Part of the Hague agreement
The Hague agreement is divided into five parts. Including: 1 part,1London Protocol of June 2, 934, (Article 1-23); Part II, Hague Protocol1960165438+1October 28th, (Article 1-33); Part III, Additional Protocol of Monaco196118, (Article18); Part iv of the Stockholm supplementary protocol (article 1- 12); 1part v of the Geneva protocol of 29 August 975 (article 1- 12). The main content of The Hague Agreement is that any individual or unit with the nationality of any member country of The Hague Union or with domicile or business premises in that country can apply for "international preservation". As long as the applicant applies to the International Bureau of the World Intellectual Property Organization once, he can obtain the patent protection of industrial designs in the member countries that want to be protected. When applying for international preservation, you don't need to get the approval of the design patent in the patent office of one country first, and you can get protection in several countries at the same time through one-time preservation. The term of international deposit is 5 years, which can be extended for 5 years after maturity.