Is patent right equal to exclusive right?

Patent right is essentially an exclusive right. Exclusive rights are also called "exclusive rights". Article 1 1 of the Patent Law stipulates: "After the patent right for invention and utility model is granted, no unit or individual may manufacture, use or sell its patented product for production and business purposes, or use its patented method, or use or sell the product directly obtained according to the patented method, unless otherwise provided by law. After the patent right for design is granted, no unit or individual may manufacture or sell its design for the purpose of production and operation without the permission of the patentee. After the patent right of a patented product is granted, unless otherwise provided by law, the patentee has the right to prohibit others from importing the patented product or the product directly obtained according to the patented method for the purposes mentioned in the preceding two paragraphs without the permission of the patentee. " The law here stipulates that the patentee has the right to prohibit others from manufacturing, using, selling and importing, which is the so-called exclusive right enjoyed by the patentee. After the design patent is granted, no unit or individual may exploit the patent without the permission of the patentee, that is, may not manufacture, sell or import its patented products for production and business purposes. "The patentee's exclusive right to implement.

The patentee's exclusive right to exploit, that is, only the patentee can exploit his patent right, and no one else can exploit the patent without permission.

The situation of patent implementation includes:

1. Inventions and utility models have five exclusive rights to exploit: inventions include product inventions, method inventions and improved inventions, and their inventors and utility model owners perform the following five acts:

1, manufacturing patented products, or using patented methods to manufacture patented products.

2. Use patented products or use patented products.

3. Selling patented products or using patented methods to manufacture patented products.

4. Promising to sell patented products or patented products manufactured by patented methods.

5. Import patented products, or import patented products manufactured by patented methods.

Any of the above acts constitutes infringement as long as it is not approved by the patentee.

The above-mentioned promised sales refer to the offer and invitation to offer. If A has patented products, it has constituted infringement that someone sells A's products in the form of advertisements without A's permission.

Second, there are four designs:

(1) manufacturing industry; 2 sales; 3 committed sales; 4 import.

For example, without Party A's permission, Party B produces patented design products with patent rights, which constitutes infringement. If Party B sells products to Party C, although Party C has not obtained Party A's permission, it does not constitute infringement.