Now also available as
eBook
Obstructions to patent enforcement exist all over the world. Increasingly,
unauthorized players use protected inventions to conduct their own commercial
businesses. The question must be asked whether available law provides for
sufficient disincentives against the infringement of granted rights. If a
patent right cannot be properly enforced, it is of little value to its owner;
moreover, under-enforcement ultimately leads to tension within the entire
system of protection, generating harmful repercussions and sooner or later
producing dysfunctional effects. Yet protection that is too wide risks
hindering further innovation. Carefully balancing the scope of legal
protection with the impact of enforcement measures is essential. The more the
legal focus has moved to questions of enforcement, the more the imbalance
within the system of legal protection has been revealed. In 2010 an
international conference was organized around these issues in Taipei by the
Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property and Competition Law and the
Academia Sinica, Taipei, with the support of the IP Academy Singapore, the
Institute of Law for Science and Technology of National Tsing Hua University,
and the Graduate Institute of Intellectual Property, National Chengchi
University. The aims were to provide doctrinal clarification of some common
misconceptions and myths surrounding patent enforcement, and to discuss the
“more economic approach,” which is gaining growing acceptance across many
countries.
This publication, derived from that conference, carries through those
objectives, and also serves as a handbook for patent enforcement in major
Asian jurisdictions, where there is huge potential for economic growth and
patent cooperation. In addition it looks into the experiences of the
centralized system of patent enforcement in the United States, and into the
European Union’s efforts to establish a truly international patent right
governed by a unitary European patent court. Scholars, judges and
practitioners were also invited to comment on the conference reports, greatly
enriching the book. Among the many matters treated in depth are the following:
dysfunctional use of the patent system, such as misappropriation prior to
grant, abuse of granted right; the interaction between patent enforcement and
competition law; safeguarding the investor’s possibilities to obtain a return
on his investments during a limited period of time; the need to challenge the
industries’ contentions and the assertions of lobbying groups; widespread
uncertainty about the impact of patent infringements; and absence of
recognized standards on how to measure the losses of the industries concerned.
The authors emphasize that issues of enforcement cannot be addressed in an
isolated manner. The patent system, they show, can be improved by first
understanding the unique features of certain jurisdictions that can spur
reflections and mutual learning. Patent lawyers, regulators, and policymakers
everywhere stand to benefit immeasurably from this richly significant book.
Introduction
Reto M. Hilty & Kung-Chung Liu
Part I Doctrinal Clarification
Chapter 1 Keynote
Reto M. Hilty
Chapter 2 More Economic Approach to IPR and Competition Law: A
Cross-Jurisdiction Study on Patent Pools
Kung-Chung Liu
Comment: Reflections on a Second Thought
Richard Li-Dar Wang
Chapter 3 The Economics of Patent Enforcement and Its Reception in Asia
Andrea Wechsler
Comment
Steven S. Kan
Part II Patent Enforcement in East Asian Jurisdictions with Civil Law
Background
Chapter 4 Mainland China
Xiang Yu & Di Lu
Comment
Heinz Goddar
Chapter 5 Japan
Masabumi Suzuki & Yoshiyuki Tamura
Comment
Klaus Hinkelmann
Chapter 6 Korea
Byungil Kim
Comment: When Public Law Comes Across Private Law
Sung-Mei Hsiung
Chapter 7 Taiwan
Ming-Yan Shieh & Su-Hua Lee
Comment
Rupprecht Podszun
Chapter 8 Patent Enforcement in Indonesia
Christoph Antons
Comment
Min-Chiuan Wang
Chapter 9 Philippines
Alex Ferdinand S. Fider
Comment
Chung-Lun Shen
Chapter 10 Thailand
Nandana Indananda
Comment: A Closer Look at the TRIPS Compatibility Issue of Patent
Enforcement in Thailand
Tsu-Sung Hsieh
Part III Patent Enforcement in East Asian Jurisdictions with Common Law
Background
Chapter 11 Hong Kong
Alice Lee
Annex
Comment: Towards More Cost-Effective and Efficient Patent Enforcement in
Hong Kong
Kuo-Lien Hsieh
Chapter 12 Malaysia
Kherk Ying Chew
Comment
Chung-Hsin Hsu
Chapter 13 Singapore
Ng-Loy Wee Loon
Comment
Chung-Hsin Hsu
Chapter 14 India
Mrinalini Kochupillai
Comment
Chung-Lun Shen
Part IV American and European Issues
Chapter 15 Centralized Patent Enforcement: Experiences and Problems with
the U.S. System
Matthias Leistner & Manuel Kleinemenke
Comment
Ming-Jye Huang
Chapter 16 The Present and Future of European Patent Jurisdiction
Thomas Jaeger
Comment
Wei-Lin Wang
Index