Intellectual Property

Intellectual property (IP) is a category of property that includes intangible creations of the human intellect. The best-known types are copyrights, patents, trademarks and trade secrets.

 

The main purpose of intellectual property law is to encourage the creation of a wide variety of intellectual goods. To achieve this, the law gives people and businesses property rights to the information and intellectual goods they create, usually for a limited period of time. This gives economic incentive for their creation, because it allows people to benefit from the information and intellectual goods they create, and allows them to protect their ideas and prevent copying. These economic incentives are expected to stimulate innovation and contribute to the technological progress of countries, which depends on the extent of protection granted to innovators.

 

The intangible nature of intellectual property presents difficulties when compared with traditional property like land or goods. Unlike traditional property, intellectual property is "indivisible", since an unlimited number of people can "consume" an intellectual good without its being depleted. Additionally, investments in intellectual goods suffer from problems of appropriation: Landowners can surround their land with a robust fence and hire armed guards to protect it, but producers of information or literature can usually do little to stop their first buyer from replicating it and selling it at a lower price. Balancing rights so that they are strong enough to encourage the creation of intellectual goods but not so strong that they prevent the goods' wide use is the primary focus of modern intellectual property law.


We provide the following legal services

  • Civil litigation and arbitration for IP disputes (patents, trademarks, copyrights including computer software, unfair-competition including trade secrets, antitrust, technological contracts)

  • Pursuing reviews of administrative decisions in relation to patents and trademarks and relevant administrative litigations

  • Patent search and analysis for FTO

  • Well-known trademarks nurturing

  • Trade secret protection measures

  • Pharmaceutical patent linkage system

  • Domain name disputes

  • Anti-piracy

  • Customs protection of intellectual property rights

  • IP due diligence


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