A working lunch with the president of the European Patent Office - part of the ScienceBusiness Policy Bridge series

Protecting new inventions is vital, everyone agrees – but most
also agree that the system that has evolved, piece by piece and region
by region, to accomplish that aim globally is in need of serious
overhaul. Getting a patent for all the European Countries is costly,
and a political solution remote. The US and Japan face huge backlogs.
Protection in China and other parts of the world remain uncertain. The
current international patent process is complex and costly. New
technologies – stem cells, software, the Internet – raise legal
quandaries that the patent authorities are only gradually resolving.
And the current economic crisis adds new urgency.
There is a need for more IP cooperation at international level, as
initiated by the 5 large patent offices around the world (EPO, USPTO,
JPO, SIPO and KPO).
So what’s the best way forward? That is the subject of an exclusive
Science|Business Policy Bridge meeting with Alison Brimelow, the EPO
president and a leading force in the future evolution of our
intellectual property regime

Who should attend
-
IP lawyers and consultants
- Corporate R&D and public affairs executives
interested in European intellectual property regulation
-
University administrators and principal
investigators
- Nation al delegations, and third-country representatives
For more information, contact andre.rampat@sciencebusiness.net



