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Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn PCT National Phase Entry in Vietnam. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn PCT National Phase Entry in Vietnam. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 8 tháng 3, 2023

What Are the Procedures of filing PCT Patent Application in Vietnam?

The Patent Cooperation Treaty (Patent Cooperation Treaty) abbreviated as PCT was signed on June 19, 1970 in Washington. The PCT came into effect on June 1, 1978, and Vietnam joined the PCT on October 3, 1993. PCT allows an invention to be protected in multiple countries simultaneously by making a single international patent application instead of making multiple patent applications in many separate countries or regions. Intellectual Property lawyers in Vietnam could help client understand the procedures of filing PCT patent application in Vietnam and its advantages.

What Are the Procedures of filing PCT Patent Application in Vietnam?

Similar to the provisions of Vietnam Law on Intellectual Property rights, in order to be granted an invention protection title under the PCT, a registered invention must meet the following requirements: novelty, qualified innovative and capable of industrial application.

A dossier for patent registration under PCT of Vietnamese origin includes the following documents:

-The PCT application of Vietnamese origin to be made in English (03 copies);

-Description (02 copies, including drawings, if any);

-Claims for protection (02 copies);

-A copy of the payment receipt (in case of payment of fees and charges via postal service or directly into the account of the National Office of Intellectual Property);

-Relevant documents (if any).

Patent registration dossiers can be submitted in person or by post to the National Office of Intellectual Property in Hanoi or to two representative offices of the Department in Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang. After receiving the application, the applicant can conduct an international patent search at the competent search offices (national or regional patent office that meets the requirements set forth by the PCT and designated by the PCT General Assembly). PCT applications originating from Vietnam will be published in the PCT Gazette and subject to international preliminary examination. The appraisal department will prepare a preliminary appraisal report and send it to the International Bureau. At the national stage, the international application is examined for form and substantive according to the procedures prescribed for ordinary patent applications in the host country.

An important advantage of the PCT system is the provision of an additional minimum of 18 months from the expiration of the 12-month priority period, during which time the applicant can evaluate the possibility of commercializing product in different countries and decide which country to register the patent in. By filing an international application, the payment of national application fees and translation costs associated with national applications can be delayed.

ANT Lawyers – IP services in Vietnam will always follow up with authorities for legal update on matters relevant to IP law to update clients on regular basis.

Source ANT Lawyers: https://antlawyers.vn/library/what-are-the-procedures-of-filing-pct-patent-application-in-vietnam.html   

Thứ Hai, 5 tháng 4, 2021

Brief Reminder of Time Schedule to Apply PCT Application into Vietnam


According to Vietnam Law on Intellectual property, a PCT applicant who would like to go into Vietnamese phase after the end of PCT procedures need to submit the application within the following duration:

Vietnam patent

If an international application designates Vietnam, the National Office of Intellectual Property in Vietnam (NOIP) is the designated office. In this case, in order to enter the national phase, the applicant shall submit, within 31 months from the date of priority, to the NOIP the following:

-Written declaration requesting invention registration, made according to a set form;

-Copy of the international application (if the applicant requests the entry into the national phase before the date of publication of the international publication);

-Vietnamese translation of the international application: The description, consisting of a description section, protection request, annotations for drawings and abstract (the published copy or initially filed original application, if the application has not yet been published, and modified copy and explanation of modified contents, if the international application has been modified under Article 19 of Patent Cooperation Treaty;

-National charges and fees.

If an international application elects Vietnam, the NOIP is the elected office. In this case, if the election of Vietnam is made within 19 months from the date of priority, in order to enter the national phase, the applicant shall submit, within 31 months from the date of priority, to the NOIP the following documents:

-Written declaration request;

-Sting invention registration, made according to a set form;

-Vietnamese translation of the international application: The description, consisting of a description section, protection request, annotations for drawings and abstract (the published copy or initially filed original application, if the application has not yet been published, and modified copy and explanation of modified contents, if the international application has been modified under Article 19 and/or Article 34(2)(b) of the Treaty);

-Vietnamese translations of annexes to the international preliminary examination report (when substantive examination of the application is requested);

-National charges and fees.

After having submitted the application, the time  when the processing of an international application designating or electing Vietnam in the national phase starts is the first day of the thirty second month from the date of priority if the applicant files no written request for entry into the national phase earlier than the above time limits. The international application shall be put to formality examination and substantive examination according to the procedures applicable to ordinary invention registration applications. If the applicant requests in writing earlier examination of his/her application and pay the prescribed charge, the international application shall be examined earlier than the time limit specified above in accordance with the provisions of Article 2 3(2) of the Treaty.

Please be noted that in addition to the cases where an international application is considered withdrawn specified in the Treaty and the Regulation on implementation of the Treaty, an international application designating or electing Vietnam shall be considered withdrawn if the national fees are not paid to the NOIP or there is no Vietnamese translation upon the expiration of the set time limit.

It is important to adhere to the deadline and patent attorney in Vietnam of ANT Lawyers always follow up with the Client to remind on the schedule to follow when submitting for PCT application in Vietnam.

Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 2, 2020

Brief Reminder of Time Schedule to Apply PCT Application into Vietnam


According to Vietnam Law on Intellectual property, a PCT applicant who would like to go into Vietnamese phase after the end of PCT procedures need to submit the application within the following duration:
If an international application designates Vietnam, the National Office of Intellectual Property in Vietnam (NOIP) is the designated office. In this case, in order to enter the national phase, the applicant shall submit, within 31 months from the date of priority, to the NOIP the following:
-Written declaration requesting invention registration, made according to a set form;

-Copy of the international application (if the applicant requests the entry into the national phase before the date of publication of the international publication);

-Vietnamese translation of the international application: The description, consisting of a description section, protection request, annotations for drawings and abstract (the published copy or initially filed original application, if the application has not yet been published, and modified copy and explanation of modified contents, if the international application has been modified underArticle 19 of Patent Cooperation Treaty;

-National charges and fees.
If an international application elects Vietnam, the NOIP is the elected office. In this case, if the election of Vietnam is made within 19 months from the date of priority, in order to enter the national phase, the applicant shall submit, within 31 months from the date of priority, to the NOIP the following documents:
-Written declaration request;

-sting invention registration, made according to a set form;

-Vietnamese translation of the international application: The description, consisting of a description section, protection request, annotations for drawings and abstract (the published copy or initially filed original application, if the application has not yet been published, and modified copy and explanation of modified contents, if the international application has been modified under Article 19 and/or Article 34(2)(b) of the Treaty);

-Vietnamese translations of annexes to the international preliminary examination report (when substantive examination of the application is requested);

-National charges and fees.

After having submitted the application, the time  when the processing of an international application designating or electing Vietnam in the national phase starts is the first day of the thirty second month from the date of priority if the applicant files no written request for entry into the national phase earlier than the above time limits. The international application shall be put to formality examination and substantive examination according to the procedures applicable to ordinary invention registration applications.  If the applicant requests in writing earlier examination of his/her application and pay the prescribed charge, the international application shall be examined earlier than the time limit specified above in accordance with the provisions of Article 2 3(2) of the Treaty.
Please be noted that in addition to the cases where an international application is considered withdrawn specified in the Treaty and the Regulation on implementation of the Treaty, an international application designating or electing Vietnam shall be considered withdrawn if the national fees are not paid to the NOIP or there is no Vietnamese translation upon the expiration of the set time limit.
It is important to adhere to the deadline and patent attorney of ANT Lawyers always follow up with the Client to remind on the schedule to follow when submitting for PCT application in Vietnam.






Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 6, 2018

Which is the best country to file patent rights?


With respect to your first filed patent application, you may not have a choice. Some countries have export control laws that require that you first file in your current country. Only after being granted a foreign filing license do you then have the option to file in other countries.



According to the Paris Convention, you have within one year of your first filed application to file in foreign countries and claim priority to the filing date of the first filed application. Filing in many countries can be extremely expensive, however. A common strategy is thus to file a single PCT application, which can later be the basis for national/regional stage filings. This delays the expense, and allows more time to decide which countries are best. But one must realized that this strategy only applies to PCT member states. That does not include some countries, for example, Taiwan and Argentina. Applications must be filed there within a year of the first filing.

30 months after the earliest priority date of the PCT application, you’ll need to decide which countries (or regions) to enter the PCT application into. The best choice may be none. For example, if the PCT search report reveals prior art that is fatal to the patent application.

Assuming there are no major show-stoppers in the PCT stage, then there is a complex analysis that needs to take into account various factors, such as 1) your patent budget, 2) the market size in each country, 3) the likelihood of manufacturing in each country, 4) the strength of patent laws in each country, 5) the kinds of technologies patentable in each country. Balancing these against each other and coming up with an set of countries is extremely case specific. There is no generic answer as to what country or countries is best in the abstract. That being said, some of the most common countries/regions are US, Europe, Japan, Canada, Australia, S. Korea, and China. Within Europe, patents are most often validated in UK, France, and Germany



Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 4, 2018

Patent Prosecution Highway Mechanism Between Vietnam and Japan

First pilot program between Vietnam National Office of Intellectual Property (NOIP) and Japanese Patent Office (JPO)
NOIP and JPO have jointly undertaken the first Pilot Patent Prosecution Highway program (“PPH”) since 01stApr, 2016.
According to this bilateral PPH, the patent application filed at JPO (previously filed at NOIP) falling into one of the three following cases:


(i)     An application which validly claims for priority under the Paris Convention on the basis of NOIP application(s), or
(ii)     A PCT national phase application to Japan without priority claim, or
(iii)   An application which validly claims for priority under the Paris Convention to the PCT application(s) without priority claim.
And meeting other conditions regulated in Procedures guidance to file a request to JPO for PPH program between JPO and NOIP (“Procedures”), the applicant shall be entitled to request JPO to fast prosecute the application on the basis of providing research and evaluation results of NOIP and other relevant documents to JPO for references.
For the patent application filed at NOIP (previously submitted to JPO) falling into one of the three following cases:
(i)     An application which validly claims for priority under the Paris Convention on the basis of JPO application(s), or
(ii)     A PCT nationalphase application to Vietnam without priority claims and this PCT submitted to JPO as an international application receiving agency (applications’ number initiating with PCT/JP hereby referred to as “PCT/JP applications”), or
(iii) An application claims for priority under the Paris Convention on the basis of PCT/JP application(s) without priority claims;
And meeting other conditions regulated in the Procedures, the applicant shall be entitled to request NOIP to fast prosecute the application on the basis of providing research and evaluation results of JPO and other relevant documents to NOIP for references. The duration of the PPH program shall be expired by the date of March 31st, 2019.



Chủ Nhật, 11 tháng 2, 2018

If I show my national patent application to a company, can they file it as their own in other nations?

If you truly have a national patent (and not a national patent application), then the patent is public knowledge. Anyone in the world can find it, and in most countries (including the US, Europe, and much of Asia) finding it as easy as entering the right query on a web page.



If you only have a national patent application, then it may not be public yet. But it will be (in most countries) 18 months after you filed it. So if your outside that window, again, there’s no secrecy to preserve.

Whether or not your patent or pending application is currently public, in most of the world it constitutes “prior art.” (“Most of the world” certainly includes the US, Europe, and most if not all of Asia.) That means it will block any later-filed patent applications that seek to cover the technology disclosed or suggested by your patent application.

To be sure, there might sometimes be good reasons not to show someone your not-yet-published patent application. But if you’re only worried about someone using it as “inspiration” to file their own patent application on the same technology, you need not worry.








Thứ Tư, 7 tháng 2, 2018

What is the PCT supplementary international search?

SUPPLEMENTARY INTERNATIONAL SEARCH
The PCT is an international treaty with more than 145 Contracting States. The PCT makes it possible to seek patent protection for an invention simultaneously in a large number of countries by filing a single “international” patent application instead of filing several separate national or regional patent applications. The granting of patents remains under the control of the national or regional patent Offices in what is called the “national phase”.



The PCT procedure includes:
·        Filing
·        International Search
·        International Publication
·        Supplementary International Search
·        International Preliminary Examination
·        National Phase

What is the PCT supplementary international search?

Supplementary international search permits the applicant to request, in addition to the international search (the “main international search”), one or more supplementary international searches each to be carried out by an ISA other than the ISA which carried out the main international search. The additional search has the potential of reducing the risk of new patent documents and other technical literature being discovered in the national phase since, by requesting supplementary search the applicant can enlarge the linguistic and/or technical scope of the documentation searched.

What is the supplementary international search report?

The supplementary international search report is generally similar in content and appearance to the main international search report; it contains a listing of references to patent documents and other technical literature which may affect the patentability of the invention claimed in the international application. However, it does not repeat documents which have already been cited in the international search report, unless this is necessary because of new relevance when read in conjunction with other documents discovered during the supplementary international search. On occasion, the supplementary international search report may contain more detailed explanations than those in the main international search report. This is due to the fact that, unlike the main international search, no written opinion is established with the supplementary international search report, and these additional details are helpful for a full understanding of the references listed.