Industrial design rights in the European Union are provided at both the Community level by virtue of the Community design and at the national level under indvidual national laws.
Contents |
A design is defined as "the appearance of the whole or a part of a product resulting from the features of, in particular, the lines, contours, colours, shape, texture and/or materials of the product itself and/or its ornamentation".
Designs may be protected if:
Designs are not protected insofar as their appearance is wholly determined by their technical function, or by the need to interconnect with other products to perform a technical function (the "must-fit" exception). However modular systems such as Lego or Mechano may be protected.
Registered and unregistered Community designs are available which provide a unitary right covering the European Community. Protection for a registered Community design is for up to 25 years, subject to the payment of renewal fees every five years. The unregsitered Community design lasts for three years after a design is made available to the public and infringement only occurs if the protected design has been copied.
National systems of registered designs remain in place alongside the system of Community designs: registration in a small number of countries is cheaper than Community registration, and may be more appropriate for smaller manufacturers. National laws are harmonized by the Directive on the legal protection of designs (98/71/EC):[1] the criteria for eligibility and the duration of protection are the same as for registered Community designs. Many Member States also protect unregistered design rights under their national law, but these are not covered by the Directive.
The protection of industrial design rights is required by the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS, Arts. 25 & 26), to which the European Union is a party.[2] The Regulation on Community designs provides for the recognition of the priority date of an application for design right registration in a country which is either a member of the World Trade Organization or a party to the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property.
The European Commission has proposed that the European Union become a party to the Geneva Act of the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Registration of Industrial Designs:[3] as of September 2006, only twelve Member States (plus Iceland and Liechtenstein in the European Economic Area) are parties to the Hague Agreement, and only Hungary, Slovenia and Spain have ratified the Geneva Act.[4]
The protection of "component parts of complex products", in particular spare parts for cars, was left to Member States' discretion in Directive 98/71/EC, given the divergence of practices and opinions. As required by that Directive, the European Commission has conducted research on the question, which found that spare parts such as wings and bumpers were 6.4–10.3% more expensive in countries where these part were protected by industrial design rights compared with countries where no such protection existed:[5] it has proposed that the design right protection on these parts be abolished throughout the European Union.[6]
|
||||||||||||||||
stock | retire | vm
Why are we here?
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
This page is cache of Wikipedia. History