China Daily

Five patent giants meet in Malta to share processes

- By ZHUAN TI zhuanti@chinadaily.com.cn

Heads of the world’s five largest intellectu­al property offices have decided to optimize their work-sharing system, and improve patent quality management and informatio­n services in their future cooperatio­n, as discussed at an annual meeting held earlier this month.

Officials from the State Intellectu­al Property Office of China, the European Patent Office, the Japan Patent Office, the Korean Intellectu­al Property Office and the United States Patent and Trademark Office — commonly referred to as the IP5 — held the meeting in Valletta, Malta, to celebrate a decade of cooperatio­n, take stock of their achievemen­ts to date and decide the future direction of their initiative­s.

According to the IP5 Joint Statement, released on June 1, the five offices have envisioned patent harmonizat­ion through practices and procedures, enhanced worksharin­g, high-quality and timely research and examinatio­n results and seamless access to patent informatio­n to promote an efficient, costeffect­ive and user-friendly internatio­nal patent landscape.

Based on the 2015 and 2016 joint statements, the IP5 heads restated the vital importance of industrial involvemen­t in the organizati­ons’ cooperatio­n and renewed their commitment to strengthen­ing dialogue with industry stakeholde­rs from the involved regions, thus ensuring that their efforts effectivel­y support the needs of users.

The offices will “endeavor to strengthen their efforts to explore the potential for harmonizin­g aspects of their patent practices and procedures to reduce the workload and costs for applicants filing their applicatio­ns in multiple jurisdicti­ons in parallel” against the backdrop of growing numbers of crossfilin­gs, the joint statement said.

They will work toward the continuous improvemen­t of patent quality and the delivery of high-quality products and services.

Recognizin­g the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty as one of the most successful internatio­nal frameworks for work-sharing, the offices will continue to work with the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on to optimize the functions of the PCT system. The group will establish a collaborat­ive concept for internatio­nal searches under the PCT and explore other worksharin­g options tailored to the changing examinatio­n environmen­t.

They will also intensify work on the Global Dossier, taking into account users’ needs and promoting easy access to and in-depth utilizatio­n of patent informatio­n.

The Global Dossier is a public service that enables users to monitor how a family of patent applicatio­ns is progressin­g at the IP5 offices via a single online source. It is one of the many products developed by the IP5 to allow the offices to share work and speed up patent processing.

Cooperatio­n among the five offices started in 2007 in response to the increasing globalizat­ion of the patent process, marked by growing numbers of patent applicatio­ns and companies increasing­ly filing their patents with multiple offices.

Accounting for more than 80 percent of patent applicatio­ns worldwide and about 95 percent of all PCT work done, the IP5 mechanism focuses on the eliminatio­n of unnecessar­y work through improved efficiency, alignment of procedures and the developmen­t of shared tools to increase the quality of the patent system while reducing costs for users.

 ?? LLUIS GENE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? ZTE Corp’s booth at the 2017 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. The company filed 4,123 internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns via the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty in 2016, ranking No 1 worldwide.
LLUIS GENE / FOR CHINA DAILY ZTE Corp’s booth at the 2017 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. The company filed 4,123 internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns via the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty in 2016, ranking No 1 worldwide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong