Introduction to Intellectual Property Lucinda Jones WIPO-CAPS Workshop on Management of Intellectual Property for Photographers Beijing December 8-9, 2005

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Transcript Introduction to Intellectual Property Lucinda Jones WIPO-CAPS Workshop on Management of Intellectual Property for Photographers Beijing December 8-9, 2005

Introduction to
Intellectual Property
Lucinda Jones
WIPO-CAPS
Workshop on Management of
Intellectual Property for Photographers
Beijing
December 8-9, 2005
Overview
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“Intellectual property” (IP)
IP system
IP policy
WIPO
One type of IP - copyright
“Intellectual Property”
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Intellectual property (IP) refers to creations of the
mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, and
symbols, names, images, and designs used in commerce
Industrial property
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patents (inventions)
trademarks
industrial designs
geographical indications
Copyright
– literary and artistic works; novels, poems, plays, films,
musical works, drawings, paintings, photographs, sculptures,
and architectural designs
– related rights - performing artists, producers of phonograms,
broadcasters of radio and television programs
Why protect intellectual property?
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Protection of IP rights is an incentive to human creativity
Promotes respect for individual artists, and enables them to
earn livelihoods
Prevents infringement and “free riding”
IP serves as an instrument for cultural, social, economic
and technological development
New creativity helps create sustainable and competitive
businesses locally and internationally
IP-based industries contribute significantly to national
economies
IP gaining importance in today’s “information society”
What is the intellectual property system?
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International
– treaties
 e.g., copyright treaties include:
- Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and
Artistic Works (1967, revised 1971)
- WIPO Copyright Treaty & WIPO Performers and
Phonograms Treaty
National
– territorial copyright, patents, trademark laws
– e.g., Copyright Law of the People’s Republic of China
1990 (effective June 1, 1991) and Regulations (by
National Copyright Administration)
Enforcement mechanisms (courts, customs..)
Who manages the
intellectual property system?
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Public Sector (WIPO, Government Copyright Offices,
Courts)
Private Sector (Industry associations, collecting societies,
IP-based industries, lawyers)
Academic (Universities)
Research & Development Institutions
Individuals - you!
What is WIPO?
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United Nations specialized agency
members - 183 Member States
observers - 222 non-governmental organizations, 66
international organizations
938 staff members
based in Geneva (offices in New York, Brussels and
Singapore)
What is WIPO’s purpose?
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Convention Establishing the World Intellectual Property
Organization (Stockholm, July 14, 1967)
– entered into force in 1970, amended 1979
– WIPO’s mission to “promote the protection of intellectual
property throughout the world through cooperation among
States” in order to encourage creativity and innovation
Agreement between the United Nations and WIPO (1974)
– WIPO’s purpose is the “promotion of creative intellectual
activity and the facilitation of the transfer of technology
related to intellectual property to the developing countries in
order to accelerate economic, social and cultural
development” (article 1)
WIPO’s main activities
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Normsetting
– treaty-making processes
Providing international IP services to private sector
– registration services for patents, trademarks and designs
– dispute resolution (WIPO Arbitration & Mediation
Center)
Enhancing access to the IP system
– assists developing country members, as well as small and
medium-sized enterprises to use IP as a tool for economic
development
– distance learning programs (WIPO Worldwide Academy)
– seminars, conferences, studies and documents
International copyright policy-making
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Traditional treaty-making
– WIPO administers 23 international treaties
– 10-15 years to develop (fast-tracked 6 years)
New stakeholders
– greater public involvement in IP (as creators, distributors
and consumers)
– greater value and investment in IP as intellectual capital in
the knowledge society
New processes
– ‘soft law’, best practices, joint recommendations..
IP in the Information Society
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Emergence of digital technologies
Pre Internet.. (World Wide Web)
Post Internet?
Scale & speed
‘information society’ ‘knowledge economy’
Internet as a source of information
- network of networks a communication channel
- value in intangibles
- business assets intellectual, as opposed to physical
Internet as a tool for IP owners & users
Intellectual property today China
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Creative industries in China - 357.7 billion yuan (US$44
billion) in 2003
Copyright industries in China employ 60,000 people
Book publishing industry - 60,000 new titles a year, with 3
billion printed copies to value of 40.4 billion yuan (US$5
billion)
Film industry produces 126 films annually
Recorded music (2000) - 62 million units sold with sales of
646.4 billion yuan (US$80 million)
Challenges to IP
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Global medium (Internet) & territorial laws
Digitization
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IP ideally suited to digitization
intangibles… perfect, instant, infinite copies
globally distributed, transient, changeable
worldwide piracy as bandwidth increases, in music, software
and film industries
• 870 million infringing copyright music files online (Jan
2005)
• 90% of files shared over P2P are unauthorized
• 400,000 - 600,000 illegal film downloads per day
• RIAA commenced over 13,000 individual law suits
against alleged illegal file-sharers
One type of IP - copyright
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Copyright protects:
– written works (books, speeches, magazines)
– musical works, dramatic & choreographic works
(songs, quyi, operas, musicals, dance mime)
– artistic works and architectural works (photographs,
cartoons, paintings, sculptures)
– photographic works
– graphic works (engineering drawings and product
designs)
– films and multimedia products (video games)
– computer software ...
Copyright...
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Copyright does NOT protect:
– ideas
– works prohibited by law
– Government documents
– news on current affairs
– calendars, numerical tables and formulas
– exercise of copyright in violation of the Chinese
Constitution or in prejudice of the public interest
Copyright works for business
 copyright as a commercial asset to earn income
 protection for emerging technologies
 management of use of others’ copyright works
 use copyright as security to gain credit and financing
 copyright protection for marketing and advertising
 sale or licensing of copyright
 use of copyright in the public good
 copyright for social, cultural and economic development
(narrow the content divide)
What rights does copyright give?
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Right of publication (to decide whether to make the work
available to the public)
Right of authorship (to claim authorship and have your
name connected to the work)
Right of alteration (to change or authorize someone else
to change your work)
Right of integrity (right to protect your work against
distortion or mutilation)
Right of exploitation and remuneration (right to
reproduce, perform, broadcast, exhibit, distribute, adapt,
translate, annotate or compile, or authorize someone else to
do so, and to be paid for those actions)
Conditions of copyright
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To be protected by copyright:
– work must be original
– regardless of quality or artistic merit
– fixed in some material form
– automatic (no formalities required such as registration)
– since 1994, voluntary registration of works with local
copyright administration as evidence of ownership in case
of disputes
How long does copyright last?
– rights of authorship, alteration, and integrity are forever
– other rights last for the life of the author + 50 years (or for
some works, 50 years from date of publication)
Conditions ...
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Exceptions & limitations to copyright
– allow a copyright work to be used without permission
or payment to the owner, provided the name and title of
the work is mentioned
– aim is to preserve the balance in copyright system
between private rights to control creative works, and
the public interest in sharing of creativity and
information
– law provides exceptions for study and research, private
entertainment, quotation, reporting current events, free
live performances, some translations into minority
languages ...also photographing an artistic work located
in a public place
How can copyright be used?
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Sell the original works, or copies
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License your economic rights (give permission to someone
to copy or otherwise use the work on certain terms)
– exclusively or non-exclusively
– all rights reserved, or few rights reserved
 e.g., Creative Commons (www.creativecommons.org)
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Sell (assign) your copyright over the works - partly or
completely
Enforcement of copyright
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Infringement occurs if someone, without authorization,
performs an act over which the copyright owner has the
rights
Copyright law imposes civil liability (stop the act, remedy
the damage, make a public apology, pay compensation)
Infringements include:
– copying your work without consent, publishing the work
under their name, exhibiting, distributing or adapting the
work without consent, exploiting the work without
payment…
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Copyright disputes can be settled:
– in the courts
– using alternative dispute resolution (arbitration, mediation)
Thank you
www.wipo.int
[email protected]