Intellectual Property Right Holders
Considering current proportions of counterfeiting and piracy, intellectual property right holders suffer
substantial damage in business, which has also corresponding broader social consequences.
For example, the development of a new technology, of an innovative product or medicinal products
requires substantial investment in knowledge, research and development, and for a final product to
come to a consumer, it is necessary to invest in its testing, promotion and marketing. However, after
such product has gained reputation and popularity on the market thanks to substantial investments, it
is generally easy to be copied with technologies widely available today and to be competitive on the
market, with significantly lower investments, to the manufacturer who created the product. It is
similar with creators in art and the related activities, i.e. authors, performers, as well as the ones who
make investments in these works thus making them available to users.
It is exactly for the aforementioned reasons that a modern system of intellectual property protection
has been developed, providing for encouragement to innovations and creativity and fair market
competition. The acquisition of intellectual property rights and the rights of their holders in terms of
usage have been regulated by an elaborated law system providing for a balance between private rights
holders and the general social interest.
In addition to direct business damage incurred by income decrease caused by the sale of counterfeit or
pirated products, which is omnipresent today and assumes massive proportions, intellectual property
right holders suffer an additional damage in terms of undermined reputation, if similar or identical
products of lower quality are being sold under their trademark (brand), and they bear substantial costs
of undertaking legal measures against infringers (e.g. court expenditures, costs of storing and
destroying counterfeit and pirated products).
One should bear in mind thereby that intellectual property right holders are not only financially strong
big companies but often also small and medium enterprises or individual creators who base their
existence on intellectual property rights.
Piracy causes direct damage to creative authors who create and give driving force to the development
of the society. By taking and using their works without asking and getting authorizations, they are
prevented from working and creating and living on their creative work in the future as well.
Who are for example these creative authors in music? People who conceive and create musical works:
text writers, music authors, arrangers, artists-performers. There are often several authors participating
in creation of only one musical work, investing their knowledge, experience, talent, ideas, time. This
work of art of theirs was performed and enriched by artists-performers. However, without a physical
form – without sound recording media – this work is available to a limited number of people on
particular occasions only. There are also a great number of individuals participating in the production
of sound recording media invested by discographers: publishing editors, sound masters, technicians,
visual designers...
The number of individuals participating in the production of audio-visual works, investing their
knowledge, experience, time, talent, work and financial resources in the production and performance
of the work, is even far greater.
Total damage incurred to all these creative authors, individuals who get self-employed and try to live
on their specific work independently by taking business risks, amounts to several hundreds of millions
of kuna per year.