The beginning:
Research deliverables
Bayh-Bole, as it turns out, will be a statute that limits the scope of patent property rights in federally supported inventions, but in such an obtuse way that in effect it creates mostly administrative burdens (despite its gestures otherwise). Because Bayh-Dole is largely unenforced, with no provisions to protect inventors or third parties, or to provide the public with accounting or procedures by which to object to the private disposition of patents, it stands as not only a repudiation of the overreach of the PHS but also of public oversight of inventions made with federal support or related to that support. Federal research funding becomes, under Bayh-Dole–that is, unenforced Bayh-Dole–a subsidy for private patent monopoly exploitation. And university administrators have adopted that approach whole hog, as the expression goes.
What should the scope of claim by any sponsor of subvention research be in the disposition of results? For procurement, the matter is easier–start with the sponsor enjoying the freedom to practice what has been specified as deliverables. Anything else that’s made or invented or discovered along the way is irrelevant, so long as it does not interfere with what has been ordered. Of course, research is weird this way, as even in procurement, one can specify research services “to explore,” so that anything that’s found in exploring is the deliverable. The problem then is to specify what’s exploration on contract and what’s exploration in one’s spare time. How does one set limits on exploration, so that exploring in one’s spare time, in the same area that one is to explore “on the clock,” does not result in the production of yet more deliverables for the all-consuming sponsor? Continue reading



