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Showing posts with label Brazil China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brazil China. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Patricia Covarrubia

IP is a common interest among BRIC countries

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Last week the Brazilian Instituto Nacional da Propiedade Industrial (INPI) received leaders from the Chinese patent office (SIPO) and thus, consolidating a partnership which "can trace an outline of common interests among the BRIC countries" [aren’t we suppose to call this bloc the BRICS- now that South Africa has joined?]. In the agenda was, among other matters, “the expansion of technological cooperation agreement between the countries and encourage new forms of decentralization and the use of intellectual property in states and municipalities.”

INPI informs that the partnership between INPI and SIPO was consolidated in 2012 and was focused primarily on the training of patent examiners (three examiners of INPI have been trained in Beijing, China). They are now looking to extend the practice to the academic field, and thus, there is interest in establishing an interaction between universities and master's and doctoral programs. According to INPI, the aim is to develop research projects and international publications on innovation in the area of aviation.

Also, Brazilians have an interest in strengthening ties with China Intellectual Property Training Center (CIPTC) as well as to initiate a “pilot project examining patent shared via e-PCT (i.e. online services)”. SIPO will also send to INPI a model based on a contract established between the Chinese Training Center and the John Marshall Law School, Chicago [uh? replicating the Chinese model, which is a copy of the American model?! Well I guess the Chinese adapted it to their needs, right? …I wonder: what does the John Marshall Institute have to say about this?].
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Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Rodrigo Ramirez Herrera @ramahr

Delegación de la Oficina de Patentes China visitará Chile después de ir a Brasil y Perú


 El día 23 de febrero una delegación de cinco representantes de la Oficina de Patentes de la República Popular China (SIPO), liderada por su Comisionado Adjunto, Dr. LI Yuguang visitará el Instituto Nacional de propiedad Industrial (INAPI) de Chile. 

En la ocasión se reunirán con el Director Nacional de INAPI Sr. Maximiliano Santa Cruz, y su gabinete con el propósito de intercambiar experiencias entre estas Oficinas y estudiar las menores alternativas de cooperación entre ambas. 

Como inicio de esta relación entre SIPO e INAPI se firmará un memorando de entendimiento (MoU), que contempla importantes iniciativas que buscan establecer una relación de apoyo mutuo y desarrollar la cooperación sobre cuestiones relativas a la creación, utilización, promoción, protección y administración de los derechos de propiedad intelectual entre ambos países. 


Esta misma delegación China ha estado sosteniendo reuniones de trabajo con el Presidente de la oficina de Propiedad Intelectual de Brasil (INPI) y con representantes de la oficina peruana de Propiedad Intelectual (INDECOPI).

Fuente: Paola Guerrero (Comunicado de Prensa INAPI)
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Monday, 20 February 2012

Patricia Covarrubia

Forming an unified trend: Brazil and China

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Last week, 16th February, the representatives of the Chinese Patent office (SIPO) visited the Brazilian Instituto Nacional da Propriedad Industrial (INPI).The group, which was formed by the vice president of the SIPO, Li Yuguang, and other three leaders of the office, met with INPI’s President Jorge Avila and directors of the Institute, aiming to discuss cooperation between SIPO and INPI.

In this regards, INPI informs that this is the “beginning of a process of cooperation between the two countries under the BRICs group”. The Chinese delegation attended the presentation on INPI’s activities in regards to patents and the Strategic Planning 2012/2015. Mr Avila discussed the forms of exchange and bilateral cooperation, especially in the areas of training and management and stressed the importance of the meeting for both countries – also emphasized by Li Yuguang. Next, the Brazilian delegation will visit Beijing, where SIPO is located.

In May last year, the Financial Times (FT) published an article called Brazil and China: the ‘perfect match’, in which it noted: “Each country has what the other lacks”. The article refers pretty much on the trade between the countries but certainly with this new movement Brazil is continuing to play its strategies and using important trade partners in other areas which at the end have the same aim: protecting industries.

Source INPI.
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