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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

IP Australia
Agency overview
Formed25 February 1998; 26 years ago (1998-02-25)[1]
JurisdictionAustralian Government
Employees1,053 (FY21–22)[2]
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • Michael Schwager, Director-General[4]
  • Paula Adamson, Deputy Director-General[4]
  • Margaret Tregurtha, Deputy Director-General[4]
Websiteipaustralia.gov.au
Discovery House, the headquarters of IP Australia in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

IP Australia is an Australian Government agency, responsible for administering intellectual property law in Australia. The agency manages the registration of patents, trade marks, registered designs and plant breeder's rights in Australia. The agency sits under the Department of Industry, Science and Resources. From 1904 until 1998, the responsible government agency was called the Australian Patent Office (APO), which is now a division within IP Australia. The headquarters are located at Discovery House in Canberra, Australia, with offices in some capital cities. IP Australia has been an International Searching Authority (ISA) and International Preliminary Examining Authority (IPEA) for patent applications filed in accordance with the Patent Co-operation Treaty since 31 March 1980.[5] Australia is also a member of the Madrid system for trade marks, the Paris Convention for designs and the UPOV for plant breeder's rights.

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Transcription

The mail arrives at 7.30 in the morning. We process around 1250 letters daily. Most of the applications come in electronically and are sent to the admin areas. A lot of inventors or businesses begin their application by contacting our customer service centre. Here at the customer service centre we obviously answer all your phone calls, we also answer your emails that you send to us as well. We’ll help you with navigating our website and filing your applications. We help people with general questions. We don’t actually give you legal advice - we have lots of information to give you – but we do encourage you to talk to an IP attorney or lawyer. Here in the Trademarks and Designs Administration Section we process new trademark and new design applications.That includes filing of the new trademark application through to registrations and renewals.If it meets minimum filing requirements, we will then enter it into our administration system and send it up to examination. As a patent examiner, we're the first people to see new technology developments as the applications are applied for. And we search and examine the patent applications to see whether they’re allowed to have a patent under the Act. We have a number of different tools we can use to search the prior art as we call it. The main one being specialised search engine called Epoch but we also make use of Google. Here in the Trademarks Examination Group we look at trademarks that are filed and we examine them to make sure they meet the requirements of the Act. So basically whether they’re distinctive and whether there are similar marks already registered. Not all applications get examined. It has to be a special request which involves a fee. Of all our applications about 10 or 15 per cent get examined. It gives you protection from anyone infringing on your design. Here at Opposition Hearing and Legislation, we manage the applications that are opposed by a third party – this is less than one per cent of the total applications we receive. I deal with the opposition process mainly with trademarks. That covers from when a notice of opposition is filed, through the evidence stages and right through to us making a decision on the ownership details. Currently we’re dealing with over 1,600 trademark disputes and only nine design disputes. So once a patent application has been accepted it’s advertised for an opposition period of three months. At the end of the application process for patents or plant breeders’ rights we’ll issue a certificate to the customer if the application has been successfully granted. IP Australia is the government agency that protects your invention, brand, the appearance of your product or your plant variety through patents, trademarks, designs and plant breeder’s rights. 37

Statutory basis

IP Australia exercises its authority under a number of Commonwealth laws:

  • Patents Act 1990[6]
  • Patents Regulations 1991[7]
  • Trade Marks Act 1995 (except Part 13 which the Australian Border Force administers)[8]
  • Trade Marks Regulations 1995[9]
  • Designs Act 2003[10]
  • Designs Regulations 2004[11]
  • Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994[12]
  • Plant Breeder's Rights Regulations 1994[13]

Patent examiners

Patent examiners are generally scientists and engineers who do not necessarily hold law degrees but have received legal training in patent law. "A patent examiner is hired based on their technical expertise, their professional qualifications and possibly their industry experience. They then undergo training within the office, and we use competency based training. An examiner will take somewhere between 12 to possibly 18 months to become what is called an acceptance delegate. That means they are assessed to be competent to assess a patent application and make a decision about it qualifying or satisfying all of the legislative provisions."[14] [June 2009].

"If you have not attained the Commissioner of Patents Acceptance Delegation within two years of the date on which you commence duties, you may have failed to meet a condition of your engagement, failed to complete your entry-level training courses and you may lack an essential qualification for the performance of your duties. Consequently, it is likely that immediate action will be taken to terminate your employment."[15] [October 2010]

"APO is pursuing a medium-term strategy of continuing to engage patent examiners so that we can reduce that backlog during a time when our work is a little bit quieter, so that when economic activity picks up again we will be well placed. That is adding to our costs for patent examiners, in particular where we have continued to recruit."[16] [June 2009]

To be an ISA, APO must have "at least 100 full-time employees with sufficient technical qualifications to carry out searches." [PCT Reg. 36.1 (i)][17]

Notable Australian patents

  • On 4 August 1868, Thomas Sutcliffe Mort and Eugene Nicolle filed Victorian Patent 1139[18] for "Refrigeration".
  • On 25 March 1885 Hugh Victor McKay filed Victorian Patent 4006[19] for a "Sunshine Stripper Harvester".
  • On 13 February 1904 the first Federal Australian Patent Application was filed by Andrew Brown McKenzie for "Improvements in air leak preventative for Westinghouse and like brakes.".
  • On 21 December 1914 George Julius filed Australian Patent 15133/14[20] for an "Automatic Totalizator".
  • On 22 November 1926 Hume filed Australian Patent 4843/26 for the "Spun Concrete Pipe".
  • On 10 September 1947 George Shepherd filed Australian Patent 136548 [Application 15008/47][21] for Furniture Castors.
  • On 2 May 1955 Mervyn Victor Richardson filed Australian Patent 212130 [Application 8770/55][22] for the Victa lawn mower.
  • On 22 March 1956 Lance Hill filed Australian Patent 215772 [Application 16938/56][23] for a fold-away handle design for the Hills rotary clothes hoist.
  • On 6 July 1970 Ralph Sarich filed Australian Patent 467415 [Application 30650/71][24] for "An Improved Rotary Motor", which later became known as the "Sarich orbital engine".
  • On 3 November 1977 The University of Melbourne filed Australian Patent 519851 [Application 41061/78][25] for "A Prothesis to Simulate Neural Endings", invented by I. C. Forster. This became known as the "Cochlear Bionic Ear".
  • On 7 May 1982 Arthur Ernest Bishop filed Australian Patent 552975 [Application 15178/83][26] for "Rack and pinion Steering Gear". This became known as the "Bishop Steering Gear".
  • On 6 July 1982 Norport Pty. Ltd filed Australian Patent Application 85668/82[27] for "Yacht Keel With Fins Near Tip", invented by Ben Lexcen. This became known as the "Winged keel" and was used on Alan Bond's Australia II yacht during its successful challenge to the America's Cup in 1983.
  • On 13 October 1986 Norman Thomas Jennings filed Australian Patent Application 35064/71[28] for "Pelletted Poultry Manure Fertilizer" that later became more commonly known as "Dynamic Lifter".
  • On 19 July 1991, CSL Limited and The University of Queensland filed Australian Patent 651727 [Application 23666/92][29] for "Papilloma Virus Vaccine", invented by Ian Frazer and Jian Zhou. This vaccine for cervical cancer is known as "Gardasil" or "Cervarix".
  • On 27 November 1992, the CSIRO filed Australian Patent 666411 [Application 51806/93][30] for "A Wireless LAN", invented by John David O'Sullivan, Graham Ross Daniels, Terence Michael Paul Percival, Diethelm Ironi Ostry and John Fraser Deane.
  • On 11 August 1995, Myriad Genetics, Inc. filed Australian Patent 686004 [Application 1995033212][31] for "In vivo mutations and polymorphisms in the 17q-linked breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility gene", invented by Donna M Shattuck-Eidens, Jacques Simard, Mitsuru Emi, Francine Durocher and Yusuke Nakamura. The patent claims the human BRCA1 gene. This patent provided the opportunity to test the legal validity of gene patents in the US. The US court held that composition patents were invalid, essentially because they are products of nature.[32] This patent has yet to be tested in Australia.
  • On 24 May 2001, John Michael Keogh filed Australian Patent 2001100012 for "Circular Transportation Facilitation Device". This was, in simple fact, the wheel.[33] IP Australia was awarded an Ig Nobel Prize in 2001 for granting this patent for one of the world's oldest known inventions. The patent was thereafter revoked on 30 August 2001.[34]

Operational issues

Innovation patents

In 2001, the Australian Patent Office within IP Australia introduced a system that immediately granted "innovation patents" for applications which pass a formalities test. Innovation patents are aimed at providing protection for short market life products. To demonstrate the absurdity of the system, an innovation patent application was filed for the wheel and granted automatically by IP Australia.[33][35] The applicant, lawyer John Keogh, was awarded an Ig Nobel Prize (a satirical award within the fields of STEM for things that are unusual, imaginative or goofy) for his patent of the wheel.[35]

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ CA 8551: Intellectual Property Australia, Central Office, National Archives of Australia, retrieved 9 December 2013
  2. ^ "IP Australia Annual Report 2022" (PDF). IP Australia. 14 October 2022. p. 75.
  3. ^ "Organisational chart" (PDF). IP Australia. 1 April 2023. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b c "Our Senior Executive". IP Australia. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
  5. ^ "Joint Standing Committee On Treaties, 2007-06-22, page TR43, Deputy Director General Beattie" (PDF). Australian Government. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
  6. ^ "Patents Act 1990". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  7. ^ "Patents Regulations 1991". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  8. ^ "Trade Marks Act 1995". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  9. ^ "Trade Marks Regulations 1995". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  10. ^ "Designs Act 2003". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  11. ^ "Designs Regulations 2004". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  12. ^ "Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  13. ^ "Plant Breeder's Rights Regulations 1994". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  14. ^ "Senate Economics Legislation Committee Estimates, 2009-06-01, page E80, Deputy Director General Beattie" (PDF). Australian Government. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  15. ^ "Examiner of Patents Employment Advertisement". IP Australia. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  16. ^ "Senate Economics Legislation Committee Estimates, 2009-06-01, page E90, Director General Noonan" (PDF). Australian Government. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  17. ^ "Regulations under the PCT, page 80" (PDF). WIPO. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  18. ^ "Refrigeration" (jpe). IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  19. ^ "Sunshine Stripper Harvester" (jpe). IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  20. ^ "Automatic Totalizator" (jpe). IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  21. ^ "Furniture Castors" (jpe). IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  22. ^ "Lawn Mower" (jpe). IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  23. ^ "Rotary Clothes Hoist" (jpe). IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  24. ^ "An Improved Rotary Motor". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  25. ^ "A Prothesis to Simulate Neural Endings". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  26. ^ "Rack and Pinion Steering Gear". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  27. ^ "Yacht Keel With Fins Near Tip". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  28. ^ "Pelletted Poultry Manure Fertilizer". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  29. ^ "Papilloma Virus Vaccine". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  30. ^ "A Wireless LAN". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  31. ^ "In vivo mutations and polymorphisms in the 17q-linked breast and ovarian cancer susceptibility gene". IP Australia. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  32. ^ "The Gene Patents Case". Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  33. ^ a b John Michael Keogh (2 August 2001). "Circular transportation facilitation device" (Patent). IP Australia. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  34. ^ "Register of Patents". IP Australia. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  35. ^ a b Scott, Iain (8 October 2001). "Honouring the IgNobel". ABC News in Science. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
This page was last edited on 16 February 2024, at 02:33
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