Quevedo & Ponce - Legal News

Fast Fashion in Ecuador: Legal Protection, Boundaries, and Emerging Challenges in the Creative Industry

The fast fashion model has reshaped the global fashion industry, enabling trends seen on runways or social media to reach consumers within weeks and at affordable prices. However, this dynamic raises significant questions in the field of intellectual property, particularly in markets such as Ecuador, where the culture of legal protection is still developing.

In Ecuador, the protection of fashion-related creations is primarily governed by the Organic Code of the Social Economy of Knowledge, Creativity and Innovation (COESCCI), and its administration falls under the National Service of Intellectual Rights (SENADI). Depending on their characteristics, designs may be protected under different legal frameworks.

Trademarks are distinctive signs that identify goods and services in the marketplace, while trade names distinguish one business establishment from another. Copyright may protect artistic and scientific creations, including illustrations, prints, or original compositions incorporated into garments, provided they meet the requirement of originality. Industrial designs, in turn, protect the novel aesthetic appearance of a product, as long as it has been duly registered.

It is important to clarify that the law does not protect general ideas, styles, or fashion trends. Concepts such as “oversize fashion,” “minimalist style,” or the “classic black dress” cannot be legally monopolized. Protection applies exclusively to the specific and original manner in which those ideas are expressed.

In practice, one of the main challenges is the lack of timely registration by emerging designers, which makes it more difficult to defend against unauthorized reproductions. Moreover, to establish infringement, it is necessary to demonstrate substantial similarity between the protected design and the contested product, often requiring technical analysis and complex legal proceedings.

In an environment where market speed frequently outpaces legal response, preventive protection becomes a strategic tool to safeguard the economic value of creativity.

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