Universities that own patents have a problem. While nearly all are keen to enhance their revenue generated from patents, few are eager or prepared to enforce them in court, alone or with their exclusive licensees, should a third party deploy a product or process covered by a university-owned patent. Yet strict prudential standing requirements imposed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“CAFC”) effectively require university participation as plaintiffs in enforcement lawsuits over their exclusively licensed patents, regardless of a university’s effective ability or enthusiasm to participate in a given action. Supported by forty years of lawsuit data and original survey and interview data collected from high-level a...
Hold-up is a primary component of patent litigation and patent licensing today. Universities are e...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
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...
Most universities today assert ownership rights over all patentable inventions (and many other types...
This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel cla...
While the literature examining university engagement in patenting and technology transfer is quite d...
In this Article, I argue that patents, if obtained and exploited strategically, can have a beneficia...
Universities underwent a radical change of paradigm in the last forty years. Since Bayh-Dole Act in ...
This Article explores the idea that a faculty member acting in the role of an academic researcher in...
Universities underwent a radical change of paradigm in the last forty years. Since Bayh-Dole Act in ...
This Article explores the idea that a faculty member acting in the role of an academic researcher in...
While the literature examining university engagement in patenting and technology transfer is quite d...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
Over twenty years have passed since the enactment of The Patent and Trademark Law Amendments Act (Ba...
Hold-up is a primary component of patent litigation and patent licensing today. Universities are e...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
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...
Most universities today assert ownership rights over all patentable inventions (and many other types...
This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel cla...
While the literature examining university engagement in patenting and technology transfer is quite d...
In this Article, I argue that patents, if obtained and exploited strategically, can have a beneficia...
Universities underwent a radical change of paradigm in the last forty years. Since Bayh-Dole Act in ...
This Article explores the idea that a faculty member acting in the role of an academic researcher in...
Universities underwent a radical change of paradigm in the last forty years. Since Bayh-Dole Act in ...
This Article explores the idea that a faculty member acting in the role of an academic researcher in...
While the literature examining university engagement in patenting and technology transfer is quite d...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
Over twenty years have passed since the enactment of The Patent and Trademark Law Amendments Act (Ba...
Hold-up is a primary component of patent litigation and patent licensing today. Universities are e...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...
The statutory requirement of identifying the first and true inventor is often muddled by the mores a...