Monday, February 22, 2010

In The Year of The Tigger: What Makes A Real Winnie The Pooh?



















How to tell real from fake?
On top: real Winnie the Pooh, including a laser hologram of Walt Disney.
Below: fake Winnie the Pooh, without a laser hologram of Walt Disney. The counterfeit one is on offer in Wanchai, Hong Kong for 30 HK dollar (about 3 euro) and is tailor made for Chinese new year (good year's wishes and two plush oranges).

Probably the counterfeiters will learn from Walt Disney and might come up with their own hologram. And Walt Disney could learn from the counterfeit version and come up with a tailor made Chinese new year Winnie.
Thank you for the pictures Trinity!

Beijing Subsidies for Foreign Patents: Allowed Or Not? Smart Or Not?

October 9, 2009 the Beijing Intellectual Property Office, subsidiary of SIPO for the Beijing Municipality promulgated a circular on Applying for Special Funds for Financing Patent Applications in Foreign Countries.

It stated:

"Each United Concerned,

According to the requirements of the State Council concerning the implementation of national intellectual proeprty strategy, in order to support domestic applicants who submit patent applications in foreign countries, and protect their own innovations, recently the State Intellectual Property Office will cooperate with the Ministry of Finance to finance special funds for patent applications in foreign countries. To implement the spirit of the State Intellectual Property Office, our Office sets up a working group which is led by the director in charge, and composed of Industry Promotion Department, Patent Administration Department, and Zhongguancun Intellectual Property Promotion Office. The working group shall be responsible for organizing applications submitted in Beijing for special funds for financing patent applications in foreign countries."

The Beijing Intellectual Property Office received applications from intermediary service organisations for intellectual proeprty from October 9 to 11, 2009 and from enterprises in Beijing from October 15 to 19, 2009.

Allowed Or Not?
Is such a patent subsidy prohibited? China is a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO). The Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM) is an integral part of the WTO Agreement which should distinguish between subsidies that distort trade and those that do not and it sets out rules for trade actions. Article 1 SCM gives a definition of what a subsidy is: financial contribution by or at the direction of a government or any public body within the territory of a Member and benefit a regional recipient. According to article 2 SCM A measure is a subsidy within the meaning of the SCM when it has been specifically provided to an enterprise or industry or group of enterprises or industries.

If articles 1 and 2 SCM are positive, then article 3 SCM state that there are two categories of subsidies: prohibited subisidies: continguent on export performance and those that are contingent on the use of domestic over imported goods (red light) and actionable subsidies (amber) and non-specific non-actionable subsidies (green light).

Article 8.2 (a) SCM states which subsidies are green lighted: "assistance for research activities conducted by firms or by higher education or research establishments on a contract basis with firms if the assistance covers not more than 75 per cent of the costs of industrial research or 50 per cent of the costs of pre-competitive development activity.

Article 8.2 (b) SCM provides the conditions under which assistance to disadvantaged regions within the territory of a Member given pursuant to a general framework of regional development and non-specific can be given.

Gutterman was looking at patent subsidies for US companies:
"Green light subsidies are considered the least trade distorting subsidies and are not subject to trade action. It is not clear why R&D subsidies are considered as such. It is conceivable, however, that a patent acquired via a federal subsidy and subsequently registered in a foreign country would have the distorting effect of preventing the competition of other companies from the manufacture or importation of the product, therefore injuring the domestic industry since the latter would be impeded from the manufacture of the patented procedure. Some authors argue, however, that such subsidies are indirect and have only faint effects in the market." Gutterman, Alan, 'Innovation and Competition Policy', Kluwer Law International, 1997, pg 389 .

Members with a GNP per capita of less than US $ 1,000 per year which are listed in Annex VII to the SCM Agreement, are exempted from the prohibition on export subsidies. China is not part of this list.

Members in transition to a market economy have a seven-year period to phase out prohibited subsidies. So even if this rule applied for China, that period is over.

Smart Or Not?
Even if supporting Beijing companies with patent subsidies does not distort trade, the question is whether this is a smart policy. Is the government best positioned to allocate funds to Chinese companies that want to have foreign patents? It is highly unlikely that the government can forcast the commercial feasibility of inventions better than the companies who might be better in tune with their export markets. If companies think they can export an invention, they will take the risk and file for patent applications abroad. Governments are likely to misallocate funds to the wrong inventions. I would have liked to ask the late Milton Friedman's opinion on this.

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

China Higher and Higher in PCT Applications' Heaven

The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) published statistics of the number of Patent Convention Treaty (international patent) applications worldwide. China's PCT applications from 2008 to 2009 rose an estimated 29.7%, to 7,946 applications, estimated for 2009.




The top PCT applicants of 2009 include two Chinese providers of telecommunication and network solutions:


Rank 2: Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.: 1,847 PCT applications published in 2009
Rank 23: ZTE Corporation: 502 PCT applications published in 2009



The Economist made a nice visual representation of those WIPO statistics, see here. You see that China ranks fifth, just behind the US, Japan, Germany and South Korea and before France, Britain and the Netherlands. The Economist wrote: "Since 2005 applications from China have grown by 210% as the country has developed a home-grown high-tech sector."

Domestic patent applications: According to WIPO statistics of 2008, China is after the US and Japan the third biggest receiver of domestic patent applications. Read more here.

The statistics of the number of PCT or domestic patent applications are interesting, but of course the number of patent grants are more interesting.

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Chinese Acceptance Of and Resistance Against Global Copyright Law

Jia Lu, affiliated with Tsinghua University and Ian Weber, affiliated with University of Southern Queensland, Australia wrote an interesting paper called: 'Internet Piracy Software in China: A User Analysis of Resistance to Global Software Copyright Enforcement'.

Jia Lu and Ian Weber try to find reasons for why the Chinese accepted global copyright law, but also resist it at the same time. "The study uses Mittelman and Chin's (2005) framework of Polanyi's (1957) counter-hegemony and Gramsci's (1971) counter-movements as a heuristic [commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem: IP Dragon] device to conceptualize the resistance points to globalization located within the dominant discourse on intellectual property rights, specifically Internet software piracy, by Chinese Internet users. Gee's (2002) discourse analysis framework is applied to produce seven recurring themes within online postings: cost, convenience, software companies, foreign developed countries, China's development, Chinese culture, and moral dilemma."

Read the paper of Jia Lu and Ian Weber, 'Internet Software Piracy in China: A User Analysis of Resistance toGlobal Software Copyright Enforcement', Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, November 11, 2009, 2: 4, 298 — 317 here.

How To Acquire IP in China? Alan Adcock Gives The Steps

Alan Adcock, deputy director of Thai law firm Tilleke & Gibbins, has worked before for Lovells and Rouse & Co. International in both Shanghai and Hong Kong, wrote the article: '5 Essential Steps to Acquiring IP in China'.

1. Identifying the technology;
2. Confirming ownership;
3. Assuring non-infringement;
4. Obtaining further assurances;
5. Government approval.

Read Mr Adock's article here.

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

IPR Jurisdiction: Third Civil Division of Haining Municipal People's Court Specialises in Copyright and Trademark Disputes

Haining Municipal People's Court in Zhejiang Province set up the Third Civil Division, specializing the trial of civil cases concerning copyright disputes, trademark disputes and other related types of intellectual property rights disputes. Read the article here.

First instance IP appeal cases of TRAB and PRB will be heard by the IP Tribunal of the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court. Read the article by Howard Tsang and Lilian Shi of Wilkinson & Grist for Managing Intellectual Property Magazine here.

Scny Eriosscn: Counterfeiters Use Gestalt Psychology

Scny Eriosscn: looks familiar to you? Counterfeiters use Gestalt psychology to let consumers complete a picture they already have of a genuine brand. I am not sure whether some consumers really deceived into seeing Sony Ericsson, but some might at least be confused. Because of the same Gestalt concept you are probably seeing a triangle on the picture, aren't you?

übergizmo reports about a Sony Ericsson knock-off of its Xpera Pureness. Read the article here.

Is Apple's iPad a Knockoff from Shenzhen Great Dragon Brother's P88, Or Is the Latter A Case Of Pre-emtive Cloning?

Stan Abrams of China Hearsay blogs about Shenzhen Great Dragon Brother's P88, which is very similar to Apple's just released iPad. Mr Abrams, never losing his ironical talent wrote about Shenzen Great Dragon Brother's assertive stance towards IP rights in relation to Apple: "[T]he company apparently filed a design patent, so it’s doing its part to create indigenous IP. All those public education campaigns seem to be working!" Read Mr Abrams' blog here.

Aritz Parra of El Mundo interviewed Mr Wu Xiaolong, CEO of Great Dragon Brother who said that the P88 has been already on the market in China for half a year and was first presented to the world at the International Electronics Fair in Berlin six months ago. Read the article ''Made in China' vs Apple: ¿Quién copió a quién?' in Spanish here.

Earlier, Elaine Chow of Shanghaiist wrote that the P88 was already three months available at the Chinese market, which she calls pre-emtive cloning. Read Ms Chow's article here.

Sometimes Apple has to deal with knockoffs that are better than the real thing, as was the case with the knockoff MacBook Air, read here. Although the P88 has a bigger screen and a much larger disk drive (P88: 160 GB HD versus iPad: 64 GB Flash) and does multitasking and the iPad does not, the P88 has only a battery life of 1,5 hours, while the iPad has 10 hours. Shardendu Gautam compares the technical features for ThinkDigit, read here.

Yesterday, Song Jiang of the site Shanzai.com, that is following the Shanzai (Shan Zhai Ji = 山寨机 , read more about it here ) phenomenon, wrote:

"Just what will happen when the iPad gets launched in China remains to be seen, but I have a feeling that any presiding court in China might just sway in favor of Great Long. This could cause significant ripples in the intellectual property debate surrounding Chinese-made, and more recently, Chinese-designed products and their increasing penetration of traditionally Western dominated markets."

Picture by Shanzai.com.
Read Song Jiang's article here.

UPDATE:
Read Stan Abrams' article 'Shanzhai Saturday: Dawn of a New Era' about double shanzai, read here.

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Safe Your Logo: Make Dragons More Vital

Message from IP Dragon

Duncan Bucknell of Duncan Bucknell Company wrote on his IP Think Tank Blog, see here, about an initiative that invites companies that use a certain animal in their logo to make a contribution that that animal does not become extinct. This makes sense. The love should come from two sides, not only from the animal to the company. Of course, IP Dragon is taking heed. To conserve the dragons in China, Hong Kong, Macao and Singapore, and given their special characteristics, I will put them online every time I am meeting one to increase their vitality. And I invite readers of IP Dragon to send their pictures of dragons to ipdragon at gmail dot com, whether the dragon is in a logo or in the wild.
Read the mission of Safe Your Logo.