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Learn more about Thailand Intellectual Property
Intellectual property protects the interests of creators by giving them rights to their works. It is made up of two main components: copyright and industrial property. Intellectual property law protects owners. Indeed, Thai and international laws have established more rules allowing the protection of the rights of their owners. Intellectual Property laws strike the right balance between the rights of owners and the public interest, stimulate innovation, enrich public knowledge, promote technical advancements and maintain fair competition. Intellectual property gives its owner a monopoly for a certain period of time, preventing any third party from exploiting his creation or invention without his consent, in order to reward his creativity. Initially only this creativity could be protected.
Table of contents
What is copyright?
Intellectual property covers much more than the protection of technology-related inventions. Indeed, it also includes the protection of new products or processes, know-how or expertise. It also includes trademarks, designs, author’s works and artistic expression. Many businesses do not realize the importance of intellectual property on their development and often a lack of anticipation can have damaging consequences for your business. This is particularly visible for local businesses in developing countries where intellectual property protection for small and medium enterprises remains weak.
Several Thai intellectual property laws are passed through ministerial regulations or memoranda of understanding. Also, Thai IP law has fundamentally changed its legislation following the ratification of several international treaties relating to the protection of intellectual property.
Copyright protects artistic creations, such as literary, musical, graphic (paintings, photographs, films, etc.) and plastic (sculptures, etc.) works. Subject to originality, obtaining the copyright does not require any filing formalities. Performers, audiovisual communication companies and producers of videograms and phonograms also benefit from rights related to copyright.
🔗 For more information, please visit our page about Copyright in Thailand.
What is trademark law?
Trademark law gives economic and social actors an operating monopoly on products and services protected by a registered trademark. A trademark, in the legal sense, is a sign which allows a company (or any other economic or social actor) to distinguish its products or services from those offered by the competition. This sign can be made up of letters, numbers or figurative elements (drawings, logo, etc.).
🔗 For more information, please visit our page about Trademark in Thailand.
What is design law?
Design law protects the design of a creation in any type of sector: fashion, industry, the automotive sector and others. Filing a design gives you additional protection to that of copyright, and allows you to take action against any competitor who has infringed your design, thereby causing you harm.
🔗 For more information, please visit our page about Industrial Design in Thailand.
What is patent law?
Patent law protects the invention from the reproduction and exploitation of the invention without the consent of its author (or of his beneficiaries). To exploit a new process or object, it is essential that the patent be accompanied by a right of exploitation. Patents make it possible to support innovative companies, by protecting their advances, even if the validity of a patent is in fact limited in time.
🔗 For more information, please visit our page about Patent in Thailand.
Why to protect your intellectual property?
Each of the aforementioned intellectual property rights aims to protect a different aspect of an object, so it is up to the manager to choose the protection that best meets his needs. For example, a smartphone can combine four types of protection:
1. Protection under copyright and/or industrial design law if the manager wishes to protect the shape or design of his smartphone.
- Remarks:
Copyright grants protection for 70 years after the author’s death or publication of the work, provided that the latter is original, that is to say reflects the personality of its author. The right to designs and models, the monopoly of which is 25 years maximum as long as the design is new and sufficiently different from other existing phone models for a regular user of smartphones.
2. Protection under trademark law to protect the name of your phone or logo. The mark is valid provided it is distinctive, conforms to public order and good morals and is available. The registered sign is then protected for a period of 10 years, renewable indefinitely.
3. Protection under patent law to protect the technological and technical applications of the smartphone. The patent offers protection for 20 years, as long as the invention meets the criteria of novelty, inventive step and industrial application.
4. Finally, if the business manager wishes to protect his human and / or financial investment, he will opt for protection under rights related to copyright (50 years of protection from his communication to the public) or from the base. data (15 years from the date the database was made available to the public).
These intellectual property rights, all having different purposes, have in common that they confer on their holders a private right, a monopoly, which constitutes an exception to the principle of freedom of trade and industry.
All infringements of these rights (imitation of a brand, reproduction of a creation) are punishable by counterfeiting.
How to protect your intellectual property?
For the majority of businesses, intellectual property rights protection can take effect in the private domain, the business itself. Company owners can protect their IP assets, mitigate potential losses and avoid problems by adequately and appropriately protecting intellectual property rights through the editing of multiple contracts.
It is recommended to ensure that the intellectual property assets are well secured within the company itself. Employment contracts, confidentiality contracts or nondisclosure contracts and technology transfer agreements are particularly relevant to any type of business.
1. Employment contracts
In the context of relations with your employees, it is important to protect the intellectual property of your company by adding protective clauses. For this purpose, it is appropriate to include in the employment contracts of your employees, clauses protecting confidentiality and protecting IP.
Intellectual protection clauses in employment contracts can be drafted to protect virtually all types of intellectual property. An IP protection clause drafted by a specialized lawyer will protect the intellectual property rights in your company, especially in the context of a research and development company.
For pharmaceutical, IT or biotechnology companies, the need for intellectual property protection is essential for the development and sustainability of the company. Depending on the type of industry in your company, the protective clauses that will be written in the employment contracts of employees will have to be adapted according to the employee’s activity, his position in the company.
This specificity is found in the development of new drugs and the employment of researchers who would require clauses protecting research and development in order to guarantee the confidentiality of research.
Also, it is important to provide for the terms of termination of the contract in the context of research, data, equipment and elements that have been collected by your employee. By providing for the termination of the contract both by the employee and by the employer, you would thereby limit the risk of litigation with your company, granting you greater protection for elements including the intellectual property of your company.
🔗 To make a professional employment contract including provisions to the exploitation of your IP, please visit our page about Employment Contract.
2. Confidentiality agreements
Confidentiality agreements are legally binding agreements between an employee or provider and the company. Confidentiality agreements are about protecting company information to which “confidential” information is disclosed. These agreements mainly indicate:
➤ Confidential information |
➤ The duration of confidentiality |
➤ Terms in order to preserve confidentiality |
➤ Penalties for non-compliance with the confidentiality agreement |