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LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

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Page 1: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection

Mr. Rahul Beruar

Page 2: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

“Good design is good business”

Tom Watson, Jr., the former chairman of IBM at Wharton Business School in

1973

Page 3: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

What is Industrial Design

• The ornamental or artistic aspect of an article

• Made up of three-dimensional features, such as the shape or surface of an article, or of two-dimensional features, such as patterns, lines or color.

• An integration of art and Design, whereby mass produced products are improved for marketability and production.

Page 4: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

The Designs Act, 2000.• Section 2 of the Design Act, 2000 “Design means only the features of shape, configuration, pattern

ornament or composition of lines or colours applied to any article whether in two dimensional or three dimensional or in both forms, by any industrial process or means, whether manual, mechanical or chemical, separate or combined, which in the finished article appeal to and are judged solely by the eye; but does not include any mode or principle of construction or anything which is in substance a mere mechanical device”

“article means any article of manufacture and any substance, artificial, or partly artificial and partly natural and includes any part of an article capable of being made and sold separately”

Page 5: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Criteria for Registration of Industrial Design under the Designs Act, 2000.

A design which:

• Is new or original

• Has not been disclosed to the public by publication in tangible form or by use or in any other way prior to the filing date.

• Is significantly distinguishable from known designs or combination of known designs.

Page 6: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

What is a Industrial Design Right

• A statutory Right which protects the aesthetic appeal of an article.

• Design Right is a limited period Right.

• In India registered Design is protected for a maximum period of Fifteen Years.

Page 7: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Advantages of Registration

• A valuable business asset that can be bought, sold, transferred or licensed like any other property.

• Provides the basis for taking legal action. • Grants exclusive right for 15 years.• Prevents others from copying or imitating the

design.

• Adds value to the product.

• Makes it attractive to customers.

Page 8: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Copyright Act: Protection of Industrial Design

• Copyright subsists in an Industrial Design only if it is an ‘artistic work’ under the Copyright Act.

• Protection under the Copyright Act is available only when the aesthetic design of the product is separable from the product's function.

• No necessity of registration, under the Copyright Act, to secure copyright in such Design.

• Copyright in the Design subsists for the life of the artist plus 60 years.

Page 9: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Difference between Design Right and Copyright for a Industrial Design

Design Right Copyright

The Design Right is valid for a period of Maximum 15 Years.

The Copyright subsists for a period of 60 years plus life of the author.

Registration is required for obtaining statutory relief.

No registration is required for obtaining statutory relief.

Reproduction is restricted only to the article consisting of the Registered Design.

Reproduction is Restricted to all forms including articles.

Page 10: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Protection of Industrial Design through Trademark

• Trademark Act can be used to protect industrial designs in cases where the design has acquired distictiveness, i.e. secondary meaning and people associate the design with the source/ origin of the product.

• Industrial Design may be protected as a Trademark and renewed every ten years.

Page 11: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Importance of Industrial Design

• Makes it attractive and appealing to customers.

• Key factor in the decision of a customer to buy the product.

• Distinguishes a product where there is a wide range of products performing the same function, such as cars and computers.

• Are business assets and increase the commercial value of a company and its products.

Page 12: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Successful Industrial designs

Ipod Beetle

Segway Nokia Phone

Syringe

Page 13: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Case Study – Purple Pill• Purple Pill - a prescription drug Prilosec

manufactured by AstraZeneca for relief from heartburn caused by acid reflux disease.

• An huge marketing campaign was carried out in 1997, where advertisements for the “Purple Pill” appeared everywhere—on TV, the Internet, and in print ads.

• The whole advertising campaign was centered on the colour of the Pill.

• The advertisement resulted in consumers identifying the pill with its colour and not the name.

Page 14: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

• The marketing strategy was successful• First ever drug to hit $5 Billion Dollars1 a year in

worldwide sales.• The Patent for Purple pill expired in 2001.• AstraZeneca then replaced Prilosec with Nexium

as a new prescription drug.• Nexium was also supported with an aggressive

marketing focusing on the colour of the Pill.• In 2004 the sales of Nexium reached $3.9 Billion

Dollars2.

Case Study – Purple Pill

1. Neil Swidey, The Costly Case of the Purple Pill—The Story of One Blockbuster Heartburn Drug Tells You Everything You Need To Know About the High Cost of Prescription Medicine, BOSTON GLOBE, Nov. 17, 2002,

2. David Seemungal, On the Mend at AstraZeneca, BUSINESS WEEK ONLINE, Aug. 9, 2005

Page 15: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

• A color of a pill is usually arbitrarily selected by the manufacturer and is unrelated to the efficacy of the ingredients contained in the pill.

• A color scheme when aggressively marketed by a manufacturer creates a association in the mind of the consumers with regard to the source of the product.

Case Study – Purple Pill

Page 16: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

• Premo Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Inc. appealed an order prohibiting it from marketing a combination drug, in capsules having the same maroon and white color combination as the capsule used by SK&F, Co. (SKF) in marketing its product containing the same combination drug.

Case Study – Purple PillSK&F Co. v. Premo Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Inc

Page 17: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

The Third Circuit Court held:

– A unique color scheme employed by a brand name pharmaceutical manufacturer for their pills could not be imitated by the manufacturer of a generic equivalent.

– “Proof of non functionality serves no purpose other than identification” and that, in the case of drugs, “the nonfunctional element must not enhance efficacy.”

– Color scheme was arbitrary and not related to performance or processing of the Drug.

– The color scheme of the Pill had acquired a protectable secondary meaning.

Case Study – Purple PillSK&F Co. v. Premo Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Inc

Page 18: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

Case Study – Purple PillShire U.S., Inc. v. Barr Laboratories, Inc.

• Shire U.S., Inc., manufactured a drug to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) under the brand name “Adderall.”

• The pills were marketed in various strengths, and color and size of the pills varied with pill strength.

• All the pills were marked “AD” on one side, and the dosage size (in milligrams) were marked on the other side.

Page 19: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

• Barr Laboratories in February 2002, began marketing a generic version of Adderall.

• Barr marketed their generic equivalent in different dosages, and mirrored the color, shape, and dosage combinations of Shire's Adderall product.

Case Study – Purple PillShire U.S., Inc. v. Barr Laboratories, Inc.

Page 20: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN

The Third Circuit Court held:

– Shire has failed to prove the requisite non-functionality of their unique color scheme.

– similarity in pill appearance between Adderall and its generic counterpart both enhanced patient safety by allowing them to readily identify the pills and dosages by color.

– The Court did not address the question of whether or not Shire had achieved secondary meaning for the pill's color scheme.

Case Study – Purple PillShire U.S., Inc. v. Barr Laboratories, Inc.

Page 21: LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN Getting Noticed: The Importance of Industrial Design Protection Mr. Rahul Beruar

LAKSHMIKUMARAN & SRIDHARAN