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mellie
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Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2011 7:52 pm

Tech news

Post by mellie » Fri May 25, 2012 10:34 am

Further to the news article on 9 December 2011, the Australian Government has now approved within the context of its 2012 Budget changes to fees charged for IP Australia's products and services.


Some of the key changes that customers should note include:

The majority of fee changes will occur on 1 July 2012, with the exception of new application filing fees which will change from 1 October 2012.

Incentives for customers to use the Approved Means of transaction. Read more information about Approved Means. Customers that file in this way will benefit through a lower relative fee.

The introduction of a fourth year continuation/renewal fee which will apply to all patent applications whose fourth anniversary falls on or after 1 July 2012. Therefore the new fee will apply to patent applications filed on or after 1 July 2008 or any granted patent with a Date of Patent on or after 1 July 2008.
As the fourth year continuation/renewal fee is a new fee under the legislation it cannot be paid before 1 July 2012. If the fee is paid before this date it will be refunded and the payment will need to be made after 1 July 2012.
Please note:

In June 2011 the Government introduced into Parliament the Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Raising the Bar) Bill 2011 which will result in the introduction of a new preliminary search and opinion service for patents. This service and its associated fee will come into effect on 15 April 2013.

In line with IP Australia's commitment to quality and to ensure consistency between the searches provided to our customers throughout the patent process, the Office will align the current 15(5) product with the new preliminary search and opinion service. As of 1 July 2012, the new 15(5) product will also have an opinion issued with the search results similar to the International Search and Opinion (ISR/ISO).
This will provide our customers with the benefit of additional information regarding their inventions.
Customers are advised to familiarise themselves with the new fee structures in order to avoid payment discrepancies and delays in the processing of their IP Rights.

The new fee structures can be found here:

http://www.ipaustralia.gov.au/about-us/ ... iew=Detail


I assume IP laws apply to websites also?

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Super Nova
Posts: 11787
Joined: Sat Dec 15, 2007 12:49 am
Location: Overseas

Re: Tech news

Post by Super Nova » Fri May 25, 2012 7:29 pm

I assume IP laws apply to websites also?
Why do you assume that?

Are you referring to technology of a website and innovation or do you refer to content?

Patents are one thing then there are:
- Trade secrets
- IP
- Copyright

If you make public an innovation without securing it via patent... it is too late to claim it.
Things that cannot be patented can be your intelectual propoerty. A good example is code you write for computers. If you handle it properly. It is your IP... no patent required.

Content that you make public needs some registration normally to be fully protected or it needs to be approriately marked.

If you create something and post it here without a copyright disclaimer or some protection, anyone here is free to copy it.
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.

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