Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization
Annex 1C: Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
PART I GENERAL PROVISIONS AND BASIC PRINCIPLES
PART II STANDARDS CONCERNING THE AVAILABILITY, SCOPE AND
USE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
1. Copyright and Related Rights
2. Trademarks
3. Geographical Indications
4. Industrial Designs
5. Patents
6. Layout-Designs (Topographies) of Integrated Circuits
7. Protection of Undisclosed Information
8. Control of Anti-Competitive Practices in Contractual Licences
PART III ENFORCEMENT OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
1. General Obligations
2. Civil and Administrative Procedures and Remedies
3. Provisional Measures
4. Special Requirements Related to Border Measures
5. Criminal Procedures
PART IV ACQUISITION AND MAINTENANCE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
RIGHTS AND RELATED INTER PARTES PROCEDURES
PART V DISPUTE PREVENTION AND SETTLEMENT
PART VI TRANSITIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
PART VII INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS; FINAL PROVISIONS
ANNEX 1C
AGREEMENT ON TRADE-RELATED ASPECTS OF INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY RIGHTS
Members,
Desiring to reduce distortions and impediments to international
trade, and taking into account the need to promote effective and
adequate protection of intellectual property rights, and to ensure
that measures and procedures to enforce intellectual property
rights do not themselves become barriers to legitimate trade;
Recognizing, to this end, the need for new rules and disciplines
concerning:
(a) the applicability of the basic principles of GATT 1994 and
of relevant international intellectual property agreements or
conventions;
(b) the provision of adequate standards and principles concerning
the availability, scope and use of trade-related intellectual
property rights;
(c) the provision of effective and appropriate means for the
enforcement of trade-related intellectual property rights, taking
into account differences in national legal systems;
(d) the provision of effective and expeditious procedures for
the multilateral prevention and settlement of disputes between
governments: and
(e) transitional arrangements aiming at the fullest participation
in the results of the negotiations;
Recognizing the need for a multilateral framework of principles,
rules and disciplines dealing with international trade in counterfeit
goods;
Recognizing that intellectual property rights are private
rights;
Recognizing the underlying public policy objectives of
national systems for the protection of intellectual property,
including developmental and technological objectives;
Recognizing also the special needs of the least-developed
country Members in respect of maximum flexibility in the domestic
implementation of laws and regulations in order to enable them
to create a sound and viable technological base;
Emphasizing the importance of reducing tensions by reaching
strengthened commitments to resolve disputes on trade-related
intellectual property issues through multilateral procedures;
Desiring to establish a mutually supportive relationship
between the WTO and the World Intellectual Property Organization
(referred to in this Agreement as "WIPO") as well as
other relevant international organizations;
Hereby agree as follows:
PART I: GENERAL PROVISIONS AND BASIC PRINCIPLES
Article 1: Nature and Scope of Obligations
1. Members shall give effect to the provisions of this Agreement.
Members may, but shall not be obliged to, implement in their law
more extensive protection than is required by this Agreement,
provided that such protection does not contravene the provisions
of this Agreement. Members shall be free to determine the appropriate
method of implementing the provisions of this Agreement within
their own legal system and practice.
2. For the purposes of this Agreement, the term "intellectual
property" refers to all categories of intellectual property
that are the subject of Sections 1 through 7 of Part II.
3. Members shall accord the treatment provided for in this Agreement
to the nationals of other Members.1 In respect of the relevant
intellectual property right, the nationals of other Members shall
be understood as those natural or legal persons that would meet
the criteria for eligibility for protection provided for in the
Paris Convention (1967), the Berne Convention (1971), the Rome
Convention and the Treaty on Intellectual Property in Respect
of Integrated Circuits, were all Members of the WTO members of
those Conventions. 2 Any Member availing itself of the possibilities
provided in paragraph 3 of Article 5 or paragraph 2 of Article
6 of the Rome Convention
shall make a notification as foreseen in those provisions to the
Council for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
(the "Council for TRIPS").
Article 2: Intellectual Property Conventions
1. In respect of Parts II, III and IV of this Agreement, Members
shall comply with Articles 1 through 12, and Article 19, of the
Paris Convention (1967).
2. Nothing in Parts I to IV of this Agreement shall derogate from
existing obligations that Members may have to each other under
the Paris Convention, the Berne Convention, the Rome Convention
and the Treaty on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated
Circuits.
Article 3: National Treatment
1. Each Member shall accord to the nationals of other Members
treatment no less favourable than that it accords to its own nationals
with regard to the protection 3 of intellectual property, subject
to the exceptions already provided in, respectively, the Paris
Convention (1967), the Berne Convention (1971), the Rome Convention
or the Treaty on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated
Circuits. In respect of performers, producers of phonograms and
broadcasting organizations, this obligation only applies in respect
of the rights provided under this Agreement. Any Member availing
itself of the possibilities provided in Article 6 of the Berne
Convention (1971) or paragraph 1(b) of Article 16 of the Rome
Convention shall make a notification as foreseen in those provisions
to the Council for TRIPS.
2. Members may avail themselves of the exceptions permitted under
paragraph 1 in relation to judicial and administrative procedures,
including the designation of an address for service or the appointment
of an agent within the jurisdiction of a Member, only where such
exceptions are necessary to secure compliance with laws and regulations
which are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Agreement
and where such practices are not applied in a manner which would
constitute a disguised restriction on trade.
Article 4: Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
With regard to the protection of intellectual property, any advantage,
favour, privilege or immunity granted by a Member to the nationals
of any other country shall be accorded immediately and unconditionally
to the nationals of all other Members. Exempted from this obligation
are any advantage, favour, privilege or immunity accorded by a
Member:
(a) deriving from international agreements on judicial assistance
or law enforcement of a general nature and not particularly confined
to the protection of intellectual property;
(b) granted in accordance with the provisions of the Berne Convention
(1971) or the Rome Convention authorizing that the treatment accorded
be a function not of national treatment but of the treatment accorded
in another country;
(c) in respect of the rights of performers, producers of phonograms
and broadcasting organizations not provided under this Agreement;
(d) deriving from international agreements related to the protection
of intellectual property which entered into force prior to the
entry into force of the WTO Agreement, provided that such agreements
are notified to the Council for TRIPS and do not constitute an
arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination against nationals of
other Members.
Article 5:Multilateral Agreements on Acquisition or Maintenance of Protection
The obligations under Articles 3 and 4 do not apply to procedures
provided in multilateral agreements concluded under the auspices
of WIPO relating to the acquisition or maintenance of intellectual
property rights.
Article 6: Exhaustion
For the purposes of dispute settlement under this Agreement,
subject to the provisions of Articles 3 and 4 nothing in this
Agreement shall be used to address the issue of the exhaustion
of intellectual property rights.
Article 7: Objectives
The protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights
should contribute to the promotion of technological innovation
and to the transfer and dissemination of technology, to the mutual
advantage of producers and users of technological knowledge and
in a manner conducive to social and economic welfare, and to a
balance of rights and obligations.
Article 8: Principles
1. Members may, in formulating or amending their laws and regulations,
adopt measures necessary to protect public health and nutrition,
and to promote the public interest in sectors of vital importance
to their socio-economic and technological development, provided
that such measures are consistent with the provisions of this
Agreement.
2. Appropriate measures, provided that they are consistent with
the provisions of this Agreement, may be needed to prevent the
abuse of intellectual property rights by right holders or the
resort to practices which unreasonably restrain trade or adversely
affect the international transfer of technology.
PART II STANDARDS CONCERNING THE AVAILABILITY, SCOPE AND
USE OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
Section 1: Copyright and Related Rights
Article 9: Relation to the Berne Convention
1. Members shall comply with Articles 1 through 21 of the Berne
Convention (1971) and the Appendix thereto. However, Members shall
not have rights or obligations under this Agreement in respect
of the rights conferred under Article 6bis of that Convention
or of the rights derived therefrom.
2. Copyright protection shall extend to expressions and not to
ideas, procedures, methods of operation or mathematical concepts
as such.
Article 10: Computer Programs and Compilations of Data
1. Computer programs, whether in source or object code, shall
be protected as literary works under the Berne Convention (1971).
2. 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. Such protection, which shall not extend to the data or
material itself, shall be without prejudice to any copyright subsisting
in the data or material itself.
Article 11: Rental Rights
In respect of at least computer programs and cinematographic
works, a Member shall provide authors and their successors in
title the right to authorize or to prohibit the commercial rental
to the public of originals or copies of their copyright works.
A Member shall be excepted from this obligation in respect of
cinematographic works unless such rental has led to widespread
copying of such works which is materially impairing the exclusive
right of reproduction conferred in that Member on authors and
their successors in title. In respect of computer programs, this
obligation does not apply to rentals where the program itself
is not the essential object of the rental.
Article 12: Term of Protection
Whenever the term of protection of a work, other than a photographic
work or a work of applied art, is calculated on a basis other
than the life of a natural person, such term shall be no less
than 50 years from the end of the calendar year of authorized
publication, 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.
Article 13: Limitations and Exceptions
Members shall confine limitations or exceptions to exclusive
rights to certain special cases which do not conflict with a normal
exploitation of the work and do not unreasonably prejudice the
legitimate interests of the right holder.
Article 14: Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms
(Sound Recordings) and Broadcasting Organizations
1. In respect of a fixation of their performance on a phonogram,
performers shall have the possibility of preventing the following
acts when undertaken without their authorization: the fixation
of their unfixed performance and the reproduction of such fixation.
Performers shall also have the possibility of preventing the following
acts when undertaken without their authorization: the broadcasting
by wireless means and the communication to the public of their
live performance.
2. Producers of phonograms shall enjoy the right to authorize
or prohibit the direct or indirect reproduction of their phonograms.
3. Broadcasting organizations shall have the right to prohibit
the following acts when undertaken without their authorization:
the fixation, the reproduction of fixations, and the rebroadcasting
by wireless means of broadcasts, as well as the communication
to the public of television broadcasts of the same. Where Members
do not grant such rights to broadcasting organizations, they shall
provide owners of copyright in the subject matter of broadcasts
with the possibility of preventing the above acts, subject to
the provisions of the Berne Convention (1971).
4. The provisions of Article 11 in respect of computer programs
shall apply mutatis mutandis to producers of phonograms
and any other right holders in phonograms as determined in a Member's
law. If on 15 April 1994 a Member has in force a system of equitable
remuneration of right holders in respect of the rental of phonograms,
it may maintain such system provided that the commercial rental
of phonograms is not giving rise to the material impairment of
the exclusive rights of reproduction of right holders.
5. The term of the protection available under this Agreement to
performers and producers of phonograms shall last at least until
the end of a period of 50 years computed from the end of the calendar
year in which the fixation was made or the performance took place.
The term of protection granted pursuant to paragraph 3 shall last
for at least 20 years from the end of the calendar year in which
the broadcast took place.
6. Any Member may, in relation to the rights conferred under paragraphs
1, 2 and 3, provide for conditions, limitations, exceptions and
reservations to the extent permitted by the Rome Convention. However,
the provisions of Article 18 of the Berne Convention (1971) shall
also apply, mutatis mutandis, to the rights of performers
and producers of phonograms in phonograms.
Continue with Annex 1C
1 When "nationals" are referred to in this Agreement, they shall be deemed, in the case of a separate customs territory
Member of the WTO, to mean persons, natural or legal, who are
domiciled or who have a real and effective industrial or commercial
establishment in that customs territory.
2 In this Agreement, "Paris Convention" refers
to the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property:
"Paris Convention (1967)" refers to the Stockholm Act
of this Convention of 14 July 1967. "Berne Convention"
refers to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary
and Artistic Works: "Berne Convention (1971)" refers
to the Paris Act of this Convention of 24 July 1971. "Rome
Convention" refers to the International Convention for the
Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and Broadcasting
Organizations, adopted at Rome on 26 October 1961. "Treaty
on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated Circuits"
adopted at Washington on 26 May 1989. "WTO Agreement"
refers to the Agreement Establishing the WTO.
3 For the purposes of Articles 3 and 4, "protection" shall include matters affecting the availability, acquisition,
scope, maintenance and enforcement of intellectual property rights
as well as those matters affecting the use of intellectual property
rights specifically addressed in this Agreement.
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