w88 casino News Network (provided by the Law w88 casino)Recently, the China-EU Intellectual Property Judicial Forum hosted by the Supreme People's Court and the IP Key China Project was held in Suzhou. Huang Yong, executive deputy dean of the Institute of Foreign Law and Rule of Law at the w88 casino and professor of law w88 casino, was invited to attend the forum and delivered a speech titled "New Thoughts on Competition Policy and Antitrust in the Field of Intellectual Property Licensing." Xia Daohu, President of the Higher People's Court of Jiangsu Province, Wu Qingwen, Deputy Secretary of the CPC Suzhou Municipal Committee and Mayor, He Zhonglin, Vice President of the Intellectual Property Tribunal of the Supreme People's Court, Klaus Grabinski, President of the European Unified Patent Court, and Mi Moqin, Intellectual Property Commissioner of the European Union Delegation to China, attended the opening ceremony and delivered speeches. The Third Civil Division of the Supreme People's Court, the International Cooperation Bureau, the Intellectual Property Court, relevant heads and judges of all intellectual property courts across the country, and intellectual property courts in Jiangsu Province, relevant judges of the Civil Law and Intellectual Property Court of the Hague Court of the Netherlands, the French Commercial Court of Brussels, the Patent and Market Court of the Stockholm District Court, IP Key China project officials, the legal attaché of the Italian Embassy in China, and the customs attaché of the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands attended the forum.

This forum is divided into two main topics: "Antitrust Issues in the Field of Intellectual Property" and "Issues in the Trial of Patent Cases" and four related sub-topics. In the topic of "Antitrust Issues in the Field of Intellectual Property Licensing", Professor Huang Yong combined the foundation and achievements of antitrust in the field of intellectual property licensing in China, focusing on antitrust cases and rules in the field of intellectual property licensing in China, and formulated standards on the licensing rates, FRAND principles, jurisdiction, and prohibition issues involved in antitrust in the field of SEP licensing. The process involved issues such as monopoly agreements, abuse of dominant market position, monopolistic behavior when exercising non-SEP rights and the principle of "necessary facilities", etc. were shared in detail, and new thoughts and prospects were put forward on the basic relationship between intellectual property and antitrust, China's intellectual property strategy and competition policy, and factors to be considered in the design of the antitrust system. Professor Huang Yong pointed out that intellectual property rights are private rights, have internationally accepted rules, and are also China's national strategy. Antitrust law is a domestic law that protects local competition, but in specific practice it shows a high degree of necessity for international coordination. China is a big manufacturing country and a big exporting country. In the past, it has been in a development model where technology, markets and even capital are outside the country for a long time, which makes Chinese enterprises highly dependent on intellectual property rights. However, with the continuous development of my country's economy and science and technology, our country is gradually becoming an innovation country and a powerful country. Many Chinese companies are becoming licensors from licensees, and their positions in the international industrial chain and value chain are constantly improving. Therefore, carrying out intellectual property judicial adjudication from an international perspective, balancing the relationship between current interest demands and future industrial development, and further strengthening the understanding and grasp of the development laws of relevant commercial industries are crucial to my country's intellectual property innovation and protection.
It is reported that the IP Key China project is guided by the European Commission and implemented by the European Union Intellectual Property Office. Since the first phase was launched in 1999, four phases of project cooperation have been completed. For more than 20 years, the project has built a China-EU intellectual property cooperation platform, and the cooperation areas cover all intellectual property fields.