Insights on patents, trademarks, and design protection
Prior-art search determines registrability, claim scope, and office-action cost. Here is why it must precede drafting.
Filing without a prior trademark search risks refusal, invalidation, and infringement claims. Here is why the search must come first.
How a foreign applicant without a Korean address or place of business should appoint a Korean patent attorney — POA, e-signature, NDA, and fee structure.
Lack of distinctiveness under Article 33 of the Korean Trademark Act is the leading refusal ground. Covers the seven categories, naming workarounds, and acquired distinctiveness.
A practitioner's guide to Korean patent annuity fees — fee schedule, normal and grace periods, the 3-year bulk discount, SME and individual reductions, and recovery after lapse.
Korea's copyright registration provides four practical advantages — author and creation-date presumptions, fault presumption, term extension, and customs filings. A practitioner's guide to the procedure and the 2024 fee reductions.
How trademark owners reclaim domains from cybersquatters — the UDRP three-element test, Korea's IDRC procedure, proving bad faith, and post-decision transfer or cancellation.
Korean patent invalidation trials succeed in roughly half of all cases. A practitioner's guide to standing, grounds, procedure, and the retroactive effect of a final decision.
Recipes are patentable in Korea as food compositions or processes, but the inventive-step bar is the gating issue. We unpack what works, with the Coca-Cola / KFC trade-secret playbook.
Korean trademarks must be renewed every 10 years. A practitioner's guide to the one-year filing window, six-month grace period, surcharges, and split payment.
Korean BM/SW patents require a hardware-coupled claim. We compare KIPO eligibility with the US Alice/Mayo §101 framework and walk through workable claim patterns.
Korea runs two examination tracks for designs — partial and full. Compare scope, eligible Locarno classes, time to grant, and post-grant stability to choose the right path.
Patents trade publication for 20-year exclusivity; trade secrets trade silence for indefinite protection. We compare the two using Korean law and the Coca-Cola example.
A patent attorney compares PCT national phase entry and Paris-route direct filing in Korea: 31-month deadline, translation costs, KIPO fee reductions, examination.
A standard Korean trademark takes 10-14 months to register; expedited examination delivers a decision in roughly 2 months. Eligibility, fees, and the 2024 rule changes.
Korean design rights protect appearance; patents protect function. Compare term, fees, dual-protection options, and GUI/screen-design filings under KIPO practice.