Sony and Other Major Multinationals File 212 Blockchain Patents in China in 2020

Published at: April 9, 2020

China has been a hotspot for blockchain patents and development. As Cointelegraph previously reported, the National Intellectual Property Administration of China has awarded 2,191 blockchain patents between 2017 to 2019.

Major multinational companies have also shown immense interest in filing blockchain patents in China. The latest Global Times report suggests that 35 multinationals including Microsoft, Walmart, Mastercard, Sony and Intel, had applied for a total of 212 blockchain patents by the end of March 2020.

Of all the foreign companies with blockchain patents in China, Mastercard tops the list with 46 such patents to its name. While there is no news about the company starting any business specifically in China, these patents could be aligned to help them with their global blockchain payments initiative, which they are developing along with the blockchain software firm R3.

Nokia, Intel, and Oracle are next on the line with 13, 12, and 9 blockchain patents respectively in China.

Although these companies are filing for blockchain patents in China, all of them are yet to start a blockchain-related business within the country. This is indicative of the fact that these companies are filing numerous blockchain-patents for technological accumulation so that they may put them to use in the future.

Patent Filing Trend

While U.S. organizations are filing for numerous blockchain patents in China, Chinese companies do not seem to bother filing patents in the United States. As Cointelegraph previously reported, only 4.17% of 1.2 million Chinese patent applications in 2016 were filed overseas. Conversely, 43% of 521,802 patents filed by U.S.-based companies were filed overseas.

Earlier this year, China's National Intellectual Property Administration streamlined its patent-filing process. Revising guidelines to patent applications for new technologies such as blockchain, artificial intelligence and big data reflected the country's strategic prioritization of new tech and strengthening protections for intellectual property.

Tags
Related Posts
Microsoft wins US patent for ‘ledger-independent token service’
American tech giant Microsoft has won a blockchain-related patent for techniques for implementing a cross-chain token management system. The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) granted the patent to Microsoft’s subsidiary, Microsoft Technology Licensing, on Tuesday. Filed in February 2019, the patent describes a “ledger-independent token service,” or a software service enabling individuals and organizations to create and manage tokens across multiple distributed ledger networks and platforms. Examples of such platforms in the patent filing included major blockchain platform Ethereum, IBM-backed Hyperledger Fabric, JPMorgan’s enterprise blockchain platform Quorum, R3 Corda and Chain Core. The described computer system aims to …
Technology / Aug. 26, 2021
IBM Triples Number of Blockchain Patents in US Since Last Year
Tech giant IBM has tripled the number of blockchain patents secured in the United States since last year, currently boasting over 100 active patent families. That makes IBM’s growth in US patents the largest of last year, according to a report by crypto-related news site BeinCrypto on July 16. According to data gathered by Yuval Halevi, co-founder of crypto and blockchain PR company GuerillaBuzz, IBM’s number of active patent families dwarfs other notable corporations. This includes some primary tech companies, such as Intel, Microsoft, and Dell Technologies: “In just 1 year the number of IBM blockchain patents has grown by …
Blockchain / July 17, 2019
Alibaba Files US Patent for Blockchain Domain Name Management System
Chinese online retail giant Alibaba has applied for a United States patent entitled “Domain Name Management Scheme for Cross-Chain Interactions in Blockchain Systems.” Alibaba filed its latest application on Aug. 15 in a continuation of an application filed in November 2018. According to the filing, Alibaba intends to patent a system that uses what they call a “unified blockchain domain name” (UBCDN) in order to denote and share information. In the system, Alibaba proposes to use a computing system to generate a UBCDN message which contains a blockchain domain name and a chain identifier that is paired with that name. …
Blockchain / Aug. 15, 2019
Report: Chinese E-Commerce Giant JD.com Has Applied for Over 200 Blockchain Patents
Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com has applied for over 200 blockchain patents, according to a report by Securities Daily News on May 20. The report also notes that major e-commerce competitor Alibaba has applied for 262 blockchain patents, and Chinese internet titans Tencent and Baidu have applied for 80 and 50 such patents, respectively, as recorded by the Intellectual Property Center of China Information and Communication. According to interpretation of the data provided by Intellectual Property Center of China Information and Communication, JD.com was in first place for “global blockchain patent strength,” with Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu coming it at second, …
Blockchain / May 21, 2019
With 7,600 Blockchain Patent Applications, Chinese Firms Far Outpace US
Measured by patent applications in the sector, China is handily outpacing other countries including the United States in blockchain technology. On Nov. 20, Japan-based financial newspaper Nikkei reported that Chinese companies submitted around 7,600 applications between 2009 and 2018 — about three times as many as U.S.-based companies. A total of 12,000 blockchain applications According to Tokyo-based research firm Astamuse, the U.S., China, Japan, South Korea and Germany together submitted around 12,000 blockchain-related patent applications through 2018, with China accounting for over 60% of the five-country total. South Korea submitted close to 1,150 applications within the same time frame, while …
Blockchain / Nov. 20, 2019