kb-ip-wipo
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name: kb-ip-wipo
description: Use when a matter involves international IP filing systems, WIPO treaties, the Madrid System for international trademark registration, the PCT for international patent applications, the Hague System for industrial designs, or WIPO arbitration and mediation. Covers WIPO's role as treaty administrator, key treaty membership for MENA countries, the Madrid/PCT/Hague filing procedures, WIPO UDRP domain dispute process, and the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center. Triggers on WIPO filing, Madrid trademark, PCT patent, Hague design, WIPO arbitration, or international IP registration questions.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.IP-WIPO
category: kb
practice_area: Intellectual Property Law
jurisdictions: [KSA, UAE, LB, EG, EU, UK, MENA]
priority: P2
intent: [WIPO, Madrid-system, PCT, international-trademark, international-patent, UDRP]
related: [kb-ip-mena, kb-fintech-licensing-difc, kb-fintech-licensing-adgm, draft-ip-assignment, draft-ip-licensing]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Knowledge Pack — WIPO and International IP Filing Systems
WIPO Overview
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is the UN agency responsible for international IP policy, services, and cooperation. Headquartered in Geneva, WIPO administers 26 treaties and provides several global filing systems that allow rights holders to seek protection in multiple countries through a single application.
For MENA practitioners and clients, WIPO filing systems reduce cost and complexity for multi-jurisdictional IP portfolios.
Key WIPO Treaties — MENA Membership
| Treaty | Purpose | KSA | UAE | LB | EG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paris Convention | Industrial property (TM, patents, designs) — priority rights | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Berne Convention | Copyright — automatic protection | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Madrid Protocol | International trademark registration | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) | International patent filing | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Hague Agreement | International design registration | No | No | No | No |
| Singapore Treaty (TM formalities) | Trademark administration | No | No | No | No |
| WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT) | Digital/internet copyright | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT) | Performers' and producers' rights | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
Lebanon is not a member of the Madrid Protocol — international trademark filings cannot designate Lebanon directly. National filing in Lebanon required separately.
Hague System (designs): KSA and UAE are not members — national design registrations required separately.
Madrid System — International Trademark Registration
How It Works
The Madrid System allows a trademark owner to seek protection in multiple member countries through a single international application filed via the trademark office of their home country ("Office of Origin"):
- Rights holder must have a pending or registered "basic mark" in their home country.
- File an international application through the home office using the MM2 form (or online via WIPO Madrid System e-filing).
- WIPO reviews formalities; assigns an international registration number.
- WIPO notifies designated member countries.
- Each designated country examines the mark under its own rules within 12–18 months.
- Country grants or refuses protection; if no action, protection is presumed granted.
Advantages
- One application, one set of fees (base fee + designation fees per country).
- Centralized management: renewals, assignment, change of name/address — one filing with WIPO applies globally.
- Central attack risk: if the basic mark is cancelled within 5 years, the international registration may fall (central attack — mitigated by converting to national applications).
MENA Context
- KSA, UAE, Egypt: designatable via Madrid.
- Lebanon: not designatable — separate national filing required.
- Term: 10 years renewable; aligned with most national trademark terms.
- Renewal through WIPO centrally (does not need to be renewed country by country).
Key Fees (Indicative)
- WIPO base fee: CHF 653 (standard mark; one class).
- Individual country designation fees: vary (UAE: CHF 239; KSA: CHF 279; EG: CHF 103 — verify current WIPO fee schedule).
- Additional classes: per-class fees for each designation.
PCT — Patent Cooperation Treaty
How It Works
The PCT allows patent applicants to seek protection in up to 150+ countries through a single international application:
- File one PCT application (in one language, with one filing fee) at a receiving office (national office or WIPO directly).
- WIPO conducts an International Search (by an International Searching Authority — ISA: USPTO, EPO, KIPO, SAIP, etc.).
- International Publication at 18 months from priority date.
- Optional International Preliminary Examination (IPEA).
- Enter national phase in each designated country by deadline:
- Typically 30 months from priority date (31 months for some countries).
- Each country examines under its own patentability standards; grants or refuses.
Advantages
- Defers national phase costs — applicants can decide which countries to pursue after seeing prior-art search results.
- Single application maintains priority date in all designated countries.
- ISA search report used by national offices; reduces duplicate examination effort.
MENA National Phase
| Jurisdiction | National Phase Deadline | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| KSA | 30 months from priority | Arabic translation required; SAIP examination |
| UAE | 30 months | Arabic translation; MOEC examination |
| Lebanon | 30 months | MOET filing; Arabic translation |
| Egypt | 30 months | EDA filing; Arabic translation |
| GCC via GCC Patent Office | Special arrangement | Separate GCC Patent Office filing (not via PCT) — consider both PCT and direct GCC filing |
GCC Patent Office
The GCC Patent Office (Riyadh) provides a regional patent covering all 6 GCC states through a single application:
- Not part of the PCT system — separate from PCT national phase filing.
- Applicants can file both via PCT (for non-GCC countries) and directly at GCC Patent Office.
- Once granted, provides coverage in KSA, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman simultaneously.
- Processing: 2–4 years; substantive examination.
Hague System — International Design Registration
The Hague System allows international registration of industrial designs:
- Filed at WIPO; designates member countries.
- KSA, UAE, Lebanon, Egypt: not currently members — national design registrations required separately.
- Relevant for EU designs (EUIPO) and global design portfolios; MENA clients with EU products should use Hague for EU coverage.
WIPO UDRP — Domain Name Disputes
Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP)
WIPO's Arbitration and Mediation Center administers domain name disputes for gTLDs (.com, .net, .org, .info, .biz, etc.) and many ccTLDs:
Requirements to succeed (all three must be met):
- The disputed domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a trademark in which the complainant has rights.
- The respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in the domain name.
- The domain name was registered and is being used in bad faith.
Remedies: transfer of domain or cancellation.
Process:
- File complaint with WIPO UDRP Center (USD 1,500 for one panel, one domain).
- Respondent has 20 days to respond.
- Panelist decision within 14 days.
- Total process: ~50 days.
MENA use: WIPO UDRP actively used by KSA and UAE trademark owners to recover hijacked .com domains. SAIP and MOEC trademark registrations serve as the basis for complaints.
Country-Code Domains
| Domain | Administrator | Dispute Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| .sa (Saudi Arabia) | CITC | SAIP/CITC domain dispute policy |
| .ae (UAE) | TDRA | UDRP-like domain dispute policy |
| .lb (Lebanon) | OMSAR | Limited dispute mechanism |
| .eg (Egypt) | NTRA | Egyptian domain dispute procedures |
WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center
WIPO also provides arbitration and mediation for IP disputes (beyond domain names):
- WIPO Arbitration: confidential, neutral, IP-specialist arbitrators; widely used for patent licensing disputes, franchise, technology transfer.
- WIPO Mediation: non-binding, flexible process; used for licensing negotiation breakdown.
- Expedited Arbitration: shorter, less expensive; suitable for lower-value disputes.
WIPO arbitration is recognized and enforced in all New York Convention signatory countries (which include all MENA states discussed here).
IP Strategy: WIPO Systems in MENA Portfolio Management
| Objective | Recommended Approach |
|---|---|
| Trademark across GCC + EU | Madrid Protocol (designate KSA, UAE, EG, EU) + national filing in Lebanon |
| Patent across GCC | GCC Patent Office (single application for all 6 GCC states); PCT for rest |
| Global patent | PCT (enters national phase in each relevant country at 30 months) |
| Design globally (no MENA Hague members) | Hague System for EU/US/CN; national design filings for KSA, UAE, LB, EG |
| Domain dispute (.com) | WIPO UDRP |
| Domain dispute (ccTLD) | National domain dispute mechanism per ccTLD |
Caveats & Currency
WIPO fee schedules are updated annually in January; verify current fees at www.wipo.int before quoting costs. Madrid member list changes periodically — check for any new MENA country accessions (Jordan, Iraq). PCT national phase deadlines are firm — missing deadlines is fatal to patent rights. GCC Patent Office examination timelines are indicative; track record of processing times varies. UDRP statistics available on WIPO website for due diligence.
Related Skills
- [[kb-ip-mena]]
- [[draft-ip-assignment]]
- [[draft-ip-licensing]]
- [[kb-fintech-licensing-difc]]
- [[kb-fintech-licensing-cma-ksa]]