Volume 22, Issue 4 (2018)                   CLR 2018, 22(4): 163-190 | Back to browse issues page

XML Persian Abstract Print


1- Ph.D. Student, Faculty of Law, Department of Private Law, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran.
2- Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, Department of Intellectual Property Law, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran. , sadegh_m2000@yahoo.com
3- Associate Professor of Private Law, Faculty of law, Tarbiat Modares University , Tehran, Iran
4- Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, Department of Intellectual Property Law, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran.
Abstract:   (8276 Views)
Due to the increasing growth of the software industry and its financial value, the issue of using software as collateral has been taken into consideration by the laws of the countries for financing. Security interest in software as a financing instrument in the UNCITRAL Legislative Guide on Secured Transactions (Supplement on Security Rights in Intellectual Property) and Article 9 of the US Uniform Commercial Code is adopted. However, effectiveness against third parties, is subject to registration. if registered, must be filed in the Federal Copyright Office, otherwise the security right must be filed in the secretory State’s Office. In the case of invented software, the current procedure is the dual registration of security interest in the secretory State’s Office and the Federal Patent and Trademark Office.
In Iranian law, collateralization of software has been questioned Because of the intangible nature of it. Some regulations such as Securities Collateral Directive, dated 6/19/2010, securities and shares considered as tangible asset and collateralization of them has been possible. Also, software Proprietary Bonds are securities under the Directive of deposition and transaction of intellectual property bonds. Thus, these securities, like all other securities, are objective, and it is possible to collateral them with physical delivery or prediction of a security right registration system.
 
Full-Text [PDF 588 kb]   (2354 Downloads)    
Article Type: Original Research | Subject: Comparative Law
Received: 2018/07/16 | Accepted: 2018/11/27 | Published: 2019/03/15

Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.