Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial PropertyCategory:Intellectual property treatiesCategory:Patent law The Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, signed in Paris, France, on March 20, 1883, is an important and one of the first intellectual property treaties. Thanks to this treaty, intellectual property systems, including patents, of any contracting state are accessible to the nationals of other states party to the Convention. The priority right is also established by this treaty: it provides that an applicant from one contracting State shall be able to use its first filing date (in one of the contracting State) as the effective filing date in another contracting State, provided that he files another application within 6 (for trademarks) or 12 months (for patents) from the first filing.
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"Hell is other people." - Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) |
