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Industrial design right

An industrial design right is an intellectual property right that protects the visual design of objects that are purely utilitarian. An industrial design consists of the creation of a shape, configuration or composition of pattern or color, or combination of pattern and color in three-dimensional form containing aesthetic value. An industrial design can be a two- or three-dimensional pattern used to produce a product, industrial commodity or handicraft.

Under the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Deposit of Industrial Designs, a WIPO-administered treaty, a procedure for an international registration exists. To qualify for registration, the national laws of most member states of WIPO require the design to be novel.[1] An applicant can file for a single international deposit with WIPO or with the national office in a country party to the treaty. The design will then be protected in as many member countries of the treaty as desired. Design rights started in the United Kingdom in 1787 with the Designing and Printing of Linen Act and have expanded from there.

Registering for an industrial design right is related to granting a patent.[2]

Law making edit

Kenya edit

According to industrial property Act 2001, an industrial design is defined as "any composition of lines or colours or any three-dimensional form whether or not associated with lines or colours, provided that such composition or form gives a special appearance to a product of industry or handicraft and can serve as pattern for a product of industry or handicraft" .

An industrial design is registrable if it is new. An industrial design is deemed to be new if it has not been disclosed to the public, anywhere in the world, by publication in tangible form or, in Kenya by use or in any other way, prior to the filing date or, where applicable, the priority date of the application for registration. However a disclosure of the industrial design is not taken into consideration if it occurred not earlier than twelve months before the filing date or, where applicable, the priority date of the application and if it was by reason or in consequence of acts committed by the applicant or his predecessor in title; or an evident abuse committed by a third party in relation to the applicant or his predecessor in title.

India edit

India's Design Act, 2000 was enacted to consolidate and amend the law relating to protection of design and to comply with the articles 25 and 26 of Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPS agreement. The new act, (earlier Patent and Design Act, 1911 was repealed by this act) now defines "design" to mean only the features of shape, configuration, pattern, ornament, or composition of lines or colours applied to any article, whether in two- or three-dimensional, or in both forms, by any industrial process or means, whether manual or 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.[3]

Indonesia edit

In Indonesia the protection of the Right to Industrial Design shall be granted for 10 (ten) years commencing from the filing date and there is not any renewal or annuity after the given period.

  • Industrial Designs that are Granted Protection

1. The Right to Industrial Design shall be granted for an Industrial Design that is novel/new
2. An Industrial Design shall be deemed new if on the filing date, such Industrial Design is not the same as any previous disclosure.
3. The previous disclosure as referred to in point 2 shall be one which before :
a. The filing date or
b. The Priority Date, if the applicant is filed with priority right.
c. Has been announced or used in Indonesia or outside Indonesia.

An industrial design shall not be deemed to have been announced if within the period of 6 (six) months at the latest before the filing date, such industrial design
a. Has been displayed in a national or international exhibition in Indonesia or overseas that is official or deemed to be official; or,
b. Has been used in Indonesia by the designer in an experiment for the purposes of education, research or development.
[4]

Canada edit

Canadian law affords ten years of protection to industrial designs that are registered; there is no protection for unregistered designs. The Industrial Design Act[5] defines "design" or "industrial design" to mean "features of shape, configuration, pattern or ornament and any combination of those features that, in a finished article, appeal to and are judged solely by the eye."[6] The design must also be original: in 2012, the Patent Appeal Board rejected a design for a trash can, and gave guidance as to what the Act requires:[7]

  • The degree of originality required to register an original design is greater than that laid down by Canadian copyright legislation, but less than that required to register a patent.
  • The articles being compared should not be examined side by side, but separate so that imperfect recollection comes into play.
  • One is to look at the design as a whole.
  • Any change must be substantial. It must not be trivial or infinitesimal.

During the existence of an exclusive right, no person can "make, import for the purpose of trade or business, or sell, rent, or offer or expose for sale or rent, any article in respect of which the design is registered."[8] The rule also applies to kits and substantial differences are in reference to previously published designs.

Registering an industrial design in Canada may be appropriate for a variety of articles such as consumer products, vehicles, sports equipment, packaging, etc., having an original aesthetic appearance, and may even be used to protect new technologies such as electronic icons. Industrial designs can also serve to complement other forms of intellectual property rights such as patents and trade-marks.[9]

The Canadian courts see infrequent litigation concerning industrial designs — the first case in almost two decades took place in 2012 between Bodum and Trudeau Corporation concerning visual features of double wall drinking glasses.[9][10]

It is possible for a registered design to also receive protection under Canadian copyright or trademark law:

  • a "useful article" (ie, one with a utilitarian function) will receive copyright protection where it is reproduced in a quantity of fifty or less, but that limitation does not apply with respect to:
    • a graphic or photographic representation that is applied to the face of an article
    • a trade-mark or a representation thereof or a label
    • material that has a woven or knitted pattern or that is suitable for piece goods or surface coverings or for making wearing apparel
    • a representation of a real or fictitious being, event or place that is applied to an article as a feature of shape, configuration, pattern or ornament[11]
  • where a registered design has become publicly identifiable with the product, it may be eligible for registration as a "distinguishing guise" under trademark law, but such registration cannot be used to limit the development of any art or industry[12]

European Union edit

Registered and unregistered community designs are available which provide a unitary right covering the European Community. Protection for a registered community design is for up to 25 years, subject to the payment of renewal fees every five years. The unregistered community design lasts for three years after a design is made available to the public and infringement only occurs if the protected design has been copied.

United Kingdom edit

Legislation given in Britain during the years 1787 to 1839 protected designs for textiles. The Copyright of Design Act passed in 1842 allowed other material designs, such as those for metal and earthenware objects, to be registered with a diamond mark to indicate the date of registration.[2]

In addition to the design protection available under community designs, UK law provides its own national registered design right (Registered Designs Act 1949, later amended by Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988) and an unregistered design right. The unregistered right, which exists automatically if the requirements are met, can last for up to 15 years. The registered design right can last up to 25 years subject to the payment of maintenance fees. The topography of semi-conductor circuits are also covered by integrated circuit layout design protection, a form of protection which lasts 10 years.

Japan edit

Article 1 of the Japanese Design Law states: "This law was designed to protect and utilize designs and to encourage creation of designs in order to contribute to industrial development". The protection period in Japan is 20 years from the day of registration.

United States edit

U.S. design patents last fifteen years from the date of grant if filed on or after May 13, 2015 (fourteen years if filed before May 13, 2015) and cover the ornamental aspects of utilitarian objects. Objects that lack a use beyond that conferred by their appearance or the information they convey, may be covered by copyright—a form of intellectual property of much longer duration that exists as soon as a qualifying work is created. In some circumstances, rights may also be acquired in trade dress, but trade dress protection is akin to trademark rights and requires that the design have source significance or "secondary meaning." It is useful only to prevent source misrepresentations; trade dress protection.

Australia edit

In Australia, design patent registration lasts for 5 years, with an option to be extended once for an additional 5 years. For the patent to be granted, a formalities exam is needed. If infringement action is to be taken, the design needs to become certified which involves a substantive examination.[13] This process ensures that the design is truly unique and eligible for protection under Australian patent law.

Duration of design rights edit

Depending on the jurisdiction registered design rights have a duration between 15 and 50 years.[14] Members of the WIPO Hague system have to publish their maximum term of protection for design rights. These terms are presented in the table below. Some of the jurisdiction below are unions or collaborative office for design registration like the African Intellectual Property Organization, the European Union and the Benelux.

Country or union Maximum duration of design right
African Intellectual Property Organization 15 years
Albania 15 years
Armenia 15 years
Azerbaijan 15 years
Belize 15 years
Benelux 25 years
Benin 15 years
Bosnia and Herzegovina 25 years
Botswana 15 years
Brunei Darussalam 15 years
Bulgaria 25 years
Cambodia 15 years
Côte d'Ivoire 15 years
Croatia 25 years
Denmark 25 years

(except: spare parts, 15 years)

Democratic People's Republic of Korea 15 years
Egypt 15 years
Estonia 25 years
European Union 25 years
Finland 25 years (except: spare parts, 15 years)
France 25 years
Gabon 15 years
Georgia 25 years
Germany 25 years
Ghana 15 years
Greece 25 years
Hungary 25 years
Iceland 25 years
Italy 25 years
Japan 20 years
Kyrgyzstan 15 years
Latvia 25 years
Liechtenstein 25 years
Lithuania 25 years
Mali 15 years
Monaco 50 years
Mongolia 15 years
Montenegro 25 years
Morocco 50 years
Namibia 15 years
Nepal 25 years
Niger 15 years
Norway 25 years
Oman 15 years
Poland 25 years
Republic of Korea 20 years
Republic of Moldova 25 years
Romania 25 years
Russian Federation 25 years
São Tomé and Príncipe 15 years
Senegal 15 years
Serbia 25 years
Singapore 15 years
Slovenia 25 years
Spain 25 years
Sweden 25 years (except: spare parts, 15 years)
Switzerland 25 years
Syrian Arab Republic 15 years
Tajikistan 15 years
Sri Lanka 15 years
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 25 years
Tunisia 15 years
Turkey 25 years
Ukraine 15 years
United Kingdom 25 years
United States of America 15 years

Industrial design applications edit

 
Trend in industrial design applications for the top five application offices, 1883–2022
 
Application design counts by region, in 2012 and in 2022. WIPI 2023.

Between 1883 and the early 1950s, the offices of Japan and the United States of America averaged a similar number of industrial design applications, rarely exceeding 10,000. The office of Japan received the highest number of applications per year from the 1950s thru to the late 1990s, reaching approximately 50,000 annual filings at its peak. The office of China, which received 640 applications when it first began receiving applications in 1985, has seen an unprecedented rate of growth, peaking at 805,710 applications filed in 2021. The office of the Republic of Korea surpassed the office of Japan in 2004 and has remained in second position ever since. In 2012, the office of the US moved ahead of Japan to become the third largest globally. The EUIPO began receiving applications in 2003 and moved up to fourth position in 2019. Among these top five offices, the EUIPO is the only one to have a multiple design system. Applications filed at the European Union IP Office contained 109,132 designs in 2022.[15]

In 2022, about 1.1 million industrial design applications were filed worldwide. Asia accounted for 70.3% of all designs in applications filed worldwide in 2022. Asia was followed by Europe (22.4%) and North America (4.4%).[15]

Bibliography edit

  • Brian W. Gray & Effie Bouzalas, editors, Industrial Design Rights: An International Perspective (Kluwer Law International: The Hague, 2001) ISBN 90-411-9684-6

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Making Design Registration Cheaper and Easier". WIPO.
  2. ^ a b Trinder, Barrie (1992). "design registration". The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Industrial Archaeology. Blackwell Publishers. pp. 207–8. ISBN 0631142169.
  3. ^ . patentoficce.nic.in. Archived from the original on 2010-05-22.
  4. ^ The Design Act of Indonesia, 2000 (31 of 2000) Industrial Design Attorney in Indonesia
  5. ^ "Industrial Design Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. I-9)". 5 November 2018.
  6. ^ "Industrial Design Act, s. 2". 5 November 2018.
  7. ^ Alain Provost (2012). "Recent Guidance on the Criteria for Originality in Canadian Industrial Designs". Robic Newsletter. 16 (2). ROBIC LLP., discussing Re Victor Stanley Inc., 2012 CarswellNat 885
  8. ^ "Industrial Design Act, s. 11". 5 November 2018.
  9. ^ a b André Thériault; Christopher N. Hunter (November 2012). . Norton Rose Fulbright. Archived from the original on 2014-01-16.
  10. ^ Bodum USA, Inc. v. Trudeau Corporation (1889) Inc., 2012 FC 1128 (26 September 2012)
  11. ^ "Copyright Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-42), s. 64". 13 March 2020.
  12. ^ "Trade-marks Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. T-13), s. 13". 13 March 2020.
  13. ^ "How to Patent Designs". Baxterip.com.au. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  14. ^ This is the range of contracting parties of the WIPO Hague system
  15. ^ a b "World Intellectual Property Indicators (WIPI) - 2023". www.wipo.int. Retrieved 2023-12-11.  This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4.0 license.

External links edit

  • Information about industrial design rights on the UK Patent Office web site
  • International Designs on the WIPO web site
  • Hague System for the International Registration of Industrial Designs on the WIPO web site

industrial, design, right, industrial, design, right, intellectual, property, right, that, protects, visual, design, objects, that, purely, utilitarian, industrial, design, consists, creation, shape, configuration, composition, pattern, color, combination, pat. An industrial design right is an intellectual property right that protects the visual design of objects that are purely utilitarian An industrial design consists of the creation of a shape configuration or composition of pattern or color or combination of pattern and color in three dimensional form containing aesthetic value An industrial design can be a two or three dimensional pattern used to produce a product industrial commodity or handicraft Under the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Deposit of Industrial Designs a WIPO administered treaty a procedure for an international registration exists To qualify for registration the national laws of most member states of WIPO require the design to be novel 1 An applicant can file for a single international deposit with WIPO or with the national office in a country party to the treaty The design will then be protected in as many member countries of the treaty as desired Design rights started in the United Kingdom in 1787 with the Designing and Printing of Linen Act and have expanded from there Registering for an industrial design right is related to granting a patent 2 Contents 1 Law making 1 1 Kenya 1 2 India 1 3 Indonesia 1 4 Canada 1 5 European Union 1 6 United Kingdom 1 7 Japan 1 8 United States 1 9 Australia 2 Duration of design rights 3 Industrial design applications 4 Bibliography 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLaw making editKenya edit According to industrial property Act 2001 an industrial design is defined as any composition of lines or colours or any three dimensional form whether or not associated with lines or colours provided that such composition or form gives a special appearance to a product of industry or handicraft and can serve as pattern for a product of industry or handicraft An industrial design is registrable if it is new An industrial design is deemed to be new if it has not been disclosed to the public anywhere in the world by publication in tangible form or in Kenya by use or in any other way prior to the filing date or where applicable the priority date of the application for registration However a disclosure of the industrial design is not taken into consideration if it occurred not earlier than twelve months before the filing date or where applicable the priority date of the application and if it was by reason or in consequence of acts committed by the applicant or his predecessor in title or an evident abuse committed by a third party in relation to the applicant or his predecessor in title India edit India s Design Act 2000 was enacted to consolidate and amend the law relating to protection of design and to comply with the articles 25 and 26 of Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPS agreement The new act earlier Patent and Design Act 1911 was repealed by this act now defines design to mean only the features of shape configuration pattern ornament or composition of lines or colours applied to any article whether in two or three dimensional or in both forms by any industrial process or means whether manual or 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 3 Indonesia edit In Indonesia the protection of the Right to Industrial Design shall be granted for 10 ten years commencing from the filing date and there is not any renewal or annuity after the given period Industrial Designs that are Granted Protection 1 The Right to Industrial Design shall be granted for an Industrial Design that is novel new 2 An Industrial Design shall be deemed new if on the filing date such Industrial Design is not the same as any previous disclosure 3 The previous disclosure as referred to in point 2 shall be one which before a The filing date or b The Priority Date if the applicant is filed with priority right c Has been announced or used in Indonesia or outside Indonesia An industrial design shall not be deemed to have been announced if within the period of 6 six months at the latest before the filing date such industrial design a Has been displayed in a national or international exhibition in Indonesia or overseas that is official or deemed to be official or b Has been used in Indonesia by the designer in an experiment for the purposes of education research or development 4 Canada edit Canadian law affords ten years of protection to industrial designs that are registered there is no protection for unregistered designs The Industrial Design Act 5 defines design or industrial design to mean features of shape configuration pattern or ornament and any combination of those features that in a finished article appeal to and are judged solely by the eye 6 The design must also be original in 2012 the Patent Appeal Board rejected a design for a trash can and gave guidance as to what the Act requires 7 The degree of originality required to register an original design is greater than that laid down by Canadian copyright legislation but less than that required to register a patent The articles being compared should not be examined side by side but separate so that imperfect recollection comes into play One is to look at the design as a whole Any change must be substantial It must not be trivial or infinitesimal During the existence of an exclusive right no person can make import for the purpose of trade or business or sell rent or offer or expose for sale or rent any article in respect of which the design is registered 8 The rule also applies to kits and substantial differences are in reference to previously published designs Registering an industrial design in Canada may be appropriate for a variety of articles such as consumer products vehicles sports equipment packaging etc having an original aesthetic appearance and may even be used to protect new technologies such as electronic icons Industrial designs can also serve to complement other forms of intellectual property rights such as patents and trade marks 9 The Canadian courts see infrequent litigation concerning industrial designs the first case in almost two decades took place in 2012 between Bodum and Trudeau Corporation concerning visual features of double wall drinking glasses 9 10 It is possible for a registered design to also receive protection under Canadian copyright or trademark law a useful article ie one with a utilitarian function will receive copyright protection where it is reproduced in a quantity of fifty or less but that limitation does not apply with respect to a graphic or photographic representation that is applied to the face of an article a trade mark or a representation thereof or a label material that has a woven or knitted pattern or that is suitable for piece goods or surface coverings or for making wearing apparel a representation of a real or fictitious being event or place that is applied to an article as a feature of shape configuration pattern or ornament 11 where a registered design has become publicly identifiable with the product it may be eligible for registration as a distinguishing guise under trademark law but such registration cannot be used to limit the development of any art or industry 12 European Union edit Main article Industrial design rights in the European Union Registered and unregistered community designs are available which provide a unitary right covering the European Community Protection for a registered community design is for up to 25 years subject to the payment of renewal fees every five years The unregistered community design lasts for three years after a design is made available to the public and infringement only occurs if the protected design has been copied United Kingdom edit Main article Design right United Kingdom Legislation given in Britain during the years 1787 to 1839 protected designs for textiles The Copyright of Design Act passed in 1842 allowed other material designs such as those for metal and earthenware objects to be registered with a diamond mark to indicate the date of registration 2 In addition to the design protection available under community designs UK law provides its own national registered design right Registered Designs Act 1949 later amended by Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 and an unregistered design right The unregistered right which exists automatically if the requirements are met can last for up to 15 years The registered design right can last up to 25 years subject to the payment of maintenance fees The topography of semi conductor circuits are also covered by integrated circuit layout design protection a form of protection which lasts 10 years Japan edit Main article Japanese design law Article 1 of the Japanese Design Law states This law was designed to protect and utilize designs and to encourage creation of designs in order to contribute to industrial development The protection period in Japan is 20 years from the day of registration United States edit U S design patents last fifteen years from the date of grant if filed on or after May 13 2015 fourteen years if filed before May 13 2015 and cover the ornamental aspects of utilitarian objects Objects that lack a use beyond that conferred by their appearance or the information they convey may be covered by copyright a form of intellectual property of much longer duration that exists as soon as a qualifying work is created In some circumstances rights may also be acquired in trade dress but trade dress protection is akin to trademark rights and requires that the design have source significance or secondary meaning It is useful only to prevent source misrepresentations trade dress protection Australia edit In Australia design patent registration lasts for 5 years with an option to be extended once for an additional 5 years For the patent to be granted a formalities exam is needed If infringement action is to be taken the design needs to become certified which involves a substantive examination 13 This process ensures that the design is truly unique and eligible for protection under Australian patent law Duration of design rights editDepending on the jurisdiction registered design rights have a duration between 15 and 50 years 14 Members of the WIPO Hague system have to publish their maximum term of protection for design rights These terms are presented in the table below Some of the jurisdiction below are unions or collaborative office for design registration like the African Intellectual Property Organization the European Union and the Benelux Country or union Maximum duration of design right African Intellectual Property Organization 15 years Albania 15 years Armenia 15 years Azerbaijan 15 years Belize 15 years Benelux 25 years Benin 15 years Bosnia and Herzegovina 25 years Botswana 15 years Brunei Darussalam 15 years Bulgaria 25 years Cambodia 15 years Cote d Ivoire 15 years Croatia 25 years Denmark 25 years except spare parts 15 years Democratic People s Republic of Korea 15 years Egypt 15 years Estonia 25 years European Union 25 years Finland 25 years except spare parts 15 years France 25 years Gabon 15 years Georgia 25 years Germany 25 years Ghana 15 years Greece 25 years Hungary 25 years Iceland 25 years Italy 25 years Japan 20 years Kyrgyzstan 15 years Latvia 25 years Liechtenstein 25 years Lithuania 25 years Mali 15 years Monaco 50 years Mongolia 15 years Montenegro 25 years Morocco 50 years Namibia 15 years Nepal 25 years Niger 15 years Norway 25 years Oman 15 years Poland 25 years Republic of Korea 20 years Republic of Moldova 25 years Romania 25 years Russian Federation 25 years Sao Tome and Principe 15 years Senegal 15 years Serbia 25 years Singapore 15 years Slovenia 25 years Spain 25 years Sweden 25 years except spare parts 15 years Switzerland 25 years Syrian Arab Republic 15 years Tajikistan 15 years Sri Lanka 15 years The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 25 years Tunisia 15 years Turkey 25 years Ukraine 15 years United Kingdom 25 years United States of America 15 yearsIndustrial design applications edit nbsp Trend in industrial design applications for the top five application offices 1883 2022 nbsp Application design counts by region in 2012 and in 2022 WIPI 2023 Between 1883 and the early 1950s the offices of Japan and the United States of America averaged a similar number of industrial design applications rarely exceeding 10 000 The office of Japan received the highest number of applications per year from the 1950s thru to the late 1990s reaching approximately 50 000 annual filings at its peak The office of China which received 640 applications when it first began receiving applications in 1985 has seen an unprecedented rate of growth peaking at 805 710 applications filed in 2021 The office of the Republic of Korea surpassed the office of Japan in 2004 and has remained in second position ever since In 2012 the office of the US moved ahead of Japan to become the third largest globally The EUIPO began receiving applications in 2003 and moved up to fourth position in 2019 Among these top five offices the EUIPO is the only one to have a multiple design system Applications filed at the European Union IP Office contained 109 132 designs in 2022 15 In 2022 about 1 1 million industrial design applications were filed worldwide Asia accounted for 70 3 of all designs in applications filed worldwide in 2022 Asia was followed by Europe 22 4 and North America 4 4 15 Bibliography editBrian W Gray amp Effie Bouzalas editors Industrial Design Rights An International Perspective Kluwer Law International The Hague 2001 ISBN 90 411 9684 6See also editDesign patent US patent law Geschmacksmuster German design law Industrial design rights in the European Union Open design movement Utility modelReferences edit Making Design Registration Cheaper and Easier WIPO a b Trinder Barrie 1992 design registration The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Industrial Archaeology Blackwell Publishers pp 207 8 ISBN 0631142169 The Design Act 2000 16 of 2000 patentoficce nic in Archived from the original on 2010 05 22 The Design Act of Indonesia 2000 31 of 2000 Industrial Design Attorney in Indonesia Industrial Design Act R S C 1985 c I 9 5 November 2018 Industrial Design Act s 2 5 November 2018 Alain Provost 2012 Recent Guidance on the Criteria for Originality in Canadian Industrial Designs Robic Newsletter 16 2 ROBIC LLP discussing Re Victor Stanley Inc 2012 CarswellNat 885 Industrial Design Act s 11 5 November 2018 a b Andre Theriault Christopher N Hunter November 2012 Hen s tooth found Federal Court decides industrial design infringement case Norton Rose Fulbright Archived from the original on 2014 01 16 Bodum USA Inc v Trudeau Corporation 1889 Inc 2012 FC 1128 26 September 2012 Copyright Act R S C 1985 c C 42 s 64 13 March 2020 Trade marks Act R S C 1985 c T 13 s 13 13 March 2020 How to Patent Designs Baxterip com au Retrieved 2012 09 12 This is the range of contracting parties of the WIPO Hague system a b World Intellectual Property Indicators WIPI 2023 www wipo int Retrieved 2023 12 11 nbsp This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4 0 license External links editInformation about industrial design rights on the Kenya Industrial Property Institute website Information about industrial design rights on the IPAustralia website Information about industrial design rights on the UK Patent Office web site International Designs on the WIPO web site Hague System for the International Registration of Industrial Designs on the WIPO web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Industrial design right amp oldid 1198747704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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