As industries reshape global standards with the evolving landscape of intellectual property, lawyers tell Excel V. Dyquiangco how jurisdictions are adapting IP frameworks to keep pace with digital innovations, sustainability and economic uncertainties, including strategies for IP protection, regulatory challenges and proactive legal reforms.
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In 2025, intellectual property law is poised to face unprecedented shifts driven by rapid advancements in emerging technologies and industries. As artificial intelligence, blockchain and the metaverse continue to evolve, questions surrounding the ownership and protection of digital assets, data and innovations have become increasingly complex.
At the same time, the global race to adopt sustainable solutions and green technologies is creating new challenges for IP frameworks, particularly in managing the intersection of environmental goals and proprietary innovations. Jurisdictions worldwide are revisiting their IP laws to address these growing concerns, ensuring that legal protections keep pace with technological and industrial progress.
As new technologies blur traditional boundaries, industries such as AI, biotechnology and fintech are expected to play a transformative role in reshaping intellectual property landscapes. These sectors are pushing the limits of existing legal frameworks, leading to calls for reforms that address both innovation and rights management. In the face of these changes, jurisdictions must adapt to ensure a balance between encouraging technological advancements and safeguarding the rights of creators and innovators. Understanding which emerging industries will drive the most significant changes in IP law in 2025 is essential for navigating this evolving legal terrain.
New Zealand, for example, is seeing continued growth in several emerging industries such as agritech, renewable energy, digital technology and biotechnology with a focus on health, environment and food security advancements. Meanwhile, the digital technology sector will drive the most significant changes in intellectual property law in New Zealand. This is because innovation in software, artificial intelligence and digital content is the most rapid, as New Zealand is already seeing existing IP frameworks struggling to keep up with new challenges, such as protecting AI-generated works, software innovation protection and data ownership.
In Thailand, artificial intelligence and environmental, social and governance (ESG) innovations are expected to drive significant changes in the IP landscape. With AI transforming industries at an accelerated pace through the generation of new technologies and content, challenges have arisen surrounding ownership and IP protection, particularly since Thai laws were written quite some time ago prior to generative AI was deployed. Determining whether AI systems or their developers own IP protection is currently one major legal gap.
From the perspective of ESG, there is an increasing focus on sustainability which has encouraged the development of green technologies, which in turn creates new IP. There is also the possibility that ESG-related innovations may outstrip the current legal framework to encourage more innovations in this field.
This is quite similar in China where AI is likely to significantly influence the landscape of IP law. From a regulatory and legislative viewpoint, the New Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Plan released by the State Council of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 2017 anticipated that by 2025, China will have seen the initial establishment of AI laws and regulations, ethical norms and policy systems, and the formation of AI security assessment and control capabilities.
As is the case in many other jurisdictions, regulation and legislation are outpaced by the speed of technical advancement and development, so there are further significant clarifications in this regard in the coming years.
Digital content and AI
“AI-generated content, in particular, challenges traditional notions of authorship and ownership, requiring new guidelines for copyright and patent eligibility,” said Anton Blijlevens, a principal at AJ Park in Auckland. “This will likely lead to reforms in IP laws to clarify how AI-created works are protected and how responsibility is assigned. Additionally, as digital content continues to expand, there will be a growing focus on combating piracy, copyright infringement and unauthorized use of digital assets. Enforcement strategies may increasingly leverage technology, such as AI tools, to monitor and detect IP violations online.