Category Archives: Technology Transfer

Bozocratic Dumbthink Alert

DLA Piper sent me an “alert” email with the heading “A Victory for Roche in a Case over Inventors’ Rights.” It includes this advice: The decision re-emphasizes the importance of university employers to require all employees and consultants to execute … Continue reading

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Born to Waxen Wood

Vivek Wadhwa’s column at The Washington Post gets at the issues nicely.  This is a golden opportunity, he writes, to rethink the university approach to research commercialization. Bayh-Dole is good law.  But the university implementation of it is not good … Continue reading

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What we learn from Stanford v. Roche

There are some valuable insights, but first the obvious.  Short form, big picture. 1.  Bayh-Dole is no vesting statute. 2.  Inventors own their inventions made with federal support. 3.  University administrators don’t understand Bayh-Dole or innovation. 4.  AUTM is an … Continue reading

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A Koan

The innovateur was compelled to visit first the City of Clowns.  The clowns took the innovation from the innovateur. The clowns were not funny, and they were not helpful, and they were not innovative.  The innovateur watched smoke rise from … Continue reading

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Bozonet Theory Review

Let’s review some basic bozonet theory. Transmission Congestion produces imitative practice When an organization, profession, or activity takes in rapidly a number of new practitioners without a formal course of training, and requires expertise of these practitioners, and these new … Continue reading

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The Dark Lesson

There is a dark lesson in the Stanford v. Roche situation. For two years, university patent administrators have led an all-out attack on research inventors, have distorted Bayh-Dole, and demonstrated they form a monoculture of inventor-loathing, bureaucracy-creating political operators. It’s … Continue reading

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100% Bayh-Dole

There’s talk that the Stanford v. Roche decision somehow forces a change in university practice from using promises to assign in patent agreements to present assignments of future inventions. This is nonsense. The same loons who could not read Bayh-Dole … Continue reading

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Seven Claims about Bayh-Dole

Let’s look at some of the claims made about Bayh-Dole. 1.  Bayh-Dole is about commercialization. Only a little tiny bit.  Get over it. No, really.  Look at the objectives of the Act, at 35 USC 200.  The primary emphasis is … Continue reading

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University "Commercialization" and "Commercialization Programs"

I argue that while new products on the market is a primary measure of commercialization, the critical metric for a university commercialization program is the number of unlicensed inventions that the university has claimed.   Every unlicensed invention acts to suppress … Continue reading

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Cities of Innovation

Geoffrey West in Edge 343 (WHY CITIES KEEP GROWING, CORPORATIONS AND PEOPLE ALWAYS DIE, AND LIFE GETS FASTER): “Well, Google is a bit of an exception, because it still tolerates some of that. But most companies start out probably with … Continue reading

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