A 50% discount for small businesses and a 75% discount for microenterprises are available for the U.S. designation fee. In this context, Box 18 of Form DM/1 provides for the indication of the status of small or micro-enterprises for the purpose of a reduction in the US designation fee. To qualify for the microtity reduction for designation fees in the United States, a micro-enterprise status certification must be submitted. Annex IV of Form DM/1, available from www.wipo.int/hague/en/forms/, provides for the presentation of a certificate of micro-enterprise status. The original version of the Convention (the 1925 Hague version) is no longer applied because all States Parties have signed subsequent conventions. The London Act of 1934 was officially applied between a State of the London Act that did not sign the Hague Act and/or the Geneva Act in relation to other States of the London Act until October 2016. However, since 1 January 2010, the application of this law has already been frozen. All Contracting Parties to one or more instruments of the Hague Convention are members of the Hague Union. Here is a list: The meeting will also be an opportunity to exchange views on the national implementation of these agreements.

(a) nationals of a Contracting Party, orb) have their domicile in the territory of a Contracting Party, or (k) have a real industrial or commercial establishment and not only appearing in the territory of a Contracting Party or have their habitual residence in a Contracting Party There is no limit to the number of representations that may be included for each design. It is possible to enter disclaimers. It is also possible to include a description of the design and/or the identity of the creator of the design; For some Contracting Parties, the inclusion of one or both of these Contracting Parties is mandatory. Information on the Hague System, including geographical coverage and a user guide, is available on the WIPO website www.wipo.int/hague/en/. The EUIPO has only signed the Geneva Act and, therefore, for British design holders, only States and intergovernmental organizations (“Parties”) covered by the Geneva Act can be designated, U.S. applicants should consider filing the international design application through the USPTO or directly with the International Bureau (IB) depending on their particular situation. Direct filing of the application with the IB avoids paying a transmission fee to the USPTO and allows the IB to perform a formality check earlier, which can quickly become important for applicants who want immediate publication or a certified copy of the international design application. In addition, for applications filed on or after 30 March 2016 via the IB e-filing interface, applicants have the option to send corrections of irregularities or deficiencies (including reproductions and corrected documents) electronically to the IB through the e-Filing Portfolio Manager. See www.wipo.int/edocs/hagdocs/en/2016/hague_2016_5.pdf. The IB e-filing interface also enables electronic entry of application data, eliminating the need for a separate DM/1 form, and the data entered is validated in real time to minimize errors in the filing of the application. In addition, filing through the USPTO is not possible unless each applicant has at least one U.S.

nationality or residence, habitual residence, or real and actual industrial or commercial establishment in the United States. Applicants may also consider creating a current account with WIPO and including the approval in the Payment of Fees section of Form DM/1 to instruct the International Bureau to debit the required fees from WIPO`s current account. For more information on the payment of fees to WIPO, please see www.wipo.int/about-wipo/en/finance/hague.html. In some cases, requests may be made to postpone the publication of designs for up to 30 months from the filing date or, if priority is claimed, from the priority date. However, some parties have a shorter deferral period, and others do not allow deferral at all. The Geneva Act of the Hague Convention on the International Registration of Industrial Designs of July 2, 1999 (`the Hague Convention`) is an international convention which allows the applicant to file a single international design application which may have the effect of an application for protection of the design(s) in the countries and/or intergovernmental organizations designated in the application; who are Parties to the Hague Convention (the “Parties”). The United States is a party to the Hague Convention, which was concluded on 13 September. May 2015 with regard to the United States. The Hague Convention is administered by the International Bureau of the World Intellectual Property Organization (hereinafter referred to as “the International Bureau”).

In accordance with Rule 7(1) of the Hague Convention, an international design application must be filed on the “official form”. The International Bureau has established the “Application for International Registration” (Form DM/1) as the official form for filing an international design application. In addition, the International Bureau has attached Annexes to Form DM/1 that may be required when certain Contracting Parties have been designated. Form DM/1 and the Annexes are available on the website of the International Bureau at www.wipo.int/hague/en/forms/. No, there are no USPTO forms specifically for the USPTO to file an international design application. The official application form for the filing of an international design application, i.e. the “application for international registration” (Form DM/1), and the annexes are forms prepared by the International Bureau. These forms are available at www.wipo.int/hague/en/forms/. The International Bureau provides an online tool, the Hague Fee Calculator, to assist the applicant in calculating the relevant WIPO filing fees. The Hague System Fee Calculator is available at www.wipo.int/hague/en/fees/calculator.jsp. The application is submitted directly to the World Intellectual Property Organization in Geneva. Unlike the international trademark registration system, no home filing or registration is required.

Up to one hundred designs may be included in the same application, provided that they are all intended for the same class of designs (according to the International Industrial Design Classification). It should be noted, however, that some Parties have special requirements, which means that, in certain circumstances, the international registration is not valid for all designs of that Party. In particular, multiple designs are not provided for in the United States. Official fees are due and depend on the number of designs, the possibility or not of publication without delay and the respective Contracting Parties. The requirements for reproductions are set out in Rule 9 of the Hague Convention and Part Iv of the Administrative Instructions for the Application of the Hague Convention. The provisions of the Hague Convention and the Administrative Instructions are available on the WIPO website at the following address: www.wipo.int/hague/en/legal_texts/. In addition, certain technical requirements applicable to image files, such as resolution, minimum and maximum image size, margin width, etc., are specified on the WIPO website at www.wipo.int/hague/en/how_to/file/prepare.html. For reproductions submitted through the USPTO as an indirect filing office via EFS-Web, see also the EFS-Web Quick Start Guide for International Design Applications at: www.uspto.gov/patents-application-process/applying-online/efs-web-guidance-and-resources The agreement was concluded in the Dutch city of The Hague. The initial period of an international registration is five years.

Renewal periods are also five years, but only up to the normal term of protection of the design in the names concerned; it varies from designated office to office; In most cases, it`s 25 years, but for some, it`s 10 or 15 years. .