{"id":53732,"date":"2021-02-21T13:11:16","date_gmt":"2021-02-21T16:11:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.daniel-ip.com\/?p=53732"},"modified":"2023-03-16T20:03:50","modified_gmt":"2023-03-16T23:03:50","slug":"protecting-and-enforcing-design-rights-brazil","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.daniel-ip.com\/en\/articles\/protecting-and-enforcing-design-rights-brazil\/","title":{"rendered":"Protecting and enforcing design rights: Brazil"},"content":{"rendered":"

In Brazil, the legal provisions for industrial designs are included in the Industrial Property Law (9,279\/96). This law is supplemented by normative acts which regulate the National Institute of Industrial Property (INPI). The most recent of these are Normative Acts 44\/2015 and 45\/2015.<\/p>\n

Legal framework<\/strong><\/h4>\n

In Brazil, the legal provisions for industrial designs are included in the Industrial Property Law (9,279\/96). This law is supplemented by normative acts which regulate the National Institute of Industrial Property (INPI). The most recent of these are Normative Acts 44\/2015 and 45\/2015.<\/p>\n

Industrial designs are classified according to the Locarno Agreement and are granted under a registration system that shares similarities with the Brazilian patent system.<\/p>\n

Unregistered designs<\/strong><\/h4>\n

Unlike the EU unregistered Community design system, Brazilian design law provides no protection for unregistered designs. This means that the author of a design must obtain registration in order to prevent unauthorised third-party use. In rare cases, pursuing copyright protection may be an option to prevent third parties from exploiting a design.<\/p>\n

Registered designs<\/strong><\/h4>\n
Definition and conditions<\/strong><\/h5>\n

Article 95 of the Industrial Property Law defines an \u2018industrial design\u2019 as: \u201cany ornamental plastic form of an object or any ornamental arrangement of lines and colours that may be applied to a product, that provides a new and original visual result in its external configuration, and that may serve as a type for industrial manufacture.\u201d Thus, industrial designs may take a three-dimensional (3D) form as the manufactured form of an article, or a two-dimensional (2D) form as the arrangement of lines and colours that may be applied to a product.<\/p>\n

Both 2D and 3D designs must include visual aspects which are considered ornamental. Designs created based on solely functional purposes are not registrable (Article 100 II). For instance, a blank spherical design created for a soccer ball is not eligible for registration, since without that shape the article would not perform its function correctly. Ornamental aspects may be understood as the visual features of a design which make it distinctive from other similar designs \u2013 particularly from similar articles which perform the same function.<\/p>\n

Requirements for registration<\/strong><\/h5>\n

Novelty is the first requirement for registration. An industrial design is considered \u2018novel\u2019 when it cannot be found in the prior art as of its filing or priority date.<\/p>\n

However, a grace period exists which provides an exception to this rule. Accordingly, a disclosure of the design that takes place up to 180 days before its filing date (or its priority date, if applicable) will not be considered as part of the state of the art, provided that it is made by:<\/p>\n