Patent Prosecution Highway between Indonesia and South Korea
Patent Prosecution Highway between Indonesia and South Korea Starting this December, the Indonesian Patent Office (DGIP) and the Korean Intellectual Property Office (KIPO) began implementing the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) program. This program aims to ensure that South Korean companies entering Indonesia can obtain Patent Examinations more quickly, from 40 months to just 18.4 months. This KIPO PPH collaboration with DGIP is the 10th Bilateral PPH after previously collaborating with IMPI (Mexico – July 1, 2012), IPOPHL (Philippines – May 1, 2015), TIPO (Taiwan – July 1, 2015), EAPO (Eurasia Patent Office – January 1, 2019), IPVN (Viet Nam – June 1, 2019), SAIP (Saudi Arabia – July 1, 2019), INPI (Brazil – April 1, 2020), and MyIPO (Malaysia – December 1, 2020 ), INPI (France – September 1, 2022). It is called Bilateral PPH because it is still a pilot program, before finally becoming Global PPH, as has been implemented in IP5 countries (China, Japan, USA, & EU) and other 24 countries, such as the UK, Singapore, Australia, and Russia. The Basic Concept PPH Where an Office of First Filing (OFF) has assessed the patentability of a Patent Application, an Office of Second Filing (OSF) offers the Applicant accelerated examination for the corresponding Application, provided that certain conditions are met. Those conditions include sufficient correspondence in the claims of the two applications and the search and examination results of an OFF being made available to an OSF. Under the PPH program, the examination results of an OFF are used to expedite the application process in an OSF, thereby reducing the workload and improving patent quality. If deemed patentable by an OFF, the corresponding application is filed in advance for accelerated examination in an OSF. This PPH program is divided into two categories: PPH using the National Work Products and PPH using the PCT International Products from the KIPO. The following are the procedures for each category: 1. PPH using the National Work Products from the KIPO Applicants can request accelerated examination by a prescribed procedure including submission of relevant documents on an application filed with the DGIP and satisfies the following requirements under the DGIP-KIPO Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) pilot program based on the KIPO application. When filing a request for the PPH pilot program, an applicant must submit a request form to the DGIP. The offices may terminate the PPH pilot program if the volume of participation exceeds a manageable level, or for any other reason. Ex Ante notice will be published if the PPH pilot program is terminated. The PPH pilot program will be in effect for three (3) years commencing on 8 December 2023 and will end on 8 November 2026. However, the program may be extended after a joint DGIP – KIPO review and assessment of the program implementation. Requirements a. Both the DGIP application on which PPH is requested and the KIPO application(s) forming the basis of the PPH request shall have the same earliest date (whether a priority date or a filing date). For example, the DGIP application (including the PCT national phase application) may be either: an application that validly claims priority under the Paris Convention from the KIPO application(s) except for a complex priority. Example: A. Paris Route B. PCT Route C. PCT Route – Domestic Priority D. Paris Route – Complex Priority E. Paris Route – Divisional Application F. PCT ROUTE an application that provides the basis of a valid priority claim under the Paris Convention for the KIPO application(s) (including PCT national phase application(s)). Example: A. Paris Route B. PCT Route a PCT national phase application where both the DGIP application and the KIPO application(s) are derived from a common PCT international application having no priority claim. Example: A. Direct PCT Route B. Direct PCT & Paris Route C. Direct PCT & PCT Route D. Direct PCT & PCT Route b. Patent applications have been initiated in the Office of the KIPO or the DGIP. Patent applications belong to a patent family of which at least the earliest application was filed with the DGIP or the KIPO acting as a national office. The DGIP application which validly claims priority direct PCT applications is also eligible. Example: A. Paris Route BUT the First Application is from the Third Country B. PCT Route BUT the First Application is from the Third Country c. At least one corresponding application exists in the KIPO and has one or more claims that are determined to be patentable/allowable by the KIPO. The corresponding application(s) can be the application that forms the basis of the priority claim, an application derived from the KIPO application that forms the basis of the priority claim (e.g., a divisional application of the KIPO application or an application that claims domestic priority to the KIPO application, example: or a KIPO national phase application of a PCT application. Example: A. PCT Route B. Direct PCT Route C. Direct PCT & PCT Route D. Direct PCT & PCT Route Claims are “determined to be patentable/allowable” when the KIPO examiner identifies the claims as patentable/allowable in the latest office action, even if the application is not granted for patent. The office’s action includes: Decision to Grant a Patent Notification of Reasons for Refusal Decision of Refusal Appeal Decision For example, if the following routine expression is described in the “Notification of Reason for Refusal” of the KIPO, those claims are clearly identified to be patentable/allowable. “<Claims which has been found no reason for refusal> At present for an invention concerning Claim, no reason for refusal is found.” d. All claims on file, as originally filed or as amended, for examination under the PPH must sufficiently correspond to one or more of those claims indicated as patentable/allowable in the KIPO. Claims are considered to “sufficiently correspond” where, accounting for differences due to translations and claim format, the claims in the DGIP are of the same or similar scope as the claims in…

