Showing posts with label Yahong Li. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yahong Li. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Yahong Li & Zhaoxia Deng on Players’ Rights to Game Mods: Towards a More Balanced Copyright Regime (Computer Law & Security Review)

Computer Law & Security Review
Published in November 2021
Abstract: In the context of video game, there is a notable convergence between the users and producers of content. There is also a tension between control over created content and innovative uses of that content, which arises from the gap existed between copyright law and the emerging practices of online communities. This paper examines a distinct form of player-contributed content, namely game Mods, through the perspective of social welfare rather than that of content creators. It argues that law is not the only factor affecting copyright owners’ decision-making behavior; social and economic factors also play an essential role. These factors explain why game developers may tolerate or even encourage minor alterations to their works but prohibit total conversion of the Mods. Given that the existing law and terms of service cannot serve as “effective cure” for regulating game Mods, this paper explores the social and economic factors that impact how game corporations address modding, framing these factors in a four-quadrant model according to the relative benefits and harm of Mods to game developers and users/modders. The inconsistency between the letter of the law and its practical application in the modding context suggests a need for law reform. Based on the findings of the above examinations, this paper proposes a two-pronged solution to the modding problem. The first prong concerns the social benefit of game Mods, aiming at changing the copyright regime from being exclusive to non-exclusive, which confers on gamers the legal right to modify video games without permission but obliges them to remunerate the original developers for commercial use of those Mods. The second prong concerns the potential social harm of game Mods and proposes a community-based approach, under which game operators are imposed a common law duty to monitor infringement and to ensure the fair implementation of game developers’ terms of service.  Click here to download the article (until 22 January 2022).

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Yahong Li on Copyright Issues with the “Black Hole” Image and their Legal Implications (Cardozo Arts & Ent LJ)

"Copyright Issues With The “Black Hole” Image And Their Legal Implications"
Published on 31 January 2020
Abstract: The release of the world’s first-ever black hole image generated an immediate copyright dispute and revealed multiple copyright issues that remain unsettled. This Article argues that the black hole image should be left in the public domain without copyright protection for the following reasons: First, the image’s copyrightability and copyright ownership are too uncertain to warrant legal protection, making fair use and compulsory licensing largely irrelevant; second, the image is a work of worldwide significance that was created through broad international collaboration with substantial public funding, which strongly implies a public interest in access to the work; and third, a Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution license cannot guarantee public access because it can be changed at any time to a more restrictive license. This Article concludes that only by leaving the black hole image in the public domain can copyright’s objective of increasing public access to creative works and promoting scientific progress be achieved.

Yahong Li on the Age of Remix and Copyright Law Reform (Law, Innovation and Technology)

''The age of remix and copyright law reform''
Published on 18 February 2020
Abstract: The remix has emerged as a dominant force of creation in the digital and Internet age. The solutions under current copyright law such as fair use as well as voluntary, compulsory and public licencing have failed to adequately protect remix works and remixers, and as a result hampered the creativity of remix artists. New approaches are needed to cope with the challenges. This article proposes to add remix as a protectable subject matter; create a right to remix and grant it to remixers; obligate remixers to attribute source works to copyright holders and remunerate them for remixing; require the same remix rights and obligations to be passed on to future remixers; and impose a statutory levy on social media for using remixes. It is argued that the proposed approach can better protect remix creation and help achieve an optimal balance of interests between copyright holders, social media and users.

Monday, December 16, 2019

HKU Law's SSRN Legal Studies Research Paper Series (May - Dec 2019)


Vol. 9, No. 7: December 10, 2019

Table of Contents

Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Robin Veidt, University of Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)

Ilias Bantekas, Brunel University London - Brunel Law School
Pietro Ortolani, Radboud University
Shahla F. Ali, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Manuel A. Gomez, Florida International University College of Law
Michael Polkinghorne, White & Case LLP

Johannes M M Chan, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Alex Schwartz, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Angela Huyue Zhang, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Eric C. Ip, The University of Hong Kong

Shahla F. Ali, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Albert H. Y. Chen, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 6: Oct 31, 2019


Table of Contents

Shitong Qiao, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Alex Green, Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong
Jennifer Hendry, School of Law, University of Leeds

Successful Secession and theValue of International Recognition
Alex Green, Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong

Remedial Discretion and Dilemmasin Asia
Po Jen Yap, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 5: Oct 17, 2019


Table of Contents

Anna Dziedzic, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne - Melbourne Law School
Cheryl Saunders, University of Melbourne - Law School

Jingyi Wang, Peking University - Peking University School of Transnational Law
Wilson Chow, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Johannes M M Chan, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Po Jen Yap, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 4: September 19, 2019

SIMON N. M. YOUNG, EDITOR

Table of Contents

Syren Johnstone, Department of Law, University of Hong Kong, Asian Institute of International Financial Law

Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)

Federico Panisi, University of Brescia
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Anton Didenko, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Cyn-Young Park, Asian Development Bank
Emilija Pashoska, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Bo Zhao, University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Business and Economics, Asian Development Bank - Economic Research and Regional Cooperation Department (ERCD)

Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Emilios Avgouleas, University of Edinburgh - School of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 3: June 11, 2019


Table of Contents

Han Zhu, Centre for Chinese Law, The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law

Kelvin Hiu Fai Kwok, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Ernest Lim, National University of Singapore (NUS) - Faculty of Law

Han Zhu, Centre for Chinese Law, The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law 
Albert H. Y. Chen, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Kelvin Hiu Fai Kwok, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Janos Nathan Barberis, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 2: May 10, 2019


Table of Contents

The Future of Data-Driven Finance and RegTech: Lessons from EU Big Bang IIDirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Rolf H. Weber, University of Zurich - Faculty of Law

A Network Theory of PatentabilityLaura G. Pedraza-Farina, Northwestern University School of Law
Ryan Whalen, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

The Age of Remix and Copyright Law Reform
Yahong Li, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Re-Conceptualizing ‘Object’ Analysis Under Article 101 TFEU: Theoretical and Comparative Perspectives
Kelvin Hiu Fai Kwok, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

What are Law Courses for? Striking a Balance between Professional and Liberal Education GoalsDanny Gittings, University of Hong Kong, College of Humanities and Law, School of Professional and Continuing Education, The University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Law

From Global to Anthropocenic Assemblages: Re-Thinking Territory, Authority and Rights in the New Climatic RegimeDaniel Matthews, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Monday, September 23, 2019

Yahong Li on Copyright Issues with the “Black Hole” Image and Their Legal Implications (forthcoming journal article)

"Copyright Issues with the “Black Hole” Image and Their Legal Implications"
Yahong Li
Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal,
forthcoming: Volume 38, Issue 1
Abstract: The release of the world’s first-ever black hole image generated an immediate copyright dispute and revealed multiple copyright issues that remain unsettled. This paper argues that the black hole image should be left in the public domain without copyright protection because: first, the image’s copyrightability and copyright ownership are too uncertain to warrant a legal protection, making fair use and compulsory licensing largely irrelevant; second, the image is a work of world significance that was created through broad international collaboration with substantial public funding, which has a strong implication for public interest in access of the work; and third, Creative Commons 4.0 Attribution license cannot guarantee public access because it can be changed to a more restrictive license. This paper concludes that only leaving the black hole image in the public domain can copyright’s objective of increasing public access of creative works and promoting scientific progress be achieved.

Yahong Li on The Age of Remix and Copyright Law Reform (SSRN)

"The Age of Remix and Copyright Law Reform"
Abstract: The remix has emerged as a dominant force of creation in the digital and Internet age. The solutions under the current copyright law such as fair use as well as voluntary, compulsory and public licensing have failed to adequately protect remix works and remixers, and as a result, hampered the creativity of remix artists. New approaches are needed to cope with the challenges. This article proposes to add remix as a protectable subject matter; create a right to remix and grant it to remixers; obligate remixers to attribute source works to copyright holders and remunerate them for remixing; require the same remix rights and obligations to be passed on to future remixers; and impose a statutory levy on social media for using remixes. It is argued that the proposed approach can better protect remix creation and help achieve an optimal balance of interests between copyright holders, social media and users.

Yahong Li on Music Copyright Society of China's Legal Right and Standing to Bring Lawsuit in Its Own Name (new book chapter)

"Music Copyright Society of China Has Legal Right and Standing to Bring Lawsuit in Its Own Name"
in Kung-Chung Liu (ed.), Annotated Leading Copyright Cases in Major Asian Jurisdictions (City University of Hong Kong Press, 2019), pp. 98-101
Abstract: This is a case filed by the Music Copyright Society of China ("MCSC") against Suzhou Broadcasting and Television Bureau ("SBTB") for broadcasting its members' published songs without payment.  The appeal court, Suzhou Intermediate People's Court, upheld the judgment of the first instance, Suzhou Huqiu District Court: the defendant is liable for infringement of MCSC's right in broadcasting, and the defendant's defense of fair use should be rejected.

Yahong Li on Reminiscing About the Golden Age: An Analysis of Efforts to Revive the Hong Kong Film Industry Through the Lens of Copyright Protection (new book chapter)

in Liu, Kung-Chung, Racherla, Uday (eds), Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China (Springer, 2019), pp. 145-172
Abstract: The Hong Kong film industry portrayed itself as an international film powerhouse during its golden age.  Its light was dimmed on account of the industry's director-centered production system, prevailing investor pressure, weak infrastructure, political and economic conditions, popularity of foreign films, and rampant piracy. The Hong Kong government established infrastructural solutions and financial remedies to alleviate the industry's plight.  Despite those laudable efforts, success has been limited.  The key to restoring film industry to its former glory lies in reforming the traditional Hong Kong copyright framework, including reconstructing the copyright ownership rule, providing breathing space for secondary creation, and decriminalizing individual, noncommercial online sharing.

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Dr Yahong Li Elected to the Executive Committee of ATRIP

Congratulations to Dr Yahong Li, who was elected a new member of the Executive Committee of the International Association for the Advancement of Teaching and Research In Intellectual Property (ATRIP) during the closing session of ATRIP's 38th Annual Congress held in Nashville, United States, from 25-28 August 2019.  ATRIP's general objective is "to contribute to the advancement of teaching and research in the field of the law of intellectual property".  Dr Li is internationally known for her scholarship on IP law in China and her more recent interdisciplinary projects focusing on IP, culture and technology.  She is Director of HKU's LLM programme in Technology and IP Law.

Congratulations to Ms Deng Zhaoxia Winner of the Young Scholar Essay Competition (38th Annual ATRIP Congress)

Congratulations to Ms Deng Zhaoxia, a PhD student supervised by Dr Yahong Li, who was awarded the championship prize in the Young Scholar Essay Competition of the 38th Annual Congress of the International Association for the Advancement of Teaching and Research in Intellectual Property (ATRIP) on 25 August 2019 in Nashville, United States. ATRIP is a well established global intellectual property (IP) association currently with around 360 members who are prominent IP scholars from all over the world. Its nine Executive Committee members are nominated by the President and other existing executive committee members, and approved by a vote of the Assembly of the Congress. The competition is sponsored by the International Federation of Intellectual Property Attorneys (FICPI), and Ms Deng is the first Asian young scholar to win this prestigious award.  Her paper was titled "Readapting Copyright Law to Video Games: Comparative and Critical Analysis".

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Yahong Li on the Current Dilemma and Future of Software Patenting (Int'l Rev IP & Competition L)

"The Current Dilemma and Future of Software Patenting"
Yahong Li
IIC - International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law
July 2019, published online
Abstract: The unprecedented division over patent eligibility based on the ‘‘abstract idea’’ construct among the courts and judges in the Alice v. CLS case, the post-Alice contradictory decisions and the trend of rejecting or invalidating software patents, as well as the uncertainty about the concept of ‘‘computer program as such’’ (or ‘‘per se’’) in Europe and China, present a chaotic reality and serious dilemma as to the future direction of the software patenting regime around the world. The recent revisions to patent examination guidelines by the patent offices in the US, Europe and China, particularly the ‘‘grouping’’ of ‘‘abstract ideas’’ by the USPTO, providing examples of a ‘‘further technical effect’’ by the EPO, and distinguishing a‘‘computer program per se’’ and ‘‘computer-implemented inventions’’ by the CNIPA, although helpful in patent examinations, cannot solve the root problem and fix the dilemma. A more general definition, or a ‘‘safe harbour’’, for the ‘‘abstract idea’’ or computer program ‘‘as such’’ is needed. In addition, to prevent patent troll sand promote true software innovation, the scope and length of software patent protection should be limited, e.g. allowing only the means of implementation but not the function to be patented; and granting 10 years of utility-model-type or sui generis protection. All the above proposed reforms should be undertaken at the international level, e.g. by adopting a Software Treaty under the auspices of the WIPO, because the software patent dilemma is a global one that deserves an international solution, especially in the age of the internet where most of the soft-ware patents cover borderless internet technologies.

Yahong Li on Copyrightability of Remixes and Creation of Remix Rights (new book chapter)

"Copyrightability of Remixes and Creation of Remix Rights"
Yahong Li
in Susy Frankel (ed.), Is Intellectual Property Pluralism Functional? (Edward Elgar, 2019) 288-309
Abstract: Digital and Internet technologies have fostered the culture of remix. From literature, arts to music, remix has become a dominant force of creation. However, the legal status of remix remains obscure, akin to that of an illegitimate child who has a prominent existence but no clear legal right, to be caught between copyright holders and social media, being sued by the former and exploited by the latter. The existing fair use regime including the Canadian model of UGC exception has failed to provide a remedy due to its uncertainty and defensive nature. So have voluntary licensing schemes. Copyright law should be reformed to protect remix and to grant a positive right of remix to remixers, while obligating them to pay attribution and remuneration to copyright holders of the source materials, and to grant the same right to future remixers so that the societal creativity can be unleashed through more remixes.

Congratulations to Dr Yahong Li and her PhD students in Chinese Intellectual Property

Congratulations to Dr Yahong Li who was appointed an expert for the Think Tank of China National Copyright Trading Bases (Yuexiu) on 20 June 2019 and a member of the Expert Committee of Peking University Great Bay Area Intellectual Property Institute on 21 June 2019. Dr Yahong Li was also invited to be a judge of the PhD Forum on Technology and Intellectual Property Law (2019) organized by Peking University on June 22-23​. At this forum, her fourth and second year PhD students, Huang Weijie and Deng Zhaoxia, were awarded second and third prizes respectively for their academic papers:
(1) Huang Weijie: “To Block or to Monetize: A Mechanism to Facilitate Copyright Reallocation." (the second prize) 
Abstract: The rule “to block or to monetize” provides copyright owners with liability-rule protection to gain advertising revenue from infringement, which facilitates efficient copyright reallocation when more and more user-generated contents (UGC) lay in the gray area between infringement and fair use. However, the current rule deprives UGC creators of the bargaining power against copyright owners, which not only stifles UGC creation but also refrains copyright from discovering more efficient exploiters through a dispersed market mechanism. To fulfill the purpose of the liability-rule protection, UGC creators should be permitted to restore the removed UGCs or share advertising revenue through counter-notification. 
(2) Deng Zhaoxia, "Critical Analysis on the Merchandising Rights of Fictional Characters: Chinese and American Perspectives" (the third prize)
Abstract: This paper takes fictional characters as the research objects to explore the connotation of their merchandising right. Through comparative and critical analysis of the phenomenon of “copyrighting trademark” of fictional characters in China and the phenomenon of “trademarking copyright” of fictional characters in America, it concludes that the merchandising right originates from commercialization outside the original works and serves to distinguish the origin or quality of the goods, which should be defined and protected legally as a commercial mark right and interest, belonging to the category of “trademark with certain influence”. Hence exercising this right must follow the general principles of trademark law and cannot hinder the freedom of expression or artistic expression.

Thursday, March 21, 2019

HKU Class of 2018 Law PhD Graduates

Congratulations to our 12 PhD graduates who had their degrees conferred upon them at the 200th Congregation on 30 November 2018 at the University of Hong Kong. The newest members of our RPg alumnae family include the following:

1. Dr. AMESHEVA Inna Ilieva, Unravelling Differential Treatment: From Coexistence to Cooperation in International Climate Change Law. Supervisor: Dr James Fry


3. Dr. CHONG Agnes, The Non-Hierarchical Norms of No-Harm and PhD Equitable Utilization in International Watercourses Law. Supervisor: Dr James Fry

4. Dr. FEI Mengtian, An Analysis of Modernization and Law concerning Same-sex Sexuality in China.  Supervisor: Mr Benny Tai

5. Dr. LEJOT Paul Louis, The Place of Law Legal and Regulatory Influences on Financial Sector Agglomeration. Supervisor: Professor Douglas Arner

6. Dr. LONG Jie, China's Space Station in Light of Long-term Sustainability of Outer Space Activities: Cooperation, Law, Reality and Potential. Supervisor: Professor Yun Zhao

7. Dr. REPOUSIS Odysseas, The Rise of Multilateral Investment Treaties: International Investment Law Between Codification and Progressive Development. Supervisor: Dr James Fry

8. Dr. RUANGSAWASDI Chernporn, The Virtue-Based Paradigm of Judgment in the World of Investment Disputes.  Supervisor: Professor Hualing Fu

9. Dr. SPINA ALI Gabriele, Article 39(3) TRIPS: Understanding the Obligations, Exploiting the Flexibilities.  Supervisor: Ms Alice Lee

10. Dr. WEST Michael John, Federal Frontiers: the Constitution of Hunan Province in 1920s Republican China.  Supervisor: Professor Hualing Fu

11. Dr. ZHANG Xiaohan, The Application of the Consumer Protection Principle in the UNCITRAL ODR Rules and Its Implications for the ODR Practice in China. Supervisor: Professor Yun Zhao

12. Dr. ZUO Anlei, Institutional Fragmentation of International Intellectual Property Law in a World Society: Ontological Ethos, Structural Biases and Regime Interaction.  Supervisor: Dr. Li Yahong

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Yahong Li and Weijie Huang on Taking Users' Rights Seriously: Proposed UGC Solutions for Spurring Creativity in the Internet Age (QM J of Intell Prop)

Yahong Li and Weijie Huang
February 2019, Volume 9, Issue 1 
Abstract: The past three centuries have witnessed copyright owners competing with distributors for the flow of income generated by new technologies. However, users have largely been excluded from this cake-cutting copyright game. The neglect of users’ interests has posed a serious challenge in the user generated content (‘UGC’) age. New technologies have empowered users to create UGC, whereas the existing law entitles copyright owners to block users’ access to source materials and allows UGC platforms to exploit UGC without remuneration. This article proposes a two-pronged solution in attempting to strike a better balance between copyright owners, UGC platforms and UGC creators. The first is an ex-post remuneration rule that confers on UGC creators the legal right to use copyrighted work without asking for permission but imposes an obligation to pay remuneration, both of which pass to future UGC creators. This rule incorporates elements of Creative Commons and compulsory licensing as part of the copyright rules generally applicable to all UGC creators. The second solution proposes a community-based approach, which imposes upon UGC platforms a common-law duty of monitoring infringement and includes some legal standards that ensure fair implementation of the terms of use/service of UGC platforms.

Monday, October 16, 2017

New book by Yahong Li: Patents and Innovation in Mainland China and Hong Kong (CUP)

Editor: Yahong Li
Cambridge University Press
October 2017, 286 pp
Description: How do patents affect innovation in Mainland China and Hong Kong? How can two patent systems operate within one country and how is innovation affected by the 'one country two systems' model? For the first time, this book links these challenging issues together and provides a comprehensive overview for government officials, law-makers, academics, law practitioners and students to understand the patent systems of Mainland China and Hong Kong. Themes examined include the interaction between the two distinctive patent regimes, the impact of patents on innovation in China's specific industries such as green tech, traditional Chinese medicines and telecommunications, the role of utility models in inflating low-quality patents and the application of good faith principle in enforcing FRAND in Mainland China, patent system reforms in Hong Kong, and the impact of these changes on innovation in the two vastly distinctive yet closely connected jurisdictions.
  • The first detailed study of the links between Mainland China and Hong Kong in the area of patents and innovation
  • Describes the establishment of Hong Kong's indigenous patent system and how it was reformed after the handover to China
  • Analyzes in depth the role of patents in China's individual industries such as green tech, traditional Chinese medicines and telecommunications
Chapters were contributed by some of the students and graduates of the Faculty of Law's research postgraduate programme including Dr Chen Yifu, Dr Gao Li and Miss Yu Limeng.

Advance Praise
'In the international IP community a knowledge gap exists with regard to the fact that China employs two different, but complementary patent systems. The book giving deep comparative insight into both systems and furthermore promotes additional, valuable knowledge concerning other territories of 'Greater China'.' 
Heinz Goddar, European and German Patent and Trademark Attorney
'With uncertainties about the Unified Patent Court and system in Europe and the disruptions of long-standing expectations by the Supreme Court in the United States, China promises to emerge as the primary place where researchers and investors can vindicate their faith in the future of intellectual property. In that new emerging world of IP, knowledge of Chinese IP law and practice will be at a premium. Chinese IP has an additional point of attraction: it is actually two systems - one on the mainland and one in the traditional Asian economic powerhouse of Hong Kong. This book by Professor Li opens the door to both systems and increases insight into both by comparison. As China continues to emerge as the center pole holding up the tent of IP, Professor Li's book will teach ways to use that tent and its center pole to protect the world's IP assets.' 
Judge Randall Rader, Principal, The Rader Group; former Chief Judge, US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Thursday, August 17, 2017

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Yahong Li Comments on Hong Kong's High Speed Railway Patent Infringement Case (new book chapter)

in Kung-Chung LIU (eds), Annotated Leading Patent Cases in Major Asian Jurisdictions (City University of Hong Kong Press, 2017), pp 69-83. 
Summary: This is a recent patent infringement case in Hong Kong (SNE Engineering Co Ltd v Hsin Chong Construction Co Ltd [2014] 2 HKLRD 822 (CFI)), which involves a short term patent, Patent No. 1150416 for a construction method for extracting building piles from the ground. The plaintiff claimed that its short term patent was infringed by the defendant, while the defendant raised the defense of patent invalidly due to lack of sufficient disclosure and lack of novelty and inventive steps. The High Court invalidated the patent, and dismissed the claim of infringement. However, its reasoning leaves room for improvement, and implicates the need for future reform of Hong Kong’s short-term patent system but not the court system.

Saturday, June 24, 2017

Congratulations to Our Two PhD Fulbright Scholars 2017-2018

Congratulations to Ms Weijie Huang and Ms Xiaohan Zhang, our two PhD candidates, who were awarded the prestigious Fulbright - RGC Hong Kong Research Scholar Award (Junior Programme) 2017-2018.  Ms Huang, supervised by Dr Yahong Li, will spend 10 months at the UC Berkeley School of Law researching copyright law and the newly emerging phenomenon of user-remixed content.  Ms Zhang, supervised by Professor Yun Zhao, will spend 6 months at Harvard Law School researching the development of a Chinese online dispute resolution mechanism.  

Friday, June 9, 2017

Yahong Li Interviewed on Patent Rights and New Drug Approvals in China (S&P Global)

"China's patent linkage system fosters innovation, keeps generic makers in fold"
Lisa Anne Cam
S&P Global Market Intelligence
24 May 2017
While the recent decision to implement a patent linkage system in China seeks to encourage innovation in the pharmaceutical industry, manufacturers of generics could also stand to gain from it. 
     The Chinese Food and Drug Administration said May 12 that it plans to link the application process for new drug approval to patent rights, and that pharma companies seeking market approval for new drugs will have to declare whether their products violate intellectual property rights. 
     Yahong Li, associate professor at the University of Hong Kong's law department, said in an interview that there are terms in the policy draft which, if not clarified in the final policy, could be interpreted by generic drug manufacturers to their advantage. 
     For example, how do you define who is an innovator?  "The policy states its purpose is to protect innovators' rights, but who are these innovators? Would a company developing a drug based on an existing product be considered an innovator as well?" Li, who specializes in intellectual property law, said... Click here to read the full article.