1 / 11

The Utopia of IP Regulation in Indonesia

The Utopia of IP Regulation in Indonesia. Budi Rahardjo PPAUME ITB br@paume.itb.ac.id. Budi Rahardjo’s Profile http://budi.insan.co.id. IP Protection. Innovations increase our quality of life Motivate innovation by giving exclusive rights

urit
Download Presentation

The Utopia of IP Regulation in Indonesia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Utopia of IP Regulation in Indonesia Budi Rahardjo PPAUME ITBbr@paume.itb.ac.id

  2. Budi Rahardjo’s Profilehttp://budi.insan.co.id

  3. IP Protection • Innovations increase our quality of life • Motivate innovation by giving exclusive rights • Ideally:A balance between incentive to innovate and public benefits

  4. What Drives People to Innovate? • Financial reward • Fame & fortune • Gratification • Necessity • Contribution to humanity

  5. “Problems” • To find “balance” and “fairness” • What is fairness? • Copying a page of a book? • How about a chapter? Half of the book? • For educational purposes only?

  6. Digital Problems • Digitalized products • Music / audio • Movies / video • Software / programs • Book, written documents • They are all numbers! • It is easier to copy digital works without degrading the quality of the original and produce same quality duplicates

  7. Extended Problems • Only big and rich companies / institutions can register (patents) • Poor countries / people are at disadvantage • Lack of patent officers who understand new (emerging) technology • Different interpretations • Software patents • Internet Domain Names • What is “property”?

  8. Indonesia’s Problems • Create expensive products • Compare price of MS Office to salary of ordinary people • Prices of books, references, journals are too expensive for students, lecturers • Local companies (SME) cannot compete world wide without infringing some IPRs • Little interest in registering works (no incentive) • Cultural barrier: little interest in written documentation

  9. New Movements • Free Software Foundation, Open Source, GNU Public License (GPL) • Open Course Ware, open journals? (Firstmoday.dk) • Anti (Against) Intellectual Property

  10. Indonesia’s Approach • Must accept globalization, respect IPRs • Forced to adopt TRIPS, WIPO, etc. • Must be smart in implementation • Encourage the use of free software or pay for commercial software • Encourage innovation (but how?)

  11. Concluding Remarks • Long way to go, but must take the first step(s) • Must be smart in implementing IP regulation

More Related