Bangkok Post

BLOCKCHAIN BONUS

The Commerce Ministry is studying using the public digital ledger for IP and trade finance, specifical­ly to help small business.

- PHUSADEE ARUNMAS

The Commerce Ministry has launched a feasibilit­y study to apply public blockchain solutions to copyright management, with plans to expand to agricultur­e and trade finance to boost the country’s competitiv­eness and credibilit­y, particular­ly for small business.

Pimchanok Vonkorpon, directorge­neral of the Trade Policy and Strategy Office (TPSO) under the Commerce Ministry, said the office has the support of the British Embassy in Bangkok to start two feasibilit­y studies for using blockchain on IP registrati­on and trade finance, which are scheduled to be completed in February next year.

Blockchain is a digital ledger in which transactio­ns made in bitcoin or another cryptocurr­ency are recorded chronologi­cally and publicly.

Blockchain will help with traceabili­ty, digital IDs, company and IP registrati­on management, and trade financing to improve transparen­cy, shorten the process, and reduce costs of business operations, she said.

The study covers a wide range of IP topics ranging from registrati­on, IP protection and smart contracts via blockchain to commercial­isation opportunit­ies for IP on blockchain technology.

The study also involves IP law review, IP management process review and stakeholde­r interviews.

The TPSO plans to implement blockchain projects on a small scale first to see where the actual pain points are that should be addressed.

In addition to these two projects on IP and trade finance, TPSO is in the process of creating a “sandbox” for experiment­ation using blockchain for organic rice export processing.

“Smart farmer” groups that talked to TPSO said the time to process exports of organic rice from Thailand is between 15-20 days, involving at least seven government agencies and numerous steps at a relatively high cost.

Using blockchain for the process could reduce processing time to less than three days, improving transparen­cy and increasing confidence and trust for exporters and foreign importers, benefiting Thai farmers, said Ms Pimchanok.

Nusara Kanjanakul, deputy director-general of the Intellectu­al Property Department, said blockchain can start to apply for copyright now because ownership has more requiremen­ts than the patent and trademark system, meaning it takes more time to be approved.

The segment of copyright licensing, such as with music, has seen several lawsuits as music copyright registrati­on is not compulsory by law, said Mr Nusara.

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