Industrial property right is one of the subjects of intellectual property rights and is governed by the Law on Intellectual Property of Vietnam. So how to understand this kind of right?
The term "Industrial Property" is used to refer to the types of property rights to the results of human intellectual creative labor in the fields of industry, business and commerce.
According to the provisions of Clause 4, Article 4 of the Law on Intellectual Property, Industrial property rights means rights of an organization or individual to inventions, industrial designs, designs of semi-conducting closed circuits, trade secrets, trademarks, trade names and geographical indications which such organization or individual created or owns, and the right to prevent unfair competition.
In essence, industrial property rights, like other intellectual property rights, are rights to industrial property subject matters, not rights to products/carriers.
Industrial property information means information already published in documents of patents, utility solutions, designs of semi-conducting closed circuits, industrial designs, trademarks, and geographical indications. It is information related to the technical and legal status of industrial property rights’s subject matters.
Regarding technical status, for inventions, information about solutions contained in descriptions and illustrations; for an industrial design is information contained in the description and photograph or drawing of that design; for a trademark, it is information contained in the trademark template and the list of products and services bearing the mark.
Regarding the legal status of the protection title, information indicating whether the subject matters of the industrial property right has been granted a protection title, is still valid or has expired, or has been invalidated.
4.1. The similarity between industrial property rights and copyrights
Industrial property rights and copyright are both intellectual property rights protected by law in accordance with the Law on Intellectual Property.
4.2. The difference between industrial property rights and copyrights
Comparison criteria |
Copyrights |
Industrial property rights |
Subject matters |
The subject matters of copyright includes comprise literary, artistic and scientific works and derivative works from these works. |
The subject matters of industrial property rights include inventions, industrial designs, designs of semi-conducting closed circuits, trade secrets, trademarks, trade names, geographical indications and the right to prevent unfair competition. |
Grounds for the generation of rights |
Copyright shall arise at the moment a work is created and fixed in a certain material form, irrespective of its content, quality, form, mode and language and irrespective of whether or not such work has been published or registered. |
Industrial property rights arise at different times depending on the subject matters to be protected, of which the majority of industrial property rights arise on the basis of being granted a protection title (invention, industrial design, designs of semi-conducting closed circuits, trademark, geographical indication). |
Term of protection |
Long term of protection: Property rights to cinematographic, photographic, applied art and anonymous works are protected for 75 years from the time the work is first published. Property rights to other works are protected for the life of the author and for 50 years following the year of the author's death. Some moral rights are protected indefinitely. |
Most objects of industrial property rights have a shorter term of protection than that of a copyright (20 years for inventions, 10 years for utility solutions, up to 15 years for industrial designs, …) |
Industrial property representatives shall comprise organizations providing industrial property representation services and individuals practicing industrial property representation within such organizations.
Industrial property representation services shall comprise:
Vietnamese law on industrial property:
According to the provisions of the Intellectual Property Law, industrial property rights may be restricted by the following factors:
Where a person has, before the publication date of an application for registration of an invention or industrial design, used or prepared necessary conditions for use of an invention or industrial design identical with the protected invention or industrial design stated in such application for registration, but created independently (hereinafter referred to as the prior use right holder), then after a protection title is granted, such person shall be entitled to continue using such invention or industrial design within the scope and volume of use or use preparations without having to obtain permission or paying compensation to the owner of the protected invention or industrial design. The exercise of the right of prior users of inventions or industrial designs shall not be deemed an infringement of the right of the owner of the invention or industrial design.
Prior use right holders to inventions or industrial designs must not assign such right to others, except where such right is assigned together with the transfer of a business or production establishment which has used or has prepared to use the invention or industrial design. Prior use right holders must not expand the use scope and volume unless it is so permitted by the owner of the invention or industrial design.
Owners of inventions, industrial designs and layout designs shall be obliged to pay remuneration to the authors of such inventions, industrial designs and layout designs, unless otherwise agreed upon by the parties.
The minimum level of remuneration payable by an owner to an author shall be regulated as follows:
The obligation to pay remuneration to authors of inventions, industrial designs and layout designs shall exist throughout the term of protection of such invention, industrial design or layout design.
Owners of inventions shall be obliged to manufacture protected products or apply protected processes to satisfy the requirements of national defence and security, disease prevention, and treatment and nutrition of the people or to meet other social urgent needs. When the needs stipulated in this clause arise but an invention owner fails to perform such obligation, the competent State body may license such invention to others without permission from the invention owner.
Owners of trademarks shall be obliged to use such marks continuously. Where a trademark has not been used for five consecutive years or more, the ownership right to such mark shall be invalidated.
A dependent invention means an invention created based on another invention (hereinafter referred to as the principal invention) and may only be used on condition that the principal invention is also used.
Where the owner of a dependent invention can prove that his or her invention makes an important technical advance as compared with the principal invention and has great economic significance, he or she may request the owner of the principal invention to license such principal invention at a reasonably commercial price and conditions.
Where the owner of a principal invention fails to satisfy the request of the owner of a dependent invention without justifiable reason, the State body concerned may license such invention to the owner of the dependent invention without permission from the owner of the principal invention.
In the following cases, the right to use an invention may be licensed to another organization or individual pursuant to a decision of the competent State body without permission from the holder of the exclusive right to use such invention:
The holder of the exclusive right to use an invention may request termination of the use right when the grounds for licensing no longer exist and are unlikely to recur, provided that such termination shall not be prejudicial to the licensee of the invention.
When shall the industrial property rights be established?
Industrial property rights shall be established as follows:
(a) Industrial property rights to an invention, industrial design, layout design, trademark shall be established on the basis of a decision of the competent State body to grant a protection title in accordance with the registration procedures stipulated in this Law or the recognition of international registration pursuant to an international treaty of which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a member.
In the case of a well known trademark, industrial property rights shall be established on the basis of use and shall not be dependent on registration procedures;
In the case of a geographical indication, industrial property rights shall be established on the basis of a decision of the competent State body to grant a protection title in accordance with the registration procedures stipulated in this Law or an international treaty of which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a member.
(b) Industrial property rights to a trade name shall be established on the basis of lawful use thereof;
(c) Industrial property rights to a trade secret shall be established on the basis of lawful acquirement of the trade secret and maintaining confidentiality thereof;
(d) The right to prevent unfair competition shall be established on the basis of competitive activities in business.
According to the provisions of Clause 2, Article 11 of the Intellectual Property Law, the Government shall perform the unified state management of intellectual property, in which the Ministry of Science and Technology is responsible to the Government for performing the state management of intellectual property rights.
An industrial property registration application includes the following documents:
The current collection, collection, payment, management and use of industrial property fees and charges comply with Circular No. 263/2016/TT-BTC dated 14/11/2016 of the Ministry of Finance and Information and Circular No. 31/2020/TT-BTC dated 04/05/2020 of the Ministry of Finance amending and supplementing a number of articles of Circular No. 263/2016/TT-BTC.
The term of protection of industrial property rights is specified in Article 93 of the Intellectual Property Law, specifically as follows:
1. Invention Patent is valid from the date of grant and lasts until the end of 20 years from the date of filing.
2. The utility solution patent is valid from the date of grant and lasts until the end of 10 years from the filing date.
3. An industrial design patent is valid from the date of grant and lasts until the end of 5 years from the date of filing the application, renewable for 2 consecutive times, each time for 5 years.
4. A certificate of registered design of semi-conducting closed circuits shall be valid from the grant date until the earliest date among the following:
5. A certificate of registered mark shall be valid from the grant date until the end of 10 years after the filing date and may be renewed for many consecutive terms, each of 10 years.
6. A certificate of registered geographical indication shall have indefinite validity starting from the grant date.
Acts of infringing upon industrial property rights are acts specified in Articles 126, Article 127, Article 129 and Article 130 of the Intellectual Property Law. These acts are considered acts of infringement of industrial property rights when the following grounds are fully satisfied:
According to the provisions of Article 200 of the Intellectual Property Law, Competent State body handling industrial property rights infringement include:
There are 4 measures to handle the infringement of industrial property rights in Vietnam, including:
CÔNG TY LUẬT TNHH NGỌC PHÚ
Customer service: 19009343
Hotline: 0913 41 99 96
Email: legal@nplaw.vn