Category Archives: Bayh-Dole

The IPA and Wisconsin’s 1969 Patent Policy, 3

This article starts here: The IPA and Wisconsin’s 1969 Patent Policy, 1 In most cases, a principal investigator will know immediately whether an invention or discovery is within scope of a well drafted research agreement–is this invention something that was … Continue reading

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The IPA and Wisconsin’s 1969 Patent Policy, 2

This article starts here: The IPA and Wisconsin’s 1969 Patent Policy, 1 In the new 1969 Wisconsin patent policy, we encounter a corporate agent and the passive voice: “it has become necessary for the University to scrutinize with care the … Continue reading

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More Fakographic Comment

APLU and AAU published an infographic about university research and technology transfer. Technology transfer, the infographic claims, “transforms society” and the infographic will show us how. The “driver” of this transformation, we are told, is institutional licensing of patents based on inventions … Continue reading

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The IPA and Wisconsin’s 1969 Patent Policy, 1

Tucked into Congressional testimony in 1978 on expanding the Institutional Patent Agreement program is the 1969 University of Wisconsin patent policy. This policy is notable for a number of reasons. First, because it is an actual policy statement on patents, where … Continue reading

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A New Fakographic from APLU and AAU in 10 Exhibits

A couple of university front organizations, APLU and AAU, have published a two-page infographic that presents a glowing picture of Bayh-Dole and university patent-based commercialization. Titled “How Technology Transfer Transforms Society,” the infographic confidently presents arguments for university commercialization practices. … Continue reading

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Unpacking COGR’s argument that universities should have “uniform” patent policies

For fifteen years, Archie Palmer worked to get universities to adopt formal patent and research policies. Palmer’s work ran in parallel with the growth of federal subvention funding for research–the government just gave money to university-hosted research projects, not because … Continue reading

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Five ways to attack Bayh-Dole corruption, short of repeal

Powerful interests protect Bayh-Dole. But Bayh-Dole should be repealed. Heck, 23 senators led by Sen. Harrison Schmitt tried to do that the year after Bayh-Dole was passed, to replace Bayh-Dole with a comprehensive law regarding research inventions! But short of … Continue reading

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Seven Pillars of Bayh-Dole, the Law that Loots the Commons

I’ve spent more than a few months now focused on Bayh-Dole and its history. It’s worth taking a moment and summarizing some findings. Perhaps this could be the start of a new guide to the Bayh-Dole Act, told from the … Continue reading

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Notes toward a future FAQ on (f)(2)

Q. Under Bayh-Dole, if a contractor requires inventors to assign all inventions made with federal support to the contractor, doesn’t that requirement comply with Bayh-Dole?  A. No. Bayh-Dole applies to federal agencies, stipulating how agencies may contract for patent rights … Continue reading

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The sound and fury of nonprofit assignments of subject inventions

Over the past few months I have returned the issue of exclusive licenses and assignments in Bayh-Dole. Here’s the operative requirement for nonprofits (35 USC 202(c)(7)(A)): (7) In the case of a nonprofit organization, (A) a prohibition upon the assignment of … Continue reading

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