Archive for the Australian IP Case Law Category

Emerging to fly

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on November 6, 2011 by 1place

Art takes many forms … and often provides a point of reflection:
The above was sent to me with a copy of the artist’s profile in this month’s “Craft Arts International” by Gordon Foulds who writes “… her portrait of well known local surfer Mark Occhilupo … delighted everyone who saw it”. She was also finalist in this year’s Portia Geach Memorial Award 2011 – Australia’s prestigious portrait exhibition for female artists – for a portrait of Ilia Saiki Chidzey titled a Designer in Contemplation.  The artist is Melissa Bates.

Where do lawyers come from – a narrative fallacy

Posted in Australian IP Case Law with tags , , , , , on October 15, 2011 by 1place

The perception of the lawyer is stated in today’s SMH as:

Many males went to all-boys private schools and males brief their mates …[1], so the story goes…

Has anyone ever looked at who practices law from a qualitative perspective – particularly looking at the range of practitioner’s backgrounds?  The newspaper story above would have us believe that the CV of most lawyers reflects a narrative that may not be true.

Take my private school life – it did not exist – actually, there were many periods in my primary school life where my schooling did not exist: I had long periods of absence either because of travelling or being too ill due to being bought up in a less conventional lifestyle – however, I still managed to attend over 10 schools (none private and including three universities).

This morning’s Guardian states “prospective lawyers must…do a law degree at 18 – which internationally is seen as an oddly young age to embark on a professional vocation“.[2]  The same applies for many Australian hopefuls wanting to enter the legal profession. Read more »

Intangible assets – the new economic indicator

Posted in Australian IP Case Law, IP Protection, Patent, Design, 1P, Future with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 25, 2011 by 1place

Intellectual property has evolved from a collection of legal rights to now being a major asset that performs independently, when compared to other assets.  Has this evolution changed the way in which IP performs relative to economic change?

Last week the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) released statistics for each country’s registered IP trends against GDP and other indicators.  Registered IP includes patent, trade mark and design registrations.

These statistics show that the rate of growth of registered IP in the major economies have had a marked decrease: that is, the growth in the number of patents, trade marks and design rights filed has fallen from 2008 onwards.  WIPO’s mapping of registered IP filings against GDP, shows registered IP filings to be much more volatile and extreme when compared to change in GDP. Read more »

The shape of things to come

Posted in 1P, Article, Australian IP Case Law, Design, IP Protection, Out of your mind with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on August 31, 2011 by 1place

Most of us are now familiar with the idea that a shape can gain protection as a registered trade mark. The Coca-Cola bottle is a famous example.

An Australian Federal Court decision this month (Bodum v DKSH Australia [2011] FCAFC 98) held that unregistered rights in features of a product’s shape can also be protected, if the shape itself has acquired a sufficient reputation.  FULL POST

David vs Goliath #1: Microsoft loses i4i Patent Case

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on June 12, 2011 by 1place

MICROSOFT CORP. v. i4i LIMITED PARTNERSHIP et al. Case No. 10-290. Decided June 9, 2011

We all love a David vs Goliath story, particularly when it acts as a parable to explain the laws, values and/or morals of society.  This David vs Goliath story seems to show how Patent law is clear and Goliaths such as Microsoft cannot assert patent invalidity without providing compelling evidence.  FULL POST

Paperless: by choice or force?

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on February 5, 2011 by 1place


Australia has had a tough Christmas with flooding in several states.  What can we learn from such natural disasters?  What can we do differently as a firm in light of these climatic events?

Time to change our law firm practices – the paperless revolution – the must do! -FULL POST>

On The Street: Graffiti series. #4

Posted in Australian IP Case Law, Photo on December 1, 2010 by 1place

Marrickville, Sydney NSW Australia

New York I love you – harmony in green

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on November 20, 2010 by 1place

Trade marks were surreal in 1977

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on October 7, 2010 by 1place

 

Patent + trade mark filings fall in the big economies due to GFC but Australia not impacted

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on September 26, 2010 by 1place
The GFC”s impact on  patent and trade mark filings is revealed in WIPO’s World Intellectual Property Indicators 2010 (http://bit.ly/8Z94r5).
R&D expenditures decreased with the fall in the GDPs of France, Germany, United Kingdom and the US.  These falls are correlated with a marked decrease in patent and trade mark filings in these high income economies.
Source: WIPO, World Intellectual Property Indicators 2010 Figure 3 (http://bit.ly/8Z94r5).
This fall does not appear to be reflected in the Australian National Phase entries or International Search Requests for PCT as shown in IP Australia’s statistics to August 2010. (http://www.ipaustralia.gov.au/pdfs/statistics/Patent%20Demand%20Statistics.pdf)

Polling Place

Posted in Australian IP Case Law on August 21, 2010 by 1place

Big day in Australia – Thankfully subliminal advertising was used for 1 Place Patent Attorneys + Solicitors at each polling location:

Designership and the death of the author

Posted in 1P, Article, Australian IP Case Law, Copyright, Design, IP Protection on July 29, 2010 by 1place

PDF version

Authorship as identity

We all understand what it is to be an author. We identify series of books through characters. Think: Harry Potter. The author’s individual style also identifies the author as the common source of texts. Think: Dr Seuss.

In primary school we create our own stories and other works, and so engage the world as an author from a young age.

In his 1967 essay The death of the author, French literary theorist and philosopher Roland Barthes challenges the idea that a text can be attributed to a single author. Barthes argues that a text is never original because it is a reflection of references from a multitude of traditions and quotations from innumerable cultural centres.  Thus every piece of writing reflects a fabric of inputs rather than a single voice.

Authorship as currency

In 1985 the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors sought to establish uniform standards for what contributions merit authorship in biomedical journals. This proposal was an attempt to stamp out the practice of “gifting” authorship in exchange for materials, research subjects, career advancement and so on.

Legal significance

The use of authorship as a bartering tool reflects its inherent value. Authorship is valuable because the right to own IP devolves from authorship.

Copyright

For copyright purposes, the author is the person who expresses an idea in tangible form (e.g. writing, a drawing). This is even if the idea was supplied by another person. Consider the following examples (based on legal cases):

  1. a ghost writer who writes the life of a person who supplies the facts is the author;
  2. an artist who executes a drawing based on instructions of another person as to the subject and treatment is the author;
  3. a subeditor of a newspaper who substantially re-writes a news story submitted by a journalist is the author.

The author is the person who produces an “original” work through the exercise of labour, skill and judgement. Merely transcribing material supplied by another person does not constitute authorship.

The default position for copyright is that the author is the owner. This is subject to:

  1. an employment relationship – employers own IP created by employees in the course of employment; and
  2. a contractual arrangement – the author of a work owns the copyright unless agreed otherwise and assigned in writing.

Registered designs

Authorship of a registered design is attributable to the person who conceives the design (the relevant shape, configuration, pattern or ornamentation) and reduces it to visible form (e.g. by drawing it up or making a model).

Disputes may arise where one person conceives a concept for a design, puts it into a rough material form then contracts a second person to draw up the final design, If the first person leaves only minor details to the choice of the second person then the first person is the author. Conversely, if the instructions of the first person leave practically all to the second person,  the author is the second person.  Ownership of a registered design devolves from designership of the design.

The default position for registered designs is that the actual designer is the author and owner of the design and is entitled to apply for registration as the owner of the registered design. This is subject to:

  • an employment relationship – where the designer makes a design in the course of employment, the employer owns the design; and
  • a contractual arrangement – where a designer creates a design under a contract with another person, that other person is the owner of the design (unless agreed otherwise).

What if a final design comes about through functional or practical production considerations rather than aesthetic considerations? Is a person who contributes technical expertise an author?

In the design of a security glass brick designed to be used in situations where greater structural strength is required (e.g. jails), a manufacturer of glass bricks relied heavily on technical expertise of a manufacturer of strengthened glass to arrive at the final design. The Australian Designs Office  found that the contribution of the toughened glass manufacturer was sufficient to establish joint authorship in the final design – the result being that it was entitled to be recorded as a joint owner of the application to register the design: Glass Block Constructions (Aus) Pty ltd v Armourglass Australia Pty Ltd [2005] ADO 1. The relative contributions of two parties engaged in developing a product for manufacture were sufficient to establish designership rights for both parties.

Another common situation is when one party develops IP rights incidental to development of a product owned by another party. In Dennis Gravolin and Trailer Vision Pty ltd v Lomac Holdings Pty Ltd as trustee for Lomac Trust [2007] ADO 7, the owner of a patent for a trailer plug obtained assistance from a manufacturer to manufacture a trailer plug product. The manufacturer filed applications to register designs for a number of trailer plugs. None of the design applications related to the actual product that was the subject of the arrangement between the parties or a confidentiality agreement signed by the manufacturer – there were clear differences in the shape and configuration of the housing of the patented plug and that of the relevant design applications.  The dealings between the parties were silent on IP created by the manufacturer incidental to the arrangement with the patent owner. Therefore, the manufacturer was free to develop incidental IP rights with no obligation to disclose them to the patent owner. There was no evidence to establish any right to authorship (through contributions to the development of the designs) by the patent owner.

This decision illustrates that the owner of certain IP rights (e.g. the patent owner) does not necessarily own all rights incidental to arrangements with other parties relating to their IP. The manufacturer’s design rights were created independently from the patent owner’s rights and, absent any circumstances to establish the contrary, the manufacturer owns them.

Patents

When is a person who contributes to an invention entitled to claim inventorship? When one person has a general idea of what is required but does not necessarily know how to put those ideas into effect and a second person does, then both are the inventors: Row Weeder v Nielsen (1997) 39 IPR 400. The question might be whether the invention would have occurred without the second person’s involvement: Costa v GR & IE Daking (1994) 29 IPR 241. The contribution of the second person needs to have a material effect on the final concept of the invention: Row Weeder.  There is no joint inventorship with a person who bases the claim on knowledge derived from the true inventor: Stack.

Practical significance

The unifying element for joint authorship, designership and inventorship is the involvement of  multiple people in an activity of original creativity. Title devolves from the creator of the work to the person obtaining the legal monopoly right.

For designers (other than employees), the default position for:

  • copyright is that the designer is the owner of those contributions;
  • registered design rights is that the party contracting the designer to create the design is the owner of those contributions; and
  • patent rights is that the designer is the owner of those contributions.

This assumes the designer is making a sufficient, original contribution to establish authorship, designership or inventorship. As the default position for ownership can be altered by agreement, designers need to be able to identify when steps are required to secure ownership or when you are the owner. Agreements about IP ownership must be written. By understanding your rights, you may have leverage to insist on ownership or be adequately compensated in dealings with clients.

This post originally appeared as an article in Issue 32, July 2010, of the industrial design magazine Curve

Stop, Kookaburra! Leave some for me

Posted in 1P, Australian IP Case Law, Photo on February 8, 2010 by 1place

Laugh, Kookaburra! Laugh

Posted in Australian IP Case Law, Copyright on February 8, 2010 by 1place

“Oh how life can be” is the final lyric of “Kookaburra sits in the old gum tree” for which it seems fitting that a song published in a Girl Guides’ magazine is causing problems for “Men at Work”.

“Spicks And Specks” – a public broadcasting rock comedy show – alerts a potential breach of copyright for which the owners were not aware of.

Sweet irony that the Girl Guides rise above Men at Work in the battle of the sexes.

Men at Work: “Can’t you hear, can’t you hear the thunder? You better run, you better take cover”

only to be replaced by:

“Laugh, Kookaburra! Laugh, Kookaburra! Gay your life must be”

Mind the gap: copyright and product designs

Posted in 1P, Australian IP Case Law, Copyright, Design with tags , , , on November 8, 2009 by 1place

PDF version

“[We] resembled each other like two drops of water, but we had different reflections”.
Salvador Dali, The Secret Life of Salvador Dali

Artistic copyright and registered design rights can each provide protection for a product design but, taking a leaf from Salvador Dali, they provide different reflections. One can long survive the other, or be extinguished by it. The art is in finding the gaps and exploiting them as best you can.

This post addresses the overlap (and gaps) between what is known as “artistic copyright” and design protection in Australia. We present a series of theoretical scenarios involving some of Dali’s designs to illustrate the boundaries of copyright protection for product design.

We continue the Dali theme, because Dali’s work typifies that of many designers in the sense that it spans a broad range of industrial or commercial spheres (see the box). We have taken great artistic licence in relation to actual events (we made them up), timing (now) and location (Australia).

Scenario 1: copycat design when there is no design registration
Dali creates a new design for a sofa in 2007: the Mae West Lips Sofa. He has created some design drawings and a handmade wood and satin prototype but not applied to register the design.

He displays the prototype sofa at a design fair later that year and receives interest from manufacturers. As a result, the sofa is made by Vogue Manufacturer (Vogue), a high end manufacturer with a strong reputation in design, under licence from Dali. The Mae West Lips Sofa is a runaway success, with the first run of 50 sofas sold out at the product launch in 2008.
Rogue Manufacturing (Rogue) is always scouting for new designs with consumer appeal. It buys one of the Mae West Sofas, and makes drawings and measurements from it in order to copy it and make its own line of lip-shaped sofas to sell to the public.

Dali comes across Rogue’s sofas. He has no design registration for his sofa design. Can he stop Rogue on the basis of copyright infringement?

Turning first to Dali’s design drawings, they fall into the category of works known as “artistic works” under the Copyright Act 1968 (s10). Therefore, assuming they are “original” and created by Dali, he will have copyright protection in his design drawings as “artistic works”.

Dali may have created more than one design drawing – perhaps different perspectives and several detail drawings. Each of those drawings is potentially a separate and independent copyright work (to the extent that each is original and not a direct copy of an earlier version). In assessing whether copyright has been infringed, a critical first step is to consider – what are the copyright works and which of those works has been infringed?

What about the handmade sofa prototype? It is an original artistic work in its own right and therefore has copyright protection independent of Dali’s drawings. Therefore, Rogue’s actions may have infringed copyright in one or more drawings as well as the sofa prototype.

Thus a single product design can encompass a body of copyright works, each separately protected by copyright (and indeed potentially other intellectual property (IP) rights). The copyright works recognised in law do not necessarily correspond precisely to the “thing” protected (here, a sofa). Conversely, the physical product or object (sofa) protected is often an aggregation of copyright works, each capable of being independently and separately infringed. It is important to recognise the range of possible copyright works in a single product.

Returning to Rogue’s activities, the drawings and sofas it makes are 2D and 3D reproductions, respectively, of Dali’s design drawings (or at least one of his drawings, but for convenience they will be referred to as drawings). Under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) (s21), a 3D artistic work is reproduced if a version of the work is produced in 2D form, and vice versa. However, are Rogue’s 2D and 3D reproductions infringing?

The Copyright Act provides a defence to infringement to reproduce an artistic work by embodying that work in a product if a “corresponding design” of the artistic work has already been industrially applied by or with the licence of the copyright owner (section 77).

In other words, if a corresponding design (namely, Vogue’s sofas) of Dali’s artistic works is applied to an article (50 copies made and sold) then Rogue may have a defence that effectively excludes Dali’s copyright protection in his artistic works. However, all may not be lost because the defence under s 77 does not apply if the artistic work is a “work of artistic craftsmanship”.

Is Dali’s sofa prototype a “work of artistic craftsmanship”? Quite likely, since it possesses aesthetic qualities and, in making his sofa prototype, Dali had significant freedom of design choice relatively unconstrained by the function or utility of the article: see Burge v Swarbrick [2007] HCA 17; (2007) 234 ALR 204. Assuming that Dali’s sofa prototype is a work of artistic craftsmanship, then copyright protection is not excluded even after industrial application of the work. Therefore, production and sales of the sofas by Vogue does not preclude copyright protection in Dali’s sofa prototype.

Conclusion: Rogue’s drawings and sofas infringe copyright in Dali’s sofa prototype.

In relation to Dali’s design drawings, they are not works of artistic craftsmanship and therefore copyright protection in the drawings was extinguished by industrial application of the design drawings to sofas made and sold by Vogue.

Conclusion: Rogue’s drawings and sofas do not infringe copyright in Dali’s design drawings. However, as Rogue’s conduct infringes Dali’s copyright in the prototype, Dali can prevent Rogue from continuing to make and sell the sofas.

Scenario 2: copycat design when there is a design registration
What if Dali had successfully registered the design in relation to articles of furniture?

Dali would have to rely on the design registration to stop Rogue from making and selling copycat sofas. All artistic works (whether a work of artistic craftsmanship or other form of artistic work) lose copyright protection upon design registration of a corresponding design. Therefore, Dali would lose copyright protection in both the drawings and the prototype.

In Australia, design protection is limited to 10 years. As a result, Dali would have no recourse under copyright or design laws to stop Rogue from making and selling copycat sofas after his design registration has expired.

Conversely, if Dali had not registered the design, he would retain copyright in the sofa prototype for life plus 70 years. The risk, however, is that if a court held that the sofa prototype is not a work of artistic craftsmanship, Dali would be left without either copyright or design protection from the day Vogue first offered its sofas for sale.

Scenario 3: the copy is not identical
Let’s assume that Rogue does not make drawings of the sofa but instead makes a mould from the sofa and has it manufactured as a plastic injected bench seat. Can Rogue be stopped from selling the injection moulded version of the design?

Under copyright law
Under copyright law, an artistic work can be infringed by reproduction of the work or a substantial part of the work. The term “substantial” refers to quality rather than quantity. Whether a part is “substantial” depends on whether it is an essential part of the work – a vital or material part, even if only minor in quantity.

The injection moulded product would infringe a substantial part of Dali’s artistic work, assuming that the overall appearance of Dali’s work, including in shape and dimensions, is reproduced. As copyright protection in the drawings has been lost (as described in scenario 1), in order to establish infringement Dali’s sofa prototype would need to be a work of artistic craftsmanship.

A key aspect of copyright protection is that there must be a causal connection between the thing copied and the copy. In other words, if Rogue had independently come up with the injection moulded design of a bench seat shaped in the form of lips (and can prove this) then Dali has no claim to copyright infringement. Copyright does not prevent independent creation of the same expression of an idea. In contrast, independent creation is not a defence to infringement of a design registration.

Under design law
Assuming Dali has a design registration for his design in relation to articles of furniture, would the registration be infringed?
Rogue’s injection moulded bench seat is not identical to Dali’s design. The test then becomes whether Rogue’s sofa is “substantially similar in overall impression” to Dali’s design. “Design” is defined in the Designs Act (s5) to mean the overall appearance of the produce resulting from one or more visual features of the product.

The comparison is made between the visual features of the allegedly infringing product and those of the design registration, not Vogue’s sofa (see LED Technologies v Elecspress [2008] FCA 1941).

Visual features include the “shape, configuration, pattern and ornamentation of the product” but do not include the feel of the product or the materials used (s7 Designs Act). More weight is given to similarities than differences and consideration is given to the quality and importance of similarities in the context of the design as a whole. Therefore, similarities between the shape and configuration of Rogue’s sofa and those of Dali’s design registration (the lip shape, positioning of various components relative to each other) would be important factors, not the differences in materials used (wood and silk versus plastic). On this basis it is likely that Dali’s design registration would be infringed.

Scenario 4: print reproduction
Rogue obtains a copy of a marketing flyer distributed by Vogue at the product launch. The flyer contains a sketch of by Dali of the sofa. Rogue makes its own flyer using Vogue’s flyer “as a guide” but includes a copy of Dali’s sketch. Rogue has infringed copyright in Dali’s sketch by reproducing it in a flyer: see Caroma Industries Ltd v Technicon Industries Pty Ltd [2008] FCA 1465.

Assuming Dali’s sketch for the flyer was a separate sketch made for marketing purposes to his design drawings, this is a separate artistic work with copyright protection independent of the design sketches and prototype. Therefore, copyright in Dali’s sketch is not extinguished by his design registration and Rogue’s flyer infringes Dali’s copyright.

Scenario 5: registration of a 2D design
In collaboration with a fashion designer, Dali creates a trompe l’oueil painting as a fabric design which is printed on fabric and used to create an evening gown. Betty sees the design and copies it for use as a pattern on wallpaper as well as a print for t-shirts.

Assume the design is registered in relation to textile fabrics and garments. The design registrations would not prevent use on wallpaper. However, as the registered designs are purely representations of two-dimensional features, they are not “corresponding designs” under s74 of the Copyright Act (that is, they do not include any visual features of shape or configuration embodied in a product). Therefore, the design registrations do not limit copyright in Dali’s artistic work (the original trompe l’oueil painting) and Betty’s actions will infringe both copyright and the design registration in relation to garments.

A final word
“There is only one difference between a madman and me.
I am not mad.”

Salvador Dali, Diary of a Genius

This post is an expanded version of an article published in Issue 29, Oct 2009, of the industrial design magazine Curve

Federal Court rejects Seahorse shape mark

Posted in 1P, Article, Australian IP Case Law, Trade Mark on September 10, 2009 by 1place

Chocolaterie Guylian N.V. v Registrar of Trade Marks [2009] FCA 891

The Federal Court, on appeal from a decision of the Australian Trade Marks Office, has recently rejected an application by Chocolaterie Guylian N.V. (Guylian) to register its seahorse shape as a trade mark on the basis that the shape was not capable of distinguishing Guylian’s goods.

Guylian is a well known Belgian company producing a seashell range of chocolates, which are distributed in 132 countries. The seahorse shape features in the seashell range and the range has been promoted and sold in Australia since the 1980s.

The Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) does specifically include shapes within the definition of sign and there are numerous shapes which are registered as a trade mark in Australia.
The Federal Court confirmed the Trade Marks Office’s decision to refuse registration of Guylian’s seahorse shape. The Federal Court held that the shape:

a) was not inherently distinctive to the degree required by section 41(3) of the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) (TMA), and

b) does not and will not distinguish Guylian’s chocolate and praline goods from those of other rival traders as required by section 41(5) of the TMA.

Some key aspects of the decision:

  1. Guylain argued that its shape is a “fanciful stylised” representation of a seahorse and as such, inherently distinctive. Justice Sundberg considered that, on balance, an average consumer would see it as a relatively ordinary representation of a seahorse.
  2. Justice Sundberg did not rule out the possibility that a shape reminiscent of a real animal or creature could be considered inherently distinctive. This would ultimately depend on whether other traders would want to use the shape in the ordinary course of business. However, there was sufficient evidence from the Registrar that other traders selling marine inspired chocolates, such that other chocolate producers might legitimately want to use a seahorse shape.
  3. Even though Guylian’s seahorse related marketing had included seahorse shaped boxes / packaging and sponsorship and promotion of, a marine conservation research project named Project Seahorse, Justice Sundberg did not accept that these uses were sufficient to educate the public to recognise the seahorse shape as a badge of origin.
  4. The prominence of the GUYLIAN trade mark and the stylised engraved ‘G’ logo in packaging reduced the significance of the shape as a trade mark. Therefore, use of the seahorse shape on the packaging should be considered as descriptive of the boxes’ contents, rather than as functioning as a trade mark.
  5. Guylian sought to rely on survey evidence which showed just over 40% of survey respondents recognised the seahorse shape as belonging to Guylian. However, Justice Sundberg did not find that this survey evidence was sufficient.

This case highlights that it can be difficult to secure registration of a shape mark, even in the face of extensive use and reputation demonstrated through survey evidence.

Accompanying branding in the evidence of use, such as word marks and logos may counter against registration in that it may be treated as diluting the trade mark distinctiveness of the applied for shape.
Evidence should demonstrate that the public has been educated to understand the shape as a badge of origin and care needs to be taken in relying on survey evidence.

Lance Scott - Partner 1 Place Patent Attorneys + Solicitors

Technation.com.au on 1Place

Posted in 1P, Australian IP Case Law, IP Protection, Photo on September 9, 2009 by 1place
1Place expert system on Technation.com.au

1Place expert system on Technation.com.au

Technation has kindly given us a great wrap.  Have a read at:  http://www.technation.com.au/

Contributory TM infringement against web hosting company

Posted in 1P, Australian IP Case Law, IP Protection, Trade Mark on September 7, 2009 by 1place

A web hosting company is to pay $32M for TM infringement see http://www.ipkat.com/

“companies should know if enabling illegal activities” http://tinyurl.com/lwfosf
If there is intentional inducement for another group to infringe a trade mark, or if group “continues to supply its product to one whom it knows or has reason to know is engaging in trade mark infringement, the manufacturer or distributor is contributorially responsible for any harm done as a result of the deceit.” Inwood Labs, Inc v Ives Labs, Inc cited fromhttp://www.ipkat.com/

No Duty to Invent

Posted in 1P, Article, Australian IP Case Law, IP Protection on September 5, 2009 by 1place

Employer ownership of IP (click for PDF)

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