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-
- PART SIX
- INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
-
-
- Chapter Seventeen
-
- Intellectual Property
-
-
-
- Article 1701: Nature and Scope of Obligations
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide in its territory to the nationals
- of another Party adequate and effective protection and
- enforcement of intellectual property rights, while ensuring that
- measures to enforce intellectual property rights do not
- themselves become barriers to legitimate trade.
-
- 2. To provide adequate and effective protection and enforcement
- of intellectual property rights, each Party shall, at a minimum,
- give effect to this Chapter and to the substantive provisions of:
-
- (a) the Geneva Convention for the Protection of Producers
- of Phonograms Against Unauthorized Duplication of their
- Phonograms, 1971 (Geneva Convention);
-
- (b) the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and
- Artistic Works, 1971 (Berne Convention);
-
- (c) the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial
- Property, 1967 (Paris Convention); and
-
- (d) the International Convention for the Protection of New
- Varieties of Plants, 1978 (UPOV Convention), or the
- International Convention for the Protection of New
- Varieties of Plants, 1991 (UPOV Convention).
-
- If a Party has not acceded to the specified text of any such
- Conventions on or before the date of entry into force of this
- Agreement, it shall make every effort to accede.
-
- 3. Paragraph 2 shall apply, except as provided in Annex 1701.3.
-
-
- Article 1702: More Extensive Protection
-
- A Party may implement in its domestic law more extensive
- protection of intellectual property rights than is required under
- this Agreement, provided that such protection is not inconsistent
- with this Agreement.
-
-
- Article 1703: National Treatment
-
- 1. Each Party shall accord to nationals of another Party
- treatment no less favorable than that it accords to its own
- nationals with regard to the protection and enforcement of all
- intellectual property rights. In respect of sound recordings,
- each Party shall provide such treatment to producers and
- performers of another Party, except that a Party may limit rights
- of performers of another Party in respect of secondary uses of
- sound recordings to those rights its nationals are accorded in
- the territory of such other Party.
-
- 2. No Party may, as a condition of according national treatment
- under this Article, require right holders to comply with any
- formalities or conditions in order to acquire rights in respect
- of copyright and related rights.
-
- 3. A Party may derogate from paragraph 1 in relation to its
- judicial and administrative procedures for the protection or
- enforcement of intellectual property rights, including any
- procedure requiring a national of another Party to designate for
- service of process an address in the Party's territory or to
- appoint an agent in the Party's territory, if the derogation is
- consistent with the relevant Convention listed in Article
- 1701(2), provided that such derogation:
-
- (a) is necessary to secure compliance with measures that
- are not inconsistent with this Chapter; and
-
- (b) is not applied in a manner that would constitute a
- disguised restriction on trade.
-
- 4. No Party shall have any obligation under this Article with
- respect to procedures provided in multilateral agreements
- concluded under the auspices of the World Intellectual Property
- Organization relating to the acquisition or maintenance of
- intellectual property rights.
-
-
- Article 1704: Control of Abusive or Anticompetitive Practices or
- Conditions
-
- Nothing in this Chapter shall prevent a Party from
- specifying in its domestic law licensing practices or conditions
- that may in particular cases constitute an abuse of intellectual
- property rights having an adverse effect on competition in the
- relevant market. A Party may adopt or maintain, consistent with
- the other provisions of this Agreement, appropriate measures to
- prevent or control such practices or conditions.
-
-
- Article 1705: Copyright
-
- 1. Each Party shall protect the works covered by Article 2 of
- the Berne Convention, including any other works that embody
- original expression within the meaning of that Convention. In
- particular:
-
- (a) all types of computer programs are literary works
- within the meaning of the Berne Convention and each
- Party shall protect them as such; and
-
- (b) compilations of data or other material, whether in
- machine readable or other form, which by reason of the
- selection or arrangement of their contents constitute
- intellectual creations, shall be protected as such.
-
- The protection a Party provides under subparagraph (b) shall not
- extend to the data or material itself, or prejudice any copyright
- subsisting in that data or material.
-
- 2. Each Party shall provide to authors and their successors in
- interest those rights enumerated in the Berne Convention in
- respect of works covered by paragraph 1, including the right to
- authorize or prohibit:
-
- (a) the importation into the Party's territory of copies of
- the work made without the right holder's authorization;
-
- (b) the first public distribution of the original and each
- copy of the work by sale, rental or otherwise;
-
- (c) the communication of a work to the public; and
-
- (d) the commercial rental of the original or a copy of a
- computer program.
-
- Subparagraph (d) shall not apply where the copy of the computer
- program is not itself an essential object of the rental. Each
- Party shall provide that putting the original or a copy of a
- computer program on the market with the right holder's consent
- shall not exhaust the rental right.
-
- 3. Each Party shall provide that for copyright and related
- rights:
-
- (a) any person acquiring or holding economic rights may
- freely and separately transfer such rights by contract
- for purposes of their exploitation and enjoyment by the
- transferee; and
-
- (b) any person acquiring or holding such economic rights by
- virtue of a contract, including contracts of employment
- underlying the creation of works and sound recordings,
- shall be able to exercise those rights in its own name
- and enjoy fully the benefits derived from those rights.
-
- 4. Each Party shall provide that, where the term of protection
- of a work, other than a photographic work or a work of applied
- art, is to be calculated on a basis other than the life of a
- natural person, the term shall be not less than 50 years from the
- end of the calendar year of the first authorized publication of
- the work, or, failing such authorized publication within 50 years
- from the making of the work, 50 years from the end of the
- calendar year of making.
-
- 5. Each Party shall confine limitations or exceptions to the
- rights provided for in this Article to certain special cases that
- do not conflict with a normal exploitation of the work and do not
- unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the right
- holder.
-
- 6. No Party may grant translation and reproduction licenses
- permitted under the Appendix to the Berne Convention where
- legitimate needs in that Party's territory for copies or
- translations of the work could be met by the right holder's
- voluntary actions but for obstacles created by the Party's
- measures.
-
- 7. Each Party shall comply with the requirements set out in
- Annex 1705.7.
-
-
- Article 1706: Sound Recordings
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide to the producer of a sound
- recording the right to authorize or prohibit:
-
- (a) the direct or indirect reproduction of the sound
- recording;
-
- (b) the importation into the Party's territory of copies of
- the sound recording made without the producer's
- authorization;
-
- (c) the first public distribution of the original and each
- copy of the sound recording by sale, rental or
- otherwise; and
-
- (d) the commercial rental of the original or a copy of the
- sound recording, except where expressly otherwise
- provided in a contract between the producer of the
- sound recording and the authors of the works fixed
- therein.
-
- Each Party shall provide that putting the original or a copy of a
- sound recording on the market with the right holder's consent
- shall not exhaust the rental right.
-
- 2. Each Party shall provide a term of protection for sound
- recordings of at least 50 years from the end of the calendar year
- in which the fixation was made.
-
- 3. Each Party shall confine limitations or exceptions to the
- rights provided for in this Article to certain special cases that
- do not conflict with a normal exploitation of the sound recording
- and do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the
- right holder.
-
-
- Article 1707: Protection of Encrypted Program-Carrying Satellite
- Signals
-
- Within one year from the date of entry into force of this
- Agreement, each Party shall:
-
- (a) make it a criminal offense to manufacture, import,
- sell, lease or otherwise make available a device or
- system that is primarily of assistance in decoding an
- encrypted program-carrying satellite signal without the
- authorization of the lawful distributor of such signal;
- and
-
- (b) make it a civil offense to receive, in connection with
- commercial activities, or further distribute, an
- encrypted program-carrying satellite signal that has
- been decoded without the authorization of the lawful
- distributor of the signal or to engage in any activity
- prohibited under subparagraph (a).
-
- Each Party shall provide that any civil offense established under
- subparagraph (b) shall be actionable by any person that holds an
- interest in the content of such signal.
-
-
- Article 1708: Trademarks
-
- 1. For purposes of this Agreement, a trademark consists of any
- sign, or any combination of signs, capable of distinguishing the
- goods or services of one person from those of another, including
- personal names, designs, letters, numerals, colors, figurative
- elements, or the shape of goods or of their packaging.
- Trademarks shall include service marks and collective marks, and
- may include certification marks. A Party may require, as a
- condition for registration that a sign be visually perceptible.
-
- 2. Each Party shall provide to the owner of a registered
- trademark the right to prevent all persons not having the owner's
- consent from using in commerce identical or similar signs for
- goods or services that are identical or similar to those goods or
- services in respect of which the owner's trademark is registered,
- where such use would result in a likelihood of confusion. In the
- case of the use of an identical sign for identical goods or
- services, a likelihood of confusion shall be presumed. The
- rights described above shall not prejudice any prior rights, nor
- shall they affect the possibility of a Party making rights
- available on the basis of use.
-
- 3. A Party may make registrability depend on use. However,
- actual use of a trademark shall not be a condition for filing an
- application for registration. No Party may refuse an application
- solely on the ground that intended use has not taken place before
- the expiry of a period of three years from the date of
- application for registration.
-
- 4. Each Party shall provide a system for the registration of
- trademarks, which shall include:
-
- (a) examination of applications;
-
- (b) notice to be given to an applicant of the reasons for
- the refusal to register a trademark;
-
- (c) a reasonable opportunity for the applicant to respond
- to the notice;
-
- (d) publication of each trademark either before or promptly
- after it is registered; and
-
- (e) a reasonable opportunity for interested persons to
- petition to cancel the registration of a trademark.
-
- A Party may provide for a reasonable opportunity for interested
- persons to oppose the registration of a trademark.
-
- 5. The nature of the goods or services to which a trademark is
- to be applied shall in no case form an obstacle to the
- registration of the trademark.
-
- 6. Article 6bis of the Paris Convention shall apply, with such
- modifications as are necessary, to services. In determining
- whether a trademark is well-known, account shall be taken of the
- knowledge of the trademark in the relevant sector of the public,
- including knowledge in the Party's territory obtained as a result
- of the promotion of the trademark. No Party may require that the
- reputation of the trademark extend beyond the sector of the
- public that normally deals with the relevant goods or services.
-
- 7. Each Party shall provide that the initial registration of a
- trademark be for a term of at least 10 years and that the
- registration be indefinitely renewable for terms of not less than
- 10 years when conditions for renewal have been met.
-
- 8. Each Party shall require the use of a trademark to maintain
- a registration. The registration may be canceled for the reason
- of non-use only after an uninterrupted period of at least two
- years of non-use, unless valid reasons based on the existence of
- obstacles to such use are shown by the trademark owner. Each
- Party shall recognize, as valid reasons for non-use,
- circumstances arising independently of the will of the trademark
- owner that constitute an obstacle to the use of the trademark,
- such as import restrictions on, or other government requirements
- for, goods or services identified by the trademark.
-
- 9. Each Party shall recognize use of a trademark by a person
- other than the trademark owner, where such use is subject to the
- owner's control, as use of the trademark for purposes of
- maintaining the registration.
-
- 10. No Party shall encumber the use of a trademark in commerce
- by special requirements, such as a use that reduces the
- trademark's function as an indication of source or a use with
- another trademark.
-
- 11. A Party may determine conditions on the licensing and
- assignment of trademarks, it being understood that the compulsory
- licensing of trademarks shall not be permitted and that the owner
- of a registered trademark shall have the right to assign its
- trademark with or without the transfer of the business to which
- the trademark belongs.
-
- 12. A Party may provide limited exceptions to the rights
- conferred by a trademark, such as fair use of descriptive terms,
- provided that such exceptions take into account the legitimate
- interests of the trademark owner and of other persons.
-
- 13. Each Party shall prohibit the registration as a trademark of
- words, at least in English, French or Spanish, that generically
- designate goods or services or types of goods or services to
- which the trademark applies.
-
- 14. Each Party shall refuse to register trademarks that consist
- of or comprise immoral, deceptive or scandalous matter, or matter
- that may disparage or falsely suggest a connection with persons,
- living or dead, institutions, beliefs or any Party's national
- symbols, or bring them into contempt or disrepute.
-
-
- Article 1709: Patents
-
- 1. Subject to paragraphs 2 and 3, each Party shall make patents
- available for any inventions, whether products or processes, in
- all fields of technology, provided that such inventions are new,
- result from an inventive step and are capable of industrial
- application. For the purposes of this Article, a Party may deem
- the terms "inventive step" and "capable of industrial
- application" to be synonymous with the terms "non-obvious" and
- "useful", respectively.
-
- 2. A Party may exclude from patentability inventions if
- preventing in its territory the commercial exploitation of the
- inventions is necessary to protect ordre public or morality,
- including to protect human, animal or plant life or health or to
- avoid serious prejudice to nature or the environment, provided
- that the exclusion is not based solely on the ground that the
- Party prohibits commercial exploitation in its territory of the
- subject matter of the patent.
-
- 3. A Party may also exclude from patentability:
-
- (a) diagnostic, therapeutic and surgical methods for the
- treatment of humans or animals;
-
- (b) plants and animals other than microorganisms; and
-
- (c) essentially biological processes for the production of
- plants or animals, other than non-biological and
- microbiological processes for such production.
-
- Notwithstanding subparagraph (b), each Party shall provide for
- the protection of plant varieties through patents, an effective
- scheme of sui generis protection, or both.
-
- 4. If a Party has not made available product patent protection
- for pharmaceutical or agricultural chemicals commensurate with
- paragraph 1:
-
- (a) as of January 1, 1992, for subject matter that relates
- to naturally occurring substances prepared or produced
- by, or significantly derived from, microbiological
- processes and intended for food or medicine; and
-
- (b) as of July 1, 1991, for any other subject matter,
-
- that Party shall provide to the inventor of any such product or
- its assignee the means to obtain product patent protection for
- such product for the unexpired term of the patent for such
- product granted in another Party, as long as the product has not
- been marketed in the Party providing protection under this
- paragraph and the person seeking such protection makes a timely
- request.
-
- 5. Each Party shall provide that:
-
- (a) where the subject matter of a patent is a product, the
- patent shall confer on the patent owner the right to
- prevent other persons from making, using or selling the
- subject matter of the patent, without the patent
- owner's consent; and
-
- (b) where the subject matter of a patent is a process, the
- patent shall confer on the patent owner the right to
- prevent other persons from using that process and from
- using, selling, or importing at least the product
- obtained directly by that process, without the patent
- owner's consent.
-
- 6. A Party may provide limited exceptions to the exclusive
- rights conferred by a patent, provided that such exceptions do
- not unreasonably conflict with a normal exploitation of the
- patent and do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests
- of the patent owner, taking into account the legitimate interests
- of other persons.
-
- 7. Subject to paragraphs 2 and 3, patents shall be available
- and patent rights enjoyable without discrimination as to the
- field of technology, the territory of the Party where the
- invention was made and whether products are imported or locally
- produced.
-
- 8. A Party may revoke a patent only when:
-
- (a) grounds exist that would have justified a refusal to
- grant the patent; or
-
- (b) the grant of a compulsory license has not remedied the
- lack of exploitation of the patent.
-
- 9. Each Party shall permit patent owners to assign and transfer
- by succession their patents, and to conclude licensing contracts.
-
- 10. Where the law of a Party allows for use of the subject
- matter of a patent, other than that use allowed under paragraph
- 6, without the authorization of the right holder, including use
- by the government or other persons authorized by the government,
- the Party shall respect the following provisions:
-
- (a) authorization of such use shall be considered on its
- individual merits;
-
- (b) such use may only be permitted if, prior to such use,
- the proposed user has made efforts to obtain
- authorization from the right holder on reasonable
- commercial terms and conditions and such efforts have
- not been successful within a reasonable period of time.
- The requirement to make such efforts may be waived by a
- Party in the case of a national emergency or other
- circumstances of extreme urgency or in cases of public
- non-commercial use. In situations of national
- emergency or other circumstances of extreme urgency,
- the right holder shall, nevertheless, be notified as
- soon as reasonably practicable. In the case of public
- non-commercial use, where the government or contractor,
- without making a patent search, knows or has
- demonstrable grounds to know that a valid patent is or
- will be used by or for the government, the right holder
- shall be informed promptly;
-
- (c) the scope and duration of such use shall be limited to
- the purpose for which it was authorized;
-
- (d) such use shall be non-exclusive;
-
- (e) such use shall be non-assignable, except with that part
- of the enterprise or goodwill that enjoys such use;
-
- (f) any such use shall be authorized predominantly for the
- supply of the Party's domestic market;
-
- (g) authorization for such use shall be liable, subject to
- adequate protection of the legitimate interests of the
- persons so authorized, to be terminated if and when the
- circumstances that led to it cease to exist and are
- unlikely to recur. The competent authority shall have
- the authority to review, upon motivated request, the
- continued existence of these circumstances;
-
- (h) the right holder shall be paid adequate remuneration in
- the circumstances of each case, taking into account the
- economic value of the authorization;
-
- (i) the legal validity of any decision relating to the
- authorization shall be subject to judicial or other
- independent review by a distinct higher authority;
-
- (j) any decision relating to the remuneration provided in
- respect of such use shall be subject to judicial or
- other independent review by a distinct higher
- authority;
-
- (k) the Party shall not be obliged to apply the conditions
- set out in subparagraphs (b) and (f) where such use is
- permitted to remedy a practice determined after
- judicial or administrative process to be
- anticompetitive. The need to correct anticompetitive
- practices may be taken into account in determining the
- amount of remuneration in such cases. Competent
- authorities shall have the authority to refuse
- termination of authorization if and when the conditions
- that led to such authorization are likely to recur;
-
- (l) the Party shall not authorize the use of the subject
- matter of a patent to permit the exploitation of
- another patent except as a remedy for an adjudicated
- violation of domestic laws regarding anticompetitive
- practices.
-
- 11. Where the subject matter of a patent is a process for
- obtaining a product, each Party shall, in any infringement
- proceeding, place on the defendant the burden of establishing
- that the allegedly infringing product was made by a process other
- than the patented process in one of the following situations:
-
- (a) the product obtained by the patented process is new; or
-
- (b) a substantial likelihood exists that the allegedly
- infringing product was made by the process and the
- patent owner has been unable through reasonable efforts
- to determine the process actually used.
-
- In the gathering and evaluation of evidence, the legitimate
- interests of the defendant in protecting its trade secrets shall
- be taken into account.
-
- 12. Each Party shall provide a term of protection for patents of
- at least 20 years from the date of filing or 17 years from the
- date of grant. A Party may extend the term of patent protection,
- in appropriate cases, to compensate for delays caused by
- regulatory approval processes.
-
-
- Article 1710: Layout Designs of Semiconductor Integrated
- Circuits
-
- 1. Each Party shall protect layout designs (topographies) of
- integrated circuits ("layout designs") in accordance with
- Articles 2 through 7, 12 and 16(3), other than Article 6(3), of
- the Treaty on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated
- Circuits as opened for signature on 26 May 1989.
-
- 2. Subject to paragraph 3, each Party shall make it unlawful
- for any person without the right holder's authorization to
- import, sell or otherwise distribute for commercial purposes any
- of the following:
-
- (a) a protected layout design;
-
- (b) an integrated circuit in which a protected layout
- design is incorporated; or
-
- (c) an article incorporating such an integrated circuit,
- only insofar as it continues to contain an unlawfully
- reproduced layout design.
-
- 3. No Party may make unlawful any of the acts referred to in
- paragraph 2 performed in respect of an integrated circuit that
- incorporates an unlawfully reproduced layout design or any
- article that incorporates such an integrated circuit where the
- person performing those acts or ordering those acts to be done
- did not know and had no reasonable ground to know, when it
- acquired the integrated circuit or article incorporating such an
- integrated circuit, that it incorporated an unlawfully reproduced
- layout design.
-
- 4. Each Party shall provide that, after the person referred to
- in paragraph 3 has received sufficient notice that the layout
- design was unlawfully reproduced, such person may perform any of
- the acts with respect to the stock on hand or ordered before such
- notice, but shall be liable to pay the right holder for doing so
- an amount equivalent to a reasonable royalty such as would be
- payable under a freely negotiated license in respect of such a
- layout design.
-
- 5. No Party may permit the compulsory licensing of layout
- designs of integrated circuits.
- 6. Any Party that requires registration as a condition for
- protection of a layout design shall provide that the term of
- protection shall not end before the expiration of a period of 10
- years counted from the date of:
-
- (a) filing of the application for registration; or
-
- (b) the first commercial exploitation of the layout design,
- wherever in the world it occurs.
-
- 7. Where a Party does not require registration as a condition
- for protection of a layout design, the Party shall provide a term
- of protection of not less than 10 years from the date of the
- first commercial exploitation of the layout design, wherever in
- the world it occurs.
-
- 8. Notwithstanding paragraphs 6 and 7, a Party may provide that
- the protection shall lapse 15 years after the creation of the
- layout design.
-
- 9. This Article shall apply, except as provided in Annex
- 1710.9.
-
-
- Article 1711: Trade Secrets
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide the legal means for any person to
- prevent trade secrets from being disclosed to, acquired by, or
- used by others without the consent of the person lawfully in
- control of the information in a manner contrary to honest
- commercial practices, in so far as:
-
- (a) the information is secret in the sense that it is not,
- as a body or in the precise configuration and assembly
- of its components, generally known among or readily
- accessible to persons that normally deal with the kind
- of information in question;
-
- (b) the information has actual or potential commercial
- value because it is secret; and
-
- (c) the person lawfully in control of the information has
- taken reasonable steps under the circumstances to keep
- it secret.
-
- 2. A Party may require that to qualify for protection a trade
- secret must be evidenced in documents, electronic or magnetic
- means, optical discs, microfilms, films or other similar
- instruments.
-
- 3. No Party may limit the duration of protection for trade
- secrets, so long as the conditions in paragraph 1 exist.
-
- 4. No Party may discourage or impede the voluntary licensing of
- trade secrets by imposing excessive or discriminatory conditions
- on such licenses, or conditions that dilute the value of the
- trade secrets.
-
- 5. If a Party requires, as a condition for approving the
- marketing of pharmaceutical or agricultural chemical products
- that utilize new chemical entities, the submission of undisclosed
- test or other data necessary to determine whether the use of such
- products is safe and effective, the Party shall protect against
- disclosure of the data of persons making such submissions, where
- the origination of such data involves considerable effort, except
- where the disclosure is necessary to protect the public or unless
- steps are taken to ensure that the data is protected against
- unfair commercial use.
-
- 6. Each Party shall provide that for data subject to paragraph
- 5 that are submitted to the Party after the date of entry into
- force of this Agreement, no person other than the person that
- submitted them may, without the latter's permission, rely on such
- data in support of an application for product approval during a
- reasonable period of time after their submission. For this
- purpose, a reasonable period shall normally mean not less than
- five years from the date on which the Party granted approval to
- the person that produced the data for approval to market its
- product, taking account of the nature of the data and the
- person's efforts and expenditures in producing them. Subject to
- this provision, there shall be no limitation on any Party to
- implement abbreviated approval procedures for such products on
- the basis of bioequivalence and bioavailability studies.
-
- 7. Where a Party relies upon a marketing approval granted by
- another Party, the reasonable period of exclusive use of the data
- submitted in connection with obtaining the approval relied upon
- shall commence with the date of the first marketing approval
- relied upon.
-
-
- Article 1712: Geographical Indications
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide, in respect of geographical
- indications, the legal means for interested persons to prevent:
-
- (a) the use of any means in the designation or presentation
- of a good that indicates or suggests that the good in
- question originates in a territory, region or locality
- other than the true place of origin, in a manner that
- misleads the public as to the geographical origin of
- the good;
-
- (b) any use that constitutes an act of unfair competition
- within the meaning of Article 10bis of the Paris
- Convention.
-
- 2. Each Party shall, on its own initiative if its domestic law
- so permits or at the request of an interested person, refuse to
- register, or invalidate the registration of, a trademark
- containing or consisting of a geographical indication with
- respect to goods that do not originate in the indicated
- territory, region or locality, if use of the indication in the
- trademark for such goods is of such a nature as to mislead the
- public as to the geographical origin of the good.
-
- 3. Each Party shall also apply paragraphs 1 and 2 to a
- geographical indication that, although correctly indicating the
- territory, region or locality in which the goods originate,
- falsely represents to the public that the goods originate in
- another territory, region or locality.
-
- 4. Nothing in this Article shall require a Party to prevent
- continued and similar use of a particular geographical indication
- of another Party in connection with goods or services by any of
- its nationals or domiciliaries who have used that geographical
- indication in a continuous manner with regard to the same or
- related goods or services in that Party's territory, either:
-
- (a) for at least 10 years, or
-
- (b) in good faith, before the date of signature of this
- Agreement.
-
- 5. Where a trademark has been applied for or registered in good
- faith, or where rights to a trademark have been acquired through
- use in good faith, either:
-
- (a) before the date of application of these provisions in
- that Party, or
-
- (b) before the geographical indication is protected in its
- Party of origin,
-
- no Party may adopt any measure to implement this Article that
- prejudices eligibility for, or the validity of, the registration
- of a trademark, or the right to use a trademark, on the basis
- that such a trademark is identical with, or similar to, a
- geographical indication.
-
- 6. No Party shall be required to apply this Article to a
- geographical indication if it is identical to the customary term
- in common language in that Party's territory for the goods or
- services to which the indication applies.
-
- 7. A Party may provide that any request made under this Article
- in connection with the use or registration of a trademark must be
- presented within five years after the adverse use of the
- protected indication has become generally known in that Party or
- after the date of registration of the trademark in that Party,
- provided that the trademark has been published by that date, if
- such date is earlier than the date on which the adverse use
- became generally known in that Party, provided that the
- geographical indication is not used or registered in bad faith.
-
- 8. No Party shall adopt any measure implementing this Article
- that would prejudice any person's right to use, in the course of
- trade, its name or the name of its predecessor in business,
- except where such name forms all or part of a valid trademark in
- existence before the geographical indication became protected and
- with which there is a likelihood of confusion, or such name is
- used in such a manner as to mislead the public.
-
- 9. Nothing in this Chapter shall require a Party to protect a
- geographical indication that is not protected, or has fallen into
- disuse, in the Party of origin.
-
-
- Article 1713: Industrial Designs
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide for the protection of independently
- created industrial designs that are new or original. A Party may
- provide that:
-
- (a) designs are not new or original if they do not
- significantly differ from known designs or combinations
- of known design features; and
-
- (b) such protection shall not extend to designs dictated
- essentially by technical or functional considerations.
-
- 2. Each Party shall ensure that the requirements for securing
- protection for textile designs, in particular in regard to any
- cost, examination or publication, do not unreasonably impair a
- person's opportunity to seek and obtain such protection. A Party
- may comply with this obligation through industrial design law or
- copyright law.
-
- 3. Each Party shall provide the owner of a protected industrial
- design the right to prevent other persons not having the owner's
- consent from making or selling articles bearing or embodying a
- design that is a copy, or substantially a copy, of the protected
- design, when such acts are undertaken for commercial purposes.
-
- 4. A Party may provide limited exceptions to the protection of
- industrial designs, provided that such exceptions do not
- unreasonably conflict with the normal exploitation of protected
- industrial designs and do not unreasonably prejudice the
- legitimate interests of the owner of the protected design, taking
- into account the legitimate interests of other persons.
-
- 5. Each Party shall provide a term of protection for industrial
- designs of at least 10 years.
-
-
- Article 1714: Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights:
- General Provisions
-
- 1. Each Party shall ensure that enforcement procedures, as
- specified in this Article and Articles 1715 through 1718, are
- available under its domestic law so as to permit effective action
- to be taken against any act of infringement of intellectual
- property rights covered by this Chapter, including expeditious
- remedies to prevent infringements and remedies to deter further
- infringements. Such enforcement procedures shall be applied so
- as to avoid the creation of barriers to legitimate trade and to
- provide for safeguards against abuse of the procedures.
-
- 2. Each Party shall ensure that its procedures for the
- enforcement of intellectual property rights are fair and
- equitable, are not unnecessarily complicated or costly, and do
- not entail unreasonable time-limits or unwarranted delays.
-
- 3. Each Party shall provide that decisions on the merits of a
- case in judicial and administrative enforcement proceedings
- shall:
-
- (a) preferably be in writing and preferably state the
- reasons on which the decisions are based;
-
- (b) be made available at least to the parties in a
- proceeding without undue delay; and
-
- (c) be based only on evidence in respect of which such
- parties were offered the opportunity to be heard.
-
- 4. Each Party shall ensure that parties in a proceeding have an
- opportunity to have final administrative decisions reviewed by a
- judicial authority of that Party and, subject to jurisdictional
- provisions in its domestic laws concerning the importance of a
- case, to have reviewed at least the legal aspects of initial
- judicial decisions on the merits of a case. Notwithstanding the
- above, no Party shall be required to provide for judicial review
- of acquittals in criminal cases.
-
- 5. Nothing in this Article and in Articles 1715 through 1718
- shall require a Party to establish a judicial system for the
- enforcement of intellectual property rights distinct from that
- Party's system for the enforcement of laws in general.
-
- 6. For the purposes of Articles 1715 through 1718, the term
- "right holder" includes federations and associations having legal
- standing to assert such rights.
-
-
- Article 1715: Specific Procedural and Remedial Aspects of Civil
- and Administrative Procedures
-
- 1. Each Party shall make available to right holders civil
- judicial procedures for the enforcement of any intellectual
- property right covered by this Chapter. Each Party shall provide
- that:
-
- (a) defendants have the right to written notice that is
- timely and contains sufficient detail, including the
- basis of the claims;
-
- (b) parties in a proceeding are allowed to be represented
- by independent legal counsel;
-
- (c) the procedures do not include imposition of overly
- burdensome requirements concerning mandatory personal
- appearances;
-
- (d) all parties in a proceeding are duly entitled to
- substantiate their claims and to present relevant
- evidence; and
-
- (e) the procedures include a means to identify and protect
- confidential information.
-
- 2. Each Party shall provide that its judicial authorities shall
- have the authority:
-
- (a) where a party in a proceeding has presented reasonably
- available evidence sufficient to support its claims and
- has specified evidence relevant to the substantiation
- of its claims that is within the control of the
- opposing party, to order the opposing party to produce
- such evidence, subject in appropriate cases to
- conditions that ensure the protection of confidential
- information;
-
- (b) where a party in a proceeding voluntarily and without
- good reason refuses access to, or otherwise does not
- provide relevant evidence under that party's control
- within a reasonable period, or significantly impedes a
- proceeding relating to an enforcement action, to make
- preliminary and final determinations, affirmative or
- negative, on the basis of the evidence presented,
- including the complaint or the allegation presented by
- the party adversely affected by the denial of access to
- evidence, subject to providing the parties an
- opportunity to be heard on the allegations or evidence;
-
- (c) to order a party in a proceeding to desist from an
- infringement, including to prevent the date of entry
- into the channels of commerce in their jurisdiction of
- imported goods that involve the infringement of an
- intellectual property right, which order shall be
- enforceable at least immediately after customs
- clearance of such goods;
-
- (d) to order the infringer of an intellectual property
- right to pay the right holder damages adequate to
- compensate for the injury the right holder has suffered
- because of the infringement where the infringer knew or
- had reasonable grounds to know that it was engaged in
- an infringing activity;
-
- (e) to order an infringer of an intellectual property right
- to pay the right holder's expenses, which may include
- appropriate attorney's fees; and
-
- (f) to order a party in a proceeding at whose request
- measures were taken and who has abused enforcement
- procedures to provide adequate compensation to any
- party wrongfully enjoined or restrained in the
- proceeding for the injury suffered because of such
- abuse and to pay that party's expenses, which may
- include appropriate attorney's fees.
-
- 3. With respect to the authority referred to in subparagraph
- 2(c), no Party shall be obliged to provide such authority in
- respect of protected subject matter that is acquired or ordered
- by a person before that person knew or had reasonable grounds to
- know that dealing in that subject matter would entail the
- infringement of an intellectual property right.
-
- 4. With respect to the authority referred to in subparagraph
- 2(d), a Party may, at least with respect to copyrighted works and
- sound recordings, authorize the judicial authorities to order
- recovery of profits or payment of pre-established damages, or
- both, even where the infringer did not know or had no reasonable
- grounds to know that it was engaged in an infringing activity.
-
- 5. Each Party shall provide that, in order to create an
- effective deterrent to infringement, its judicial authorities
- shall have the authority to order that:
-
- (a) goods that they have found to be infringing be, without
- compensation of any sort, disposed of outside the
- channels of commerce in such a manner as to avoid any
- injury caused to the right holder, or, unless this
- would be contrary to existing constitutional
- requirements, destroyed; and
-
- (b) materials and implements the predominant use of which
- has been in the creation of the infringing goods be,
- without compensation of any sort, disposed of outside
- the channels of commerce in such a manner as to
- minimize the risks of further infringements.
-
- In considering whether to issue such an order, judicial
- authorities shall take into account the need for proportionality
- between the seriousness of the infringement and the remedies
- ordered as well as the interests of other persons. In regard to
- counterfeit goods, the simple removal of the trademark unlawfully
- affixed shall not be sufficient, other than in exceptional cases,
- to permit release of the goods into the channels of commerce.
-
- 6. In respect of the administration of any law pertaining to
- the protection or enforcement of intellectual property rights,
- each Party shall only exempt both public authorities and
- officials from liability to appropriate remedial measures where
- actions are taken or intended in good faith in the course of the
- administration of such laws.
-
- 7. Notwithstanding the other provisions of Articles 1714
- through 1718, where a Party is sued with respect to an
- infringement of an intellectual property right as a result of its
- use of that right or use on its behalf, that Party may limit the
- remedies available against it to the payment to the right holder
- of adequate remuneration in the circumstances of each case,
- taking into account the economic value of the use.
-
- 8. Each Party shall provide that, where a civil remedy can be
- ordered as a result of administrative procedures on the merits of
- a case, such procedures shall conform to principles equivalent in
- substance to those set out in this Article.
-
-
- Article 1716: Provisional Measures
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide that its judicial authorities shall
- have the authority to order prompt and effective provisional
- measures:
-
- (a) to prevent an infringement of any intellectual property
- right, and in particular to prevent the date of entry
- into the channels of commerce in their jurisdiction of
- allegedly infringing goods, including measures to
- prevent the entry of imported goods at least
- immediately after customs clearance; and
-
- (b) to preserve relevant evidence in regard to the alleged
- infringement.
-
- 2. Each Party shall provide that its judicial authorities shall
- have the authority to require any applicant for provisional
- measures to provide to the judicial authorities any evidence
- reasonably available to that applicant that the judicial
- authorities consider necessary to enable them to determine with a
- sufficient degree of certainty whether:
-
- (a) the applicant is the right holder;
-
- (b) the applicant's right is being infringed or such
- infringement is imminent; and
-
- (c) any delay in the issuance of such measures is likely to
- cause irreparable harm to the right holder, or there is
- a demonstrable risk of evidence being destroyed.
-
- Each Party shall provide that its judicial authorities shall have
- the authority to require the applicant to provide a security or
- equivalent assurance sufficient to protect the interests of the
- defendant and to prevent abuse.
-
- 3. Each Party shall provide that its competent authorities
- shall have the authority to require an applicant for provisional
- measures to provide other information necessary for the
- identification of the relevant goods by the authority that will
- execute the provisional measures.
-
- 4. Each Party shall provide that its judicial authorities shall
- have the authority to order provisional measures on an ex parte
- basis, in particular where any delay is likely to cause
- irreparable harm to the right holder, or where there is a
- demonstrable risk of evidence being destroyed.
-
- 5. Each Party shall provide that where provisional measures are
- adopted by that Party's judicial authorities on an ex parte
- basis:
-
- (a) a person affected shall be given notice of those
- measures without delay but in any event no later than
- immediately after the execution of the measures;
-
- (b) a defendant shall, upon request, have those measures
- reviewed by that Party's judicial authorities, for the
- purpose of deciding, within a reasonable period after
- notice of those measures is given, whether the measures
- shall be modified, revoked or confirmed, and shall be
- given an opportunity to be heard in the review
- proceedings.
-
- 6. Without prejudice to paragraph 5, each Party shall provide
- that, upon the request of the defendant, the Party's judicial
- authorities shall revoke or otherwise cease to apply the
- provisional measures taken on the basis of paragraphs 1 and 4 if
- proceedings leading to a decision on the merits are not
- initiated:
-
- (a) within a reasonable period as determined by the
- judicial authority ordering the measures where the
- Party's domestic law so permits; or
-
- (b) in the absence of such a determination, within a period
- of no more than 20 working days or 31 calendar days,
- whichever is longer.
-
- 7. Each Party shall provide that, where the provisional
- measures are revoked or where they lapse due to any act or
- omission by the applicant, or where the judicial authorities
- subsequently find that there has been no infringement or threat
- of infringement of an intellectual property right, the judicial
- authorities shall have the authority to order the applicant, on
- request of the defendant, to provide the defendant appropriate
- compensation for any injury caused by these measures.
-
- 8. Each Party shall provide that, where a provisional measure
- can be ordered as a result of administrative procedures, such
- procedures shall conform to principles equivalent in substance to
- those set out in this Article.
-
-
- Article 1717: Criminal Procedures and Penalties
-
- 1. Each Party shall provide criminal procedures and penalties
- to be applied at least in cases of willful trademark
- counterfeiting or copyright piracy on a commercial scale. Each
- Party shall provide that penalties available include imprisonment
- or monetary fines, or both, sufficient to provide a deterrent,
- consistent with the level of penalties applied for crimes of a
- corresponding gravity.
-
- 2. Each Party shall provide that, in appropriate cases, its
- judicial authorities may order the seizure, forfeiture and
- destruction of infringing goods and of any materials and
- implements the predominant use of which has been in the
- commission of the offense.
-
- 3. A Party may provide criminal procedures and penalties to be
- applied in cases of infringement of intellectual property rights,
- other than those in paragraph 1, where they are committed
- wilfully and on a commercial scale.
-
-
- Article 1718: Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights at the
- Border
-
- 1. Each Party shall, in conformity with this Article, adopt
- procedures to enable a right holder, who has valid grounds for
- suspecting that the importation of counterfeit trademark goods or
- pirated copyright goods may take place, to lodge an application
- in writing with its competent authorities, whether administrative
- or judicial, for the suspension by the customs administration of
- the release of such goods into free circulation. No Party shall
- be obligated to apply such procedures to goods in transit. A
- Party may permit such an application to be made in respect of
- goods that involve other infringements of intellectual property
- rights, provided that the requirements of this Article are met.
- A Party may also provide for corresponding procedures concerning
- the suspension by the customs administration of the release of
- infringing goods destined for exportation from its territory.
-
- 2. Each Party shall require any applicant who initiates
- procedures under paragraph 1 to provide adequate evidence:
-
- (a) to satisfy that Party's competent authorities that,
- under the domestic laws of the country of importation,
- there is prima facie an infringement of its
- intellectual property right; and
-
- (b) to supply a sufficiently detailed description of the
- goods to make them readily recognizable by the customs
- administration.
-
- The competent authorities shall inform the applicant within a
- reasonable period whether they have accepted the application and,
- if so, the period for which the customs administration will take
- action.
-
- 3. Each Party shall provide that its competent authorities
- shall have the authority to require an applicant under paragraph
- 1 to provide a security or equivalent assurance sufficient to
- protect the defendant and the competent authorities and to
- prevent abuse. Such security or equivalent assurance shall not
- unreasonably deter recourse to these procedures.
-
- 4. Each Party shall provide that, where pursuant to an
- application under procedures adopted pursuant to this Article,
- its customs administration suspends the release of goods
- involving industrial designs, patents, integrated circuits or
- trade secrets into free circulation on the basis of a decision
- other than by a judicial or other independent authority, and the
- period provided for in paragraphs 6 through 8 has expired without
- the granting of provisional relief by the duly empowered
- authority, and provided that all other conditions for importation
- have been complied with, the owner, importer, or consignee of
- such goods shall be entitled to their release on the posting of a
- security in an amount sufficient to protect the right holder
- against any infringement. Payment of such security shall not
- prejudice any other remedy available to the right holder, it
- being understood that the security shall be released if the right
- holder fails to pursue its right of action within a reasonable
- period of time.
-
- 5. Each Party shall provide that its customs administration
- shall promptly notify the importer and the applicant when the
- customs administration suspends the release of goods pursuant to
- paragraph 1.
-
- 6. Each Party shall provide that its customs administration
- shall release goods from suspension if within a period not
- exceeding ten working days after the applicant under paragraph 1
- has been served notice of the suspension:
-
- (a) the customs administration has not been informed that a
- party other than the defendant has initiated
- proceedings leading to a decision on the merits of the
- case, or
-
- (b) a competent authority has taken provisional measures
- prolonging the suspension,
-
- provided that all other conditions for importation or exportation
- have been met. Each Party shall provide that, in appropriate
- cases, the customs administration may extend the suspension by
- another 10 working days.
-
- 7. Each Party shall provide that if proceedings leading to a
- decision on the merits of the case have been initiated, a review,
- including a right to be heard, shall take place on request of the
- defendant with a view to deciding, within a reasonable period,
- whether the measures shall be modified, revoked or confirmed.
-
- 8. Notwithstanding paragraphs 6 and 7, where the suspension of
- the release of goods is carried out or continued in accordance
- with a provisional judicial measure, the provisions of Article
- 1716(6) shall apply.
-
- 9. Each Party shall provide that its competent authorities
- shall have the authority to order the applicant under paragraph 1
- to pay the importer, the consignee and the owner of the goods
- appropriate compensation for any injury caused to them through
- the wrongful detention of goods or through the detention of goods
- released pursuant to paragraph 6.
-
- 10. Without prejudice to the protection of confidential
- information, each Party shall provide that its competent
- authorities shall have the authority to give the right holder
- sufficient opportunity to have any goods detained by the customs
- administration inspected in order to substantiate its claims.
- Each Party shall also provide that its competent authorities have
- the authority to give the importer an equivalent opportunity to
- have any such goods inspected. Where the competent authorities
- have made a positive determination on the merits of a case, a
- Party may provide the competent authorities the authority to
- inform the right holder of the names and addresses of the
- consignor, the importer and the consignee, and of the quantity of
- the goods in question.
-
- 11. Where a Party requires its competent authorities to act upon
- their own initiative and to suspend the release of goods in
- respect of which they have acquired prima facie evidence that an
- intellectual property right is being infringed:
-
- (a) the competent authorities may at any time seek from the
- right holder any information that may assist them to
- exercise these powers;
-
- (b) the importer and the right holder shall be promptly
- notified of the suspension by the Party's competent
- authorities, and where the importer lodges an appeal
- against the suspension with competent authorities, the
- suspension shall be subject to the conditions, with
- such modifications as are necessary, set out in
- paragraphs 6 through 8; and
-
- (c) the Party shall only exempt both public authorities and
- officials from liability to appropriate remedial
- measures where actions are taken or intended in good
- faith.
-
- 12. Without prejudice to other rights of action open to the
- right holder and subject to the defendant's right to seek
- judicial review, each Party shall provide that its competent
- authorities shall have the authority to order the destruction or
- disposal of infringing goods in accordance with the principles
- set out in Article 1715(5). In regard to counterfeit goods, the
- authorities shall not allow the re-exportation of the infringing
- goods in an unaltered state or subject them to a different
- customs procedure, other than in exceptional circumstances.
-
- 13. A Party may exclude from the application of paragraphs 1
- through 12 small quantities of goods of a non-commercial nature
- contained in travellers' personal luggage or sent in small
- consignments that are not repetitive.
-
- 14. This Article shall apply, except as provided in Annex
- 1718.14.
-
-
- Article 1719: Cooperation and Technical Assistance
-
- 1. The Parties shall provide each other on mutually agreed
- terms with technical assistance and shall promote cooperation
- between their competent authorities. Such cooperation shall
- include, but not be limited to, the training of personnel.
-
- 2. The Parties shall cooperate with a view to eliminating trade
- in goods that infringe intellectual property rights. For this
- purpose, each Party shall establish and notify the other Parties
- of contact points in its federal government and shall exchange
- information concerning trade in infringing goods.
-
-
- Article 1720: Protection of Existing Subject Matter
-
- 1. Other than the provisions of Article 1705(7), this Agreement
- does not give rise to obligations in respect of acts that
- occurred before the date of application of the relevant
- provisions of this Agreement for the Party in question.
-
- 2. Except as otherwise provided for in this Agreement, each
- Party shall apply this Agreement to all subject matter existing
- on the date of application of the relevant provisions of this
- Agreement for the Party in question, and which is protected in a
- Party on the said date, or which meets or comes subsequently to
- meet the criteria for protection under the terms of this Chapter.
- In respect of this paragraph and paragraphs 3 and 4, a Party's
- obligations with respect to existing works shall be solely
- determined under Article 18 of the Berne Convention and with
- respect to the rights of producers of sound recordings in
- existing sound recordings shall be determined solely under
- Article 18 of that Convention, as made applicable under this
- Agreement.
-
- 3. Except as required under Article 1705(7), and
- notwithstanding paragraph 2, a Party shall not be required to
- restore protection to subject matter that, on the date of
- application of the relevant provisions of this Agreement for the
- Party in question, has fallen into the public domain in its
- territory.
-
- 4. Any acts in respect of specific objects embodying protected
- subject matter which become infringing under the terms of
- legislation in conformity with this Agreement, and which were
- commenced or in respect of which a significant investment was
- made, before the date of ratification of this Agreement by that
- Party, any Party may provide for a limitation of the remedies
- available to the right holder as to the continued performance of
- such acts after the date of application of the Agreement for that
- Party. In such cases, the Party shall, however, at least provide
- for payment of equitable remuneration.
-
- 5. No Party shall be obliged to apply the provisions of Article
- 1705(2)(d) or Article 1706(1)(d) with respect to originals or
- copies purchased prior to the date of application of the relevant
- provisions of this Agreement for that Party.
-
- 6. No Party shall be required to apply Article 1709(10), or the
- requirement in Article 1709(7) that patent rights shall be
- enjoyable without discrimination as to the field of technology,
- to use without the authorization of the right holder where
- authorization for such use was granted by the government before
- the text of the Draft Final Act Embodying the Results of the
- Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations became known.
-
- 7. In the case of intellectual property rights for which
- protection is conditional upon registration, applications for
- protection that are pending on the date of application of the
- relevant provisions of this Agreement for the Party in question
- shall be permitted to be amended to claim any enhanced protection
- provided under the provisions of this Agreement. Such amendments
- shall not include new matter.
-
-
- Article 1721: Definitions
-
- For purposes of this Agreement:
-
- confidential information includes trade secrets, privileged
- information and other materials exempted from disclosure under
- the Party's domestic law;
-
- encrypted program-carrying satellite signal means a
- program-carrying satellite signal that is transmitted in a form
- whereby the aural or visual characteristics, or both, are
- modified or altered for the purpose of preventing the
- unauthorized reception by persons without the authorized
- equipment that is designed to eliminate the effects of such
- modification or alteration, of a program carried in that signal;
-
- geographical indication means any indication that identifies a
- good as originating in the territory of a Party, or a region or
- locality in that territory, where a particular quality,
- reputation or other characteristic of the good is essentially
- attributable to its geographical origin;
-
- in a manner contrary to honest commercial practices means at
- least practices such as breach of contract, breach of confidence
- and inducement to breach, and includes the acquisition of
- undisclosed information by other persons who knew, or were
- grossly negligent in failing to know, that such practices were
- involved in the acquisition;
-
- intellectual property rights refers to copyright and related
- rights, trademark rights, patent rights, rights in layout designs
- of semiconductor integrated circuits, trade secret rights, plant
- breeders' rights, rights in geographical indications and
- industrial design rights;
-
- nationals of another Party means, in respect of the relevant
- intellectual property right, persons who would meet the criteria
- for eligibility for protection provided for in the Paris
- Convention (1967), the Berne Convention (1971), the Geneva
- Convention (1971), the International Convention for the
- Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and
- Broadcasting Organizations (1961), the UPOV Convention (1978),
- the UPOV Convention (1991) or the Treaty on Intellectual Property
- in Respect of Integrated Circuits, as if each Party were a party
- to those Conventions, and with respect to intellectual property
- rights that are not the subject of these Conventions, "nationals
- of another Party" shall be understood to be at least individuals
- who are citizens or permanent residents of that Party and also
- includes any other natural person referred to in Annex 201.1;
-
- public includes, with respect to rights of communication and
- performance of works provided for under Articles 11, 11bis(1) and
- 14(1)(ii) of the Berne Convention, with respect to dramatic,
- dramatico-musical, musical and cinematographic works, at least,
- any aggregation of individuals intended to be the object of, and
- capable of perceiving, communications or performances of works,
- regardless of whether they can do so at the same or different
- times or in the same or different places, provided that such an
- aggregation is larger than a family and its immediate circle of
- acquaintances or is not a group comprising a limited number of
- individuals having similarly close ties that has not been formed
- for the principal purpose of receiving such performances and
- communications of works; and
-
- secondary uses of sound recordings means the use directly for
- broadcasting or for any other public communication of a sound
- recording.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 1701.3
-
- Intellectual Property Conventions
-
-
- 1. Mexico shall:
-
- (a) make every effort to comply with the substantive
- provisions of the 1978 or 1991 UPOV Convention as soon
- as possible and shall do so no later than two years
- after the date of signature of this Agreement; and
-
- (b) accept from the date of entry into force of this
- Agreement, applications from plant breeders for
- varieties in all plant genera and species and grant
- protection, in accordance with such substantive
- provisions, promptly after complying with subparagraph
- (a).
-
- 2. Notwithstanding Article 1701(2)(b), this Agreement confers
- no rights and imposes no obligations on the United States with
- respect to Article 6bis of the Berne Convention, or the rights
- derived from that Article.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 1705.7
-
- Copyright
-
-
- The United States shall provide protection to motion
- pictures produced in another Party's territory that have been
- declared to be in the public domain pursuant to 17 U.S.C. section
- 405. This obligation shall apply to the extent that it is
- consistent with the Constitution of the United States, and is
- subject to budgetary considerations.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 1710.9
-
- Layout Designs
-
-
- Mexico shall make every effort to implement the requirements
- of Article 1710 as soon as possible, and shall do so no later
- than four years after the date of entry into force of this
- Agreement.
-
- =============================================================================
- ANNEX 1718.14
-
- Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights
-
-
- Mexico shall make every effort to comply with the
- requirements of Article 1718 as soon as possible, and shall do so
- in any event no later than three years after the date of
- signature of this Agreement.
-
-
-