High Tech Products and Intellectual Property Erinn Woodcock Rick Nortz Paula Ramko Lance Gomes.

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High Tech Products and Intellectual Property Erinn Woodcock Rick Nortz Paula Ramko Lance Gomes
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Transcript of High Tech Products and Intellectual Property Erinn Woodcock Rick Nortz Paula Ramko Lance Gomes.

High Tech Products and Intellectual Property

Erinn Woodcock

Rick Nortz

Paula Ramko

Lance Gomes

Agenda

• Argentina’s Hardware Industry

• Argentina Software Industry

• Intellectual Property Issues– Argentina– Brazil– Mexico

• Conclusion

Hardware (36%)

Software (16%)

Consumables (7%)

Services (41%)

Overall IT Market1999

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

Total IT Market :– Grew at 11% in 1999

– Total Market $3.84 Billion in 1999

– Expected growth of 10% through 2000

Argentina Hardware Market

1999 Hardware Market – $1.6 Billion Market

User Segments:– Multi-users: $294 million in purchases– Single-users: $1 billion in purchases

Hardware MarketTrends

• 3.6 Million PCs in the Market

• 800,000 PCs sold in 1999– Total market penetration about 10 %

• Volume increase 10% in PC sales demonstrates growth of market– Residential market and small and medium-sized

businesses responsible for the growth

Hardware MarketTrends

• Government Initiatives – Science and Technology Secretariat and the Banco

Nacion will work together to:• Reduce overall costs of ownership

• Provide financing

• 8% growth projected for the sector

• Goal of 1 million homes with PCs and Internet connection

Argentine Hardware MarketExports

• Basically nonexistent

• “Export” imported products– These are customized solutions to specific

clients’ subsidiaries located in bordering countries

• Export sales of $4.8 million in 1999

• Total Hardware Import market– $1.45 billion in 1999

• US accounts for 67 % of computer import market

• 1999: $1 billion in sales of US Hardware products

• 1999-2000: Argentina increased hardware imports by 8%

Argentine Hardware MarketImports

China (7%)

Country of OriginHardware

USA (67%)

Brazil (10%)

Others (6%)

Mexico (10%)

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

Hardware MarketImport vs. Export

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ImportDomesticExports

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

Hardware MarketMexico and Brazil

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1998 1999 2000

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

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Argentina Software Market

1999 Software Market – $459 Million Market– Expected Growth 10% per year

User Segments:– Banks, Large Firms, Government Agencies– Medium and Small Companies(PyME)– Residential (SOHO)

Large Firms (35%)

Banks (19%)

Sm & Med Sized Companies(28%)

SOHO (13%)

Government (5%)

End User MarketHardware and Software

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

Software MarketTrends

• 3 Market Segments– Software for manufacturing– Vertical software market– PC software

• End-User Changes– Mostly large or small-medium corporations

Software MarketTrends

• Growth of PyME Market– Creates alliances between major US software

vendors and banks, vendors and resellers– Customized solutions

• Decrease in Piracy– 1997 70%– 1998 Software piracy law passed

Argentine Software MarketExports

• No Software Export Market • Local Production

– 1998: $30 Million– 1999: $35 Million– 7.2% share of local market

• Intersoft– Most important local software company– Will be expanding into Brazil, Paraguay,

Venezuela

• Total software import market– $459 million in 1999

• US accounts for 77% of software import market

• 1999: $350 million in sales of US software

• 1999-2000: Argentina increased software imports by 10%

Argentine Software MarketImports

USA (77%)

Germany (12%)

Others (5%)

Spain (6%)

Country of OriginSoftware

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

Software MarketImport vs. Export

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ImportDomesticExports

Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

Software MarketMexico and Brazil

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Source: U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service

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Intellectual Property Guidelines

WTO (World Trade Organization)

• Sets guidelines for international trade rules

TRIPS (Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights)

• Established in 2000

• Covers treatment of copyrights, patents, trademarks, layout of integrated circuits

• A company or individual in a WTO country can patent a product/process to prevent others using, selling or importing without the owner’s consent

Intellectual Property Law

• 1933 Law on Intellectual Property - Provides copyright protection- Nov. 1998 revision: copying software is illegal

• 1981 Law on Technology Transfer- Governs agreements providing for the transfer, assignment or licensing of technology or trademarks.

• 1981 Law on Trademarks and Designations - Ownership of a trademark begins at registration.

• 1998 IPR Protection for Software

- Explicitly included software in protected area

- Reduced software piracy by 8%• Software Legal

- Private sector group representing local software interests- Will initiate legal action against companies using pirated software.- Claims 15,000 companies are using pirated software.- Launched 170 piracy lawsuits since 1998, has won only one case.

Intellectual Property Law

Intellectual PropertyArgentina

• Level of software piracy- 1998: 62%- 1999: 55%-60%

• U.S.’estimated retail losses from software piracy:- 1998: $124M- 1999: $250M

• 2000 - Black market for computer programs is est. $1.5B/year.

• The government paid the software industry over $5M for using 22,525 versions of pirated software.

Intellectual Property LawBrazil

• April 1996 - Law protecting layout of designs of integrated circuits

• May 1997 - Industrial property law covering patents and trademarks

• February 1998 - Software law protecting computer programs as “literary works” with 50 year protection

• Draft of Bill in 2000 - Broaden criminal penalties and streamline judicial process

• Level of software piracy- 1998: 61%- 1999: 58%

• U.S.’estimated retail losses from software piracy- 1998: 367M- 1999: $392M

• Has one of the largest piracy rates in the hemisphere

• Local industry groups

•Business Software Alliance

•Brazilian Software Companies Association

Intellectual PropertyBrazil

• NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)- Mexico must provide effective border enforcement

•December 1996 Copyright Law:

- Substantially increased protection for computer programs

- Criminal penalties were increased

•March 1998 “Reglamentos”

-Most significant change to Mexican copyright law

- Tripled the number of inspectors

Intellectual Property LawMexico

• May 1999 Penal Code Update - Substantially increased penalty for IPR violations

• November 1999 Law of Industrial Property (reformed)

- More jurisdiction in copyright law

- Original law brought Mexico’s patent and trademark legislation in line with NAFTA

Intellectual Property LawMexico

• Level of software piracy- 1998: 60% - 1999: 56%

• U.S.’estimated retail losses from software piracy- 1998: $147M- 1999: $134M

• Mexico piracy is below the 80% average in Latin America

•Violations have been reclassified as a felony

Intellectual Property Mexico

Conclusion

• Hardware and Software in Argentina– Dependent on the US for Hardware and Software

– Target Markets Changing

– New Initiatives/Alliances

• Intellectual Property– Software Piracy was Rampant in the mid 90’s

– New Software Piracy Laws in many Latin American Countries

– Piracy is decreasing

– Enforcement remains an issue

Sources:

• US Department of State, FY2000; Country Commercial Guide - Argentina and Mexico

• The Economist Intelligence Unit - from Country Commerce; Argentina: June 22, 2000 and June 30, 1999; Mexico: September 30, 2000,

• SourceMex, May 12, 1999; www.ladb.unm.edu

• US Trade Representative 2000 national Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade. (Brazil)

• US & Foreign Commercial Services (Industry Sector Analysis: Hardware and Software for Argentina)

Thank You

Questions?