LR CD Cell 2012
LR CD Cell 2012
LR CD Cell 2012
PROPERTY
TANGIBLE INTANGIBLE
INTELLECTUAL
MOVABLE IMMOVABLE PROPERTY
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
• Intellectual property results from the creations of
intellect in industry, scientific, literary and artistic
domain and is intangible.
Source- PGanguli©2006
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
Creativity &
Innovation
IP
Trade
Incentive
Repositories
Strengthening IP
Synthesizing Skills
DESIGNS
TRADEMARKS
Geographical
Strategic Elements Indications
•Protection
•Period of Validity
•Enforcement Features
•Licensing Issues Know-how &
•Legal Implications Confidential
Information
13
IP LAWS IN INDIA: CHANGING
WITH TIME
• Post –Independence: The Government of India reviewed
its IP laws soon after independence, and enacted more
development friendly laws.
• Post –TRIPS:
The importance of IPR gathered momentum soon the
setting up of the World Trade Organization (WTO) on
1stJanuary 1995.
The IP laws further changed in view of India’s
commitments under TRIPS under WTO.
• Emerging significance: INNOVATION
(Globalization, Economic reforms, Increasing
competition, New Technologies, Commercialization of R&D)
LAWS CURRENTLY IN FORCE
• the Indian Patents Act 1970 with amendments till
2005
• the Designs Act 2000
• the Trademarks Act 1999
• the Copyright Act 1999
• the Geographical Indications of Goods
(Registration & Protection) Act, 1999
• the Semiconductor Integrated Circuit Layout
Design Act was enacted in 2000
• the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmer’s
Rights Act 1999
PATENTS
Patent is an exclusive right granted by the
Government/ State for the commercial
exploitation of an invention for a limited time
and gives the inventor (patentee) an
exclusive monopoly of his invention.
Novelty
Inventive step
Industrial applicability
Source- ASen©2006
DESIGNS
An industrial design is that aspect of a useful
article, which is ornamental or aesthetic.
TRADEMARKS
A trademark is a distinctive sign, which
identifies certain goods or services as those
produced or provided by a specific person or
enterprise.
PROPERTY MARK
A mark used for denoting that a movable property belongs
to a particular person is called property mark.
GEOGRAPHIC INDICATIONS
A geographical indication is a sign used on goods that have
a specific geographical origin and possess qualities or a
reputation that are due to that place of origin.
APPELLATIONS OF ORIGIN
Are specific types of geographical indications. An
appellation of origin is a more precise geographical
indication which specifies that the product in question has
certain qualities and that those qualities are due essentially
or exclusively to its place of origin.
LAYOUT DESIGNS IN
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
A semiconductor integrated circuit is a product having
transistors and other circuitry elements, which are
inseparably formed on a semiconductor material or an
insulating material or inside the semiconductor material
and designed to perform an electronic circuitry function.
MAIN FEATURES
National in Nature
Domain- Literary and Artistic works
Charles Darwin
PATENTS
PATENTS
Patent is an exclusive right granted by the Government/ State for the
commercial exploitation of an invention for a limited time and gives the
inventor (patentee) an exclusive monopoly of his invention. A patent
therefore is a property, which likes any other property, movable or
immovable, may be bought, sold, assigned or licensed. Patent requires the
inventor to disclose the invention and to define the boundary of the patented
invention so that the public at large can practice the invention on expiry of
the patent. Thus, patents are PUBLISHED and are not secret. “Invention”
means a solution to a specific problem in the field of technology. For an
invention to qualify for patent protection it must fulfill the following conditions
Novelty
Inventive step
Industrial applicability
Not excluded
The invention comes into public domain after the expiry of the term of the
patent that is generally twenty years from the date of filing of the application.
Regular payment of renewal fees is required after the 5th year (i.e. the 5th
year is the lowest fee, gradually rising to the 19th year being the highest
fee).
WHAT IS A PATENT
A patent is an exclusive territorial rights
conferred by the state to the inventor/ applicant to
exploit his/her invention for commercial benefit for
a limited period in consideration of his/her
complete disclosure of the invention
Disclosure of Information
Payment of Fees
Watch Dog
Source: asen2006
PATENTABLE INVENTION
[SECTION 2 (1) J]
Must be a process or a product or a
combination of thereof
AND
Must be Novel
Must involve an Inventive Step
Must be Industrially Applicable
PATENTABILITY CRITERIA AND
PATENTABLE SUBJECT
MATTER
ONLY INVETIONS ARE
PATENTABLE
“An invention means a new product or process involving an
inventive steps and capable of industrial application”
(S.2(1)(j)
Where
Inventive step means a feature that makes the invention not
obvious to a person skilled in the art (S.2(1)(ja)
And
Capable of industrial application, in relation to an invention,
means that the invention is capable of being made or used
in an industry (s.2(1)(ac)
CRITERIA
• Novelty
• Inventive step
• Industrial applicability
NOVELTY
• Which has not be disclosed, in the prior art
Prior claim
A surprising result
The solution to a long-standing problem
A great technical progress
Commercial success linked to the merits of the
invention
The fulfilment of a long-felt need
OBVIOUSNESS
When the alleged invention does not go
beyond the normal progress of technology
but merely follows plainly or logically from
the prior art it will be regarded as obvious
if a claim to it would inhibit the activities of
a skilled workman to carry out routine
modifications of what is already in the
public domain.
Source- MThakur©2008
WHO IS THE SKILLED PERSON?
An ordinary practitioner aware of what is common
general knowledge in the art at the relevant date.
Having access to everything in the state of the art
Need not possess inventive capability and
generally would not engage in creative thinking.
Can be expected to look for suggestions in
neighboring field where similar problem may be
present.
Cannot be expected to perform scientific research
in areas not yet explored.
Follows normally the path indicated in the state of
the art.
SOME EXAMPLES OF LACKING
INVENTIVE STEP
• When invention lies only in providing equivalents
(mechanical,electrical or chemical) to the known art.
For example, use of hydraulic motor instead of electric
motor in a pump.
• When the prior art is incomplete and the invention lies
in “filling the gap”. For example, invention :building
structure made from aluminium // Prior art ---a
structure of light weight material but not aluminium.
• When the invention consists of a new use of well-
known material employing the known properties of that
material. For example, a washing composition
containing known detergent having property of
lowering the surface tension of water;the property
being known as the essential one for detergents.
SOME EXAMPLES OF LACKING
INVENTIVE STEP
(i) A chair of eight leg for better support
Can be made
The grant of a patent for an invention does not guarantee the merit or
any other commercial value of the invention disclosed. The state
(country), which grants the patent, does not also guarantee the validity
of the patent granted.
The government (State) does not give any financial or any other award
or assistance to the inventor/patentee in granting the patent.
PATENTABLE SUBJECT
MATTER
PATENTABLE SUBJECT MATTER
Section 3(b)
An invention the primary or intended use or
commercial exploitation of which could be contrary
to public order or morality or which causes serious
prejudice to human, animal or plant life or health or
to the environment;
Section 3(c)
The mere discovery of a scientific principle or the
formulation of an abstract theory or discovery or any
living thing or non-living substances occurring in
nature;
Section 3(d)
The mere discovery of a any new property or new
use for a known substance or of the mere use of a
known process, machine or apparatus unless such
known process results in a new product or
employs at least one new reactant:
Section 3(e)
The substance obtained by mere admixture
resulting only in the aggregation of the properties
of the components thereof or a process for
producing such substances:
Section 3(f)
The mere arrangement or re-arrangement or
duplication of known devices each functioning
independently of one another in a known way;
Section 3(h)
A method of agriculture or horticulture;
Section 3(i)
Any process for the medicinal, surgical, curative,
prophylactic, diagnostic, therapeutic or other
treatment of human being or any process for a
similar treatment of animals to render them free of
disease or to increase their economic value or that
of their products;
Section 3(j)
Plants and animals in whole or any part thereof other
than micro organisms but including seeds, varieties
and species and essentially biological processes for
production or propagation of plants and animals;
Section 3(k)
A mathematical or business method or a computer
program per se or algorithms;
Section 3(l)
A literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work or any
other aesthetic creation whatsoever including
cinematographic works and television production;
Section 3(m)
A mere scheme or rule or method of performing
mental act or method of playing games;
Section 3(n)
A presentation of information;
Section 3(o)
Topography of integrated circuits;
Section 3(p)
An invention which in effect, is traditional knowledge
or which is an aggregation or duplication of known
properties of traditionally known component or
components;
INVENTIONS RELATING TO
ATOMIC ENERGY (S.4)
No patent shall be granted in respect of
an invention relating to atomic energy
falling within subsection (1) of section
20 of atomic energy Act, 1962
Technical Reasons
transferring of technology
Stopping reinventing the wheel
detail working of invention
WHY TO ACCESS PATENT
INFORMATION?
largest and most comprehensive source
On-line Search
Access Methodology
WHICH ARE THE SOURCES
FOR PATENT INFORMATION?
Commercial Vendors
Internet Based
CD-ROM based
WHAT DOES A PATENT
DOCUMENT CONTAIN?
PATENTS DOCUMENT
No legal importance
Historical facts
Identifying elements
Abstract of invention
Countries
Country of inventor
Country of applicant
Country of priority
Country of grant
Designated Countries
BIBLIOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
Number and Dates
Who invented
Who applied
BIBLIOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
Kind of Publication
Published before grant
With a search report
Without Search report
Published after grant
Language of Publication
Classification codes
International Patent Classification Codes
National Classification Codes
SPECIFICATION
Description of the invention
Disclosure
(g) claims
Source: asen2006
BACKGROUND OF THE
INVENTION
Typically drafted for a jury audience
FORMAT OF CLAIMS
POSSIBLE EQUIVALENTS
COMPRISING INCLUDING
HAVING WHEREIN
Preferred
HOW DO YOU MAKE GENERIC
THE PREAMBLE OF THE CLAIM
Claim Worded:
• His/Their Assignee
0 12
Provisional Complete
specification on specification on
Form -2 Form -2
1. Application on Form 1
2. Complete specification on Form 2
3. Appropriate Fee
4. Proof of right to make the application
5. Power of authority
6. Drawings
7. Abstract
PROCESS
The exclusive right to prevent third parties,
without his consent from the act of using that
process, and for the act of using, offering for
sale, selling or importing for those purposes the
product obtained directly by the process in India.
SURRENDER OF PATENT
• SURRENDER (under
section 63)
A patentee at any time
by giving notice to the
Controller, may offer to
surrender his/her patent:
PATENTING ABROAD
Source: asen2006
PATENTING ABROAD
• Several countries where filing is
contemplated may have different
patent laws and corresponding
different rules (procedures)
PATENTING ABROAD
(a) CONVENTIONAL SYSTEM
Filing of a national patent application in
the home-country of the applicant.
Claiming priority of the home-country
application under Paris Convention
Filing multiple foreign applications within
12 months from the date of priority
Direct foreign filing is permissible under
law for person resident in India (Section
39 of Indian Patents Acts), subject to
securing in advance a Foreign permit.
PATENTING ABROAD
• DISADVANTAGES OF CONVENTIONAL SYSTEM
Complex
Expensive
Only 12 months available for making decisions
to enter national phase
No opportunity for reconsidering the decision
to enter National phase beyond 12 months of
Priority date
PATENTING ABROAD
(b) REGIONAL PATENT SYSTEM
European Patent Convention (EPC)
Eurasian Patent System (EAPO)
African Regional Industrial Property Organization
(ARIPO)
African Intellectual Property Organization (OAPI)
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
Source: asen2006
Source: asen2006
CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL
DIVERSITY (CBD)
At the Earth Summit held in 1992 the Convention on
Biological Diversity (CBD) was concluded, to which
India is a party.
FOR LICENSOR:
Expanded market opportunity – domestic and international
Cuts investment costs (no need to establish subsidiary or
distribution and marketing channels)
Avoids country specific pitfalls in unfamiliar territory (local
factors)-better handled by the local license
Avoids non-use cancellation action per local laws
FOR LICENSEE
Availability of technology, know-how, well known brand names,
and other IP assets
Cheaper cost (in comparison to developing it self)
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENSING SAFEGUARDS
RISKS:
Misappropriation
Dilution of reputation and goodwill through misuse/wrong use
Lack of adequate legal protection locally?
SAFEGUARDS
Through detailed contract governing the licensor/license
relationship
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENCE CONTRACT CLAUSES
MANING CLAUSE:
Clearly identify the contracting parties
DEFINITIONS
IP rights (Patents, Know-how etc.) covered under the grant
(SEPARATE AGREEMENTS ADVISABLE)
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENCE CONTRACT CLAUSES
GRANT CLAUSE
Manufacture/ use and sell products using the granted IP rights
Term of the patent
Territory
Sole license
Exclusive/ non-exclusive
(exclusive license will entail higher royalties for the Licensor)
Sub-licensing rights
Improvement
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENCE CONTRACT CLAUSES
CONSIDERATION
Fixed payments (Patents)
Upfront (non-refundable, not an advance)??
Annual (minimum fixed) ??
Milestone (on delivery of certain obligations by the Licensor, e.g. 1/3
each at the time of signing the agreement, delivery of technical
documentation and commencement of commercial production
Running royalties
To cease of the patent is cancelled
PAYMENTS
Timing
Currency and exchange rate clause
Subject to local taxes
For technical training and assistance (where know-how is
involved)
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENCE CONTRACT CLAUSES
ACCOUNTING PROVISIONS
Duty to maintain accurate records by Licensee
Accounting procedure and standard
Audit and inspection by Licensor or its representative
Reports submission within 30 days of end of each quarter
(or as may be agreed)
Penalties for errors in accounting and payments
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Duty to infirm about infringement or misuse
Right to bring/defend legal actions by licensee in patent
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENCE CONTRACT CLAUSES
RENEWAL OF AGREEMENT
TERMINATION
Without notice
With notice (for no fault)
Due to material breach if left uncured after notice
CONSEQUENCE OF TERMINATION
Restraint on future use
Allowance for stock disposal
Accrued rights not affected
Confidentiality clause (if any) survive
IP AGREEMENTS
LICENCE CONTRACT CLAUSES
MISCELLANEOUS
Disclaimer of No agency relationship
Insurance purchase to protect against product liability
Notice prescription
Force Majeure (Act of God, e.g. Earth quakes, floods,
legislative changes, other events beyond control)
Severability
Entire agreement
Modification
Applicable law
Dispute resolution
IP AGREEMENTS
CONFIDENTIALITY (NDA)
Parties
Recitals (background and purpose)
E.g. Invention disclosure
• Trade secret
• Know-how
• Other ‘confidential information’
Definition of ‘Confidential Information’
Know-how, drawings, processes, etc.
Documents marked as ‘confidential’
Oral communication reduced to writing within defined time
Exclusions
Known to recipient prior to disclosure by Discloser
Lawfully obtained by Recipient from the Third Party not violating the agreement
with the Discloser
Comes into public domain without violation by recipient
Disclosure to Law Authorities (after notice to Discloser, so that it can take steps
to seek confidential treatment of the information)
IP AGREEMENTS
CONFIDENTIALITY (NDA)
Obligations of Recipient
Acknowledgement of proprietary and confidential nature and
disclosers title
Duty to preserve confidentiality
Take same degree of care as it would safeguard its own CI
Disclosure to employees on need to know basis
No disclosure to third parties (e.g. Consultants without prior written consent
of disclosure)
Employees and third parties to execute similar NDA
Duty to use only for purpose for which CI is received
Duty to return on expiration of the agreement
Duty not to misuse for file for registration on its own name
Duty to not to assign without prior consent of the Disclose (which may
not be unreasonably withheld)
Duty to notify the Discloser, if improper law/ breach occurs
IP AGREEMENTS
CONFIDENTIALITY (NDA)
Patent Office
GROUNDS same as in OPPOSITION
NATURE OF CLAIMS
SUIT FOR INFRINGEMENT
Cause of action arises when
Patents, (e.g. identical patented process leading to identical product)
Trademark
A statutory remedy for registered mark
Mere proof of registration is sufficient
Not necessary to prove reputation and goodwill
Similar goods/services on proof of likely public CONFUSION
Dissimilar goods/services on proof of REPUTATION and detrimental effect on the
mark
Use as part of corporate name in respect of same goods
Passing Off
Remedy under common law : the plaintiff’s mark’s need not be registered for
the goods in question
Necessary to prove:
reputation of the plaintiff in the mark
misrepresentation
damage / harm
ENFORCEMENT
NATURE OF CLAIMS
(Breach of Contract)
CRIMINAL (Imprisonment)
ADMINISTRATIVE (Customs)
ENFORCEMENT
CIVIL REMEDIES
PRELIMINARY/INTERIM INJUNCTION
ex-parte or after notice
Three ingredients
- prima-facie case
- irreparable injury
- balance of convenience
Anton Piller orders (to preserve evidence the court orders entry by solicitors
into the Defendant premises and taking into safe custody the evidence. Also the
Defendant required to disclose names and addresses of suppliers and
customers. In India, in addition, the courts grant lock braking power and
availing police assistance if required)
John-Doe orders (court appointed Commissioners to enter premises of ANY
suspected party to collect evidence of infringement, e.g. ICC/Cable Operators
Norwich Pharmacal orders (third parties also required to disclose
information)
Mareva injunction (restrains the Defendant from removing assets or dealing
with them in any way, so as to frustrate a potential monitory judgment)
PERMANENT INJUNCTION ON MERITS AFTER FULL HEARING
COSTS
ENFORCEMENT
CRIMINAL REMEDIES
CRIMINAL REMEDIES IN CERTAIN CASES UNDER LAW OF
Some High Courts have been very active and have been in
forefront of law making
Injunction and special interim reliefs
Protection for well known marks
SO IS THERE AN ALTERNATIVE
Neutral mediator
Easy enforceability
Confidentiality of arbitration
Other
IPR ISSUES RELATED TO
BIOTECHNOLOGY
WHAT SHOULD BE
PROTECTED
• Article 27(3)(b) of TRIPS excludes
“…..Plants and animals other than micro-organism, and
essentially biological processes for the production of plants or
animals other than non-biological and micro-biological processes
and plant varieties…..”
• Credible
• Substantial
BIOTECHNOLOGY- INNOVATIONS
1873 – Louis Pasteur, Yeast, free from organic germs
• PCR technology
• Transgenics
• Bioinformatics
BIOTECHNOLOGICAL PATENTS
• Process/methods - Inventions on the making of fermented
food products
- Uses of microorganisms
hydrocarbon
MICRO-ORGANISM
• India is rich in genetic diversity
protection
making L-Lysine.
MICROBIOLOGICAL
INVENTIONS
Product
Organisms T. aquaticus
Hepatitis A strain
Ligate
Product – WTO
Recombinant clone in Appl
plasmid vector -Human insulin
-Immunoglobin
Protein Micro-organism, -Vaccine
product variants -Blood clotting
factor
-Bt toxin
Patentable (WTO) Not Patentable
MICROBIAL AND ENZYME
PATENTS
• Composition - Vaccine composition
- Uses of microorganisms
hydrocarbon
HYBRIDOMA TECHNOLOGY
Fusion of two types of cells
(protoplast fusion)
Process is patentable
-Blood group
Monoclonal hybridomas -Hepatitis B
-HCG
-HIV
-Polio
-Malaria
Protein Cells
patentable (Not patentable) Product is not
patentable
CHOLERA VACCINE
• Vaccine per se: hit by 5(a)
drug……”
- patentable
Taq Polymerase
-Cetus Corp
- Hoffman La-Roche
- Promega corp
– Patents claimed:
aquaticus
“unobviousness”.
TAQ POLYMERASE
most controversy
PRODUCT VS. PROCESS
VS. USE CLAIMS
Product: US5589581, “DNA sequences useful for the
synthesis of carotenoids”, claims stipulate isolated
and purified DNAs which encode enzymes involved in
the biosynthesis of several carotenoids.
o Not patentable
THERAPEUTIC RELATED
INVENTIONS
• Methods of medical treatment not patentable but
is living or non-living
PATENTING OF DNA
CRITERIA FOR GENE
PATENTING
• Subject matter
Isolated gene is a composition of matter
• Novelty
Each gene is new only once
• Utility
How the gene is synthesized and scaled up
• Non-obviousness
Prior art seldom teaches (who undue
experimentation) what the next unique gene will be
Unless patent is based on gene isolation technique
WHY PATENT GENES?
• Business advantage
– ESTs
– Entire gene
– Different SNPs
patented
5,776,677)
• Claims
no gene claims
However related applications exist which cover the
gene per se
GENE PATENT - BRCA
• Two breast cancer genes patented in US
• Production of polypeptide
sequences
Examples
if close to it
WHAT IS SPECIAL ABOUT
DNA SEQUENCES
• DNA sequences are different because they blur the line
Appealed
Patent granted
In Abeyance
HARVARD ONCOMOUSE
Canada