ANT Lawyers

Vietnam Law Firm with English Speaking Lawyers

ANT Lawyers

Vietnam Law Firm with English Speaking Lawyers

ANT Lawyers

Vietnam Law Firm with English Speaking Lawyers

ANT Lawyers

Vietnam Law Firm with English Speaking Lawyers

ANT Lawyers

Vietnam Law Firm with English Speaking Lawyers

Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Patent Law Firm in Vietnam. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Patent Law Firm in Vietnam. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 4 tháng 8, 2020

What is intellectual property? Why should it be protected?


What is IPR?
Property created with the use of intellect and out of the intellectual labour of the creator\inventor. The idea and expression of such idea is his own original work and out of his ‘skill and labour.’ Although idea per is cannot be protected.


What is the nature of IP and why it is a ‘property’?
The intellectual property is intangible i.e., it has a physical embodiment or an expression of the creation but not necessarily. It differs from movable and tangible properties like one’s land or house. The intangible properties are incorporeal in nature. Some examples of IP include book, poem, working model/invention, plant varieties from an area etc.

It is called a property for the very reason that it has a ‘commercial value’ and industrial utility to it. A property can be sold, altered and enjoyed possession by the owner and the same applies to one’s IP. Such rights are not fundamental but statutory. But the legal implications governing the controlling of IP protection gives that exclusive right to enjoy the same for each IP right for a limited period.

Why one needs IP protection?
The purpose behind the statutes governing the IPR field, have only one objective of protecting the original work of the creator for a limited time to respect his skill and creativity in spending time to create or invent something. It is to regard his right to have ownership over such property. But reasonable limitations include a fixed time to have ownership and also to prevent monopoly.

Often, pharma companies charge higher prices on patented drugs cutting access to medicine for the public, thus, exceptions like compulsory licensing and fair use are existing as limitations. ‘Public purpose’ is a ground to determine the extent of exercising the exclusive rights. It is in a way, an industrial property, making it useful for country’s economy and commerce.

Types and classification of IP rights

-Patent: granted to inventions by the inventor. The conditions are that it has to have novelty, industrial utility and different from existing models and not just a mere re-arrangement. The patentable inventions can be either a process or product patent, which is usually granted for a term of 20 years (changes according to different countries). It creates a certain monopoly over the patented item.

-Copyright: right granted to expression of ideas in physical form or in other expressed terms. Artistic, dramatic, musical and written works of a creator. The registration of the same is not necessary in some countries. The work has to be original and out of his own creativity. International term of copyright period extends to 50 years after the creator’s death as well.

-Trademark: a mark, sign, form, an arrangement or combination of the colours or lines, name of a product, which makes it distinguishable from other products and to identify the brand name. It mainly helps to promote the company brand and to help the public differentiate the same from others. It is synonymously called as service marks.

-Industrial Design: The pattern, structure, that forms the product. The intricate and aesthetic features of the product that makes unique from others. It must not be deceptively similar to another design or used before applying for registration. It is different from copyright and trademark.

-Geographical indication & other rights: A plant variety or a type of food that is located in a particular geographical locality or a part of country, be under geographical indication. It helps to identify the origin of such product or type of product to the people. Other IP rights include trade secrets and undisclosed information.

-Trade secrets, Non-disclosure and license agreements are also part of IP protection.
AuthorSwathi Gunasekaran
Source: Quora

If you are looking for an experienced IP attorneys in Vietnam to help you with your patent application, you should visit ANT Lawyers.vn. We are supported by a team of experienced patent, trademark, design attorneys with qualification and skills handling full range of legal services relating to intellectual property in Vietnam.  We have specialized in the preparation and registration of patents, trademarks and designs for our clients.






Thứ Hai, 20 tháng 7, 2020

The tools allow a business to protect intellectual property


Intellectual property is something you have created. It is not just an idea. It must have a content. It can be material such as a design or immaterial such as a software.

To protect intellectual property in a business, different tools can be used depending on your type of creation. There are two mainly different types of protections : automatic protection and protection you have to apply for.

1 - Two types of automatic protections : Copyright and Design right

For these both protections you don’t to do any application or pay any fee. Copyright and Design right prevent people from using your work without your permission.

Copyright:
Copyright protection encompasses art, photography, web content, films, music…

To inform that your idea is protected you can mark your work with the following :

The copyright symbol : ©
Your name
The year of creation
If your country has signed international agreements, your work can be protected overseas. Usually the protection lasts around 25 years for photographs and 50 years for the other types of work.

Design right:
Design right protects the shape and configuration of your object. To benefit from this right you will have to prove the date of creation. This protection lasts 10 years once it is sold and 15 years from its creation.

2 - Application for protection : Trade marks, patents, registered designs

With the following protections you have the right to take a legal action against someone who uses your creation or invention without your permission.

Trade marks:
Logos, jingles and product names can be protected by Trademarks.The protection lasts 10 years. However it is renewable.

Patents:
A patent is an effective protection for your invention. However the process is time-consuming and very expensive. For instance your invention can be an artistic work, a playing game or a diagnosis. To benefit from this protection, your invention has to be new.

Registered designs:
By registering your design you protect its appearance, decoration or shape. The protection lasts up to 25 years (you have to renew it every 5 years).

At last, to protect your intellectual property you can also sign an non-disclosure agreement. In the contract you share confidential information that can include intellectual property. The second party is not allowed to disclose this information.

Source: Quora

If you are looking for an experienced IP attorneys in Vietnam to help you with your IP application, you should visit ANT Lawyers.vn. Our attorneys have experience with the IP process and will work closely with you as you apply for your IP. Hope this helps!



Thứ Hai, 20 tháng 1, 2020

How do you get an idea patented?


While an idea is not eligible for patent protection, most reproduceable inventions are. If you have created something new, novel, and reproduceable, chances are that your creation is eligible for legally enforceable intellectual property rights protection.


It’s important to understand that not all creations are treated the same under the law. If you’re an artist, author, or musician and you’ve created an original work of art or authorship, your work isn’t patentable. Instead, you’ll want to register the copyright for your work (which is created as soon as your work is fixed in a tangible form) with the U.S. Copyright Office. If your business has developed a branding tool, such as a graphic, logo, phrase, original domain name, etc. then you’ll need to register your original trademark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. However, if your novel and reproduceable creative work is a manufactured product, process, machine, product design, or plant species, that work may be patentable.
Source: Quora


Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 11, 2019

Should a startup founder worry about patents?


When you are in the early stages of your start-up, it may be tempting to cut corners in any way that you can to save time and money. However, you should realize that by doing this you aren’t setting up your business for the best scenario for success. 

If you believe that your company brings a unique invention that other people could find useful, then you can certainly apply for a patent. Doing so early on can protect your business from potential issues in the future and it will solidify your legal claim to the idea that you are patenting. You may be surprised to learn that disputes over patents between companies is not exactly rare. If you put patents at the top of the list early on, you will save yourself a lot of headache in the future.

It is wise to consult the advice of a patent attorneys in Vietnam to help assist you with your patent. We are a legal marketplace with quality lawyers who are knowledgeable in various areas of the law—including patents.


What are requirements for a patent?


Here are for obtaining a patent under U.S. law.
Requirements for Obtaining a Patent


1. To obtain a patent in the U.S., you must demonstrate that the idea is:
 -Eligible for patent protection
-Novel and does not infringe on the patents of another
-Non-obvious
-Useful
2. Once you have determined that your patent meets the above through development of your idea and a thorough patent search, you would then prepare and file your patent application along with the requisite filing fee.

Is It Necessary to Have a Prototype or Are the Designs Enough? and How Specific Do the Designs Need to Be?
While a prototype can be helpful in supporting your patent application, a working prototype is not required to apply for patent protection. However, you are required to describe your invention with a level of detail such that a skilled individual could recreate your invention from the specifications. Essentially, you will need to provide as much detail as possible.

Is It Possible to Get a Patent for Free?
You will need to pay the filing fees to the USPTO associated with your patent application. You can find a schedule of the USPTO fees here. Additionally, given the complexities of the patent process, you may also want to retain a patent attorney to assist you to improve the likelihood that your application will be approved.
Source: Quora




Thứ Tư, 6 tháng 11, 2019

How does a patent differ from a copyright?


Copyright protects a creative work, fixed in a tangible medium. Patents protect an invention, including a method, article of manufacture, machine, drug, etc.


Copyright is automatic, as soon as you create the work. It can also be registered by providing a copy of your work to the Library of Congress (in the US) or similar entity in other countries, which provides you with the ability to sue for statutory damages for infringement, collect attorney fees, etc. Copyright is cheap, around $35 to register a work, and lasts for the lifetime of the author plus 70 years. BUT, it doesn't stop someone else from making the same exact work independently - only if they actually COPY you. For example, if someone lived in a cave for years and independently, without ever hearing about Harry Potter, wrote a story about a boy wizard with a scar who visits Bogwarts Castle and fights the unmentionable one, that wouldn't infringe Rowling's copyright (but good luck proving that they never heard of it).

Copyright is very useful where your specific work is desired, such as a AAA game, a famous work of art or novel, a tv show or movie, music from a specific artist, etc.  It isn't useful where consumers want the functionality, like "a mobile match-3 game" or "a word processor" but don't care who it comes from. For example, copyright is great for protecting "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" because consumers want that rather than the knock off "Space Game: Power Wakes Up"... but it isn't that helpful for protecting "Tiny Tower" vs. "Dream Heights" vs. "Sim Tower" vs. "Tower Game", etc., etc.

Patents, on the other hand, protect implementations of the underlying idea. A patent prevents others from making, using, selling, or importing the invention, even if they independently create it.  Patents prevent those knock offs - it doesn't matter what you call your machine; if it does the same thing, in the same way, with the same parts, as someone's patented machine, it infringes. Patents are much more powerful than copyright in that way... but they only last 20 years from the date of filing, and can cost between $10-25k to obtain, sometimes more, and it may be several years from filing before they are issued. Patents are examined by patent examiners with experience in the relevant industry, and are only issued when the examiner is assured that the invention is new, non-obvious, and sufficiently described in the patent application to enable another person of skill in the art to make and use the invention.

Patents and copyrights can cover the same thing - software is copyrighted as soon as it's written, since it's a work of creativity; but it can also be covered by a patent on the functionality. This overlapping protection is useful for protecting against different types of infringement, from piracy to competitors.



Thứ Năm, 24 tháng 10, 2019

Can you resell patents? Is there a platform for this?


A patent is a business asset, just like machinery or great processes - therefore it can be sold. A patent is simply a legal document granted by the USPTO that grants ownership of an invention for a period of 20 years (in most cases). However, in order to actually profit from a brilliant idea in which you’ve patented you must either sell the patent, license the usage rights, or market/create the product yourself. With a creative idea and strong patent, that list definitely goes from easiest to most difficult.


If you have full rights to patent and have made the decision to sell, there are a few ways to make this happen. Unfortunately, there is not some online exchange for this. However, you can still find the right person or company to sell your invention to. I recommend making direct contact with businesses that are in the same market and may be interested in your product. Additionally, you can attend trade shows to further network.

Sometimes it does take some money on the part of the patent holder in order to sell a patent. You may have some success buying ad space in industry magazines or trade publications to reach additional potential buyers. If all of these steps still don’t offer any leads, it may be necessary to use a broker to sell the patent. They will take a percentage of the total sale for their efforts.
Source: Raad Ahmed - Quora


Thứ Năm, 17 tháng 10, 2019

Intellectual Property Law: What makes a patent valid?


The validity of a patent can be relevant in two ways:
First, someone can challenge the validity of your patent and second, you can question the validity of theirs. Patent validity is an important question when litigation is being brought or considered.
A patent is a set of rights granted by a government that protects an invention. If a patent is given to the applicant, they have the right to block others from making, selling or importing their invention into the country for twenty years from the date of filing.

Prior Art is any evidence of your invention existing before the date you filed your patent application. Prior art can be evidence that an invention – the same or similar to yours – has been demonstrated to the public, written about in a magazine or that there are existing patents related to your invention.

Any references used to invalidate a patent must be from before the date of priority. The date of priority is when you filed your application. For prior art to be relevant, it must have existed before this date.

When you apply for a patent, you are obliged by law to report all known relevant references. Your patent application will also prompt the patent office to perform a prior art search to determine if the invention is novel and non-obvious.
If another inventor or company believes that prior art exists, which would invalidate your patent, they may start litigation against you.

After Infringement:
If you have infringed someone else’s patent, there are a few options open to you depending on how willing the patent holder is to negotiate. The patent holder may agree to sell you the patent or license it out to you for a fee.

Intellectual property laws have been constructed to encourage companies to cross license and come up with solutions to infringement that result in innovations and products. If you have infringed a patent, particularly in error, you stand a good chance of coming to an agreement with the patent owner.

A Blocking Patent:
 If no agreement can be reached with the patent owner, then their patent becomes a blocking patent. It blocks or prevents you from manufacturing or selling your invention. In this case, you need to take steps to invalidate their patent.

Patent Validity Search:
A patent validity search is a search of prior art designed to examine all possible areas where information might be found. The search is guided by information about the target patent; the patent which is stopping you from operating.

Claims Mapping:
Claims chart mapping is an infringement analysis. This process involves examining the claims in a patent.

Unlike the invention description, the patent claims can change throughout the process of the application. Inventors usually start off claiming a lot of protection across broad ideas and are told they can’t get that level of coverage. They then narrow down what they are claiming legal protection for in the patent.

An examination of the claims is essential to understand where the prior art may be relevant. This is true whether you are seeking to prove that your patent does not infringe anyone else’s rights or if you think someone else has infringed yours.

Infringement of Your Patent:
A patent validity search can interchangeably be called an invalidity search. The same extensive search for prior art is undertaken but with a view to proving a rival patent invalid rather than ensuring the validity of your own.
In this case, you want to examine any prior art that may invalidate the claims made in the target patent.

NPE Demand Letters:
A demand letter is a letter putting forward a legal claim and demand for restitution. This could come from a rival company who think you have infringed their intellectual property rights, or it could be from a non-practicing entity or NPE.

NPE companies have no products or services. They make money by acquiring intellectual property rights such as patents and using them as a basis for legal action.
NPE companies are bad news because they are only after financial gain and cannot be appealed to on any other grounds. The best way to counter these companies is to deter them from choosing to go after you.

Having a strong and well-protected intellectual property portfolio is central to this strategy. A good claims chart mapping process is in important in this case also.

The Importance of Validity Searching:
Validity searching improves your business on some levels. It can help you to prove infringements and refute accusations of infringements. Both of these actions build the strength of your intellectual property portfolio and make it more valuable. This is true whether you want to use, sell or license your intellectualproperty.

A strong reputation can be built upon this strong intellectual property portfolio. If rivals and NPEs think you are a soft target, they will commit resources and time to trying to find a problem with your patents. If you have a highly defensible patent portfolio, you will reduce the amount of people who see you as a worthwhile target.

Conduct a Patent Validity Search to:
- Invalidate a blocking patent
- Establish deterrents to demand letters from NPEs
- Carry out due diligence on a patent, patent portfolio or pending patent application.
Source: Quora


Thứ Ba, 15 tháng 10, 2019

How do I write a good provisional patent application?


Filing a provisional patent application is certainly easier, cheaper and faster than filing a utility patent application. It’s a route that allows you to to buy some time (a year), to develop and market your idea. 

If it gains traction during the year, then you can convert it into a utility patent; if not, then you can simply let it lapse knowing that you made the right decision to not invest the thousands of extra dollars and years it would’ve taken to obtain a utility patent.

1.Search Before You Write

The first step you need to take is to do a patent search. This will tell you whether your idea has already received patent protection. Start here with Google Patent search. You’ll also want to search the USPTO database. Conclude your search with a simple worldwide search here.

Conducting a general search (e.g., text search using Google) for inventions similar to your own that haven’t been patented is also a good exercise. This will reveal whether others have already productized your idea, and if so, how your idea is different - and hopefully superior. You’ll often find that there are many expressions of unpatented ideas floating around the marketplace. This is a rich source of information for you if you’re considering patenting your innovation.

You’ll likely find inventions that are similar to your own, but not necessarily the same. Your job is to look for the differences and what makes your invention unique. Those distinctions are going to fortify your application, so make sure you’re able to describe those differences thoroughly, specifically and clearly.

2.Write Simply, But Thoroughly

You should start by first writing a list of unique benefits and features that distinguish the novelty of your idea. I’d suggest taking your time in developing a very thorough, well thought out profile - a week or so is about right, with some attention devoted to developing your list each day. This will help you immensely when you start to complete the actual application.

3.The Application

You application will consist of: (1) a specification, (2) a drawing, (3) the USPTO Cover Sheet, and (4) the filing fee.

Your specification will include these sections: Title, Description of the Invention, Claims and Abstract.

You will also need to include drawings. These can be sketched by hand and scanned into your specification doc, or you can do them with design software, CAD, PowerPoint, manuals or something similar - whichever is easier for you.

The key thing to focus on with your drawings is to make sure you clearly, comprehensively and capably show enough detail of your innovations to convince the USPTO examiner that your idea should be granted patent protection.

Next, you should specify your claims. Please note that you are not required to include your claims in a provisional application, so you can skip this part if you want to; however, it’s highly recommended that you do so. They describe what it is precisely that your patent protects.

Keep it simple, but focused. Select the top features that distinguish your invention and provide a brief, but detailed description about each characteristic. You’re not writing a final set of claims (which will come later if you convert to a utility patent); you just need to make sure you’re not limited in the future. Therefore, your claim should follow this type of format: “A [machine, device, method - whatever it is you’re protecting] that consists of [insert the two or three distinguishing features here].”

You’ll need to write an abstract, which simply means a very brief summary of your invention. For this part, you can simply re-state what you described in your claims.

You will also need to complete a “Provisional Application for Patent Cover Sheet,” which you can download here.

Finally, you’ll need to pay your fees. You can file electronically or non-electronically (snail mail). The non-electronic filing is $200-$400 (depending on your company’s size), and are in addition to the filing, search and examination fees.

The application fees (separate from the above filing fee) ranges from $65 for a micro entity up to $260 for a large entity. You can see all USPTO fees here.

Final Things You Need to Know
Your provisional patent will automatically lapse exactly one year from your filing date. If you want to convert your provisional patent to a utility patent, you must do so before the one year anniversary date of your filing. So, for example, if you filed your application on June 1, 2018 your must file your utility patent application no later than the close of business on June, 2019.

Once you have filed, you’re entitled to use “patent pending.”
You are not permitted to claim priority from another application.
The provisional application must be made in the name/s of all inventor/s.
If you convert your provisional to a utility application before the end of one year, you can claim priority to your previous provisional application/s.