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What To Do About Chinese Companies Taking Your IP?

Posted in Legal News

Last week, co-blogger Steve Dickinson and I spoke at the Foreign Correspondents Club in Beijing. From our perspective, the best part of our talk were the excellent questions posed to us by the reporters in attendance.  There was one question I pretty much punted on and though I have thought much about it since, I still do not have a good answer. In fact, I have determined it is not a question for a lawyer, but rather for a business.  Here’s the question, as best as I remember it (I believe it came from a Wall Street Journal reporter):

“What do you tell your clients about how Chinese companies are taking foreign company intellectual property and then using that intellectual property to market their own products outside China?”

As I recall, my response was something along the following: 

“Good question. In the ‘old days’ we used to warn our clients about the risks of Chinese companies taking our clients’ intellectual property and using that intellectual property to compete in China but you are right that Chinese companies are now using foreign company intellectual property to compete worldwide, not just in China. I guess we just warn our clients of this possibility and then they need to figure out whether it is worth it to them to take the risks.”  

Steve then talked of how much of the intellectual property that is being taken by Chinese companies is not the type that can be registered as a patent, copyright or trademark and therefore its protection requires contractual solutions. Steve then went on to talk about how in many instances when he and our clients have expressed a desire to the Chinese “partner” about protecting intellectual property, the Chinese company makes clear that one of their chief reasons for wanting to do the deal is to garner the intellectual property and, if they cannot do so, they will not go forward with the deal.

So about the best advice we can give is that if you are opening up your intellectual property to a Chinese company, you had better think long and hard about what the repercussions will be to your company if that Chinese company takes your IP (as it almost certainly will) and then uses it to compete with you not just in China, but in all of your existing and planned markets.

I fear there is no good solution here.  What do you think?

  • http://www.foreignentrepreneursinchina.com Clara Muriel Ruano

    There was a similar question today at the AmCham presentation for their 2010-11 China Business Report (sorry to mention this event again! I’ve just done it in another of your posts!). Being asked about the IPR risks that companies doing business in China have, one of their panelists (Mr Steve Ganster, Director Technomic Asia) shared some thoughts about it. As far as I remember it came down to:
    IPR infringement is a risk. A risk is a relative issue. It may be more risky for a company not to be in China… so you need to evaluate your IP risk vs your “not being in China” risk. And play it accordingly. If you need to be here, you will just have to find ways to handle that risk.

  • http://www.0815-bags.com Thomas Fahrnholz

    I think it is true and let’s please remember that one of the reasons for China’s opening up was specifically to acquire advanced technology/IP. So face the risk and in order to reduce it, try to rely on a WOFE as investment vehicle where ever and when ever it is possible to do so.

  • Benjamin Liu

    For innovation based IP (Patent, know-how, copyright in the computer side, IC design, etc): If the field is ever advancing and evolving, get paid handsomely for teaching them the know-how and use that profit to develop the next tier technology, rinse and repeat. If the technology cannot be improved further, you give away enough to get the deal done and shield the crown jewel as long as you can, in the hope that by the time breakup happens, you already have a foot in the China door. Use contract suppliers instead of JVs. As far as I know, the Coca Cola recipe is still a secret.
    For identity based IP (Trademarks, copyrights, name and personality rights): Do all the paper work to establish your rights, spell out all termination and surviving rights in contract. The CCP does not cares enough to save a counterfeiter.
    Everything is a balance of risk. The problem is that there is no clear understanding of the level and type of risk and the tools to combat such risk. For example, conventional wisdom accepts a geographical risk of heightened local-protectionism when enforcing patents inland versus in Beijing/Shanghai. Assuming that is true (all we have are anecdotes), what are ways of mitigating local protectionism and how effective are they? Is the Shangdong Intermediate People’s Court cosmopolitan enough and if not, how easy or hard is it to transfer venue or forum shop? I suppose those are questions for Chinese lawfirms but maybe there is room for more “Chinese IP enforcement for Dummy” in English.