IP protection in China is working – British business
Managing IP is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

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

IP protection in China is working – British business

A survey of British companies who do business in China has revealed that almost two thirds of respondents believe that protecting their IP has been an effective deterrent against infringement

The China-Britain Business Council surveyed 170 firms and found that 50% of them said that seeking protection for their IP rights in China had been effective against infringement, while 11% said that it had been “very effective”.

Almost four out of five respondents said that IP infringement had caused either no or minimal impact on their business operations.

But this figure may have been skewed by the type of businesses that responded to the survey: 65% are from the professional services sector, such as accountancy firms and lawyers, who do not have manufacturing operations.

You can read more about the survey and see the full results here.

Managing IP’s China IP Forum takes place in Beijing this week. Read reports on managingip.com and follow @managingipon twitter for the latest reports.

more from across site and ros bottom lb

More from across our site

The Munich Regional Court ruled that Lenovo was an unwilling licensee and had engaged in ‘holdout’ tactics
Technological innovation should play a critical role in advancing sustainable practices, argues Justin Delfino, global head of IP and R&D at Evalueserve
Ewan Grist of Bird & Bird, who acted for Lidl in its trademark victory against Tesco, reveals some of the lessons brand owners can take from the judgment
Dolby’s lawsuit at the Delhi High Court follows a record win by Ericsson earlier this year against the same defendant
Tee Tan, chief information officer at the owner of several IP firms, says to avoid tech just for the sake of it and explains how his company builds in-house tools
Regardless of whether the FTC’s ban on non-competes goes into effect, businesses should stop relying on these agreements
Mary Till, a former legal advisor at the USPTO who has joined Finnegan this week, is looking forward to providing clients with a USPTO perspective
IP in-house counsel who receive lots of pitches from AI vendors explain how they review them – or why they ignore them
Anna Sosis discusses the importance of IP education and explains why, away from IP, she could see herself becoming a mindfulness teacher
Cross-border judicial collaboration and EU copyright were hot topics on the second day of the EUIPO’s 5th IP Case Law Conference
Gift this article