IP News

  • Kosovo Patent Granting Procedure Update

    November 29, 2011

    Following the entry into force of the new patent law in Kosovo in September, there have been changes regarding the patent granting procedure affecting the holders of all new patent applications filed in Kosovo as well as all Serbian re-filings, which are considered to be new applications with a priority date of the Serbian filing date.

    In accordance with Article 78 of the new patent law, the holder of a new patent application or one that is being re-filed has to submit written evidence on patentability of the invention before the end of the ninth year of the patent term.

    Since the patent term is calculated from the filing date or the priority date, if claimed, in some cases the ninth year of the patent term might have already expired. If this is the case, the applicant must submit written evidence on patentability as soon as possible. If the decision to grant the patent has been issued, the applicant must submit the evidence immediately upon expiration of the 15-day appeal period.

    The written evidence on patentability must be translated into Albanian and an official fee of EUR 40 (USD 54) must be paid. When the evidence on patentability is filed, the holder is obliged to inform the IPO in case the patent claims have not been granted as initially filed.

    Any patent for the same invention granted by the European Patent Office, or any other patent office which is acting as an International Preliminary Examining Authority under the Patent Cooperation Treaty, will be accepted as evidence of the granted patent.

    If the patent has not been granted by the relevant Patent Office (i.e. EPO) before the end of the ninth year of the patent term, the applicant must, before the end of the same term, inform the IPO about this fact. The IPO may extend the deadline for another 90 days counting from the day the relevant office issues the grant decision.

    For more information, please contact Kujtesa Nezaj-Shehu.

    Source: The local text of the law

  • National IP Council Established in Kosovo

    November 29, 2011

    The State Intellectual Property Council has recently been formed in Kosovo, following the Kosovo IPO’s initiative. The Council aims to increase cooperation and coordination among all institutions and stakeholders involved in the implementation of IP rights in Kosovo.

    Isa Dukaj, head of the Industrial Property Office at the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI), within which the Kosovo IPO operates, has been appointed Chairman of the Council.

    The Council’s board members include representatives of various institutions including the Kosovo IPO, the Copyright Office, Kosovo Customs, Department of Economic Crimes and Corruption within the Kosovo Police, Market Inspectorate, the Judicial Council, the Prosecution Council, the Medicines Agency, Veterinary and Food Agency and the Environmental Protection Agency.

    For more information, please contact Nahide Saliaga-Maliqi.

    Source: Kosovo’s Ministry of Trade and Industry website

  • Kosovo Customs Destroy Counterfeit Nike Soccer Balls

    October 28, 2011

    On September 28, 2011, the Kosovo customs officials organized the destruction of 600 soccer balls found to infringe the intellectual property rights of Nike.

    The balls bearing the Nike mark were seized last month at the Vermnice border crossing point with Albania. They were cut with scalpel knives at the Vermnice customs premises. Their value is estimated at EUR 1,500 (USD 2,070).

    For more information, please contact Nahide Saliaga-Maliqi.

    Source: Kosovo Customs

  • Kosovo New Patent and Industrial Design Laws Explained

    September 23, 2011

    The new patent and industrial design laws, which entered into force in Kosovo on September 13 and September 5 respectively, introduce important novelties, which we explain below.

    The new Law on Patents introduces the possibility for an invention belonging to a citizen of the Republic of Kosovo to be kept secret for such period of time as the national interest requires. The Security Council of the Republic of Kosovo is expected to set forth the criteria and the procedures to be applied under these circumstances.

    According to the new law, the patents, as objects of property, may not only be assigned or licensed to the other parties, but may also be pledged, levied in execution or be subject to bankruptcy proceedings.

    The new law for the first time introduces provisions on compulsory licenses for pharmaceutical products for export to countries with public health problems, as well as supplementary protection certificates for pharmaceutical and plant products. When deciding on the grant of such a compulsory license, the court must take into consideration the Decision of the World Trade Organization (WTO) General Council of 30 August 2003 on the Implementation of Paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health. These provisions will not enter into force until the Republic of Kosovo joins the European Union.

    The law introduces the possibility for the applicant to restore the priority rights provided (1) the request is filed within two months following the expiration of the 12-month priority period, but before the completion of the technical preparations for the patent application publication (2) the proof is provided that the applicant failed to meet the deadline despite the exercise of due care, and (3) prescribed official fees are paid.

    Under the former patent law, the Kosovo IPO had to perform a formal and a substantive examination before publishing a patent application in the Official Gazette. If the patent application met the formal criteria and it was a patentable subject matter, at first sight, as provided in Articles 7, 8 and 9 of the former law, the patent application would be published in the IPO’s Official Gazette. Once a patent application was published, the IP holder had a six-month deadline to file a request for the issuance of the decision. The IP holder could, along with the request for the issuance of the decision, submit a copy of the grant decision issued by any International Preliminary Examining Authority. If the copy of the grant decision was not submitted within six months from the publication of the patent application because the decision had not been issued, the IP holder, in accordance with Article 40, had to submit a confirmation of the granted patent within ten years from the date of application. 

    Under the new law, the Kosovo IPO will also perform a formal and a substantive examination of the patent application, primarily in order to establish whether an invention, at first sight, is novel on the global level, involves an inventive step and is industrially applicable. However, under the new law, if the patent application complies with the formal and substantive requirements, the IPO will issue the grant decision, which will be entered in the IPO’s Register of Patents and published in the Official Gazette. The IP holders will not be obliged to file a request for the issuance of the decision within six months from the publication of the patent application. The IP holder will only be obliged to submit to the IPO the written evidence confirming the patentability of the subject matter. Such evidence must be submitted no later than on the date of expiration of the ninth year of the patent term. Any patent for the same invention granted by the European Patent Office, or any other patent office which is acting as an International Preliminary Examining Authority under the Patent Cooperation Treaty, will be accepted as an evidence of the granted patent. For the patent applications already published in the Official Gazette, the patent examiner will send official notifications to the right holders on how to proceed.

    Appeals of IPO’s decisions can be filed within 15 days from the receipt of the decision. The law requires that the Ministry of Trade and Industry, under which the IPO operates, establish a commission, which will have the authority to review the appeals. There is a 30-day deadline to file a lawsuit against the commission’s decision before the competent court. Before the new law entered into force, the rules of the Law on Administrative Procedure applied.

    The new law for the first time allows foreign legal entities or natural persons to file patent applications, receive notifications from the IPO and pay official fees directly to the Kosovo IPO provided a local address for correspondence is communicated to the IP Office. The foreign legal or natural persons can also submit the patent application in a language different from the official languages in Kosovo provided they file the translation of the patent application within six months from the filing date.

    The new Law on Industrial Designs entered into force on September 5, 2011. The law is intended to be in line with the corresponding EU regulations. The most important change concerns the industrial design registration procedure. According to the new law, the Kosovo IPO will perform a formal examination only, in order to determine whether the object is genuinely a design as defined by the law and whether it contradicts the public rules. The substantive examination has been left out. As a result, the IPO will not examine the novelty and the individual character of an industrial design. Unlike the previous law, the new law also excludes the possibility for a legal person to be considered as the designer; the designer can only be a natural person.

    Considering all these changes and novelties introduced by the three new laws, the Law on Trademarks, the Law on Patents and the Law on Industrial Designs, it is important to emphasize that the provisions of the mentioned new laws will also apply to all procedures pending on the date of entry into force of these laws. Therefore, all pending trademarks, patents and industrial design applications filed under the provisions of the previous laws, will be examined and registered in accordance with the procedures outlined in the new laws.

    For more information, please contact Kujtesa Nezaj-Shehu.

    Source: Local Kosovo texts of the laws

  • Kosovo Customs Destroy Gant, Lacoste, Puma, Prada Counterfeits

    September 23, 2011

    On September 13, 2011, the Kosovo customs authorities organized the destruction of sweaters, wristwatches and labels found to infringe the intellectual property rights of several well-known trademarks.

    The destroyed goods, worth EUR 6,670 (USD 9,127), included 77 Gant sweaters, 21 Lacoste and Puma wristwatches and 177 Prada, Chanel, XL and Valentino labels.

    For more information, please contact Nahide Saliaga-Maliqi.

    Source: Kosovo Customs