综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

   
 
Indian smartphone patents boom sets alarm bells ringing
By Hao Nan (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2014-12-03

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology recently issued a patent pre-warning report for the smartphone industry in the Indian market.

The report said that patents are more frequently being used as a weapon to attack competitors as market competition is intensifying.

Zhou Jie, an intellectual property expert at China Academy of Telecommunication Research under the MIIT, told the Legal Weekly newspaper that Chinese smartphone companies have been sued in Indian courts for IP disputes and their products seized by local customs in recent years.

Figures from the market consultancy International Data Corporation in August showed that India saw robust growth in the smartphone industry in the second quarter this year, during which more than 18 million phones were sold - an increase of 84 percent over the same period last year.

Xu Hao, senior analyst from Analysys International, said that the market is transforming 2G services into 3G services, which caused many local consumers to replace their old phones with smart ones.

As the industry's second largest market in the world, India has attracted many Chinese smartphone manufacturers to expand their operations, which now take more than half of the market share, said Sun Wenping, head of Shenzhen Mobile Communications Association in Guangdong province.

"Shenzhen alone has nearly 300 mobile phone producers that export products to India, including the industrial leaders Huawei, ZTE and Gionee, according to the local customs," Sun told the newspaper.

Indian smartphone patents boom sets alarm bells ringing

In addition, the fast-rising handset maker Xiaomi Corp in Beijing also tapped into the Indian markets in July.

Chinese products are welcomed in Indian markets due to their competitive price, so both industry giants and patent operators, also known as non-practicing entities, have paid special attention to their Chinese competitors, the newspaper reported.

Ren Caibo, head of the legal department in smartphone maker Coolpad Group, said patent disputes involving non-practicing entities are a big challenge for Chinese phone makers in India.

"We can discuss about patent cross-licensing with other phone makers to solve the disputes, but the method is useless when faced with the non-practicing entities, because they do not have real products," he said.

Sun said India's local phone makers are unlikely to file patent lawsuits against Chinese manufacturers because they "currently have insufficient research capabilities and fewer patent reserves".

But he called for more attention to some foreign industry giants who have developed Indian markets for years.

Li Junhui, a researcher at the IP research center of China University of Political Science and Law, said whether Chinese phone makers would encounter patent disputes in Indian markets mainly depends on three facts - whether the markets have strong local competitors, whether their main foreign competitors have already entered into the markets, and the local patent deployment of Chinese companies.

He said risks do not mean real hazards, adding that if the emerging Chinese companies in India do not have enough market influences, they may not have those troubles, because patent infringement cases are costly and time-consuming.

Although no large-scale patent infringement lawsuit against Chinese manufacturers has happened yet in India, Ren said they cannot rule out the possibility that some foreign companies "are waiting for a proper time".

In order to avoid the patent barriers becoming a weak point for Chinese phone makers when "going out", many of them have increased investments on patents and strengthened their research capacities.

Zhou said Chinese manufacturers should make comprehensive studies of the local economic and political situations and the development of the mobile communication industry before they enter into Indian markets.

haonan@chinadaily.com.cn

Indian smartphone patents boom sets alarm bells ringing



The J-Innovation

Steve Jobs died the month that the latest Nobel Prize winners were announced. The coincidence lends itself to speculation about inevitability.

Recommendation of Global IP Service Agencies with Chinese Business

Washable keyboard

The future of China & WTO

JETRO: A decade of development in China

伊通| 绍兴县| 浦江县| 张掖市| 长岭县| 佛冈县| 锡林郭勒盟| 曲阜市| 涟水县| 延吉市| 张家口市| 朝阳市| 安阳县| 尉犁县| 苍南县| 杨浦区| 西林县| 开鲁县| 大田县| 比如县| 原平市| 保靖县| 闵行区| 临安市| 铁力市| 张家川| 文水县| 海淀区| 松潘县| 南开区| 海兴县| 福清市| 团风县| 安西县| 海安县| 余庆县| 高尔夫| 新龙县| 陵川县| 枣庄市| 咸宁市|