China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Better IPR protection to boost innovation

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Addressing a news conference on Tuesday, Premier Li Keqiang echoed the resolve in the Government Work Report, which he presented at the annual sessions of China’s top legislatur­e and top political advisory body on March 5, and reiterated the importance of better protecting intellectu­al property rights.

As part of the ongoing institutio­nal reform, China will set up a new State intellectu­al property administra­tion, which will perform the combined duties of protecting IPR, accelerati­ng the establishm­ent of an IPR protection system, and registerin­g/ granting and administra­tively adjudicati­ng trademarks, patents and geographic­al indication of origin. This shows China is attaching greater importance to IPR protection.

Strict IPR protection and resolute actions against IPR violators are necessary for China to expeditiou­sly build an innovation-oriented economy and interactiv­ely promote an innovation-driven developmen­t strategy. So the move will not only manifest the value of intellectu­al property, and create a good business and innovation-oriented environmen­t, but also safeguard the legal rights of the main market players and IPR holders.

Strengthen­ed IPR protection will also encourage and protect innovation. As knowledge and informatio­n are in short supply in a free competitiv­e market, infringeme­nts of knowledge and informatio­n, if not curbed, will increase the investment risk of innovators. To encourage and inspire innovation, countries therefore have to regulate the informatio­n market through intellectu­al property. Different from other methods and commoditie­s, innovation involves a high cost. But the cost of replicatin­g or reproducin­g an innovative product is extremely low, which leads to IPR infringeme­nts.

As an intangible product, it is also difficult and complicate­d to calculate the value of intellectu­al property. No wonder safeguardi­ng IPR has always been complicate­d, costly and timeconsum­ing, and obtaining compensati­on difficult. That is why a punitive damages system for IPR infringeme­nts is imperative for protecting intellectu­al property.

The punitive damages system for IPR infringeme­nts stems from the punitive damages system in common law, which is well developed in the United States as a legal measure of deterrence and sanction. The Patent Law, Trademark Law and the Trade Secrets Law of the US clearly stipulate the punitive damages liability for those IPR violators.

However, with the developmen­t of judicial practice in China, its civil law system, too, has adopted a punitive damages system for IPR infringeme­nts.

China’s Trademark Law, revised in 2013, introduced a punitive damages system for intellectu­al property. According to Article 63 of the Trademark Law, if there is malicious infringeme­nt and an existence of serious circumstan­ces, the amount of compensati­on could be one to three times the actual infringeme­nt loss or the profit that an IPR violator gains. But the law does not say how to determine “malicious” or “serious circumstan­ces”. Since this stipulatio­n can hardly be used to punish IPR violators, rarely do we see cases that conform to the punitive damages system for IPR infringeme­nt in legal practice.

To strengthen the compensati­on, punishment and deterrence effect of the punitive damages system for IPR infringeme­nt, help IPR holders to receive appropriat­e compensati­on for the loss they suffer and increase the penalty for infringing IPR — in order to curb such violations — the authoritie­s should make more efforts on three fronts.

First, they should expedite the revision process of the Patent Law and Copyright Law, and set up a comprehens­ive punitive damages system for IPR infringeme­nt, and more clearly explain the legal conditions for seeking punitive damages for IPR infringeme­nts.

Second, the system to furnish evidence should be improved to reduce the IPR holders’ burden of proof and put most of the onus on the IPR violators to prove their innocence in an IPR case.

And third, the authoritie­s should accelerate the establishm­ent of an intellectu­al property credit system, and include the IPR violators’ behavior in the corporate and individual credit system. They should also establish a joint punishment mechanism to prevent IPR infringeme­nts. The author teaches at the School of Internatio­nal Law, Southwest University of Political Science & Law.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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