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The first part of this open access book sets out to re-examine some
basic principles of trade negotiation, such as choosing the right
representatives to negotiate and enhancing transparency as a cure
to the public's distrust against trade talks. Moreover, it analyses
how the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) might impact on the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership's (RCEP) IP chapter and examines
the possible norm setters of Asian IP. It then focuses on the
People's Republic of China's (PRC) trade and IP strategy against
the backdrop of the power games between the PRC, India and the US.
The second part of the book reflects on issues related to
investor-state dispute settlement and its relationship with IP,
such as how to re-calibrate the balance in international investment
arbitration, and whether compulsory license of IP constitutes
expropriation in India, the PRC and select ASEAN countries. The
third part of the book questions and strives to improve some of the
proposed IP provisions of CPTPP and RCEP and to redefine some
aspects of international IP norms, such as: pre-grant patent
opposition and experimental use exception; patent term extension;
patent linkage and data exclusivity for the pharmaceutical sector;
plant variety protection; pre-established damages for copyright
infringement; and the restructuring of copyright limitations in the
public interest. The open access edition of this book is available
under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 licence on www.bloomsburycollections.com.
Open access was funded by the Applied Research Centre for
Intellectual Assets and the Law in Asia, School of Law, Singapore
Management University.
Despite the harmonizing effect of TRIPS and intellectual property
law in general, technology transfer remains firmly rooted in
domestic contract law and public policy. However, similarities in
legal culture across many national borders keep this problem to a
minimum endash until we approach the technologically advanced
countries of East Asia. For practitioners worldwide working with
technology transfer in this culturally heterogeneous part of the
world, Legal Rules of Technology Transfer in Asia is a godsend. For
each of nine significant technology market jurisdictions--the PRC,
Taiwan, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and
Indonesia--this nuts-and-bolts approach to the applicable national
rules provides all necessary legal information and guidance.
Country chapters by local authorities are structured to cover the
following essential factors: + government policy on technological
research and transfer; + intellectual property system; + licensing
agreements; + registration and notification; + dispute resolution;
+ tax considerations; + transfer of patents; + choice of law
questions; + franchising; + publicity and merchandising; +
anti-trust rules. and many other invaluable details to help lawyers
and business persons avoid pitfalls and make the most of the
technology transfer opportunities available in these countries. Two
introductory chapters provide a much-needed perspective on
technology transfer in the context of the world trade regime as it
especially affects East Asia, with an emphasis on the trend to
clarify and strengthen anti-trust rules. A concluding chapter
surveys the market anthropology of the region and offers an expert
assessment of the probable future development of technology
transfer trade in the region. With its first-hand, in-depth,
country-by-country analysis, and its firm grasp on a diversity of
relevant legal and cultural issues, Legal Rules of Technology
Transfer in Asia is unexcelled for desktop use in offices handling
East Asian trade in technology products.
This book systematically studies the structural characteristics of
IP laws and regimes of major Asian economies, including (but not
always) China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia,
Singapore, Taiwan, and Thailand. It explores and crystallizes some
worthy Asian models which could further help the development of
international IP laws. This book begins with an overview of Asian
modern history and IP laws. It discusses the three basic IP laws in
Asia which are patent law, trademark law and copyright law. It
looks at the pre-established damages for copyright infringement and
trademark counterfeiting. The book also deals with problems with
trade secret and its over-protection. It compares IP laws and four
industries in India and China, and examines what role have IP laws
played in the development in those industries and how India and
China can learn from each other. Finally, it examines one medium
and one small-sized Asian economy on its respective struggle
(Taiwan's efforts to build a coherent IP exhaustion regime) and a
success story (how Singapore has utilized IP to secure its position
in global value chains). This book is a useful reference for law
students, scholars, practitioners, IP professionals who are
interested in knowing Asia, Asian IP laws and industries, their
struggles and finding ways to better global IP laws. The case
studies could provide helpful lessons for other Asian economies and
beyond.
This book is a very useful reference guide on how de jure and de
facto standards are being developed and how these standards compete
against each other. The book also looks at how FRAND commitments
are being determined across countries, how these disputes have
played out, especially in Asia, and how they can be better dealt
with in future globally. The book gives a broad overview of the
business model of dominant SEP patentees and analyzes some
standards for FRAND licensing of SEPs which are converging in major
Asian jurisdictions. It highlights the need for ex ante regulation
in the FRAND licensing of SEPs and suggests how we can reconcile
conflicts which may arise from different legal standards. This book
provides detailed and comprehensive analysis of recent SEP cases
with an emphasis on Asia and will interest anyone who wishes to
have more insight into the legal, policy, industrial and economic
implications of such issues.
There has been little or no study on trademark laws in Asia on a
cross-jurisdictional level. This book aims at filling the existing
gap and provides a comprehensive overview of trademark laws of
eight major Asian jurisdictions and their most-updated trademark
case law. The book analyses six of the principal issues that best
reflect Asian features in trademark law and trademark development.
The cases in the book are principally the most authoritative
decisions, usually the first to deal with certain new emerging
issues, or the first to apply particular statutory provisions in
the respective jurisdiction. Also included are a small number of
direction-changing, outlying or even controversial decisions. Each
case report is divided into six sections: summary, legal context,
facts, reasoning of the court, legal analysis, and commercial or
industrial significance. Readers will find this book useful in both
its overview of the legal context and how those cases are to be
interpreted legally and commercially.
Trade mark law has become an increasingly important field of law in
the context of a rapidly globalizing economy. The promotion and
protection of marks is widely viewed as the most important tool for
a successful expansion of business, particularly in areas of
economic transformation such as the Asia-Pacific region. This
collection of essays examines the legal protection of well-known
marks both under trade mark and unfair competition law in 10
different jurisdictions of the Asia-Pacific region, analyzing the
still widespread piracy of well-known marks in the context of the
underlying legal and cultural concepts. It explores the
significance of trade marks in an information society, highlighting
the tensions between those seeking to protect their
well-established brands globally in an age of electronic commerce,
and those concerned to prevent large firms from being granted
indiscriminate control over certain marks without having made the
corresponding marketing efforts. It examines the opportunities and
problems arising from the advent of the new digital technology, and
looks at some of the issues the technology gives rise to, such as
the protection of domain names. The papers collected in this volume
are the revised and updated proceedings of a conference on Trade
Marks, Domain Names and Unfair Competition in the Information Age,
held in Taipei in January 1999, as the result of the co-operation
by the Sun Yat-Sen Institute for Social Sciences and Philosophy,
Academia Sinica, Taipei, and the Max Planck Institute, Munich.
There has been little or no study on trademark laws in Asia on a
cross-jurisdictional level. This book aims at filling the existing
gap and provides a comprehensive overview of trademark laws of
eight major Asian jurisdictions and their most-updated trademark
case law. The book analyses six of the principal issues that best
reflect Asian features in trademark law and trademark development.
The cases in the book are principally the most authoritative
decisions, usually the first to deal with certain new emerging
issues, or the first to apply particular statutory provisions in
the respective jurisdiction. Also included are a small number of
direction-changing, outlying or even controversial decisions. Each
case report is divided into six sections: summary, legal context,
facts, reasoning of the court, legal analysis, and commercial or
industrial significance. Readers will find this book useful in both
its overview of the legal context and how those cases are to be
interpreted legally and commercially.
This book is a very useful reference guide on how de jure and de
facto standards are being developed and how these standards compete
against each other. The book also looks at how FRAND commitments
are being determined across countries, how these disputes have
played out, especially in Asia, and how they can be better dealt
with in future globally. The book gives a broad overview of the
business model of dominant SEP patentees and analyzes some
standards for FRAND licensing of SEPs which are converging in major
Asian jurisdictions. It highlights the need for ex ante regulation
in the FRAND licensing of SEPs and suggests how we can reconcile
conflicts which may arise from different legal standards. This book
provides detailed and comprehensive analysis of recent SEP cases
with an emphasis on Asia and will interest anyone who wishes to
have more insight into the legal, policy, industrial and economic
implications of such issues.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become omnipresent in today's
business environment: from chatbots to healthcare services to
various ways of creating useful information. While AI has been
increasingly used to optimize various creative and innovative
processes, the integration of AI into products, services, and other
operational procedures raises significant concerns across virtually
all areas of intellectual property (IP) law. While AI has drawn
extensive attention from IP experts globally, this is the first
book providing a broad and comprehensive picture from the
perspectives of the very nature of AI technology, its commercial
implications, its interaction with different kinds of IP, IP
administration, software and data, its social and economic impact
on the innovation policy, and ultimately AI's eligibility as a
legal entity.
The first part of this open access book sets out to re-examine some
basic principles of trade negotiation, such as choosing the right
representatives to negotiate and enhancing transparency as a cure
to the public's distrust against trade talks. Moreover, it analyses
how the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) might impact on the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership's (RCEP) IP chapter and examines
the possible norm setters of Asian IP. It then focuses on the
People's Republic of China's (PRC) trade and IP strategy against
the backdrop of the power games between the PRC, India and the US.
The second part of the book reflects on issues related to
investor-state dispute settlement and its relationship with IP,
such as how to re-calibrate the balance in international investment
arbitration, and whether compulsory license of IP constitutes
expropriation in India, the PRC and select ASEAN countries. The
third part of the book questions and strives to improve some of the
proposed IP provisions of CPTPP and RCEP and to redefine some
aspects of international IP norms, such as: pre-grant patent
opposition and experimental use exception; patent term extension;
patent linkage and data exclusivity for the pharmaceutical sector;
plant variety protection; pre-established damages for copyright
infringement; and the restructuring of copyright limitations in the
public interest. The open access edition of this book is available
under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open
access was funded by the Applied Research Centre for Intellectual
Assets and the Law in Asia, School of Law, Singapore Management
University.
This book is a reference guide to the major trends in Asian IP law.
The book is a collection of 30 case reports by 26 eminent scholars
and practitioners from Asia, Germany and the US. It covers leading
patent cases from nine major Asian economies. Each case report is
structured in the following way: summary, legal context, facts,
reasoning behind the decision, legal analysis, and commercial or
industrial significance. The purpose of this structure is to give
readers both an overview of the legal context under which the
individual cases were adjudicated and how those cases are to be
deciphered legally and commercially.
The book takes a look at the six most important current topics
arising from copyright law in the information society, and for each
topic provides an in-depth introduction that compares the
approaches taken in Europe and the US. Each topic is introduced by
an expert, and the issues are then analysed in separate country
reports representing nine Asian jurisdictions: China, Taiwan, Hong
Kong, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and the
Philippines. The six topics are: The Expansion of Copyright Law and
its Social Justification: Introduction by Reto Hilty, Max Planck
Institute, Munich Internet Trade, Digital Works and Parallel
Imports: Introduction by Christopher Heath, European Patent Office,
Munich The Collective Exercise of Copyrights: Introduction by Kung
Chung Liu, Academia Sinica, Taiwan The Law on Anti-Circumvention
and Digital Rights Management: Introduction by Andy Sun, National
Chenchi University, Taipei, Taiwan and Zhi Wei, Peking University,
Beijing Copyright Contracts, Public Policy and Antitrust:
Introduction by Estelle Derclaye, Queen Mary University of London
Contributory and Vicarious Liability for Copyright Infringement:
Introduction by Andy Sun, National Chenchi University, Taipei,
Taiwan
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