As the central link between science and technology and industry, intellectual property rights (iprs) are a key hub for linking innovation chains, industrial chains, value chains and, above all, a fundamental path to further integration between sti and industrial innovation. Scientific and technological innovations can be truly transformed from laboratory results to social real productivity only if they depend on the commercialization and industrialization of intellectual property rights. At the same time, intellectual property rights can inject the core technology supply for the transformation of traditional industries, as well as provide precision information navigation for future industry ahead-of-the-art configurations, enabling industries to take over from one another。

As a key element in nurturing new quality productivity, the intellectual property development logic has evolved from a quantitative build-up of the past scale to a full shift towards higher quality, deeper value and a continuous extension to the front end of sti. By relying on specialized tools such as patent navigation, industrial trend assessment and technology pattern analysis, the scientific orientation of basic research, precision assessment of the industrial fall-in value of research results can underpin the “0-1” original innovation breakthrough from the source. Intellectual property rights (iprs) are the core base of the global technological boom and the building of barriers to industrial competition that can lead to the growth of new and dynamic industries through high-quality patent foresight。

The protection of intellectual property rights is not only an important guarantee of high-quality economic development, but is more relevant to the governance of the state, its openness and the safety of science and technology. Strengthening the rule of law protection of intellectual property rights, based on antimonopoly and anti-improper competition in the sector, regulating the market order and optimizing the business environment. Focusing on key core technologies of national security concern, strengthening autonomous r & d and autonomous intellectual property rights (iprs) arrangements, regulating by law the transfer of intellectual property rights to foreign countries, cooperation permits, etc., and the construction of a strong scientific and technological barrier to self-reliance are important strategic underpinnings for safeguarding the country's economic security and safety floors。
Editor, intellectual property operations centre




