The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores and practices of academic science. Unfortunately, and despite claims of scientists and attorneys to the contrary, I contend that the inventive entity is not discovered but rather determined in and through social relationships. Although universities should always strive to promulgate policies which fully comport with the law, the biggest incentive for universities to insist on correct inventorship is financial. I argue that the rise in mentee claims for sole or joint inventorship, as well as the ever-present threat of an inequitable conduct defense in a patent infringement suit, jeopardizes the ability of the university to generate royalties fr...
Since the 1980s in the US and the 1990s in Europe, patenting and licensing activities by universitie...
The commercialisation of university patents via spin-off formations or licensing to established comp...
Before an academic entrepreneur may protect or commercialize an invention, they must understand if t...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
Universities that own patents have a problem. While nearly all are keen to enhance their revenue gen...
This is an undergraduate senior thesis submitted in 2014 by Stephanie Chen, a student at Duke Univer...
Over twenty years have passed since the enactment of The Patent and Trademark Law Amendments Act (Ba...
Most universities treat professors who create copyrightable works differently than professors who cr...
This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel cla...
This Article focuses on intellectual property (IP) issues in the university setting. Often, universi...
This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel cla...
Most universities today assert ownership rights over all patentable inventions (and many other types...
none3siAuthorship and inventorship are “attribution rights” upon which individual scientists build t...
While the literature examining university engagement in patenting and technology transfer is quite d...
Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their re...
Since the 1980s in the US and the 1990s in Europe, patenting and licensing activities by universitie...
The commercialisation of university patents via spin-off formations or licensing to established comp...
Before an academic entrepreneur may protect or commercialize an invention, they must understand if t...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
Universities that own patents have a problem. While nearly all are keen to enhance their revenue gen...
This is an undergraduate senior thesis submitted in 2014 by Stephanie Chen, a student at Duke Univer...
Over twenty years have passed since the enactment of The Patent and Trademark Law Amendments Act (Ba...
Most universities treat professors who create copyrightable works differently than professors who cr...
This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel cla...
This Article focuses on intellectual property (IP) issues in the university setting. Often, universi...
This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel cla...
Most universities today assert ownership rights over all patentable inventions (and many other types...
none3siAuthorship and inventorship are “attribution rights” upon which individual scientists build t...
While the literature examining university engagement in patenting and technology transfer is quite d...
Authorship and inventorship are "attribution rights" upon which individual scientists build their re...
Since the 1980s in the US and the 1990s in Europe, patenting and licensing activities by universitie...
The commercialisation of university patents via spin-off formations or licensing to established comp...
Before an academic entrepreneur may protect or commercialize an invention, they must understand if t...