Intellectual Property-1
Intellectual Property-1
Intellectual Property-1
• State to state
• Not open to individual.
• Example : India v USA.
The Laws For Intellectual
Property Protection
• Copyright Act 1987
• Trademarks Act 1976
• Patent Act 1983
• Industrial Design Act 1996
• Geographical Indications Act 2000
• Law of Tort
• -passing-off
• Confidential information
Protection for Copyright
• Protection given by law for a term of years
to the composer, author etc… to make
copies of their work..
• Work include literary, artistic,
musical,films, sound
recordings,broadcasts.
• Commercial and moral rights.
• No registration provision.
Protection for trade marks
• Commercial exploitation of a product
• To identify the product, giving it a name
• “mark” includes a device, brand, heading,
label, ticket, name, signature,word, letter,
numeral or any combination.
• Does not include sound or smell
Trade marks (cont.)
• Can either be registered or not registered
• Advantages of registered trade marks
• Application can be made for goods and
services
• Perform certain function such as indication
of quality,identifying a trade connection
Choosing the correct mark
• Compare the trade mark “Dove” to using
the mark “crows”.
• Would the “Frog restaurant ” be
acceptable?
• Would Marksman and Weekend Sex be
acceptable?
Protection for patent
• Basic idea of granting a patent
• “ the applicant applied to the government
for the right of patent and in return for the
monopoly given he must disclose
everything about the invention in the
patent document” ( the description)
• Duration 20 years.
Patent (cont.)
• Patent for invention
• Patent can be applied for a product or a
process.
• Patentable invention must be new,involves
an inventive step and industrially
applicable
• Priority date- first to file
The role of patent
• Innovation
• Anticipating the changes that is coming
• - Kodak
• - Polaroid
• - Haeir
The various route for application
• The national route
• The Paris route
• The PCT route
Protection for industrial designs
• Protection for industrial designs that are
new or original
• Design are feature of shape, configuration,
pattern or ornament
• The design must be applied to an article
• The design must be applied by an
industrial process.
• Appeal to the eye.
Commercialization strategies
• Novelty
• Effect of failure to register before
marketing
Protection for geographical
indications
• Meaning “ an indication which identifies
any goods as originating in a country or
territory, or a region or locality where a
given quality, reputation or other
characteristic of the goods is essentially
attributable to their geographical origin”
Protection for geographical
indication
• Product must come from a particular
geographical territory
• Uses a name link to the particular geographical
nature of the territory
• Such as labu sayung from the sayung Perak,
• Batik Trengganu,batik Kelantan etc.
• To stop others from using
Examples of GI
• Swiss made
• Swiss chocolates
• Sarawak pepper
• Salted egg
• Sweet tamarind
Protection under the law of Tort
• Based on common law
• There is no legislation pass by Parliament
• Enforced by court’s decision.
• Strict application of precedent.
Passing-off
• For trade mark ( registered and
unregistered)
• Started from the tort of deceits.
• The deceiver, the audience and the victim.
• Requirement of “goodwill”
Confidential information
• Protection under the law of tort
• Protection for confidential information
under contract, employer-employee
relationship,husband and wife,etc
• Need to show:-
• - information are confidential
• - recipient who obtained the information
uses it
• - damages suffered by the owner
Illustration
• Customers list
• Secret recipes
• Smells of a new perfume
Qualification for protection of
Intellectual property in Malaysia.
• Protection are territorial.
• Procedural requirement must be met.
• Intellectual Property Corporation Malaysia act as
the governing body.
• Forms submitted,search made,prescribe time
period observed.
• Abiding to International Convention.
Duration of protection
• Life + 50
• 50
• 20
• 15
• 10
• Payment of statutory fee.
Ownership
• Who is the owner?
• Proper plaintiff rule.
• -employer and employee relationship
• - independent contractor.
• - government employee.
• - joint-ownership.
• Commissioned works
Exclusive rights
• To control the whole or a substantial part
of the work.:-
• the reproduction in any material form.
• The communication to the public.
• The public performance,showing or
playing
• Distribution by sale or other transfer
• Commercial rental to the public.
The exception to the exclusive
right
• Fair dealing exception
• Statutory exception under section 13(2)
• Temporal ( duration)
• Geographic
• Non-material works
• Compulsory licenses
Enforcing IP rights
• civil action
• Criminal prosecution
• Cost in litigation
• Assistance from Enforcement Division
• Being vigilant/ self help
Civil action
• Starting a civil action
• Advantages
• Liability for cost
• Monetary compensation in term of
damages
Criminal prosecution
• Making a complaint
• Police or enforcement division
• Cost borne by the government
• No monetary compensation
• Remedy in term of fines or imprisonment
for the offender
IP infringement
• Primary infringement
• - who does or causes
• -making the product
• Secondary infringement
• - commercial activities
• - selling,distribution for sale etc
Secondary infringement
• sells,lets for hire or by way of trade
exposes or offer for sale or hire any
infringing copies.
• Distribute infringing copies.
• Importing into Malaysia
Commercialization
• Assignment
• Licenses
• - exclusive
• - non-exclusive
Intellectual property awareness
in Malaysia