|
|
Intellectual Passport CBCSC’s board of directors believed it to be indispensable to go beyond national patents and looks towards expanding the company’s intellectual property on a global scale. In response to this essential need, the Intellectual Passport CB consists of a reliable solution as the company develops internationally. CSC is currently looking to work with investors and distributors with respect to the exploitation rights for SMARTREFTM technologies. What defines the Intellectual Passport CB?The Intellectual Passport CB is an Intellectual Property legal instrument in the form of literary and artistic work. This tool opens new doors for the economic development of innovations for both inventors and investors. It accounts for the anteriority of the creation over the invention. The Intellectual Passport CB offers new preventive strategies and alternatives against imitations. It provides for the evaluation of the economic potential of an innovation through a 3 to 4 year projection. The Intellectual Passport CB harmonizes collaboration between associates, partners, investors and rights holders to develop concepts, patentable or not, through the use of an original international business plan (PEIP) and a portfolio filled with appropriate contracts. What is the difference between a patent and an Intellectual Passport CB?The Patent : is a contract drawn between a presumed inventor and the public, which is represented by the government of the state in which it was registered. Similar to a driver’s licence, it is an assorted state licence of rights, duties, and cancelation possibilities that are part of any contract. It gives its bearer the right to forbid a third party, through legal channels, from exploiting the invention in the country where the patent is registered. "The Intellectual Passport" is the name of a collection of volumes. Each volume of this collection is edited without being divulged for the preservation of secrecy. It procures the author of an original (patentable or non patentable) concept the property of the literary and/or artistic work in which the description of the concept is integrated. This description benefits from the copyrights, as they are recognized by the international instances of intellectual property. Therefore, its extent is worldwide. Different from the patent, the copyright doesn’t forbid to a third party the right to exploit the invention; it forbids them from copying the descriptive (schematics) for commercial means. Without descriptive schematics, it is impossible for a third party to produce the invention or the concept. Furthermore, the economic forecast and contract folder that it contains validates the project from a marketing perspective. The Intellectual Passport CB (non-published) and the Patent (divulged) are complementary: the first, because it procures initial property over the authors’ creation and the second, because it extends the authors right to the monopolistic exploitation of the innovation. |