Marks & Clerk Opens Up Shop in Shanghai

Marks & Clerk published a report “Focus on China” which identified a number of opportunities to take advantage of China’s burgeoning economic activity and expansion in manufacturing that are being missed by western firms. By looking at patent trends across the pharmaceuticals, automotives and telecoms industries the report provided a snapshot of China’s development and an indicator of who is best placed to benefit from growth in these industries. The report also identified a need for China to better protect its IP abroad. Obviously, Marks & Clerk wants to take advantage of these opportunities themselves by opening an office in Shanghai.

Marks & Clerk have an office specialised in IP in Hong Kong since 1984.

Read more here.

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International Chamber of Commerce Survey: “China Has Least Favourable IP Environment”

The first annual BASCAP Global Survey on Counterfeiting and Piracy was conducted by ICC’s Business Action to Stop Counterfeiting and Piracy (BASCAP) initiative, in cooperation with the Cass Business School, part of City University, London. The survey polled 48 companies, many of which operate globally, spanning 27 product categories.

Read the full results of the survey here.

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Santa Barbara Polo and Racquet Club Too Similar to Beverly Hills Polo Club for a Trademark

Beijing Nr. 1 Intermediate People’s Court confirmed the rejection of the Trade Review and Adjudication Board (TRAB) of the application of Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club for a trademark.

“[A]lthough the two trademarks had slight differences in English words, the posture of the polo player and the direction of the horse, they were similar to each other as a whole trademark. If the two trademarks were used for identical or similar goods, the consumers may confuse the sources of the goods.”

Read NTD Patent & Trademark Agency Ltd.’s article via IPR.gov.cn here.

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SIPO: “Digital Radio Standard Will Shake Few Foreign Companies’ Dominance”

SIPO reports that the Ministry of Information Technology released a national standard on multi-channel digital radio coding and decoding technology for the digital radio industry.

And it wrote reassuringly: “The standard which be widely used in digital television and digital radio will shake few foreign companies’ dominance in the field.”

China is pushing home-bred innovations and standards to be not so dependent anymore on foreign patents.

Read SIPO’s article here.

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Weak IP or Strong IP in China: Jobs Will be Lost Outside China

Peter K. Yu, associate professor of Michigan State University has written another interesting article: ‘History shows trade protectionism won’t contain China’s auto effort’, using the car industry as illustration.

Yu reasons:

Rampant infringement of intellectual property in China is costing jobs in the US and elsewhere. But if the level of intellectual property protection in China goes up, more foreign direct investments will flow to China which will cost jobs in the US and elsewhere.

Yu proposes instead of demanding free trade and stronger intellectual property protection, which is gratuit, you might better answer questions such as:

Do we want to make our industries more competitive? Do we want to reduce the loss of American jobs? Do we want China to be politically stable to advance our interests in the Pacific Rim? Do we want China to grow into a more desirable trading partner that respects democracy and the rule of law?

What do you think?

Read Yu’s article here.

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Patent Law Draft About to be Adopted: How Will Patent Law Change?

China Daily’s reports via People’s Daily that China’s third revision of its patent law is drafted.

On July 31, 2006 SIPO promulgated the Draft of Amendments to the Patent Law for public comments. Draft amendments to the law were handed to the State Council for deliberation on December 27, according to the State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO), which was in charge of drafting the amendments.

SIPO spokesman Yin Xintian said that half of the current 69 provisions will be changed.

If the draft will be adopted, what will change? The article ‘China: Third Time Lucky’ by Yong Li Wenping Chen of King & Wood published for Managing Intellectual Property sheds light over the possible outcome:

  • the absolute novelty standard (currently it is a blended novelty standard; where prior art includes publication inside or outside China, but public use or other means of disclosure only in China); in the draft prior art is broadened to include public use or other means of disclosure outside in China;
  • a design patent shall not be identical or similar to a prior design, but it shall also be significantly different from element combination of prior designs;
  • the optional brief description of the design under the current rules will become compulsory for design applications;
  • a design application for multiple similar designs of a product becomes possible.
  • infringement determination standards will be incorporated, that strengthen patent protection, extend the scope of patent infringement exemptions and further clarifies stipulations on compulsory licenses;
  • only inventions made during execution of employment duty or made mainly by using the employer’s technical secrets are statutory service inventions. However, inventions made mainly by using the employer’s other materials and technical means will be deemed as non-service inventions unless otherwise agreed. In the latter case, the employer has a non-exclusive and non-assignable right to use the inventions.
  • SIPO is getting more powers, including examining witnesses and other relevant parties; reviewing and making copies of relevant contracts, receipts, accounting books and other documents; conducting inspections of premises; seizing infringing goods and specialized equipment for infringement; issuing orders to stop infringement; and confiscating infringing goods and specialized equipment for infringement in severe cases;
  • the doctrine of equivalents, prosecution history estoppel, and defence based on practicing prior art in infringement are incorporated in the draft. Infringing equivalents are limited to equivalents of technical features rather than the whole solution, and the well-known function-way-effect test is adopted. Any written amendments or statements that restrict the patent scope which the patentee made during the patent prosecution or invalidation proceeding to comply with the granting requirements will have estoppel effects. No infringement shall be found if the alleged infringing product or process belongs to prior art;
  • patentee is liable for bad faith actions;
  • for injunctions issued by a court or a decision of an administrative authority, if the same infringer conducts a similar act infringing the same patent, the patent administrative authority may take the following actions: ordering the infringer to stop the infringement and publishing the order; confiscating the illegal revenue; and imposing a fine of up to three times the illegal revenue. Where there is no revenue, the fine can be up to Rmb100,000;
  • pre-suit injunctions and property preservation orders are available under the current Patent Law, and include evidence preservation;
  • the provision on statutory damages is incorporated in the Draft, and the upper limit is increased to Rmb1,000,000;
  • parallel import is explicitly defined as non-infringement, and the Bolar exception is adopted for pharmaceutical related patents. According to the Draft, an entity may make, use or import patented pharmaceuticals or medical devices solely for acquiring information necessary for obtaining regulatory approval, and a third party may make or import and sell the patented pharmaceuticals or medical devices to that entity. The Bolar exception in effect shortens the protection term of pharmaceutical and medical device patents. However, the Draft has no corresponding provisions for possible extensions of the term of those patents. Even worse, the Draft does not provide a time limit for starting activities under the Bolar provision;
  • after five years from knowledge of the infringement, no injunction may be issued if the infringer is willing to pay royalties as agreed by the parties or decided by the court.

Read Yong Li and Wengpin Chen’s article here and the People’s Daily article here.

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Controversial Interpretation 2004 Will Be Amended, Stays Controversial

Emma Barraclough reports for Managing Intellectual Property from the Third Global Congress on Combating Counterfeiting and Piracy in Geneva, that the controversial judicial thresholds for criminal enforcement will be amended.

First the reasons why the judicial interpretation was controversial will be outlined, followed by the proposed changes by judge Xiong Xuanguo, vice-president of the Supreme People’s Court.

Controversy around Interpretation 2004

The articles 213 through 220 Criminal Law state which IP infringements are penalised, but it was not clear when criminal liability will be triggered. The Interpretation by the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate on Several Issues of Concrete Application of Laws in Handling Criminal Cases of Infringing Intellectual Property [1] (Interpretation 2004) clarifies this. Compared with two earlier prosecution guidelines [2], the Interpretation 2004 has significantly reduced the monetary thresholds for trademarks [3]. Nevertheless the judicial interpretation was much criticised. It can be argued that the difference in thresholds between enterprises and individuals is arbitrary [4]. The Interpretation 2004 states three controversial methods [5] for calculating product values produced by infringers, which all undervalue the infringing goods [6]. Unlike its predecessors, Interpretation 2004 lacks provisions that criminalise repeat offenders [7], the infringement of well-known trademarks [8], or trademarks on pharmaceuticals for human use [9], and where illegal methods such as bribery are used to promote the sale of the counterfeit trademarks [10].On the other hand the Interpretation 2004 takes into account the values of illegal business volume, gains and amount of sales of previous infringements, under the condition that such acts have not yet been given an administrative penalty or have not so far initiated criminal procedures [11].

According to Timothy Trainer [12], any numerical thresholds are outlawed by TRIPs. This opinion seems questionable, since there is no ban on numerical thresholds in TRIPs, and it is very common for WTO members’ legislations to have some kind of numerical thresholds for criminal liability, although these numerical thresholds may not be codified, unwritten rules for case dismissal do exist [13]. The wording of article 61 TRIPs is not that remedies should provide a sufficient deterrent, but that they should be sufficient to provide a deterrent. So China’s implementation of article 61 TRIPs is only not compliant when there is no positive correlation between the thresholds and deterrence. Deterrence [14] is a relative term; a remedy might be a deterrent for some individuals, while neutral to others [15], assuming a correlation with their circumstances and perception [16]. A good way to measure a lack of deterrence would be to determine the level of recidivism of IP infringers, as professor Hughes points out [17]. Article 61 TRIPs promulgates in the second sentence that the deterrent should be consistent with the level of penalties applied for crimes of a corresponding gravity [18]. Having severe and mandatory imprisonment sentences and monetary fines available on the books is not sufficient to provide a deterrent for criminal behaviour [19]. Research shows that punishment certainty is far more consistently found to deter crime than punishment severity [20]. This is especially relevant for China, because one of the prosecutorial ways is hardly used [21] and prison sentences and fees are often not served or paid. Also long delays between the criminal act and punishment are not conducive for the deterrence, since imminence is a constituent part of deterrence [22] [23].

Notes of Controversy around Interpretation 2004
[1] Interpretation by the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate on Several Issues of Concrete Application of Laws in Handling Criminal Cases of Infringing Intellectual Property, adopted at the 1331st Session of the Judicial Committee of the Supreme People’s Court on November 2, 2004 and the 28th Session of the Tenth Procuratorial Committee of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate on November 11, 2004 and to be effective as of December 22, 2004.
[2] Provisions of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate and Ministry of Public Security Regarding Prosecution Standards for Cases Involving Economic Crimes, April 14, 2001; and the Interpretations of Some Issues Concerning the Application of Laws for the Trial of Cases on Criminal Cases of Illegal Publications issued by the Supreme People’s Court in 1998.
[3] However, if the numerical thresholds are put in a broader historical context, the level of the thresholds have not necessarily been decreased. For example the thresholds for use of a counterfeit trademark was in 1993, under the Regulations Concerning Criteria for Placing on the Docket Cases Involving the Counterfeiting of Registered Trademarks, more than RMB 20,000, in 2001 under the Prosecution guideline equal or over RMB 500,000, and since the Interpretation 2004 more than RMB 30,000.
[4] The damage done to the right holders is the same regardless of who commits the crime. It is relatively easy for a Chinese citizen to start a company. By doing so he can easily avoid operating above the criminal thresholds.
[5] Article 12 Interpretation 2004.
[6] The first method is the price at which such products are actually sold, instead of the price of the genuine products. The second: infringed products that are stored, transported and those that are not sold, shall be computed according to the labelled price or the actual prices for which they are sold after investigation. The third: to base the value of the infringed products without labelled prices or whose actual prices are impossible to ascertain, to be computed according to the median market prices of such products.
[7] Articles 61, 63 and 64 Prosecution guideline impose criminal liability even though numerical thresholds have not been reached, in case an individual has already been subject to administrative penalties on two or more occasions and is now again suspected of infringement. However, there has never been a threshold for the pure repeat offender, who has been subject to administrative penalties only once before.
[8] Articles 61 and 63 Prosecution guideline.
[9] Article 61 Prosecution guideline.
[10] Article 63 Prosecution guideline.
[11] Article 12 Interpretation 2004.
[12] Timothy Trainer, former president International Anti-Counterfeiting Coalition, representing US industry worth $ 650 billion, see here: http://www.iacc.org/.
[13] Paraphrasing professor Daniel Gervais in an interview, University of Amsterdam, July 11, 2006. And it might be better for these rules to remain unwritten, because otherwise infringers can easily produce and sell the infringed product in batches, each under the thresholds.
[14] A distinction must be made between general and special deterrence: special deterrence is deterring someone who has already offended form re-offending. General offending is dissuading potential offenders of offending at all by way of punishment administered for a particular offence. Definition by Barbara Hudson.
[15] Geoffrey York, ‘Jail time a mere irritant for Chinese video pirates’, Globe & Mail, January 7, 2007, available at: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070126.gtibletter26/BNStory/Technology/.
[16] “[..] deterrence theory neglects a growing list of personal traits that appear to predict offending [..]”, Daniel Nagin, ‘Integrating Celerity, Impulsivity, and Extralegal Sanctions Threats into a Model of General Deterrence: Theory and Evidence’, January 2000, pg. 5, available at: http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/econ/Durlauf/networkweb1/London/Criminology1-15-01.pdf
[17] “Evidence of substantial recidivism in any legal system shows that that system is not applying “remedies which constitute a deterrent” to the illegal activity being targeted,” Hughes, ‘Written statement IP Enforcement in China, a potential WTO case, and US-China relations,’ June 8, 2006, pg. 10, available at:
http://www.uscc.gov/hearings/2006hearings/written_testimonies/06_06_08wrts/06_06_7_8_hughes_justin.pdf.
[18] Crimes of a corresponding gravity could be determined by the monetary or physical damage that they cause. Even if China’s level of penalties for these crimes is of a corresponding gravity, if not higher than most other WTO members, this would not necessarily lead to a deterrence.
[19] Besides deterrence it should be noted that by factually imprisoning and fining criminals they may get incapacitated to continue their infringements.
[20] “Two prominent findings from this literature are that punishment certainty is far more consistently found to deter crime than punishment severity, [..]”, Nagin, see note 73, pg. 3.
[21] The administrative authorities scarcely refer criminal cases to the criminal prosecution, as aforementioned.
[22] “Going back to Beccaria, punishment imminence (“celerity”) has been accorded co-equal status with certainty and severity in theory, yet empirical tests of the celerity effect are scant,” Nagin, see note 73, pg. 3.
[23] There is a Pavlovian idea behind this theory, that the criminal is conditioned better if he is punished as soon as possible after the crime. Daniel Nagin has developed a discounting model for punishments to make imminence relevant in the deterrence theory. Nagin, see note 73, pg. 3.

Xiong Xuanguo’s proposals to amend the Interpretation 2004

Barraclough quoted Xiong saying that the Court had decided to make “appropriate supplements and improvements in the 2004 Interpretation so as to give full play to its role of punishing and preventing IPR related crimes”.

  • standards for sentencing in IP criminal trials would be “improved and unified”;
  • suspended sentences would be applied in a more standardized way;
  • and sever punishments would be imposed according to the circumstances and the gravity of the harm done;
  • application and enforcement of fines will be enhanced; more attention will be paid to the approaches depriving the perpetrators of their financial capacities to commit the crimes again, such as forfeiting illegal proceeds and criminal instruments, destroying IPR violating products, and ordering the perpetrator to compensate the victim for losses.

The unified application of law is of course welcome. But the emphasis on punishment severity and forgetting about punishment certainty and imminence is not the way to increase the deterrent effect of punishments. The methods for calculating product valued produced by the infringer are not going to be changed, so the Interpretation 2004 will probably keep the label controversial.

Read Barraclough’s article here.

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Portrait of an Undeterred Copyright Pirate

Geoffrey York wrote for the Globe & Mail a human interest story about a Chinese copyright pirate, who was sentenced twice to prison and spent a total of six years in jail, only to start all over again. Read York’s article here.

Deterrent [1] is a relative term; a remedy might be a deterrent for some individuals, while neutral to others, assuming a correlation with their circumstances and perception [2]. Besides, having severe and mandatory imprisonment sentences and monetary fines available on the books is not sufficient to provide a deterrent for criminal behaviour [3]. If a potential infringer’s perception is that chances are slim he will be apprehended and punished, even if the punishment severity is high, the deterrence level is most probably low. To date this is probably the case, because one of the prosecutorial ways is hardly used [4]. Research shows that punishment certainty is far more consistently found to deter crime than punishment severity [5]. This is especially relevant in China, because even when prison sentences and fees are imposed, they often are not served or paid. The delay between the criminal act and the punishment will determine the degree of imminence [6], assuming that the smaller the interval between the time of the crime and the time when the criminal has to serve his sentence and pay his fine, the more effective the special deterrent effect will be [7].

Notes
[1] A distinction must be made between general deterrence and special deterrence: “General deterrence: dissuading potential offenders from offending at all by way of the punishment administered for a particular offence”, Barbara Hudson, Understanding Justice: An Introduction to Ideas, Perspectives and Controversies in Modern Penal Theory, Buckingham, England: Open University Press, 1996 (mentioned here:
http://www.sagepub.com/upm-data/5144_Banks_II_Proof_Chapter_5.pdf#search=%22Gertrude%20Ezorsky%20special%20general%20deterrence%22) and “Special deterrence refers to an intervention that prevents an offender from committing crimes in the future,” Albert R Roberts, Critical Issues in Crime and Justice, Sage Publications Inc, Jan 1, 2003, pg. 313.
[2] “[..] deterrence theory neglects a growing list of personal traits that appear to predict offending [..]”, Daniel Nagin, Integrating Celerity, Impulsivity, and Extralegal Sanctions Threats into a Model of General Deterrence: Theory and Evidence, January 2000, pg. 5, available at: http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/econ/Durlauf/networkweb1/London/Criminology1-15-01.pdf.
[3] Besides deterrence it should be noted that by factually imprisoning and fining criminals they may get incapacitated to continue their infringements.
[4] The administrative authorities scarcely refer criminal cases to the criminal prosecution, as aforementioned.
[5]“Two prominent findings from this literature are that punishment certainty is far more consistently found to deter crime than punishment severity, [..]”,Daniel S. Nagin, Integrating Celerity, Impulsivity and Extra-Legal Sanction Threats into a Model of General Deterrence: Theory and Evidence, January 15, 2000, pg. 3, available at: http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/econ/Durlauf/networkweb1/London/Criminology1-15-01.pdf#search=%22severity%2C%20certainty%20celerity%22.
[6] “Going back to Beccaria, punishment imminence (“celerity”) has been accorded co-equal status with certainty and severity in theory, yet empirical tests of the celerity effect are scant.”
Daniel S. Nagin, Integrating Celerity, Impulsivity and Extra-Legal Sanction Threats into a Model of General Deterrence: Theory and Evidence, January 15, 2000, pg. 3, available at:
http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/econ/Durlauf/networkweb1/London/Criminology1-15-01.pdf#search=%22severity%2C%20certainty%20celerity%22.
[7] There is a Pavlovian idea behind this theory, that the criminal is conditioned better if he is punished as soon as possible after the crime. Daniel Nagin has developed a discounting model for punishments to make imminence relevant in the deterrence theory. Integrating Celerity, Impulsivity and Extra-Legal Sanction Threats into a Model of General Deterrence: Theory and Evidence, January 15, 2000, pg. 3, available at:
http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/econ/Durlauf/networkweb1/London/Criminology1-15-01.pdf#search=%22severity%2C%20certainty%20celerity%22.

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EU Survey: 40 Percent sees China As Biggest IP Threat

The Economist Intelligence Unit published a white paper ‘The Value of Knowledge, European firms and the intellectual property challenge’, after it surveyed 405 European executives about their perceptions of IP.

Here are the China relevant quotes:

European IP remains under threat from both developing and developed markets.
China is the respondents’ biggest worry (cited by 40 % as the chief geographic source of risk). Executives are optimistic, however, that the country’s IP regime will improve in the short to medium term, as local firms develop their won.

Wim Klop, managing director of Dutch chemical company DSM’s IP arm. “It’s still hard to have a legal impact on Chinese companies in China, so we tend to sue their partners in Europe,” he says.

Thomas Ehmer, head of IP at Puma, a German shoe and sportswear manufacturer, speaks for many exectutives when he points out that China’s immature IP regime, coupled with its cheap yet advanced manufacturing base, makes it the ideal environment for counterfeiting. “Counterfeiting products are … produced for the entire world,” he says, adding that the operations have become much more professional in the past year alone. “We are now facing organised crime,” he concludes.

Mr Ehmer (Puma), Mr Hourcade (chief technology officer at Thomson, a French electronics firm) and other executives believe that China’s central government sincerely wants to strengthen IP enforcement, but that it has less influence over local authorities than it would like. And it is only the local authorities, they point out, who can really crack down on the counterfeit factories and other unsavoury ascpects of Chinese capitalism.

Read the EIU’s white paper here.

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It’s a Samsung, no it’s a Sammeng, no a Samesong …

Chinese counterfeit products piggyback on brand value of Korean companies such as Samsung.

The Korea International Trade Associaton (KITA) estimates Chinese fake goods cost Korean export around US$14.2 billion (W1.3 trillion), equivalent to 5 percent of total exports.

Read the Digital Chosun Ilbo article here.

H/T to Counterfeit Chic.

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Compulsory Licensing: Philips About to Bring A WTO Case Against Taiwan

Taiwanese company GigaStorage has a conflict with Dutch company Philips about a patent for the manufacturing of CD’s since 1999.

After a complaint at the Taiwan’s Fair Trade Commission it applied for a compulsory license of Philips’ patent for the manufacturing of CD’s, based on article 79 Taiwan’s Patent Law, which states:

In the case of national emergencies or of non-profit-seeking use of a patent for the enhancement of public welfare, or in the case of an applicant’s failure of reaching a licensing agreement with the patentee concerned under reasonable commercial terms and conditions within a considerable period of time, the Patent Authority may, upon application by the applicant, grant a compulsory license to the applicant to put the patented invention into practice provided such practice shall be restricted mainly to the purpose of satisfying the requirements of domestic market. (..)

Philips is considering to take the case to the WTO, because Taiwan’s patent law is allegedly compliant to article 31 TRIPs. Taiwan is since 2002 a member of the WTO.

See an analysis of this case and also about compulsory licensing in Mainland China entitled ‘Trends in Compulsory Licenses in Greater China’ by Lily Lim of Finnegan Henderson here.

H/T to Andrew Leonard of How the World Works

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The Fifty Days Time-limit in China’s Customs Regulations Is Compliant With Article 55 TRIPs

Article 55 TRIPs [1] is the border protection equivalent of article 50 (6) TRIPs. Article 55 TRIPs states that after 10 days the goods in detention shall be released if the applicant was noticed of the suspension and the customs have not been informed that another party than the defendant, has been initiating proceedings leading to a decision on the merits of the case; or that the court has taken provisional measures prolonging the suspension of the release of the goods. In appropriate cases, this time-limit may be extended by another 10 working days. So the duration of suspension has a limit of a maximum of twenty working days.

China’s customs regulations prescribe that customs shall release the goods, within 20 working days, if the right holder has applied for this suspension, pursuant to article 15 (1) Regulations 2003 [2], and the court has not been informed that another party than the defendant has initiated proceedings leading to a decision on the merits of the case, pursuant to article 24 (1) Regulations 2003 [3]. So this is compliant to article 55 TRIPs.

Article 20 Regulations 2003 [4] states that the goods that are suspended upon the right holder’s request shall be released within thirty days if they have not been found to infringe intellectual property rights. It is TRIPs compliant, because it is implied here that the court has been informed that another party than the defendant has initiated proceedings leading to a decision on the merits of the case.

First I thought that the fifty day time-limit of article 55 TRIPs was not compliant with TRIPs, but I was astray:

Article 50 (6) TRIPs which states that after provisional measures were taken proceedings leading to a decision on the merits of the case shall be initiated within 30 days (in fact 31 days), followed by twenty days before the party other than the defendant has initiated proceedings leading to a decision on the merits of the case, before customs will release the suspended goods if no infringement was found.

Notes:
[1] Article 55 TRIPs explicitly refers to other conditions for importation or exportation, making it applicable to export.
[2] Article 15 Regulations 2003: Where the right owner applies to detain the suspected goods in accordance with Article 13 of these Regulations and submit the guarantee according to Article 14 of these Regulations, Customs shall detain the suspected goods, notify the right owner in writing and send the detention receipt to the consignees or consignors.
[3] Article 24 (1) Regulations where Customs have detained the suspected goods according to Article 15 of these Regulations and have not received a notice of assistance on execution from the People’s Court within twenty business days from the date of detention;
[4] Article 20 Regulations 2003: Where the right owner requests customs to detain the suspected goods after customs find the imported or exported goods infringing recorded intellectual property right and notify the right owner, the customs shall initiate the investigation and confirmation on the goods whether to infringe intellectual property rights or not within thirty business days from the date of their detention. Where it cannot be confirmed, customs shall notify the right owner in writing immediately.

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Made in China Popular in Korea

Counterfeit Chic has another interesting posting, this time about Korean artist Zinwoo Park’s piece of allegedly art called “Fake”. Read more about it on Counterfeit Chic here.

Photo by Buddha Baby.

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IPR: Overseas Parties Have 60 percent Success Rate at Beijing No.1 Intemediate People’s Court

Xie Chuanjiao of China Daily wrote the article International laws applied in local IPR cases, read here. Nothing new really, China has this obligation already since April 12, 1986 when it adopted its General Principles of Civil Law .

When China became the 143rd member of the WTO on December 11, 2001, it automatically entered into TRIPs, which is an integral aspect of the WTO agreement. The supremacy of international treaties concluded by or acceded to China which apply to law in civil relations with foreigners is dealt with by article 142 General Principles of Civil Law [1]. It states that where the provisions of TRIPs differ from those in civil laws of the PRC, the provisions of the international treaty shall prevail. Unless it would concern provisions for which China would have made reservations. This is conform Section 2 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties [2]. China did not make any such reservation. This means that a foreign plaintiff can cite TRIPs in a lawsuit against a Chinese entity if no domestic legal recourse were available, or if these were in conflict with provisions of TRIPs.

[1] Article 142 General Principles of Civil Law: (..) where the provisions of an international treaty which the PRC has concluded or acceded to differ from the civil laws of the PRC, the provisions of the international treaty shall prevail, with the exception of those articles to which the PRC has made a reservation. (..).

[2] Articles 19-23 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties

However, in the last part of the article Xie gave some statistics about the period 2002-2006:

  • Chinese courts dealt with 931 IPR cases involving overseas parties, or a rise of 50 percent each year, according to Jiang Zhipei, chief justice of the Supreme People’s Court IPR Tribunal.
  • Beijing No 1 Intermediate People’s Court alone ruled in favor of overseas parties in 60 percent of the 670 IPR cases.
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Learn How to Say Intellectual Property Rights in Mandarin?

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中高级28 Intellectual Property Lawsuits
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HK IP Head: Naughty Public Should Get Benefits

Heda Bayron of Voice of America comes up with a nice Asia Piracy Report, in written form and in streaming video.

In the video you see Stephen Selby, the head of Hong Kong’s intellectual property department saying:

“The public gets tired of being told not to be naughty. There has got to be something in it for them. Usually we do things more willingly if we think we benefit in the end rather than just being told, ‘Uh-uh, naughty, ya-yay, you must not do that.’ “

Right, so what is he proposing to give in return? The report did not caught his answer.

But the article continues about safety risks and the true cost of copyright piracy and depriving producers of their profit, which leaves them without any incentives to innovate, which hurts economic development, and in the end the consumer’s wallet.

Was this Selby’s reasoning or was he referring to benefits in a more literal way, such as reward schemes for informants giving specific information leading to a seizure or conviction in piracy activities? Remember HK’s efforts to turn youth into snitches, here. These reward schemes exist already at least since 2004, see here.

In the video you can see Mike Ellis of MPA, representing movie companies (again in a winning mood after the victory against Sohu.com), making a cameo about the risks of movie making and market access restrictions that stimulate copyright piracy.

Read and watch Bayron’s report here.

Update: Counterfeit.com reports that in January Hong Kong Customs and Excise have arrested 130 people.

Officers raided 806 pirated optical disc retail outlets, 80 counterfeit goods stalls and 17 showroom-and-storage facilities across Hong Kong.

Read here.

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China’s Efforts Against Counterfeit Products That Kill

Feng Tao of Xinhua reports the item communicated by the Ministry of Public Security that the PSB dealt with 4,600 cases of counterfeit and inferior products between January and November 2006. Police arrested more than 5,000 people. The question unanswered in this article is how many of them got prosecuted, and of those, how many got fined or a prison sentence?

Feng also wrote about Qiqihar No. 2 Pharmaceutical Co., that manufactured tainted durgs that killed 11 people in Guangdong province, in May 2006, due to acute kidney failure. Read more here.

China Radio International runs with the Xinhua story that China seized 9.06 billion counterfeit brand cigarettes, another product that kills, counterfeit or not. Law enforcement agencies arrested 6,334 people with 2,313 prosecuted, said administration spokesperson Zhang Xiulian of China’s State Tobacco Monopoly Administration. Read more here. Again, how many of them got fined or a prison sentence?

Then again these cases may not have been brought before a judge, yet.

A related question is: do more litigations, have any result?
I wrote about it in the article: More IPR Ligitation in China is Nice, But What About The Enforcement Ratio.
In short: more litigations do not necessarily mean that infringements are on their way back. In that article I point to an objective way of measuring the impact litigations have on infringements, by using foreign customs to gather information about the number of infringements. This implies, however, that when customs improve their investigation system, like the US Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement did, read here, the number of infringements from one year to the next should be adjusted.

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SIPO’s Patent ABC

SIPO is giving 19 answers to 19 questions about patents.
On a whole it gives an fast overview of China’s patent law.

It is peculiar that SIPO is giving information (Q&A number 19) about the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong, which has its own basic law and IPR system, separate from the PRC.

Read here.

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Pyrrhic Victory For Anti Patent Pool Professors Against Philips

Remember Zhang Ping, the IPR professor of Peking University who in December 2005 attacked a patent of Philips that was part of the 4C DVD pool because it was alleged to be not essential, read here. Emma Barraclough followed the story for Managing IP:

In January 2006, Zhang got support of four other law professors who joined her case.
In August 2006 the Patent Reexamination Board began hearing the dispute, see Barraclough’s article about this here.

However, the parties have agreed to settle the matter.
Philips will remove the Chinese patent from the patent lists attached to the DVD patent licence agreement and “never again claim the rights of the Chinese patent”.
The academics have withdrawn their request for SIPO to invalidate the patent.

Notwithstanding this settlement, the total royalty of $ 3.50 per unit charged to DVD manufacturers would not change, according Barraclough who cited a spokesman for Philips.

This position was anticipated by Zhang. Barraclough quoted Zhang in her August article:
Even if a questionable patent is declared invalid, typically, royalties are unchanged. It seems as if that unless the last so-called essential patent is declared invalid or expires, the licensing policy will stand unchanged. Therefore, by imposing prohibitive costs on the opponent and by offering little fruit to the challenger, patent pools are protected from challenge and public supervision.

In this respect Philips’ withdrawal is a Pyrrhic victory. However, manufacturers can start using the technology, although non-essential, manifested in the withdrawn patent without authorisation. This could stimulate innovation. Besides, the professors have acquired a new case study for their students.

Read Barraclough’s January 2007 article here (free access as part of MIP Week).

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Implementing Regulations of Copyright Law 2002

For some time I could not find newer implementing rules of the copyright law of China than those of 1991. That seemed odd to me, since the copyright law has been amended in 2001. So I asked around.

Today, David Carnes of China Legal Bulletin sent me the link to The Regulation on the Implementation of the Copyright Law of the People’s Republic of China is hereby promulgated for implementation as of September 15, 2002. Zhu Rongji, Premier of the State Council. See here.

Thanks a lot David.

China Legal Bulletin is a site where David is collecting relevant Chinese legislation of all kinds.
David Carnes is licensed to practice law in California. He speaks and reads Mandarin and has several years experience working with Chinese law firms and Sino-American joint ventures. He wrote a lot about outsourcing to China for EzineMagazine, but also about intellectual property in China, see this article from November 30, 2006, here.

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Exemplary Patent Enforcement Case At National Hardware Show Las Vegas

Lisa Eckelbecker of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette wrote a very informative article about the way Diamond Machining Technology (DMT), Inc. of Marlboro, Massachusetts, USA, is enforcing its intellectual property rights. DMT’s approach is a good example of a small to medium sized business giving tit for tat at fairs and exhibitions and showing teeth to potential infringers.

Eckelbecker wrote:

Events started when Mr. Brandon, who purchased DMT in 2005, arrived at the National Hardware Show in Las Vegas in May. DMT was an exhibitor, and Mr. Brandon said he decided to visit the exhibit hall before the doors opened. During a walk through the China pavillion he came upon Jing Yin Lixin [Diamond Tools Factory]’s booth.

After DMT got the evidence that Jing Yin Lixin, headquartered near Shanghai, gave price quotations for manufacture and delivery in the United States of 1,000 and 5,000 pieces for Jing Yin Lixin’s copies of both of DMT’s Mini-Sharp and Diafold products lawyers were contacted, who drafted a complaint and delivered it to Jing Yin Lixin on the floor of the trade show.

Jing Yin Lixin put up no legal defense in the case against DMT, according to court filings. It failed to obtain a lawyer, as required in federal cases, and instead submitted a letter arguing that it knew nothing about a patent and never made or sold the tools, even though it pictured the tools on a brochure.

In November Judge Kent J. Dawson of the U.S. District of Nevada ruled that Jing Yin Lixin, infringed on a DMT patent and ordered an injunction and to pay DMT’s legal fees.

Read Eckelbecker’s article here.

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Jail Time For Exporters Of Phones That Are Genuine Inside, Counterfeited Outside

Interfax China reports about four people that were found guilty in October by a people’s court in Guangzhou of infringing trademark rights because they were exporting counterfeit phones. Zhang and Xu were sentenced to nine months and two persons both named Lin were sentenced eight months in prison

The inside of the phones consisted out of second hand components and the outside were new shells branded as Motorola or Philips.

Customs of Huangpu, a city 15 kilometers from Guangzhou, captured 17,893 counterfeit Motorola and Philips phones at the port and the factories valued at approximately RMB 730,000 ($93,590), along with a large number of second-hand mobile phones, phone components and tools used in the reassembly. In April, the Huangpu Customs transferred the captured phones to the local police department and provided the police the exporting company’s customs clearance record since December 2004.

After much criticism China committed itself to transferring more cases from customs or other administrative authorities to the Public Security Bureau (police) or the people’s procuratorate for criminal enforcement.

Read the Infofax China article here.

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Royal Canadian Mounted Police Warns Against Counterfeit Circuit Breaks, Viagra and Shampoo

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) warned against several counterfeit products from China, Russia and Pakistan causing health and safety risks, reports Robers Fife for CTV.

Some of the counterfeit products have high levels of the wrong ingredient:

Viagra knock-offs with road paint as a colouring agant and Brick dust as a binding agent. Or batteries full of mercury.

Or, as in the case of counterfeit ‘Bed Head Shampoo’ have an extra ingredient: e. coli bacteria.

This can cause serious health risks:

Hospitals in Ontario and Quebec have even mistakenly bought fake circuit breakers.
“The circuit breaker kept tripping, and was supplying power to the intensive care unit of the hospital,” RCMP Chief Superintendent Ken Hansen told CTV News.

Read Fife’s article here.

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FA Premier League Against Trademark Infringers 1:0

Sarah Butler reported for the Times Online about two rulings by the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People’s Court:

The English FA (football association, nowadays called after their sponsor: Barclays) Premier League was victorious in a trademark dispute with Xiangshi Celebration Service Company, based in Jiangsu province. Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People’s Court upheld an earlier ruling that FA Premier League has the exclusive use of its crowned lion logo in China. Xiangshi Celebration Service Company must stop using a similar lion trademark, minus the football under the lion’s claw.

The dispute began in 1999, when Xiangshi registered its version of the trademark. When the Premier League tried to register its logo in China in 2000, it was rejected. It won an appeal a year later.

Also this week the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People’s Court ruled that Beijing Health New Concept Pharmacy Company and Lianhuan Pharmaceutical Company, based in Jiangsu infringed upon Pfizer’s Viagra patent. The court ordered to stop sales of generic blue pills similar to Viagra and to pay Pfizer 300,000 yuan (£19,500) in damages.
Read Butler’s article here.
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Li Ka-shing: Bring IP Offenders to Justice Even At A Loss

The Edge Daily from Malaysia gives a summary of an interview Li Ka-shing, China’s richest man, gave to Forbes Asia.

Li Ka-shing invites foreign pharmaceutical companies to partner up with him to integrate low production costs in China with the quality control of Western medicine to tap the huge demand in China. Li said in the interview according to The Edge that China needed to put more resources into protecting intellectual property to prevent imitation drugs:

Without IP rights, there would be no new technology developed, but China needs time and resources to set up a watchdog bureau. IP offenders must be brought to justice, even if you have pay $1.10 in legal fees to recover $1 of loss.

And if Superman, as Li Ka-shing is called in Hong Kong, says such things, enforcing IPR at a loss in individual cases to enhance the investment climate at large, people listen, also on the Mainland.

Read The Edge Daily article here.

Update: I found the original article ‘Thoughts of Chairman Li’ which is a very good read, by Vivian Kwok Wai Yin and Tim W. Ferguson for Forbes Asia, here.

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Anticipated Supreme People’s Court Decision in Counterfeit Case Between Montresor and Ferrero

David Eimar reports for The Independent about the much anticipated Supreme People’s Court ruling next month between Montresor’s Tresor Dore and Ferrero Rocher. Eimar points out a salient aspect of the case:

Tresor Dore, a popular Chinese brand of chocolates wrapped in gold-coloured paper and presented in the same heart-shaped box as Ferrero Rocher’s confectionery, is commonly handed out at government functions.

November 2005 Tianjin Second Intermediate People’s Court ruled that Montresor’s Tresor Dore chocolates did not counterfeit Ferrero Rocher’s chocolates, because according to the Tianjin Second Intermediate People’s Court Tresor Dore was better known in China.

Ferrero appealed and in January 2006 the Tianjin Higher People’s Court ruled that Montresor was ordered to pay 700.000 yuan to Ferrero because of counterfeiting, read more here.

Montresor was not amused and went to the Supreme People’s Court in Beijing, who is deciding in January 2007 whether Montresor’s Tresor Dore are counterfeit products.

Eimar notices that the timing of the judgment is crucial: 18 February is the start of the Chinese New Year holiday when chocolate sales traditionally boom. Gold-wrapped confectionery is particularly popular because gold is associated with prosperity.

Read Eimar’s article here.

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Reaction To Danwei’s Question About Republishing In China

Danwei’s Jeremy Goldkorn has an interesting article about whether it is legal to copy and paste entire news articles, read here.

China’s copyright law should be in lign with the Berne Convention of which China is a signatory since July 10, 1992 (entry in force October 15, 1992).

Article 10bis (2) Berne Convention
It shall also be a matter for legislation in the countries of the Union to determine the conditions under which, for the purpose of reporting current events by means of photography, cinematography, broadcasting or communication to the public by wire, literary or artistic works seen or heard in the course of the event may, to the extent justified by the informatory purpose, be reproduced and made available to the public.

So reproduction is possible, to the extent justified by the informatory purpose.

Article 22 Copyright Law
(3) reuse or citation, for any unavoidable reason, of a published work in newspapers, periodicals, at radio stations, television stations or any other media for the purpose of reporting current events;

So article 22 (3) Copyright Law states that there needs to be an unavoidable reason. A reason could be that because of the actuality or public character of the event there is no time left to first ask for permission of the author.


10bis (1) Berne Convention
It shall be a matter for legislation in the countries of the Union to permit the reproduction by the press, the broadcasting or the communication to the public by wire of articles published in newspapers or periodicals on current economic, political or religious topics, and of broadcast works of the same character, in cases in which the reproduction, broadcasting or such communication thereof is not expressly reserved. Nevertheless, the source must always be clearly indicated; the legal consequences of a breach of this obligation shall be determined by the legislation of the country where protection is claimed.

Article 22 (4) Copyright Law
reprinting by newspapers or periodicals, or rebroadcasting by radio stations, television stations, or any other media, of articles on current issues relating to politics, economics or religion published by other newspapers, periodicals, or broadcast by other radio stations, television stations or any other media except where the author has declared that the reprinting and rebroadcasting is not permitted;

It seems integral reproduction of whole articles is allowed, as long the author has not explicitly prohibited this. However, article 22 (4) Copyright Law does not mention the requirement of article 10bis (1) Berne Convention that the source must always be indicated.

However, instead of one limitation called the fair use system, as is the case in the US, which is interpreted broadly, the many limitations of China’s copyright law will be interpreted strictly.
So the practice or a new judicial interpretation will hopefully enlighten us.
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Counterfeiters Prevent Other Counterfeiters From Copying Them

Melinda Liu of Newsweek went to Yaxiu shopping mall in Beijing to get a first hand experience of the IPR infringement problem the new “strategic economic dialogue” between China and the United States, among other things such as the US trade surplus, should help solve. The U.S. delegation, headed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, includes no fewer than six cabinet secretaries.

Liu wrote:

The IPR headache is intertwined with the problems of market access—another big item on Paulson’s agenda. The piracy of foreign films, which is exacerbated by restricted access to the film market, is a case in point.

Liu noticed that of the DVD counterfeiters:
[s]ome of them ironically put special “trademarks” on their own bootleg products to prevent other counterfeiters from copying their copies.

Read Liu’s article here.

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Counterfeit Goods and Piracy Segment 2005 in Numbers: The Overview

Douglas (aka Dog McFly) sent me an email pointing out the site of Havoscope. This site shows China’s share in market value of counterfeit and piracy goods, here, based on the numbers of the Quality Brands Protection Committee and the China Publication Science Institute. Plus it gives many online sources to show China’s internet piracy.

Great overview, thanks Douglas.

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Medicine For Protection of Traditional Knowledge Is Patience

Yan Liang of Xinhua Online wrote the article: Greater international co-operation called for traditional knowledge IP protection. It’s about the interregional seminar of the intergovernmental committee on Traditional Knowledge, Genetic Resources and Traditional Cultural Expressions/Folklore (IGC), in Zhenghzou, organised by Wang Binying, WIPO’s Assistant Director General. Unfortunately, the results of the seminar were meagre.

“A success of protection of IP for traditional knowledge lies in patience, diligence and sincerity,” said I Gusti Agung Wesaka Puja, the IGC chairman.

Read more here.

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Last Emperor’s Brother Tried to Claim Personality Rights

88 year old Jin Youzhi tried to claim the personality rights based on article 10 Copyright Law of his brother Aisin Giorro Pu Yi, who was the last emperor of China, to no avail:

Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People’s Court, in its final verdict, ruled that from the last emperor to an ordinary citizen of new China, Aisin Giorro Pu Yi’s life was closely connected with China’s history.

Read the People’s Daily Online article here.
So here’s Pu Yi’s picture of whom I don’t need to ask permission.
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China Enterprise Copyright Alliance Launched

December 11, six Chinese companies: Shanda Entertainment, Netease, Sina, Microsoft China, Kingsoft and Sunchime Cartoon Group have established the China Enterprise Copyright Alliance.

The plan was announced in September during the 2006 International Copyright Forum in Beijing, which was jointly hosted by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and the National Copyright Administration (NCA).

The alliance has the following objectives:

  • to set up a long-term dialogue mechanism among enterprises, international copyright organizations, governments and media needs to be established;
  • to issue appeals to all Chinese enterprises to increase self-owned IPRs and innovative development to strengthen copyright-related industries;
  • to appeal to the government for more support in areas like investment and policy as well as research and development;
  • to appeal for related industries to develop a firm understanding of the harm of copyright violations cause to all intellectual property.

Read Hu Lishan’s article for Sinopolis here.

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China’s TRIPs Compliance Five Years Later: What’s The Score?

Today the USTR issued the 2006 Report to Congress On China’s WTO Compliance, including nine pages (70-79) about China’s intellectual property enforcement. Nothing really surprising, but it gives an overview of China’s compliance with TRIPs through the eyes of the USTR.

Pages 96-99, about the legal framework, including transparency, uniform application of laws and judicial review are also relevant for those interested in TRIPs compliance.

Read here.

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Success EVD Format Dependent On Backing Chinese Copyright Pirates

William Moss wrote a good story about China’s answer to HD DVD or Blu-Ray formats: Extended Versatile Disk.

For HD-DVD and Blu-Ray to succeed, movie studios need to support them. But even if the government mandates EVD as the format for Chinese content, its success hinges upon China’s movie pirates. Either the pirates will need to support EVD, or they need to be stamped out so that legitimate content can rule China’s shelves.

Read Moss’ article here.

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Message of IP Dragon

Ever since IP Dragon upgraded from Blogger to Beta Blogger, there have been problems to incorporate Haloscan’s comment functionality. Until that time you can comment via Blogger comments: if you cannot read Chinese click on the number on the right next to the time stamp or drop me a line at ipdragon at gmail dot com.

I do really appreciate your input! Thanks.

Cheers,
IP Dragon

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Can Copyright Save Chinese Folklore?

Deming Liu wrote an interesting 14 page essay about the idea to use copyright or a sui generis to salvage Chinese folklore. Liu explains that copyright traditionally is concerned with the creations of individuals rather the cumulative creations of an ethnic group or region. And the danger that a sui generis is susceptible in practice to the abuses of private monopolies or state arbitrariness.

Read Deming Liu, Can Copyright Lend Its Cinderellaic Magic to Chinese Folklore?, 5 John Marshall Review Intellectual Property Law 203, 2006, here (pdf).

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Final Judgement Hennessy Trademark Infringement: No More Sour Grapes in China

Remember the Hennessy trademark infringement case in 2005? See here.

March 2005, Jas Hennessy & Co. instituted a proceeding against Zhuhai Xiangmutong Trading Co. Ltd. who sold the cognoc and Xiamen Jin (Golden) Huanya Food Co. Ltd. who bottled it, before the Shanghai 2nd Intermediate People’s Court. Jas Hennessy requested the court to order that the two defendants should immediately stop the infringement, publish an apology in Xinmin Evening News to eliminate the ill effects and compensate RMB 500,000 yuan.

The two defendants appealed to Shanghai Higher People’s Court.

Zhuhai Xiangmutong argued that it filed an application for registration of the trademark “Hanlissy 亨力士 and device” with the Trademark Office under the State Administration for Industry and Commerce and the trademark was published after preliminary examination. Zhuhai Xiangmutong believed that their trademark was not similar to those owned by the plaintiff in terms of pattern, color and size. Xiamen Jinhuaya argued that they did not know the infringement since they were only the supplier for the bottling of the cognac and the bottles and trademark representations were provided by Zhuhai Xiangmutong.

October 16, the Shanghai Higher People’s Court maintained the first instance judgment which ruled that the two defendants should stop the act of infringement, publish an apology in the newspaper appointed by the court to eliminate ill effects, and compensate RMB 300,000 yuan to the plaintiff.

Hennessy registered the mark “Hennessy” and “Hennessy and device” in China. In 1990 it applied for an international registration of the mark “Hennessy” and was approved in China.

Read more about this case on the site of NTD Patent & Trademark Agency Ltd. here.

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China Outspends Japan in Innovation; IP in China Will Profit

Stan Abrams, Lehman, Lee and Xu lawyer and writer of China Hearsay, wrote an article about China’s newest milestone: that it outspends Japan in research and development.

It is expected IP protection and enforcement in China will profit most. Rightly so, because self interest is one of the best motivators.

Read Abrams article here.

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“Davee Beekham Do It At Once”

Jeremy Goldkorn posted for Danwei an article of Michael Rank of Trade Marks Directory Service about pirate trademark applications of well-known brands in China.

  • In Guangdong a businessman has applied for the trademark Nike in English and Chinese for toilet and bath articles;
  • In Jiangsu a businessman has applied for the trademark Do it at once, with three arrows, instead of Just do it with the swoosh of Nike for a television business;
  • In Fujian a businessman applied for the name Davee Beekham in English and Chinese for a range of waterproof clothing;
  • In Zhejiang a businessman applied for the trademark “Dawei Beikehamu” in English and Chinese for spectacles, sunglasses and contact lenses.

About these goods categories for trademarks, China’s accession to the Nice Agreement was May 9, 1994, see here.

Read Rank’s article here.

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Is Plagiarism Justified?

Danwei publishes Tianya blogger Guerlangwa/Icegrass Bay about an article of his that was published in New Express, Sanqin Metropolis Daily and Heilongjiang’s Life Daily, without his authorisation. Read Guerlangwa’s article here.

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Counterfeit Spelling Contest How To Write ….

Philips.

China is warming up relations with the African continent. One side effect is the growth in Chinese counterfeit products. Oskar Himmelreich made a nice picture in Kumasi, Ghana, August 2006 of a counterfeit mixer of the Dutch multinational with two LL’s and sent it to IP Dragon.

Thanks a lot Oskar.

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Xiangyang Market Is Dead Long Live Puxi and Pudong

Xiangyang market used to be Shanghai’s playground for trademark counterfeiters and copyright pirates. No more, read more here. However, the economics of demand and supply have provided new outlets for these illigit goods. Like a waterbed, the problem has moved now to Puxi and Pudong. Read a post on these markets at the Mad about Shanghai blog here.

Read about Taobao (IPR infringements taboo?) as another contender for the position the Xiangyang market held, here.

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Mainland, HK and Macau Intellectual Property Symposium

The HK Intellectual Property Department is organising the Symposium in collaboration with SIPO and the Macao SAR Economic Services. The symposium will be held in the Huayun Gloria Grand Hotel Haikou, Hainan province: 12 and 13 December, 2006.

The symposium has four themes:
1. The latest developments of IP in the three regions;
2. IP protection for the Olympics;
3. IP planning and outlook during the period of the Eleventh Five-year Plan;
4. IP protection of enterprises.

Read more here (pdf).

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Chinese Preemptive Counterfeiters Force Producers To Synchronous Market Introductions

Alex Zaharov-Reutt wrot a very interesting article for ITWire (H/T to Technology writer Mike Elgan of Raw Feed) about Chinese counterfeiters’ preempting the market, before the originals are released in the Chinese market that will trick Chinese buyers into believing the original gadgets are fake.

Zaharov-Reutt links to two articles that give examples of these not so cheap, high quality counterfeit products: LG Electronics’ Chocolate Phone and Sony’s PlayStation Portable, Read the article in the English Chosun Ilbo here.

In an effort to neutralise the Chinese counterfeiters Samsung even offered the designers a job. The English Chosun Ilbo wrote:
Samsung Electronics smoked out one such organization recently by tracking down the distribution channel on its own and offered their designers a job with the company. The organization had been able to decode circuit diagrams Samsung made. But the designers turned down the offer, saying they can make W100-200 million (US$1=W930) every time they succeed in producing a perfect fake, so there was no incentive to work for Samsung. “Due to the surge in imitation products, we keep new product design and functions highly confidential before release even within the company,” a Samsung executive said.

So I think, for companies to avoid that these high quality counterfeiters preempt the market, it is key for them to introduce their products in their home market at the same moment as they enter the Chinese market.

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HK’s Cyberport Becomes IP Training Centre

Hong Kong’s Cyberport finally seems to get a new destination as an IP capital centre, where companies can get training and information about how to manage their IPRs.

Initially, in 2000 the plan was that Cyberport would be a place with a campus where science and entrepreneurs in new technology/IT interact and flourish, to no avail.

The plan started on the wrong foot. The former HK Chief Executive, Tung Chee-Hwa was alleged to have favoured Li Ka-Shing’s son Richard, see an article in the HK Standard about it here. The investment in the project by the HK government was criticised and in the press the project was often called a white elephant. With an occupancy rate of only 42 per cent in 2005 it was about time the place found a new desination.

Alan Lung of ABCM Consulting at a seminar on managing intellectual assets held in Hong Kong last week. Other centres are proposed for the mainland Chinese cities of Hangzhou and Guangzhou. A government decision on funding for the Hong Kong centre is expected in December. See Peter Ollier’s article for Managing IP here.

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Pfizer Accuses Guangzhou Welman Of Copyright Infringement

Pfizer sued Guangzhou Welman for alleged copyright infringement of Viagra reports Forbes.

I wonder why Pfizer’s allegations focused on copyright infringement instead of patent infringement, or both. Or is copyright used mistakingly as the prototype of an intellectual property? Read more here

In 2001 Pfizer obtained a Chinese patent license for Viagra
July 2004 SIPO’s Patent Review Board revoked its license after complaints by 12 Chinese pharmaceutical companies: Pfizer failed to accurately explain the uses of the pill’s key ingredient, sildenafil citrate.
June 2, 2006 the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People’s Court reversed the review board’s verdict and upheld Pfizer’s patent. Read more here.
12 Chinese pharmaceutical firms have launched an appeal against this ruling. Read more here.

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Novartis’ Optimistic About IPR in China

Contrary to other pharmaceutical giants Novartis is setting up a research centre in Shanghai, which is a relatively expensive location. Novartis wants to cater to globetrotting scientist, tap the ideas of the local universities and study typical Chinese reactions to some diseases.

The Economist of 11th-17th November wrote:

What about concerns over intellectual property? Conditions are improving, says Mr Vasella [Novartis’ chief exective], and are now tolerable, if not ideal. When it comes to counterfeiting, for example, producers of fake drugs are still not tracked down by the authorities, but they are dealt with when exposed by others. And since drugs take such a long time to develop, Mr Vasella believes intellectual-property protection will be sufficient by the time the research laboratory produces its first fruits.

Read the Economist article ‘A Novel Prescription’ here.

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James Paradise: WTO Case Will Not Start Before North Korean Nuclear Threat Has Ended

James F. Paradise wrote another thought provoking article on AsiaMedia of the UCLA Asia Institute.

The innovation of TRIPS compared to WIPO’s conventions (Berne and Paris) is that disputes about enforcement can be dealt with in a binding manner by a panel of the WTO dispute resolution body. In other words WTO’s TRIPS is WIPO with teeth (paraphrasing professor Hugenholtz of IViR).

However, the downside of TRIPS is that it is an integral part of WTO, which results in a hybrid treaty: the protection and enforcement of intellectual property law can get entangled with trade interests. Trade tariffs can be traded off for the protection and enforcement of intellectual property and vice versa. This might not always be in the best interest of IPRs.

Paradise points out that geo-political interests such as the North Korean nuclear threat can take priority over trade interests, including intellectual property:

Recently there has been speculation that the United States, together with the European Union, Japan and Canada, would bring a complaint against China at the WTO because of inadequate enforcement of intellectual property rights. But it appears now that action of that sort — should it occur — will not happen immediately, possibly because the United States needs to maintain China’s support in dealing with the North Korean nuclear problem. In September, the United States, the EU and Canada did request that a dispute settlement panel examine their complaint that Chinese tariffs on imported auto parts were discriminatory, the first time a dispute with China had risen to this level in the WTO.

Paradise points out a trend in the business community to cope with the rampant infringement of intellectual property proactively by changing their business strategy:

“We need more flexible business models,” said George M. Borkowski at a panel primarily focused on copyright at the Los Angeles Asia Pacific Entertainment and Media (APEM) Summit 2006 last week. Borkowski, a partner of the law firm Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp, added that there is not much agreement within the industry itself about how to proceed.

Is this defeatism? I don’t think so. As a company you should both try to prevent IPR infringements, but if they do, you should be prepared to protect and enforce your IPRs ferociously.

Read Paradise’s article here.

Paradise wrote earlier an excellent review of Mertha’s book’The Politics of Piracy: Intellectual Property In Contemporary China’, read more here.

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Haier Files 2.6 Patent Applications Per Day

Gao Hucheng, the Vice-Minister of Commerce, wrote an article about the need for China to improve its brands and IPRs in order to become internationally more competitive.

Haier, the Chinese posterchild that is taking its brand very serious, “put[s] forth 2.6 patents each day on average and takes the lead among all household appliance enterprises in China with it total 6,189 patents.”

Other Chinese companies include: Shanghai Zhenhua Port Machinery Co., Ltd. [which] has obtained over 20 world leading key technologies for container cranes and the Dual 40 Feet Containers’ Quayside Container Crane invented by the company can improve the efficiency of handling containers by over 60 percent. Relying on the globally exclusive technology, Shanghai Zhenhua Port Machinery Co., Ltd. has seized 50 percent of the world’s port machinery market. A second example is that Chery Automobile Co., Ltd. has jointly developed 18 kinds of worldly leading gasoline and diesel engines with its partners and exported such engines to various countries, and it is expected that it will export 13,000 engines to the USA this year. The sales of other products with independent brands of Huawei Technologies Ltd, ZTE Corp., and Kangnai Group Co., Ltd. in the international markets are also increasing steadily.

It’s interesting to glance over these sites, since they give you an impression of the aspirations each of these mentioned brands have.

Read the translation of Gao’s article on China Economic Net here.

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Baidu Acquitted Of Charges By HK Music Companies Of Copyright Infringements

In September seven Hong Kong music companies brought against Baidu, the largest search engine of China, a copyright infringement lawsuit. Beijing No.1 Intermediate People’s Court ruled that the accusations did not have adequate legal support.

The seven companies were:
Universal Music Hong Kong Limited;
Go East Entertainment;
Warner Music Hong Kong Limited;
Sony BMG Music Entertainment (Hong Kong) Limited;
EMI Group Hong Kong Limited;
Cinepoly Music and Gold Label Entertainment.

The music companies, represented by the International Federation of Phonographic Industry (IFPI), accused Baidu of providing and spreading pirated versions of 137 songs for which the record companies hold copyrights through http://mp3.baidu.com, which enables Internet users to search and download music on the Internet. They were seeking a total of RMB 1.67 million (USD 208,750) in compensation, a public apology, and for Baidu to cease facilitating downloads of pirated music.

During the hearing Baidu argued that it never uploaded any music or songs to its own servers, nor provided any music downloads to users. The company iterated that it was just an online search platform that provided search results according to the input of users. Its “MP3 Search Service,” is just one of its search services, and is not much different than the other services it offers, the company said.

IFPI’s Benjamin Ng said they would definitely appeal to a higher court. To be continued.

Read more in an article of Interfax China here.

Baidu “strong on censoring, weak on copyright enforcement” here.

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