Intellectual rights
Intellectual rights
Q) What is intellectual rights? Discuss the need for protecting intellectual rights. How can its misuse affect public interest?
Structure
- Introduction – define IPR and types
- Body – explain the rationale for IPR with examples. Add the other side of the story with misuse of rights
- Conclusion – note on corrective measures like compulsory licensing, TRIPS flexibilities etc
Content
Intellectual property rights (IPR) have been defined as ideas, inventions, and creative expressions based on which there is a public willingness to bestow the status of property.
Intellectual property rights (IPR) refers to the legal rights given to the inventor or creator to protect his invention or creation for a certain period of time. These legal rights confer an exclusive right to the inventor/creator or his assignee to fully utilize his invention/creation for a given period of time. It is very well settled that IP play a vital role in the modern economy.
IPR is prerequisite for better identification, planning, commercialization, rendering, and thereby protection of invention or creativity. Intellectual property (IP) pertains to any original creation of the human intellect such as artistic, literary, technical, or scientific creation.
Types of Intellectual Properties and their Description
IP protection can be sought for a variety of intellectual efforts including
- Patents
- Industrial designs relates to features of any shape, configuration, surface pattern, composition of lines and colors applied to an article whether 2-D, e.g., textile, or 3-D, g., toothbrush
- Trademarks relate to any mark, name, or logo under which trade is conducted for any product or service and by which the manufacturer or the service provider is identified. Trademarks can be bought, sold, and licensed. Trademark has no existence apart from the goodwill of the product or service it symbolizes
- Copyright relates to expression of ideas in material form and includes literary, musical, dramatic, artistic, cinematography work, audio tapes, and computer software
- Geographical indications are indications, which identify as good as originating in the territory of a country or a region or locality in that territory where a given quality, reputation, or other characteristic of the goods is essentially attributable to its geographical origin
Need
- It has also been conclusively established that the intellectual labor associated with the innovation should be given due importance so that public good emanates from it. There has been a quantum jump in research and development (R&D) costs with an associated jump in investments required for putting a new technology in the market place
- The stakes of the developers of technology have become very high, and hence, the need to protect the knowledge from unlawful use has become expedient, at least for a period, that would ensure recovery of the R&D and other associated costs and adequate profits for continuous investments in R&D.
- IPR is a strong tool, to protect investments, time, money, effort invested by the inventor/creator of an IP, since it grants the inventor/creator an exclusive right for a certain period of time for use of his invention/creation. Thus IPR, in this way aids the economic development of a country by promoting healthy competition and encouraging industrial development and economic growth.
IPR enhances technology advancement in the following ways:
- It provides a mechanism of handling infringement, piracy, and unauthorized use
- It provides a pool of information to the general public since all forms of IP are published except in case of trade secrets
Issues
- Many governments have not used the flexibilities available under the TRIPS Agreement for various reasons, such as capacity constraints or political pressure from states and corporations mentioned in the UN Secretary-General’s High Level Panel Report on Access to
- Moreover, even where some developing countries used the flexibilities available to them under the TRIPS Agreement to address public interest objectives through measures which are fully consistent with the TRIPS Agreement, these attempts have been challenged legally as well as Political and economic pressure placed on governments to forgo the use of TRIPS flexibilities violates the integrity and legitimacy of the system of legal duties and rights created by the TRIPS Agreement, as reaffirmed by the Doha Declaration.
- A slew of regional trade agreements containing “TRIPS plus” standards of IP protection and enforcement have the potential to significantly affect the policy space available for effective and full use of the TRIPS flexibilities. Such provisions can delay market entry of generics and increase prices of medicines. Investor-State disputes under regional or bilateral investment protection agreements are also emerging as significant threats to the use of TRIPS flexibilities in the public
- There is a growing concern about an imbalance between intellectual property and the public interest. With regard to health technologies, for example, patents and related monopoly rights in test data, without sufficient use of balancing exceptions and limitations to protect the public interest, permit companies to maintain high prices and exacerbate crises of access around the world, where many patients cannot afford medicines, and force governments with finite health budgets to ration care. Increased copyright protections create similar problems of access to knowledge goods, limiting the ability of many people around the world to access print, audio, or visual works of education or entertainment that we take for granted. These are only a few examples of the problem. There is a need to pursue a development-oriented approach towards formulating IP laws and policies rather than pursue an iconoclastic approach of IP for development.
Ironically, the abovementioned challenges to the use of TRIPS flexibilities to further the public interest objectives underlying IP protection, have been occurring in spite of the emergence of laws and jurisprudence in developed countries that seek to limit the scope of IP protection and enforcement. For example, in the Myriad Genetics (2013) case, the US Supreme Court had ruled unanimously that naturally occurring genes cannot be patented, even if they are isolated. In 2003, the US Federal Trade Commission had proposed tightening the non-obviousness standard, in order to limit the grant of unwarranted patents.
More than 20 years after the adoption of the TRIPS Agreement, there is a need for discussion in the TRIPS Council on the relationship between IP and the public interest and to broaden the understanding of how the IP system can be more responsive to public interest considerations. While this issue is very pertinent for developing countries, it has also been a topic of significant policy debate even in developed countries.
Compulsory Licensing
Compulsory licensing occurs when a government allows someone else to produce the patented product or process without the consent of the patent owner. Article 31 TRIPS lays down a set of conditions for issuing compulsory licenses of patents. The Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health states that, “Each Member has the right to grant compulsory licenses and the freedom to determine the grounds upon which such licenses are granted”. In spite of the clarity of this language, WTO Members around the world seeking to make use of compulsory licences as a tool to increase access to affordable medicines have faced various challenges/barriers.
Some possible grounds for compulsory licensing are suggested in Article 5A of the Paris Convention (e.g. abuse of patent rights, including failure of the patent holder to work the invention) and in Article 31 of the TRIPS Agreement (e.g. national emergency and public non- commercial use). However, this list is not exhaustive. The Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health confirmed what was already implicit in the TRIPS Agreement – that WTO Members have the freedom to determine the grounds upon which compulsory licenses are granted. They are thus not limited to emergencies or other urgent situations, as is sometimes mistakenly believed. A range of grounds have been set out in national laws like (i) non-working or insufficient working, (ii) anti-competitive practices, (iii) public interest, (iv) dependant and blocking patents, (v) Government use.