Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Trademark inquiry - I would like to ask a question: when the owner of various intellectual property rights does not agree on the method of exercising the rights, how should it be implemented?
I would like to ask a question: when the owner of various intellectual property rights does not agree on the method of exercising the rights, how should it be implemented?

***Someone can implement the patent alone or license others to implement the patent with a general license; if others are allowed to implement the patent, the royalties collected should be distributed among the ***owners.

Article 15 of the "Patent Law" stipulates as follows: If the holder of the right to apply for a patent or the patent right has an agreement on the exercise of the right, the agreement shall prevail. If there is no agreement, the first owner can implement the patent alone or license others to implement the patent in the form of a general license; if the patent is licensed to others, the royalties collected shall be distributed among the first owners. Except for the circumstances specified in the preceding paragraph, the exercise of the exclusive patent application right or patent right shall require the consent of all owners.

Intellectual property rights refers to the fact that two or more intellectual property owners share the same intellectual property rights. The owner of the property is called a party owner, and the rights and obligations between the parties due to property ownership are called party relationships. The most owned objects of intellectual property are called owned property. In the relationship between intellectual property rights and ownership, the most owned property is intellectual property, not a thing. In the relationship between ownership and ownership, the owner of the right owns only things, so it can be called "owned property". ";In the relationship between intellectual property rights and private property, the object is intellectual property, which can be referred to as "owned property" for short, but cannot be called "owned property".