What are the common problems of intellectual property?

Common intellectual property issues include ownership disputes, infringement disputes, contract disputes and administrative disputes. Ownership disputes refer to disputes over property or who owns it, and infringement disputes refer to disputes that infringe upon the legitimate civil rights and interests of others, such as property rights, personal rights, intellectual property rights, inheritance rights and even creditor's rights.

Contract disputes refer to all disputes caused by the effectiveness, interpretation, performance, modification and termination of the contract after the contract is signed. Contract disputes can be settled through negotiation, mediation, arbitration and civil litigation. Administrative disputes refer to disputes between administrative organs and managed counterparts, including citizens, legal persons and other organizations in the process of administrative management.

The characteristics of intellectual property rights can be summarized as follows:

1, intangible property right;

2. Confirmation or award must be directly stipulated by special national legislation;

3. Duality: both the nature of personal rights and the content of property rights. But the trademark right is an exception, it only protects property rights, not personal rights;

4. Appropriateness: Intellectual property is the exclusive right of the right subject. Without the consent of the obligee or special provisions of the law, no one except the obligee may enjoy or use the right;

5. Regionality: Intellectual property rights recognized and protected by a country's laws have legal effect only within the country;

6. Timeliness: The law stipulates a certain period of protection for intellectual property rights, and intellectual property rights are only valid within the statutory period.

Article 12 of the Copyright Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulates that a natural person, a legal person or an unincorporated organization who signs a work is the author and has corresponding rights in the work unless there is proof to the contrary.

Authors and other copyright owners may register their works with registration agencies recognized by the national copyright authorities.

The provisions of the preceding two paragraphs shall apply mutatis mutandis to copyright-related rights.