Intellectual Property Rights in India: Trademarks, Copyright and Patents
By Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran | 19 Law Chambers, Visakhapatnam | Legal Awareness
Your business name, logo, invention, software, book, music, or brand identity is valuable intellectual property and Indian law protects it through specific legal mechanisms. Furthermore, failing to register and protect your intellectual property allows competitors to copy your work, sell counterfeit products under your brand, or patent your invention before you do. Consequently, understanding the basics of intellectual property rights helps every business owner, creator, and innovator in Andhra Pradesh protect what they have created. Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran at 19 Law Chambers provides guidance on intellectual property protection and enforcement across India.
Four Major Types of Intellectual Property in India
- Trademark A trademark is any word, name, symbol, logo, colour combination, or distinctive sign that identifies your goods or services and distinguishes them from competitors. Specifically, registering your trademark under the Trade Marks Act, 1999 gives you the exclusive right to use it in India and the right to sue anyone who uses a deceptively similar mark. Furthermore, trademark registration is valid for 10 years and renewable indefinitely. Consequently, every business however small should register its name and logo as a trademark before launching.
How to Register a Trademark: File a trademark application before the Trade Marks Registry at ipindia.gov.in. Specifically, the application includes: your name and address, the trademark image or word, the class of goods or services (out of 45 international classes), and the date of first use. Moreover, trademark examination takes 12 to 18 months but you receive trademark pending protection from the filing date. Consequently, start using the ™ symbol immediately upon filing.
- Copyright Copyright automatically protects any original creative work books, articles, songs, films, software, paintings, and artistic works from the moment of creation. Furthermore, you do not need to register copyright for protection to exist. However, registering copyright at the Copyright Office creates important evidentiary advantages in infringement cases. Moreover, copyright in India lasts for the creator’s lifetime plus 60 years.
What Copyright Protects: Literary works including books, articles, and software code, artistic works paintings, photographs, and sculptures, musical works and sound recordings, cinematographic films, and broadcasts. Importantly, copyright protects the expression of ideas not the ideas themselves. Consequently, two people can write articles about the same topic without infringing each other’s copyright as long as the expression is original.
- Patent A patent grants you the exclusive right to make, use, and sell your invention in India for 20 years in exchange for publicly disclosing how the invention works. Specifically, to be patentable, an invention must be: new (not previously disclosed anywhere in the world), inventive (not obvious to a person skilled in the relevant field), and capable of industrial application.
What Cannot Be Patented: Mathematical methods, mental acts, discoveries of natural phenomena, traditional knowledge, computer programs per se, and methods of treatment of humans and animals. Importantly, file your patent application at ipindia.gov.in before publicly disclosing the invention disclosure before filing destroys novelty. Consequently, inventor secrecy before patent filing is absolutely essential.
- Trade Secret Trade secrets are confidential business information formulas, processes, customer lists, pricing strategies, and technical know-how that give your business a competitive advantage. Specifically, Indian law protects trade secrets through: non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) with employees and business partners, breach of confidence tort law claims, and criminal prosecution under IPC for theft of trade secrets. Furthermore, unlike patents, trade secrets can be protected indefinitely as long as they remain secret. Read: Legal Notice How to Send India for enforcement approach.
Enforcing Intellectual Property Rights in India
For Trademark Infringement: File a civil suit for injunction and damages before the District Court. Moreover, criminal complaints under Section 103 and 104 of the Trade Marks Act — with imprisonment up to 3 years — are also available against counterfeiters. Furthermore, ex-parte injunctions (without hearing the infringer) are routinely granted in clear trademark infringement cases. Consequently, courts shut down infringers within days in urgent cases.
For Copyright Infringement: File a civil suit for injunction and damages, or file a criminal complaint under Section 63 Copyright Act — with imprisonment up to 3 years. Moreover, the Copyright Office provides a quick administrative remedy for some infringement situations. Specifically, internet piracy of copyrighted content can be addressed through website blocking orders — which Indian courts grant increasingly quickly.
For Patent Infringement: File a civil suit before the District Court or the Intellectual Property Division of the High Court. Specifically, claim: permanent injunction preventing further infringement, delivery up or destruction of infringing products, damages including lost profits and reasonable royalty, and costs of proceedings. Consequently, patent infringement suits are complex and expensive — making proper patent registration and documentation essential from the start.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Someone is using my business name without registration. Can I stop them?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Yes — even without trademark registration, you can claim common law rights in your business name through “passing off” action in civil court. Specifically, you must prove: your reputation in the name, misrepresentation by the infringer, and damage to your reputation or business. Furthermore, register your trademark immediately to strengthen your position in any infringement proceeding.
Q: My employee left and is using my trade secrets at a competitor. What can I do?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>File an urgent civil suit for breach of confidence and an ex-parte injunction preventing disclosure or use of your trade secrets. Furthermore, if the NDA was violated ;claim damages for breach of contract. Moreover, file a criminal complaint for theft of trade information under IPC provisions. Consequently, act immediately the longer the trade secret is used, the greater the damage and the harder it becomes to demonstrate secrecy.
Q: Is copyright registration required in India?
Copyright exists automatically upon creation of an original work registration is not mandatory. However, registration at the Copyright Office creates a public record, serves as prima facie evidence of copyright in disputes, and significantly strengthens your position in infringement proceedings. Consequently, register important works as a practical measure. Free legal aid: NALSA — nalsa.gov.in | Free Legal Aid in AP.
Also read: Defamation Law India Online Offline | Right to Information RTI India | Best Lawyers in Vizag
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