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The Institute of Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys of Australia (IPTA) is the peak professional body representing Australian patent and trademark attorneys. Its aim is to:
- Promote improvements in patent, trademark, logo, design and copyright laws and regulations
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to exchange professional ideas and knowledge on patents, trade marks and copyright issues, and to gather and disseminate professional knowledge
- Promote training and educational status of patent and trademark attorneys
For intellectual property (IP) creators and users, IPTA offers qualified professional attorneys.
Patent & trade mark attorneys may be lawyers.
- Advise on intellectual property (IP), and help IP owners register and maintain their property
- Apply for and secure patents, registered trademarks, industrial designs and plant variety rights in Australia and overseas
- Help transfer technology by licensing and other processes
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Conduct litigation in Australia and overseas
Patents may be registered in a wide range of areas including:
- biotechnology
- business methods
- chemical
- computer software
- electronics
- engineering
- gene technology
- ideas & invention
- living organisms
- material & physics
- medical & pharmaceutical
- Plant breeder's rights (PBR)
- product copyright & designs
- Apply for and secure trade marks registrations in Australia and overseas
- By advising on use and registration of trade marks
- By assisting in licensing and assignment of trade marks
- By conducting trade mark litigation & protection in Australia and overseas
It is not necessary to be registered to practice in trade marks. However, there is a Register of Trade Marks Attorneys. Only those on the Register are entitled to call themselves a 'trade marks attorney' or 'trade marks agents', and to enjoy the rights such as professional privilege (without which clients' rights might be adversely affected).
Trains student patent attorneys
The Academy - accredited by the Professional Standards Board for Patent and Trade Marks Attorneys - conducts group courses on:
- Patent Systems
- Drafting patent specifications
- Interpretation and validity of patent specifications
Intellectual property (IP) refers to property rights created through your intellectual and/or discovery efforts, and can generally be protected under patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret, trade dress or other law.
Many products created today incorporate new features - including shape, configuration, pattern or ornamentation.
These products could possibly be registered as Industrial Designs.
Plant breeder's rights (PBR) - administered under Australia.s Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994, through the Plant Breeder's Rights Office at IP Australia - give owners exclusive commercial rights to registered plant varieties.
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Australian Capital Territory (ACT)
New South Wales (NSW)
Queensland (Qld)
South Australia (SA)
Victoria (Vic)
Western Australia (WA)
Tasmania (Tas)
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Methods of Medical Treatment
There is presently no bar in Australia to obtaining patent claims relating to methods of medical treatment.
Genes and Gene Technology
Avoid simple misunderstandings when it comes to the patenting DNA and their defining nucleotide sequences.
Evergreening
Evergreening is a term that now includes the process by which patent protection for a pharmaceutical compound is extended by patenting improvements over the original active compound, such as new uses of the compound, methods for its production, crystalline forms, drug combinations, dosage regimes or re-formulations.
Computer Software
Software and pesticide have more in common than you might think, when it comes to patents.
Business Methods
When can your method of doing business be patentable?
IPTA Site Map
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