Taiwan: Can a product package be an artistic work?

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

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

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

Taiwan: Can a product package be an artistic work?

Generally, when faced with competitor's illegal copying of a product's package, unless the design of such package is a registered design patent or a trade mark, the claimant used to rely on Article 22 of Taiwan's Fair Trade Act to seek injunctive relief. However, under the Fair Trade Act, there will be a heavy burden on the claimant to show to the judge that the asserted package is a "famous representation" that is "commonly known to the general public". Thus, if the design of a product package is eligible for copyright protection, it would be another powerful tool to combat copycats and free riders.

Recently, in a case between Novartis (Taiwan) Co Ltd and Standard Chem & Pharm Co Ltd, the eligibility of copyright protection for a product package is reviewed and affirmed by the IP Court (see IP Court 2016-Ming-Zhu-Shan-Zi No 4). In this case, Novartis accused Standard of illegally copying the design of Novartis's package for its highly successful drug Exforge, a medicine widely used for treating and controlling high blood pressure. More specifically, Novartis asserted that the graphic and colour design of package of Standard's Asartan has copied and thereby infringed Novartis's copyright over the design of package of its Exforge product.

Exforge

Asartan

After comparing the package of Asartan against that of Exforge, the IP Court judge held that an artistic work is protectable as long as it possesses a minimum degree of originality. The originality of an artistic work, be it two-dimensional or three-dimensional, may be shown if the overall arrangement of line, colour, structure and shape of the work demonstrates the author's individuality and aesthetic preference through the exercise of art skills. The judge then found that the overall arrangement of geometric elements such as graphics and lines; and the use of colours of blue, yellow, white and brown, demonstrate a certain degree of creativity and the author's individuality. Such overall arrangement of graphics and choice of colours, added to the image of the designed characters "易安穩/ Exforge" and other relevant explanatory information, are sufficient to meet the requirement of originality of artistic work under Taiwan's Copyright Act.

Having said that, on the issue of substantial similarity, the judge found that except for the use of colours of blue, white, and yellow, other designs and arrangements of aesthetic elements, such as the shapes, lines and arrangement of geometric drawings, presented in these two packages are quite different from each other. It is true that Standard chose to use colours of blue, yellow and white, but the mere use of similar colours does not amount to substantial similarity per se. As such, in the viewpoint of an ordinary and reasonable audience, the package of Asartan would be substantially different from that of Exforge.

Although in the end Novartis's copyright claim failed, this case gives us a glimpse of IP Court's position on the eligibility of copyright protection. While it remains to be seen if the IP Court would follow the US Copyright Act and develop the so-called "conceptual separability test" to determine the copyrightability of a useful article, this case does provide another option to protect the artistic design of a product package in Taiwan.

Steven CC Liao


Saint Island International Patent & Law Offices7th Floor, No. 248, Section 3Nanking East RoadTaipei 105-45, Taiwan, ROCTel: +886 2 2775 1823Fax: +886 2 2731 6377siiplo@mail.saint-island.com.twwww.saint-island.com.tw

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Kilburn & Strode and Mewburn Ellis are just two firms that have invested heavily in office space – a sign that the legal industry is serious about in-person working
In major recent developments, Dyson snagged another win against Hong Kong-based competitor Dreame and a new AI-powered UPC platform was launched
Mohit and Sidhant Goel decided not to pursue an interim injunction application so that their client, Communications Components Antenna, could benefit from a fast-track trial
Anita Cade, head of Ashurst’s IP and media team in Australia, discusses why law firms that can pull together capability across different practice areas and jurisdictions stand to gain
INTA’s CEO says London-based firms have registered fewer delegates compared to past meetings in San Diego and Atlanta, and questions the 'ethics' of trying to participate without registering
Lobbies and interest groups are among the interveners in a major dispute over whether courts can set patent pool rates
Benoit Geurts and Coreena Brinck will help the firm ‘accelerate its innovation agenda’, according to its managing partner
News of a trademark row over Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ and Nokia’s expansion of its IoT licensing programme were also among the top talking points
IP attorneys share how the Cox v Sony ruling impacts their counselling strategies, and if the case could influence how courts may assess liability for AI platforms
Natasha Daughtrey shares how firms can help their women litigators take the lead on trials, and why she is seeing a convergence of tech and life sciences disputes
Gift this article