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Glossary Of Intellectual Property Terms
The 1886 multinational treaty on copyright protection
signed at Berne, Switzerland; officially titled The
International Union for the Protection of Literary and
Artistic Works. Prior to the 1996 World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) Conference, the Berne Convention was
revised in 1914, 1928, 1948, 1967, and 1971. The convention
grants the moral rights of attribution and integrity, and
certain exclusive economic rights to a work's translation,
reproduction, performance, and adaptation. The United States
became a signatory to the Berne Convention in 1989.
An exclusive right conferred by a government on the
creator of original literary or artistic works such as books,
articles, drawings, photographs, musical compositions,
recordings, films, and computer programs. International in
scope, copyright grants the creator reproduction, derivation,
distribution, performance, and display rights. The Berne
Convention mandates that the period of copyright protection
cover the life of the author plus 50 years. Current U.S.
copyright law is based on the Copyright Act of 1976 and its
amendments.
The names and words that companies designate for their
registered Internet Web site addresses, such as the
"Forbes" name in the URL http://www.forbes.com.
Trademark disputes arise when more than one company tries to
use the same domain name, or one company appropriates another
company's brand or product name for its URL.
Electronic Copyright Management Systems:
Digital technology that controls access to electronic
information, in order to protect the intellectual property
rights of content owners. A variety of electronic copyright
management systems are being developed, including marking
technologies -- watermarking, fingerprinting, and data hiding
-- that ensure the user's legal authorization, serial copy
management systems embedded in digital recorders that
determine whether a digital audio tape is copyright
protected, and new secure marketing and distribution
strategies.
Codified in the 1976 U.S. Copyright Law and frequently
used by scholars, journalists, and librarians, the fair use
provision permits the limited use of copyrighted scientific
and artistic material to supplement or briefly illustrate
oral or written commentary, literary or artistic criticism,
or teaching materials. In determining that a use is fair,
four factors must be considered: (1) the purpose and
character of the use -- whether it is commercial or
nonprofit; (2) the nature of the copyrighted material; (3)
the amount of the total work used; and (4) the effect of the
use upon the potential market -- whether or not the author is
deprived of sales.
Creative ideas and expressions of the human mind that
possess commercial value and receive the legal protection of
a property right. The major legal mechanisms for protecting
intellectual property rights are copyrights, patents, and
trademarks. Intellectual property rights enable owners to
select who may access and use their property, and to protect
it from unauthorized use.
1996 WIPO Diplomatic Conference:
The December 1996, 18-day World Intellectual Property
Organization summit held in Geneva, whose goal was to revise
the Berne Convention. Conference delegates drafted two
treaties -- the WIPO Copyright Treaty, which covers literary
and artistic works including films and computer software, and
the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, which covers
recorded music. Each treaty, if ratified by the individual
member countries, will grant copyright owners protection for
distributing their work in digital form. The Performances and
Phonograms Treaty is the first global agreement to protect
the rights of recording artists and producers against digital
piracy of their works.
A legal grant issued by a government permitting an
inventor to exclude others from making, using, or selling a
claimed invention during the patent's term. The TRIPS
Agreement mandates that the term for patent applications
filed after June 7, 1995, runs 20 years from the filing date.
To receive patent protection, an invention must display
patentable subject matter (a process, machine, article of
manufacture), originality, novelty, nonobviousness, and
utility. Current U.S. law is based on the 1952 Patent Code.
As a signatory to the 1883 Paris Convention for the
Protection of Industrial Property, the United States belongs
to the premier international patent treaty organization, the
Paris Union.
Patent Cooperation Treaty:
A multilateral treaty among more than 50 nations that is
designed to simplify the process of an applicant's seeking a
patent on the same invention in more than one nation.
Administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization
and effective since 1978, the Patent Cooperation Treaty
enables an inventor to file a single international
application in addition to the main patent application filed
in a treaty-member country.
A name or symbol secured by legal registration that
identifies a manufacturer's or trader's product or service
and distinguishes it from other products and services. Icons,
company names, brand names, and packaging can all have
trademark protection. Trademark owners have the right to
prevent others from using the same, or a confusingly similar
mark, but cannot prevent others from making or selling the
same goods under a nonconfusing mark. Current U.S. law is
based on the Lanham Act of 1946. This act also incorporates
the trademark obligations of the United States under the
Paris Convention.
An international treaty that harmonizes and simplifies the
requirements and procedures for filing, registering, and
renewing trademarks, and gives service marks the same legal
status as trademarks. Adopted at the 1994 World Intellectual
Property Organization Diplomatic Conference in Geneva, the
treaty has entered into force. Currently, the United States
Senate has not yet ratified the Trademark Law Treaty.
International rules governing the Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), formulated at the
December 1993 Uruguay Round of GATT. All GATT
member-countries agreed to rewrite their national laws to
conform to internationally agreed norms for protecting
patents, trademarks, copyrights, industrial designs, and
trade secrets. The TRIPS agreement also extended protection
to such technological areas as pharmaceutical products and
computer software, which were previously unprotected in many
countries. The general timetable for implementing the TRIPS
agreement, which entered into force on July 1, 1995, is one
year for industrialized countries; five years for developing
countries and countries shifting from centrally planned
economies; and 11 years for least-developed countries.
WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization):
A specialized Geneva-based agency of the United Nations,
created in 1967 that promotes international cooperation in
intellectual property protection. WIPO administers various
"Unions," including the Paris Union and the Berne
Union, and other treaty organizations founded on multilateral
treaties. The organization also creates model laws for
adoption by developing nations. More than 160 countries are
WIPO members.
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