVE
    MARKS
  • TERM INCREASED FROM 7 YEARS
    TO 10 YEARS
» THE DESIGNS ACT, 2000
» THE GI ACT, 1999
» THE COPYRIGHTS ACT, 1957
» THE BIO-DIVERSITY ACT, 2001
» THE   LAYOUTS      AND   INTEGRATED
  CIRCUITS ACT
» THE PROTECTION YOU RECEIVE IS ONLY
» ELECTRICAL JUG     FOR THE APPEARANCE OF THE ARTICLE
                     AND NOT HOW IT WORKS.
                   » DESIGN REGISTRATION IS INTENDED
                     TO PROTECT DESIGNS WHICH HAVE AN
                     INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL USE.
                   » DURATION OF PROTECTION IS
                     INITIALLY FOR 10 YEARS AND
                     EXTENDABLE FOR ANOTHER TERM OF
                     5 YEARS.
                   » DESIGNS OF STAMPS, LABELS, TOKENS,
                     CARDS, CARTOONS, OR PARTS OF AN
                     ARTICLE NOT SOLD SEPARATELY, CANNOT
                     BE REGISTERED.
TRADEMARKS
» A TRADE MARK IS ANY SIGN WHICH CAN DISTINGUISH THE GOODS OF ONE TRADER
  FROM THOSE OF ANOTHER. SIGN INCLUDES, WORDS, LOGOS, PICTURES, OR A
  COMBINATION OF THESE.



•TO REGISTER A TRADE MARK , THE MARK MUST BE:-
•DISTINCTIVE, AND, NOT DECEPTIVE, OR CONTRARY TO LAW OR MORALITY, AND, NOT
IDENTICAL OR SIMILAR TO ANY EARLIER MARKS FOR THE SAME OR SIMILAR GOODS.




•A TRADE MARK IS USED AS A MARKETING TOOL SO THAT CUSTOMERS
CAN RECOGNIZE THE PRODUCT OF A PARTICULAR TRADER.
TRADEMARKS
HOW TO SELECT A TRADE MARK ?
        1. A WORD, LETTER OR ANY COMBINATION THEREOF AND SIMPLE IN DESIGN.
             2. IF IT IS A WORD IT SHOULD BE EASY TO SPEAK, SPELL AND REMEMBER.
         3. THE IDEAL WORD FOR A TRADE MARK IS AN INVENTED OR COINED WORD
           4. WORDS WHICH ARE LAUDATORY OR WHICH DIRECTLY DESCRIBES THE
               CHARACTER OR QUALITY OF THE GOODS SHOULD NOT BE ADOPTED.
     5. GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES CONNECTED WITH THE REPUTATION OR QUALITY OF
      THE GOODS FOR WHICH REGISTRATION IS SOUGHT SHOULD NOT BE ADOPTED.




ARE ALL TRADE MARKS REGISTRABLE ?
NOT POSSIBLE TO REGISTER A MARK WHICH IS CONFUSING WITH A TRADE MARK OF
      ANOTHER TRADER OR A TRADE MARK WHICH DESCRIBES THE CHARACTER OR
  QUALITY OF THE GOODS. THE MARK SHOULD NOT CONFLICT WITH A TRADE MARK
 ALREADY REGISTERED OR PENDING REGISTRATION IN RESPECT OF SIMILAR GOODS.
WHAT IS GIR
•An indication used to identify agricultural, natural or manufactured goods
originating from a definite territory in India.
•It should have a special quality or characteristics or reputation based upon
the climatic or production characteristics unique to the geographical location.
•Examples of Geographical Indications in India are Darjeeling Tea,
Kanchipuram Silk Saree, Alphonso Mango, Nagpur Orange, Kolhapuri Chappal,
Bikaneri Bhujia, etc.
•Any association of persons, producers, organization established by or under
the law can apply representing & protecting the interests of the producers.
•The registration of a Geographical Indication is for a period of ten years.
•Renewal is possible for further periods of 10 years each.
•A trade mark is a sign which is used in the course of trade and it
distinguishes goods or services of one enterprise from those of other
enterprises. Whereas a Geographical Indication is used to identify goods
having special characteristics originating from a definite geographical
territory.
LAW OF PATENTS

•PROTECTION PART

•ENFORCEMENT PART
•CRITERIA FOR PATENTABILITY
  –NEW & USEFUL
  –NON-OBVIOUS
  –CAPABLE OF INDUSTRIAL
  APPLICATIONS
•PATENTS ACT SPECIFIES
  –WHAT ARE NOT INVENTIONS?
  –WHAT ARE NOT PATENTABLE
  INVENTIONS?

•HOW TO GET THAT MONOPOLY
RIGHT?
» OPPOSITION PROCEEDINGS

» LICENSING PROVISIONS

» INFRINGEMENTS SUIT PROVISIONS
IT ENCOURAGES RESEARCH.
 INDUCES AN INVENTOR TO DISCLOSE HIS
INVENTIONS
  INSTEAD OF KEEPING THEM AS SECRET.
 PROVIDES INDUCEMENT FOR CAPITAL
INVESTMENT
 ENCOURAGING TECHNOLOGICAL
DEVELOPMENT.
 IT ENCOURAGES ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW
INDUSTRIES.
•KNOWLEDGE OF INVENTION ADDS TO
 SCIENTIFIC BACKGROUND FORMING
 BASE FOR FURTHER RESEACH

•REASONABLE ASSURANCE FOR
 COMMERCIALIZATION

•PATENT- OPEN TO PUBLIC FOR USE
  –AFTER ITS TERM EXPIRES
                  OR
  –WHEN IT CEASES TO BE IN FORCE
INVENTION

INVENTION IS A SUCCESSFUL TECHNICAL
 SOLUTION TO A TECHNICAL PROBLEM.



TO BE GRANTED A PATENT,              AN
INVENTION MUST BE       NEW,
     NON-OBVIOUS AND         CAPABLE OF
INDUSTRIAL APPLICATION
•Make it public for free use by public(like publishing in   the
journal)                    Or
•Work the invention in SECRECY without
PATENTING it (like coco-cola composition)
                        Or
•Work the invention OPENLY without PATENTING
it (directly put it in the market)
                              Or
•EXPLOIT the invention on the basis of a PATENT (like
Rank Xerox )
A patent is a Monopoly Right granted

  •For an invention
  •By the government
  •To the inventor or his assignee
  •For a limited period
  •It is valid within the country of grant
WHY DO YOU NEED
     ―PATENT INFORMATION‖
•SIZE OF THE RESOURSE –ENORMOUS AND WIDE Every
area of technology is covered.
•80% NOT PUBLISHED ELSEWHERE
•FIRST PUBLICATION:Inventions disclosed in patents well
before being published in any other type of document
   Invention Patent published First publication in any form
Punched card       1889                         1914
  Television       1923                         1928
  Jet engine       1936                         1946
•EXPIRED PATENTS : FREE USE ;
•TO AVOID REDUNDANT RESEACH Use the technology
given in patent specification as a stepping stone.
PATENTS NOT ONLY FOR MAJOR
TECHNOLOGICAL BREAKTHROUGH

Such As
•LAZLO biro‘s - ball point pen
•Ring – pull for cans of beverages
   But even for any small ‗ incremental ‘ inventions
•INDIVIDUALS OR Companies-normally do not
clearly recognize the TRUE MARKET VALUE for a
particular INVENTION
   e.g. Anti theft device for motor cars-wheel clamp
   Tetra pack style of cartons for milk & fruit juice
MINISTRY OF COMMERCE
                                 MINISTRY OF HUMAN RESOURSE
  AND INDUSTRY
                                 DEVELOPMENT

  DEPT. OF INDUSTRIAL              DEPT. OF EDUCATION
  POLICY & PROMOTION

                                   COPYRIGHT OFFICE
  CONTROLLER GENERAL OF
PATENTS, DESIGNS & TRADE MARKS



PATENT             TRADE MARKS         REGISTAR OF
OFFICE             REGISTRY            COPYRIGHT

 Sr.JOINT    GIR
 CONTROLLER          JOINT
 OF PATENTS          REGISTAR OF
 AND DESIGNS         TRADEMARKS
CREATING A CHEAPER AND FAKE
VERSION
PREVENTING
           PROGRESS

                          BENEFITTING
HARMING
                         CONCENTRATED
HEALTH
                           INTEREST


          INTELLECTUAL
           MONOPOLY
SHWET KAMAL
SHASHANK SHEKHAR
BHAGAT SINGH BHANDARI
TARANJEET SINGH

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Intellectual Property Rights

  • 2. » Intellectual property (IP) is a term referring to a number of distinct types of creations of the mind for which a set of exclusive rights are recognized—and the corresponding fields of law.
  • 3. MUSIC LITERARY ART DISCOVERY INVENTION SYMBOL DESIGN
  • 4. PATENT INDUSTRIAL TRADEMARK DESIGN RIGHTS COPYRIGHTS IPR TRADE SECRETS
  • 5. FOR MOST PRODUCTS EVERY FORM OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS CAN BE OBTAINED CAMERA ―PATENT‖  FOR EVERY INDIVIDUAL IMPROVED MECHANISM ―DESIGN‖  FOR OUTER SHAPE & CONTOUR / CONFIGURATION “TRADE MARK” BRAND NAME OR LOGO FOR GOODS DENOTED AS ® ―COPY RIGHT‖ FOR INSTRUCTION / MANUAL BOOKLET DENOTED AS ©
  • 6. Music played on the CD player is Industrial design protected by protection for 3D copyright shape Various technical parts & mechanisms are subject mater of Brand name- protection registered under under Patents trademark
  • 7. » Meet international obligations while safeguarding national interests » Modernize; and » Move ahead
  • 8. » THE PATENTS ACT, 1970 • PRODUCT PATENT • PATENT TERM OF 20 YEARS • PUBLIC HEALTH SAFEGUARDS • PROTECTION TO TK » THE TRADE MARKS ACT, 1999 • SERVICE MARKS AND COLLECTIVE MARKS • TERM INCREASED FROM 7 YEARS TO 10 YEARS
  • 9. » THE DESIGNS ACT, 2000 » THE GI ACT, 1999 » THE COPYRIGHTS ACT, 1957 » THE BIO-DIVERSITY ACT, 2001 » THE LAYOUTS AND INTEGRATED CIRCUITS ACT
  • 10. » THE PROTECTION YOU RECEIVE IS ONLY » ELECTRICAL JUG FOR THE APPEARANCE OF THE ARTICLE AND NOT HOW IT WORKS. » DESIGN REGISTRATION IS INTENDED TO PROTECT DESIGNS WHICH HAVE AN INDUSTRIAL OR COMMERCIAL USE. » DURATION OF PROTECTION IS INITIALLY FOR 10 YEARS AND EXTENDABLE FOR ANOTHER TERM OF 5 YEARS. » DESIGNS OF STAMPS, LABELS, TOKENS, CARDS, CARTOONS, OR PARTS OF AN ARTICLE NOT SOLD SEPARATELY, CANNOT BE REGISTERED.
  • 11. TRADEMARKS » A TRADE MARK IS ANY SIGN WHICH CAN DISTINGUISH THE GOODS OF ONE TRADER FROM THOSE OF ANOTHER. SIGN INCLUDES, WORDS, LOGOS, PICTURES, OR A COMBINATION OF THESE. •TO REGISTER A TRADE MARK , THE MARK MUST BE:- •DISTINCTIVE, AND, NOT DECEPTIVE, OR CONTRARY TO LAW OR MORALITY, AND, NOT IDENTICAL OR SIMILAR TO ANY EARLIER MARKS FOR THE SAME OR SIMILAR GOODS. •A TRADE MARK IS USED AS A MARKETING TOOL SO THAT CUSTOMERS CAN RECOGNIZE THE PRODUCT OF A PARTICULAR TRADER.
  • 12. TRADEMARKS HOW TO SELECT A TRADE MARK ? 1. A WORD, LETTER OR ANY COMBINATION THEREOF AND SIMPLE IN DESIGN. 2. IF IT IS A WORD IT SHOULD BE EASY TO SPEAK, SPELL AND REMEMBER. 3. THE IDEAL WORD FOR A TRADE MARK IS AN INVENTED OR COINED WORD 4. WORDS WHICH ARE LAUDATORY OR WHICH DIRECTLY DESCRIBES THE CHARACTER OR QUALITY OF THE GOODS SHOULD NOT BE ADOPTED. 5. GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES CONNECTED WITH THE REPUTATION OR QUALITY OF THE GOODS FOR WHICH REGISTRATION IS SOUGHT SHOULD NOT BE ADOPTED. ARE ALL TRADE MARKS REGISTRABLE ? NOT POSSIBLE TO REGISTER A MARK WHICH IS CONFUSING WITH A TRADE MARK OF ANOTHER TRADER OR A TRADE MARK WHICH DESCRIBES THE CHARACTER OR QUALITY OF THE GOODS. THE MARK SHOULD NOT CONFLICT WITH A TRADE MARK ALREADY REGISTERED OR PENDING REGISTRATION IN RESPECT OF SIMILAR GOODS.
  • 13. WHAT IS GIR •An indication used to identify agricultural, natural or manufactured goods originating from a definite territory in India. •It should have a special quality or characteristics or reputation based upon the climatic or production characteristics unique to the geographical location. •Examples of Geographical Indications in India are Darjeeling Tea, Kanchipuram Silk Saree, Alphonso Mango, Nagpur Orange, Kolhapuri Chappal, Bikaneri Bhujia, etc. •Any association of persons, producers, organization established by or under the law can apply representing & protecting the interests of the producers. •The registration of a Geographical Indication is for a period of ten years. •Renewal is possible for further periods of 10 years each. •A trade mark is a sign which is used in the course of trade and it distinguishes goods or services of one enterprise from those of other enterprises. Whereas a Geographical Indication is used to identify goods having special characteristics originating from a definite geographical territory.
  • 14. LAW OF PATENTS •PROTECTION PART •ENFORCEMENT PART
  • 15. •CRITERIA FOR PATENTABILITY –NEW & USEFUL –NON-OBVIOUS –CAPABLE OF INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS •PATENTS ACT SPECIFIES –WHAT ARE NOT INVENTIONS? –WHAT ARE NOT PATENTABLE INVENTIONS? •HOW TO GET THAT MONOPOLY RIGHT?
  • 16. » OPPOSITION PROCEEDINGS » LICENSING PROVISIONS » INFRINGEMENTS SUIT PROVISIONS
  • 17. IT ENCOURAGES RESEARCH. INDUCES AN INVENTOR TO DISCLOSE HIS INVENTIONS INSTEAD OF KEEPING THEM AS SECRET. PROVIDES INDUCEMENT FOR CAPITAL INVESTMENT ENCOURAGING TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT. IT ENCOURAGES ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW INDUSTRIES.
  • 18. •KNOWLEDGE OF INVENTION ADDS TO SCIENTIFIC BACKGROUND FORMING BASE FOR FURTHER RESEACH •REASONABLE ASSURANCE FOR COMMERCIALIZATION •PATENT- OPEN TO PUBLIC FOR USE –AFTER ITS TERM EXPIRES OR –WHEN IT CEASES TO BE IN FORCE
  • 19. INVENTION INVENTION IS A SUCCESSFUL TECHNICAL SOLUTION TO A TECHNICAL PROBLEM. TO BE GRANTED A PATENT, AN INVENTION MUST BE NEW, NON-OBVIOUS AND CAPABLE OF INDUSTRIAL APPLICATION
  • 20. •Make it public for free use by public(like publishing in the journal) Or •Work the invention in SECRECY without PATENTING it (like coco-cola composition) Or •Work the invention OPENLY without PATENTING it (directly put it in the market) Or •EXPLOIT the invention on the basis of a PATENT (like Rank Xerox )
  • 21. A patent is a Monopoly Right granted •For an invention •By the government •To the inventor or his assignee •For a limited period •It is valid within the country of grant
  • 22. WHY DO YOU NEED ―PATENT INFORMATION‖ •SIZE OF THE RESOURSE –ENORMOUS AND WIDE Every area of technology is covered. •80% NOT PUBLISHED ELSEWHERE •FIRST PUBLICATION:Inventions disclosed in patents well before being published in any other type of document Invention Patent published First publication in any form Punched card 1889 1914 Television 1923 1928 Jet engine 1936 1946 •EXPIRED PATENTS : FREE USE ; •TO AVOID REDUNDANT RESEACH Use the technology given in patent specification as a stepping stone.
  • 23. PATENTS NOT ONLY FOR MAJOR TECHNOLOGICAL BREAKTHROUGH Such As •LAZLO biro‘s - ball point pen •Ring – pull for cans of beverages But even for any small ‗ incremental ‘ inventions •INDIVIDUALS OR Companies-normally do not clearly recognize the TRUE MARKET VALUE for a particular INVENTION e.g. Anti theft device for motor cars-wheel clamp Tetra pack style of cartons for milk & fruit juice
  • 24. MINISTRY OF COMMERCE MINISTRY OF HUMAN RESOURSE AND INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT DEPT. OF INDUSTRIAL DEPT. OF EDUCATION POLICY & PROMOTION COPYRIGHT OFFICE CONTROLLER GENERAL OF PATENTS, DESIGNS & TRADE MARKS PATENT TRADE MARKS REGISTAR OF OFFICE REGISTRY COPYRIGHT Sr.JOINT GIR CONTROLLER JOINT OF PATENTS REGISTAR OF AND DESIGNS TRADEMARKS
  • 25.
  • 26. CREATING A CHEAPER AND FAKE VERSION
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. PREVENTING PROGRESS BENEFITTING HARMING CONCENTRATED HEALTH INTEREST INTELLECTUAL MONOPOLY
  • 32.
  • 33. SHWET KAMAL SHASHANK SHEKHAR BHAGAT SINGH BHANDARI TARANJEET SINGH