How to protect innovation under sharing economics

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

How to protect innovation under sharing economics

China-Top500-speakers-168

Leading Chinese companies participated in the China Top 500 Enterprise Summit to discuss the strategies and uncertainty of IP protection at a time of rapid development of technology in China



China-Top500-speakers

“Intellectual property is the core competency of any companies seeking development and innovation in China,” Yuehong Liu, deputy director general of Hunan Provincial Intellectual Property Office (IP Office), said in his opening speech to kick off the 2016 China Top 500 Enterprise Summit.

This is the 16th year of the annual summit, which took place in Changsha, Hunan Province in August this year.

During the summit, Hunan IP Office announced the signing of a strategic cooperation agreement with WTOIP, a Chinese IP trading platform. WTOIP will assist the local IP Office to build the IP online trading platform and offer local enterprises services including IPR verification, freedom-to-operate searches and IP transactions.

China is adjusting to a sharing economy, which implies individuals are able to share assets owned by someone else. Yuehong Liu said the sharing economy is driven by the booming development of internet and technology.

He also observed that cutting-edge technologies bring new opportunities and challenges to IP protection in China, which echoes to the theme of the summit: “How will enterprises promote invention and innovation under IP law and sharing economics?”

Panel discussion

Representatives from WIPO and leading Chinese companies also shared their experiences of protecting IP in China.

Hongbing Chen, Director of WIPO’s office in China, explained the key to protecting innovation and invention is to build a healthy ecosystem that requires “an established judicial system, business environment, education, investment in R&D, and infrastructures”. Chen said intellectual property is a benchmark for input and output for invention. “The stronger IP protection is, the higher input-output ratio will be, and thus more companies are motivated to invent new technology”, he said.

“What is the key to IP protection? It’s the legal awareness,” said Yuanbao Zheng, chairman of People Electric Appliance Group. This means train the employees and board members, said Zheng.

Xuhui Xie, chairman and president of WTOIP, said the means of IP protection and utilization changed under sharing economics: “Companies have to be ready for this trend - invest in and plan IP strategy as early as possible.”

To wrap up the summit, Jiming Wang of China Enterprise Confederation announced the winners of the 2016 Top 500 Chinese corporations of the year. The evaluation is based on company’s gross revenue in a year.

Top 10 Chinese companies include State Grid Corporation of China, China National Petroleum Corporation, China Petrochemical Corporation, ICBC, China Construction Bank, China State Construction Engineering, Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of China, China Ping An Insurance and China Mobile. 



more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Plasseraud IP says it is eyeing AI and quantum computing expertise with new hire from Cabinet Netter
In the fifth episode of a podcast series celebrating the tenth anniversary of IP Inclusive, we discuss the ‘Careers in Ideas’ network and how to open access to the profession
McGuireWoods’ focussed experimentation and disciplined execution of AI tools is sharpening its IP practice
As Marshall Gerstein celebrates its 70-year anniversary, Jeffrey Sharp, managing partner, reflects on lessons that shaped both his career and the firm’s success
News of two pharma deals involving Novo Nordisk and GSK and a loss for Open AI were also among the top talking points
Howard Hogan, IP partner at Gibson Dunn, says AI deepfakes are driving lawyers to rethink how IP protects creativity and innovation
Vivien Chan joins us for our ‘Women in IP’ series to discuss gender bias in the legal profession and why the business model followed by law firms leaves little room for women leaders
Partner Jeremy Hertzog explains how his team worked through a huge amount of disclosure from Adidas and what victory means for the firm
Evarist Kameja and Hadija Juma at Bowmans explain why a new law in Tanzania marks a significant shift in IP enforcement
In the wake of controversy surrounding Banksy’s recent London mural, AJ Park’s Thomas Huthwaite and Eloise Calder delve into the challenges street artists face in protecting their works and rights
Gift this article