1. According to the connection and difference between intellectual property and other (general) civil rights, the object of intellectual property is civil rights, including trademarks, patents, copyrights, etc., with original ideas as the center and carriers as the forms of expression.
2. The difference between intellectual property and other (general) civil rights mainly stems from the particularity of intellectual property itself, that is, the object of intellectual property has reproducibility, regionality and timeliness:
(1). Reproducibility lies in that intellectual property rights repeatedly reflect the value characteristics on the carrier;
(2) Regionality stems from the special provisions of sovereign countries or regions on intellectual property rights within their jurisdiction;
(3) Timeliness stems from the limitation of time effectiveness of intellectual property rights within the jurisdiction of sovereign countries or regions.
4. Intellectual property itself combines the property rights and personal rights (personality rights and identity rights) of the obligee, so simply comparing property rights and personal rights, intellectual property rights are different.
5. The main difference between intellectual property and ownership is that the possession, use, income and disposition of ownership are more exclusive and can be completed by the owner's own will. Ownership is absolute, exclusive and permanent, and intellectual property rights need the protection of laws and legal procedures. When there is a conflict of rights between them, intellectual property rights must be transferred to ownership.