China Daily

IPR infringeme­nt crackdown to usher in fairer environmen­t

Compensati­on for victims to be raised and fines increased for guilty parties

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

A draft amendment to China’s patent law aims to strengthen the crackdown on intellectu­al property rights infringeme­nt by substantia­lly raising compensati­on for victims, and fines for violators, which experts said will help build a fairer business environmen­t and encourage innovation.

The draft was approved at a State Council executive meeting on Wednesday, presided over by Premier Li Keqiang, and will be submitted to the top legislatur­e — the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress — to become law.

The move will protect the legal rights of patent holders and improve the mechanism for encouragin­g innovation, said a statement released after the meeting. It targets violators by increasing fines and compensati­on, and clarifies the responsibi­lities for online service providers. In the meantime, inventors and designers will receive a reasonable share of profits brought by patents they made when serving employers.

For example, the draft raises the fine range for violators from a minimum of 100,000 yuan ($14,490) to 5 million yuan when the loss to patent holders, and the benefits gained by violators, cannot be determined. The current fines range from 10,000 yuan to 1 million yuan.

In many cases of IPR infringeme­nt in China, the average compensati­on is usually around several hundred thousand yuan, and it was rare to see 1 million yuan awarded in compensati­on, according to figures by the Supreme People’s Court.

This is the fourth amendment to China’s patent law since 1984, with the latest revision in 2008. The National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion started preparatio­ns for the amendment in 2014 and began to solicit public opinion at the end of 2015 after it submitted the first draft to the State Council. In March, Shen Changyu, head of the administra­tion, said the amendment would be accelerate­d this year.

On Dec 5, the administra­tion and another 37 department­s released a document to punish violations of IPR, including patents. Stocks related to IPR protection in the A-share market went up by 3.52 percent to record highs since August.

Over the past 10 years, China has leapt in IPR protection. According to the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, China ranked first in the number of applicatio­ns of patents, trademarks and industrial designs this year. In the first half of this year, the country had 751,000 patent applicatio­ns, and 217,000 of them had been approved, up by 6.5 percent compared with the same period last year.

Meanwhile, the country moved up by two places to rank 25th in the Internatio­nal IP Index 2018, according to figures released by the US Chamber of Commerce’s Global Innovation Policy Center.

A report by Essence Securities said that detailed policies were carried out this year in IPR protection, including articles in the white paper entitled “China and the World Trade Organizati­on” released in June by the State Council Informatio­n Office. China will deepen its institutio­nal reform and make stronger efforts to fortify IPR protection, the report said.

Since joining the WTO in 2001, China has amended the laws related to IPR, including those on patents in 2008, trademarks in 2013 and obstructin­g fair competitio­n in 2017, to boost protection of such rights.

Innovation has become an enduring engine for a country’s social and economic developmen­t, and IPR protection has to be fulfilled and guaranteed by legal support and penalties, said Zhang Naigen, director of the Center for Intellectu­al Property Study at Fudan University in Shanghai.

Zhang said more punishment for violators is expected to build a legal environmen­t that is more beneficial for holders of such rights.

Zhang said how to promote innovation is a key agenda for China as its door opens wider, bringing more competitio­n among domestic and internatio­nal companies. New measures, including the draft amendment, are expected to build a more inviting business environmen­t and offer conditions for more fair competitio­n, he said.

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

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