The exclusivity of intellectual property rights can also be called exclusivity, exclusivity, and monopoly. The exclusivity of intellectual property rights includes the following meanings: 1. Intellectual property rights are exclusive. During the validity period of the right, no one may use this right within the specified territory without the permission of the owner of the intellectual property rights.
2. For an intellectual achievement, a certain type of intellectual property rights granted by the state should be unique, and the same type of intellectual property rights cannot be granted to others for the same intellectual achievement.
According to the above first level of meaning, the objects protected by intellectual property rights, that is, intellectual achievements that meet the requirements of intellectual property rights, can be distinguished from intellectual achievements in the public domain. That is to say, the object of intellectual property rights must be in the "exclusive domain" and have "proprietality". If it enters the "public domain", it can no longer be protected by intellectual property rights.
The above second meaning also reflects the difference between intellectual property rights and tangible property rights. The owner of tangible property rights, such as the owner of a table, has limited rights to use and dispose of his table. He has no right to use or dispose of other identical tables, let alone prohibit others from making them. , selling the same table. The patentee who has obtained the patent for this table product not only has the right to prohibit others from manufacturing and selling the same table, but can also prevent others from obtaining patent rights for the same table. It can be seen that for a certain type of tangible objects, the "exclusiveness" of tangible property rights is the real "exclusiveness".