Other Forms of Ipr
Other Forms of Ipr
1. Discuss the International agreements and treaties for the various forms of IPRs?
There are different subject matters of intellectual property like Patents, Copyright, Trademarks,
Industrial design, Plant Varieties etc. Need for protection in these different subjects arose in
different periods. These are reflected in different treaties. Agreement on TRIPS, under the aegis
of WTO, remains the most influential, comprehensive and inclusive of all. Other treaties are
covered here for background information.
There are two main bodies – World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) under UN which
administers 1-7 treaties mentioned below. the 8th treaty is independent of any organization.
Another relevant body is the World Trading Organization. 9th (or TRIPS) is administered by the
WTO. the 10th treaty comes under UNESCO.
Paris Convention for Industrial Property, 1883 – Adopted on March 20, 1883 at Paris and
entered into force on July 7, 1884. It provides basic guidelines for the protection of industrial
property (patents, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, service marks, trade names,
indications of source or appellations of origin, and the repression of unfair competition) and has
substantive provisions for national treatment, right of priority and common rules.
Bern convention for literary and artistic works, 1886 – Adopted on September 9, 1886 at
Berne and entered into force on December 4, 1887. It came into force in India on April 1, 1928.
It provided for a copyright system. It doesn’t provide for any formality to claim protection.
This Convention on Copyrights rests on three basic principles – national treatment, automatic
protection and independence of protection; it also contains a series of provisions determining the
minimum protection to be granted. Protection is automatically accorded to any creation,
provided work is original and other conditions under the treaty are fulfilled. It means that
your work, if original, is already protected. You can claim that you have copyright.
Madrid Agreement, 1891 – The Madrid System for the International Registration of Marks is
governed by two treaties:
the Madrid Agreement, concluded in 1891 and revised at Brussels (1900), Washington
(1911), The Hague (1925), London (1934), Nice (1957) and Stockholm (1967), and amended
in 1979, and
the Protocol relating to that Agreement, concluded in 1989, which aims to make the Madrid
system more flexible and more compatible with the domestic legislation of certain countries or
intergovernmental organizations that had not been able to accede to the Agreement.
States and organizations party to the Madrid system are collectively referred to as Contracting
Parties. The system makes it possible to protect a mark in a large number of countries by
obtaining an international registration that has effect in each of the designated Contracting
Parties.
Patent cooperation treaty, 1970 – It was earlier not possible for an entity to claim
protection in different countries by single application. The Treaty makes it possible to seek
patent protection for an invention simultaneously in each of a large number of countries by filing
an "international" patent application. Such an application may be filed by anyone who is a
national or resident of a Contracting State. It may generally be filed with the national patent
office of the Contracting State of which the applicant is a national or resident or, at the
applicant's option, with the International Bureau of WIPO in Geneva.
Budapest Treaty of 1980 – Under the treaty, the deposit of a microorganism with an
"international depositary authority" satisfies the deposit requirements of treaty members' national
patent laws. An "international depositary authority" is capable of storing biological material and
has established procedures that assure compliance with the Budapest Treaty. Such procedures
include requirements that the deposit will remain available for the life of the patent and that
samples will be furnished only to those persons or entities entitled to receive them.
Trademark Law Treaty, 1994 – The aim of the Trademark Law Treaty (TLT) is to
standardize and streamline national and regional trademark registration procedures. This is
achieved through the simplification and harmonization of certain features of those procedures,
thus making trademark applications and the administration of trademark registrations in multiple
jurisdictions less complex and more predictable. It also introduced ‘service marks’ in ambit of
trade marks. Earlier trademarks were accorded only to goods.
The Hague agreement concerning the International Deposit of ‘Industrial Design’
1925 – The Hague Agreement is an international registration system which offers the possibility
of obtaining protection for up to 100 industrial designs in designated member countries and
intergovernmental organizations, referred to as contracting parties. As of 2022, there are 76
contracting parties under the Hague Agreement. It created the International Design Bureau of
WIPO.
TRIPS were the results of discussions held in the Uruguay round which led to the formation of
WTO. This treaty is an offshoot of the General Agreement on Trade in Goods (GATT). This
treaty provided a robust Dispute Resolution Mechanism and stringent penal provisions under
auspices of WTO.
Further, every treaty under WTO is based some principle which are –
1. National Treatment – No foreign products, once they enter domestic territories,
shall be discriminated against in any manner. This also applies to intellectual
property. Members must accord similar treatment to foreign creations, as they do to
domestic ones.
2. Most Favored Nation – If a member provides some privilege, favorable treatment
or exemption to another country or group, then other members must get similar
favorable treatment.
3. Right to priority treatment – If a similar patent application has been filed in two
different countries, then the prior applicant has the right to the patent.
4. Concept of Minimum Standards – This treaty provides for a minimum level of
protection that every member should provide to intellectual property. Members have
discretion to provide more protection than minimum standards.
5. Universal Copyright Convention, 1952 – This convention is administered by
UNESCO. This exists simultaneously with the Bern Convention. This treaty
provides for procedural formalities for filing and recognition of copyright. As Bern
convention provides for an automatic route to copyright, this treaty has lost its
relevance.
2. How far The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers Rights Act, 2001, is successful to
provide for the establishment of an effective system for protection of plant varieties, the
rights of farmers and plant breeders and to encourage the development of new varieties of
plants?
3. Discuss the historical background of topography law along with inventions and expressions.
4. Biological Diversity Act was enacted in 2002, aims at the conservation of biological resources,
managing its sustainable use and enabling fair and equitable sharing benefits arising out of the use and
knowledge of biological resources with the local communities. Examine the statement with the help of
relevant features of Biological Diversity Act.
Conservation of Section 36 of the Act requires the government and local authorities to take
measures to conserve and protect India’s biodiversity, including through
the establishment of protected areas and the promotion of in-situ
Biodiversity conservation.
Section 21 of the Act requires that any benefits arising from the commercial
use of India’s biodiversity must be shared equitably with local communities
and other stakeholders.
Benefit-sharing
Section 24 of the Act provides for the establishment of a National
Biodiversity Fund to support the conservation and sustainable use of
biodiversity.
Section 55 of the Act sets out penalties for non-compliance, including fines
and imprisonment.
Offences and
Section 56 of the Act provides for the seizure of equipment and products
Penalties
used in contravention of the Act
Short
5. "India does not have a national regulatory authority for protection of personal data." Critically discuss
data protection regime in India.
6. Being intangible property rights and given the power of a celebrity's fame, these IPR rights of
celebrities are often prone to misuse and misappropriation. Explain.
7. "Few rights are available to broadcasting organisations, even if they are situated outside India, so long
as the broadcast is available in India for viewing." In the regard, discuss IPR rights of broadcaster.
8. What are the Requirements and procedure of registration for Biological Diversity Protection?