7. Intellectual Property Rights Flashcards
What distinguishes intellectual property from other types of property,such as land, buildings and inventory?
8 marks
2011
Intellectual property is Intangible whereas physical assets are tangible
Costs of creation and reproduction.
Physical property is expensive to create and to reproduce; for example, houses, automobiles, diamonds.
Most physical property can be copied without legal repercussions, although industrial design applies to say automobiles.
Intellectual property may take a lot of effort to create (e.g., a book) but is easy to reproduce at minimal cost.
IP may not, generally be freely copied. IP is protected.
Three examples are: patents in the case of biotechnology, automatic copyright in the case of literature and registered trademarks in the case of logos
**Multi-use - **With physical property, it can only be used by one firm at a time, whereas with IP many firms could use it simultaneously.
Depreciation. Physical assets will depreciate over time (although property tends to appreciate), whereas there is no wearing out of IP. It may simply become less useful over time if new technologies overtake an existing patent.
Registered IPRs are…
Trademarks - logos, smells, sounds,
Patents - inventions
Design rights - product shapes and configurations
“He [Hawkins] believed that game publishers could get squeezed if they didn’t own the intellectual property (“IP”) behind the game”. (p.2)
a) Why would Digital Chocolate get squeezed?
b) What IPRs are important for gaming industry companies and why?
(4 and 8) 2011
Unregistered IPRs…
Know-how (trade secrets)
e.g. coca-cola formula
Copyright - software, literary, research notes
Design rights - product shape and configuration
Is a patent the strongest barrier to entry that exists?
[8 Marks]
2010
a) How can intellectual property be protected for a social
networking business, like Facebook?
b) Is intellectual property protection important for a social
networking site?
[4 and 8 marks]
a)
- Invention of site protected by patent, lasting for 20 years
- Anyone producing similar sites can be brought to court by facebook and the company can recieve damages
- Facebook logo protected by trademark
b)
- Yes
- It protects the site’s competitive advantage
- Attracts investors as idea is unique + protected
- The site may also want to take measures to protect its user’s intellectual property as social networking is all about sharing information.
What are patents?
Definition:
A patent is an exclusive legal right
granted for an invention that is:
New
Involves and inventive step (non-obvious)
Is capable of industrial application
Duration: 20 years from filing date
Patent market is estimated to be worth $100bn annually
A strong set of patents can discourage competitiors and attract investors
Different types of patents:
Design - new, original, nonobvious designs for articles of manufacure
Utility - new, useful, nonobvious manufacturing processes and machines
Business method - utility e.g. amazon
Licensing:
The author may authorise others to use the invention through granting a license and recieving royalties
At IBM, patents and licenses represent 15% of revenues
Misuse:
If anyone uses the patented IP without a license, the patent holder can bring the case to court
But it is the responsibility of the patent-holder to protect their patent so must have a strategy to monitor its use and label the patent
What is a patent pool?
an arrangement among multiple patent holders to
aggregate their patents
Examples of patents
1902 - Gillette disposible razor
1974 - Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer gene splicing technology has earned over $250m
Dell computers has 77 patents protecting its built-to-order business method
Amazon has patent for one-click buying method patent (controversial)
What is copyrighting used for?
= the right of an author to prevent others from printing, copying or publishing any of his/her original work
The life of a copyright is the life of the author + 70 years
Relates to the form of expression and not the subject matter (i.e. the ideas may be used elsewhere)
books, music, plays, art
Must be:
Original
Skill involved
Permanent form (not just an idea)
Author qualifies for protection
Unregistered right
Arises automatically
What are trademarks?
Any distictive word, name, symbol, slogan, shape, sound or logo that identifies the source of a product or service.
Once a trademark it registered, the owner can bring legal action to any infringement use and recieve damages
Duration: 10 years and can be renewed indefinitely
Registered and unregistered designs
Protects the appearance of the whole product or its part, in particular contours, shape and texture
In Europe registration (£60) might last up to 25 years, subject to renewal every 5 years (£130-£450)
Advantages and disadvantages of patents
+
- A firm can maintain is competitive advantage
- Encourages R+D
- Attracts investment
- Licenses can be sold to generate revenue
-
- Expensive to monitor/regulate/maintain
- The cost of the patent may out-weigh the financial advantages of the invention.
- Inventors may choose to capitalise on inventions that could benefit the wider public, such as a new low carbon emitting energy source, rather than allowing the inventions to be used widely.