| Section 6: Layout-Designs (Topographies) of Integrated
Circuits
Article 35
Relation to IPIC Treaty
Members agree to provide protection to the layout-designs
(topographies) of integrated circuits (hereinafter referred
to as “layout-designs”) in accordance with Articles
2–7 (other than paragraph 3 of Article 6), Article 12
and paragraph 3 of Article 16 of the Treaty on Intellectual
Property in Respect of Integrated Circuits and, in addition,
to comply with the following provisions.
Article 36
Scope of the Protection2
Subject to the provisions of paragraph 1 of Article 37 below,
Members shall consider unlawful the following acts if performed
without the authorization of the right holder: importing,
selling, or otherwise distributing for commercial purposes
a protected layout-design, an integrated circuit in which
a protected layout-design is incorporated, or an article incorporating
such an integrated circuit only insofar as it continues to
contain an unlawfully reproduced layout-design.
Article 37
Acts not Requiring the Authorization of the Right Holder
1. Notwithstanding Article 36 above, no Member shall consider
unlawful the performance of any of the acts referred to in
that Article in respect of an integrated circuit incorporating
an unlawfully reproduced layout-design or any article incorporating
such an integrated circuit where the person performing or
ordering such acts did not know and had no reasonable ground
to know, when acquiring the integrated circuit or article
incorporating such an integrated circuit, that it incorporated
an unlawfully reproduced layout-design. Members shall provide
that, after the time that such person has received sufficient
notice that the layout-design was unlawfully reproduced, he
may perform any of the acts with respect to the stock on hand
or ordered before such time, but shall be liable to pay to
the right holder a sum equivalent to a reasonable royalty
such as would be payable under a freely negotiated license
in respect of such a layout-design.
2. The conditions set out in sub-paragraphs (a)–(k)
of Article 31 above shall apply mutatis mutandis in
the event of any non-voluntary licensing of a layout-design
or of its use by or for the government without the authorization
of the right holder.
Article 38
Term of Protection
1. In Members requiring registration as a condition of protection,
the term of protection of layout-designs shall not end before
the expiration of a period of ten years counted from the date
of filing an application for registration or from the first
commercial exploitation wherever in the world it occurs.
2. In Members not requiring registration as a condition for
protection, layout-designs shall be protected for a term of
no less than ten years from the date of the first commercial
exploitation wherever in the world it occurs.
3. Notwithstanding paragraphs 1 and 2 above, a Member may
provide that protection shall lapse fifteen years after the
creation of the layout-design.
Appendix IV Endnotes
1For an explanation of the relationship
of this section of TRIPs to title 17 of the United States
Code, see the second paragraph of endnote
8, chapter 9, supra.
2The term “right holder”
in this section shall be understood as having the same meaning
as the term “holder of the right” in the Treaty
on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated Circuits,
done at Washington, D.C., on May 26, 1989.
|