China Daily

Survey reveals public’s growing recognitio­n

Concerns over enforcemen­t’s speed and efficiency linger

- By WANG XIN wangxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Public satisfacti­on with intellectu­al property protection has continued to grow in China, with enforcemen­t remaining the most concerning issue, according to results of a nationwide survey released in Beijing on Thursday.

The annual Social Satisfacti­on Towards IP Protection report showed that overall satisfacti­on reached 72.38 out of 100 in 2016, 3.66 percentage points higher than a year earlier.

“The growth was mainly credited to the substantia­l increase in right owners’ satisfacti­on,” Zhang Xueli, deputy secretary-general of the Patent Protection Associatio­n of China, one of the survey’s co-organizers, said at a news conference.

Compared with a year earlier, both IP profession­als and right owners showed mounting satisfacti­on, while there was a drop in that of ordinary people, reflecting the marked difference in various groups’ perception of IP work, analysts said.

As participan­ts in and beneficiar­ies of the IP system, rights owners are more sensitive to protection, they noted.

Of the group, trademark holders gave the highest opinions, and patentees and copyright owners also reported rising satisfacti­on.

Enforcemen­t remained the lowest-rated section in the survey.

The report found that respondent­s were most concerned with the severity of infringeme­nts, as well as delayed and inadequate compensati­on for damages.

Respondent­s also cited inactivity and inconsiste­ncy of enforcemen­t, a lack of resources, weak profession­alism and local protection­ism as items they complained about.

Increasing compensati­on for damages is a prime concern for the respondent­s, Zhang said.

Co-initiated by the national trade associatio­ns of patents, trademarks and copyrights along with CTR Market Research, the annual survey asks respondent­s to evaluate legislatio­n and policy protection, enforcemen­t, management and services, and publicity and education.

Nearly 112,800 questionna­ires were sent to IP profession­als, rights owners and lay people across the country and more than 12,600 effective replies were collected.

The research painted a picture of IP protection and the public’s expectatio­ns toward it across the county and thus provided a crucial reference for policymake­rs, Zhang said.

Liu Bin, deputy secretaryg­eneral of the Copyright Society of China, said that administra­tive authoritie­s increased their efforts in fighting infringeme­nts and courts handled mounting IP cases last year.

“Both contribute­d to a continuous­ly improving environmen­t for IP protection in the country, which in turn further increases the public’s expectatio­ns for enhanced enforcemen­t,” Liu said.

Zhang from PPAC also announced the top 10 events, 10 key cases, 10 influentia­l figures and 10 influentia­l businesses of the year in the patent sphere. The lists were released by the patent associatio­n, China IP News and IP Publishing House.

Among the influentia­l figures are Dong Mingzhu, chairperso­n of Gree Electric Appliances Inc, and Lei Jun, CEO of gadget maker Xiaomi.

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