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  • Inside Views

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    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website.

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    The Relationship Between IP, Technology Transfer, and Development

    An analysis of practices and policies involving intellectual property, technology transfer and development shows the difficulties of achieving a positive correlation between those areas, writes Cheikh Kane.


    Rapport entre propriété intellectuelle, transfert de technologie et développement

    Une analyse des pratiques et des politiques impliquant la propriété intellectuelle, le transfert de technologie et le développement démontre la difficulté à parvenir à une corrélation positive entre les différents domaines, écrit Cheikh Kane.


    Intellectual Property Watch
    7 November 2006

    Group B+ Draft Patent Harmonisation Treaty Emerges

    By William New and Tove Iren S. Gerhardsen
    The wealthy members of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) have created a draft patent harmonisation treaty to be negotiated outside WIPO in the hope of removing basic differences in national and regional practices. But while the countries say they have the momentum and political will to change their laws, the draft text obtained by Intellectual Property Watch shows that substantive differences remain.

    The draft patent treaty text, drawn up by the United Kingdom, and based on several pre-existing documents, shows there is substantial work left to do to bring the so-called Group B+ members to accord. The group follows WIPO structure, where developed nations act collectively as Group B, plus additional countries represented at the European Patent Office.

    Draft treaty text available here

    Developed countries account for the majority of the world’s intellectual property, and all in the room during the September meeting on the eve of the WIPO General Assembly expressed solid support for proceeding on the basis of the chair’s draft (IPW, Patent Policy, 6 November 2006).

    The ultimate goal appears to be to catalyse the stalled harmonisation talks at WIPO in the Standing Committee on the Law of Patents. The chair was reported as saying in September, “We are working in Working Group B+ to get to a position where we can bring this back to WIPO.”

    The new text is really less of a draft treaty than a discussion document at this stage, and is referred to as the “chair’s proposal.” It contains the preliminary text plus notes on each section.

    The negotiation is on a fast track and will be discussed at the 20-21 November Group B+ meeting in Tokyo, according to the September report. A key earlier document from which it draws is the draft WIPO Substantive Patent Law Treaty.

    A key difference is that the new draft calls for a provision on adoption of the “first inventor to file” principle, with a number of possible conditions. First-to-file most notably is not the practice in the United States, which raised concerns about it in the September meeting though there is a push to change the rule in the United States.

    The draft text also contains sections on prior art (“all information which has been made available to the public anywhere in the world in any form”); availability to the public; prior art not affecting patentability (grace period) and the right of prior user; conditions for patentability; items of prior art; assessment of novelty; and assessment of inventive step/non-obviousness.

    According to the September meeting report, the European Union flagged concerns with provisions on “secret prior art” (with the content of the secret prior art defined as the content of the application at the filing date), and “anti-self-collision” (under which only one patent may be granted on competing applications from the same person).

    The draft appears to retain the rule for grace period, though it is not used in the same form by Europe.

    In September, Australia cited concern about the harmonising of “prior use of rights.” Canada said it had some difficulty with some unspecified provisions.

    William New may be reached at wnew@ip-watch.ch. Tove Iren S. Gerhardsen may be reached at tgerhardsen@ip-watch.ch.

    Categories: English, News, Patent Policy, WIPO

     

    Comments

    1. James Heald says:

      It’s curious that article 12(1) of the document, which would seem logically to have to pertain to the definition of Patentable Subject Matter and/or Industrial Applicability, is marked as “[RESERVED]“.

      Does anybody know whether there are any texts or proposals floating about for this clause ?

      Evidently the chair does not yet feel the time is right to circulate any draft for a common position on this point.

    2. Mc Creevy veut légaliser les brevets logiciels via un traité US-UE says:

      [...] IP-watch – Group B+ : L’émergence du Traité d’harmonisation sur les brevets : http://www.ip-watch.org/weblog/index.php?p=448 [...]


    Leave a Reply

    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website. By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website.

    By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    1. You agree that you are fully responsible for the content that you post. You will not knowingly post content that violates the copyright, trademark, patent or other intellectual property right of any third party or which you know is under a confidentiality obligation preventing its publication and that you will request removal of the same should you discover that you have violated this provision. Likewise, you may not post content that is libelous, defamatory, obscene, abusive, that violates a third party's right to privacy, that otherwise violates any applicable local, state, national or international law, that amounts to spamming or that is otherwise inappropriate. You may not post content that degrades others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual preference, disability or other classification. Epithets and other language intended to intimidate or to incite violence are also prohibited. Furthermore, you may not impersonate others.

    2. You understand and agree that Intellectual Property Watch is not responsible for any content posted by you or third parties. You further understand that IP Watch does not monitor the content posted. Nevertheless, IP Watch may monitor the any user-generated content as it chooses and reserves the right to remove, edit or otherwise alter content that it deems inappropriate for any reason whatever without consent nor notice. We further reserve the right, in our sole discretion, to remove a user's privilege to post content on our site. IP Watch is not in any manner endorsing the content of the discussion forums and cannot and will not vouch for its reliability or otherwise accept liability for it.

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    4. You further agree not to publish any personal information about yourself or anyone else (for example telephone number or home address). If you add a comment to a blog, be aware that your email address will be apparent.

    5. IP Watch will not be liable for any loss including but not limited to the following (whether such losses are foreseen, known or otherwise): loss of data, loss of revenue or anticipated profit, loss of business, loss of opportunity, loss of goodwill or injury to reputation, losses suffered by third parties, any indirect, consequential or exemplary damages.

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    8. For any content that you post, you hereby grant to IP Watch the royalty-free, irrevocable, perpetual, exclusive and fully sub-licensable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such content in whole or in part, world-wide and to incorporate it in other works, in any form, media or technology now known or later developed.

    9. These terms and your posts and contributions shall be governed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Switzerland (without giving effect to conflict of laws principles thereof) and any dispute exclusively settled by the Courts of the Canton of Geneva.