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dnej
17-03-2009, 09:32 PM
Australia’s beleaguered automotive industry has won
an historic court ruling banning the sale in Australia of imported copies of their Australian-designed parts and products.
The win is set to have a major impact on the multi-billion dollar automotive sector as news of the decision filters through the industry and manufacturing generally.

After two years’ research, Melbourne businessman Tony Ottobre developed a new way of making LED rear lights for trucks and trailers that improved quality and halved the cost.
In June 2004 he registered his designs under the federal Parliament’s new Designs Act 2003. His lights were an instant hit with truck and trailer manufacturers and his sales jumped from $100,000 in 2003 to more than $12 million last year. His total sales for the five-year period topped $34 million.

His breakthrough design profoundly influenced the automotive LED (light emitting diode) industry in Australia. His Thomastown firm, LED Technologies, was the first in Australia to introduce a five-year warranty, and more recently a lifetime warranty, and derive its income solely from LED products.

In November 2006 a China-made copy of Mr Ottobre’s design appeared on the Australian market, selling for about 20% less than Mr Ottobre’s products. The copy had the potential to cost Mr Ottobre millions of dollars in lost sales and significantly damage the excellent reputation of his business and its products. In what was a test case, Mr Ottobre was the first businessman in Australia’s multi-billion dollar automotive industry to use the Designs Act 2003 to sue an importer and distributors for copying his product and selling it in Australia.

After a two-year battle in the Federal Court of Australia and $900,000 in legal fees, Mr Ottobre late last month won a landmark decision for his business and all makers and sellers of Australian-designed goods.
His win sets a precedent and – for the first time in Australian manufacturing history – protects Australian-designed automotive parts and products from predatory copycat practices.

“This has been going on for years, copies undermining the manufacture and sale of Australian-designed parts and products, costing Aussie firms hundreds of millions of dollars and thousands of jobs,” Mr Ottobre said.
“Someone had to take a stand. I was determined to fight for my business.
It’s taken two years and nearly a million dollars but we’re now protected. This is a huge win not just for my business but for all makers and sellers of Aussie-designed goods.”

The new Designs Act 2003 includes the important new benchmark substantially similar. “Many people in the automotive industry are under the impression you can copy someone else’s product so long as at least 10% of it is different. This is not the case and has now been confirmed by this ruling.”

Justice Michelle Gordon said Ren International and distributors Olsen Industries, Advanced Automotive Australia and Elecspess infringed Mr Ottobre’s registered Australian designs and contravened sections of the Trade Practices Act 1974 by manufacturing, importing and selling in Australia its copy, known as the Condor model.

On February 24, 2009, Justice Gordon barred Ren International and the distributors from “directly or indirectly making, importing, selling or offering for sale” any automotive lamps that are “identical to or substantially similar in overall impression” to Mr Ottobre’s registered Australian designs. She ordered Ren International and its distributors to pay LED Technologies $200,000 in damages by March 25, 2009, and awarded Mr Ottobre legal costs.

Ren International’s copy is being pulled from distributors’ shelves across Australia. Many more imported copies of Australian-designed parts and products are expected to come under scrutiny as news of the decision filters through Australia’s automotive industry and manufacturing generally.

Steeler
17-03-2009, 10:10 PM
Hi dnej

A good news story for the innovators and disastrous for the imitators.

Cheers

Steve

dnej
17-03-2009, 10:35 PM
Steve,
It is a great product also.Sticks by his product with warranty.
David

maztez
18-03-2009, 01:11 PM
This is great for the Aussie Inventors and about time our legal system stood up and protected our home grown ideas .
Good stuff and thanks for wiseing us up ..

Spaniard_King
18-03-2009, 04:22 PM
one for the battler top stuff.

FNQCairns
18-03-2009, 04:37 PM
Hope it doesn't backfire, for instance a good idea made even better or serve to allow the original to make no improvements ever!

I can see lots of big money threatening little money just because they can also big money stealing little money ideas legally, Suspect the ruling will be overturned or 'substantially' changed given enough time and someone with deep enough pockets as is the legal way in Oz.

cheers fnq

disorderly
18-03-2009, 06:27 PM
Hope it doesn't backfire, for instance a good idea made even better or serve to allow the original to make no improvements ever!


cheers fnq

It does raise some interesting points,though...

The way our manufacturing sector is going (and phone and internet services..ie call centres,many banking jobs etc )I wonder if in certain industries and situations we should re-introduce tariffs and other protective measures...these and rulings like what happened in this instance are the only way to ensure that Australia ends up with any manufacturing and indeed jobs at all..

Basically we just CANNOT compete with India,Malaysia,Indonesia,China etc...on a price point...cant happen ....and wont happen until a decade or more in the future, if ever, they start treating their citizens like humans ..

The downside to such protection is as FNQ has mentioned above...it can mean that companies simply do not have to continually strive to improve and implement change to stay ahead of the competition..

I dunno..but the more I think about it..the more I feel that it will take some years for these Low Paid Worker Rich Countries to Unionize and for the workers to gain decent human treatment(ie fair days pay for a fair days work)and I think we need to be wary about shipping all our manufacturing and service industries offshore because once its all gone it just wont be viable to ever bring it back...

I also feel the same about our natural resources...It seems Chinese companies are sniffing around our mining companies and looking to buy them or into them at a much reduced rate due to the economic downturn...

You can be assured that if China gets controlling interests in our mines that mining jobs will go from sweet to sh!t very quick...particularly in times of economic turmoil when they can pick and choose workers ...

The days of dominating the world by Bloody Wars is over ...the new controlling powers will be of an economic nature...

Scott

PinHead
18-03-2009, 07:17 PM
so right Scott..and now China has all the dollars.

sleepygreg
18-03-2009, 09:47 PM
China also does not recognise copyright or patent laws from other countries.....therin lies another problem. And if you think Australias ruling will change their mind....forget it....we are but a minor player in the overall scheme of things. They will still export these products to the rest of the world. Dealing with Asian bloc countries is fraught with frustration, as their business ethics are far different from what we are used to, to put it bluntly, they will do what ever they have to to make sale.

I applaud the ruling though, as at least a win for the little guy with a big idea.

Remember Ralph Sarich and the orbital engine...it would have revolutionised the automotive industry, and halved fuel consumption.....but the oil companies bought the patent and archived it. The same with the Tyre companies and the compund for a tyre that would effectively never wear out. I saw several of these tyres that were tested on police cars many years ago......250,000k's of use...and no visible tyre wear.

Greg

Donny Boy
20-03-2009, 07:45 PM
Guys,

I'm very happy to say that Tony is a former neighbour & has been a very good mate of mine, for a great number of years.............about 22 -23.

The guy used to be a Tiler, then sold Cars, then got into Cash Van Sales for the Auto Industry, then had an idea....the rest you know....Now doin' fine.

I was just reading an email he sent me saying how much coverage this got & I noticed Ausfish at the bottom.......Bugger me it's a small world.


.....Geez I'm proud of the little fella...............