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Ipsha IPR Proficiency

The document provides an overview of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), detailing its definition and types, including trademarks, copyrights, patents, and trade secrets. It explains the significance of IPR in protecting creators' rights and fostering innovation, as well as the specific eligibility, protection, and duration associated with each type of intellectual property. The document emphasizes the economic and cultural benefits derived from safeguarding intellectual creations.

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Ipsha Verma
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views9 pages

Ipsha IPR Proficiency

The document provides an overview of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), detailing its definition and types, including trademarks, copyrights, patents, and trade secrets. It explains the significance of IPR in protecting creators' rights and fostering innovation, as well as the specific eligibility, protection, and duration associated with each type of intellectual property. The document emphasizes the economic and cultural benefits derived from safeguarding intellectual creations.

Uploaded by

Ipsha Verma
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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INTELLECTUAL

PROPERTY
RIGHTS
(IPR)

Submitted By: Ipsha Verma


(0901IT211026)
Submitted To: Dr. Vikram Rajpoot
TABLE OF CONTENTS

01 IPR

02 Types Of IP

03 Trademarks

04 Copyrights

05 Patents

06 Trade Secrets
Intellectual Property Rights
 Intellectual property (IP) refers to creations of the mind, such as inventions,
literary and artistic works, designs, symbols, names, and images used in
commerce.

 It grants exclusive rights to creators or owners, protecting their innovations


from unauthorized use or reproduction.

 IP includes patents for inventions, copyrights for literary and artistic works,
trademarks for brand identities, trade secrets for confidential business
information, and industrial designs for product aesthetics.

 These legal protections foster innovation, encourage creativity, and enable


individuals and businesses to benefit from their intellectual endeavors,
driving economic growth and cultural development.
1 2

Trademarks Copyrights

Types Of
Intellectual
Property

Patents Trade Secrets

3 4
01
Trademarks
• Definition: Trademarks are symbols, words, phrases, or designs that
distinguish the source of goods or services and protect brands from
unauthorized use or infringement.

• Eligibility: Trademarks can include logos, brand names, slogans, and


product packaging. They must be distinctive and used in commerce to
identify and differentiate goods or services.

Protection: Grants exclusive rights to use the trademark in connection
with specific goods or services, preventing others from using confusingly
similar marks in the same or related categories.

Renewal: Trademarks require periodic renewal to maintain protection,
usually every 10 years, as long as the mark continues to be used in
commerce.
02
Copyrights
• Definition: Copyrights protect original works of authorship fixed in
any tangible medium of expression, such as literary, musical, and
artistic works.

• Eligibility: Automatically granted upon creation, requiring minimal


originality. Common works include books, music, paintings,
photographs, software code, and architectural designs.

• Rights Granted: Copyright owners have the exclusive rights to


reproduce, distribute, perform, display, and create derivative works
based on the original work.

• Duration: Generally, copyrights last for the author's lifetime plus 70


years, after which the work enters the public domain.
03
Patents
• Definition: Patents grant inventors exclusive rights to their inventions,
preventing others from making, using, selling, or importing the
invention without permission for a limited period, typically 20 years
from the filing date.

• Eligibility: Patents are granted for new, useful, and non-obvious


inventions, including processes, machines, manufactured articles, and
compositions of matter.

• Application Process: Requires a detailed description of the invention


and its function, often including drawings or diagrams. Examination by
patent offices determines if the invention meets patentability criteria.

• Protection: Provides a monopoly over the invention, enabling the


inventor to profit from commercializing the invention or licensing the
rights to others.
04
Trade secrets
• Definition: Trade secrets are confidential information that
provides a business with a competitive advantage, such as
formulas, customer lists, and manufacturing processes.

• Protection: Unlike other forms of IP, trade secrets are


protected as long as they remain secret and provide
economic value to the owner.

• Enforcement: Trade secret protection relies on


confidentiality agreements and measures to prevent
unauthorized disclosure or use.

• For Example: Recipes, Marketing plans, financial


projections, and methods of conducting business can all
constitute trade secrets.
THANK
YOU

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