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Tag Archives: technology transfer
9 things Bayh-Dole does not require universities to do, part 2
We are working through a list of nine things Bayh-Dole does not require universities to do. It’s worth the review because there are all sorts of claims out there–almost never contested–about what Bayh-Dole requires. Most of it is nonsense. And … Continue reading
Posted in Bayh-Dole
Tagged Bayh-Dole, requirements, technology transfer
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Fantasy depictions of technology transfer, 2
The standard accounts of the “technology transfer process” seem so clear and plausible that you may well believe they are generally accurate, even if there might be “technical details” that they gloss over. But these standard accounts are largely, almost … Continue reading
Posted in Bayh-Dole, Innovation, Policy
Tagged AUTM, commercialization, counterfactual, process, technology transfer
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Fantasy depictions of technology transfer
People play innovation policy with stick drawings. Inventions are depicted as proto-products rather than as broad swaths of potential. According to the stick drawings, patents “protect” inventions from competing uses that would simultaneously discourage private investment in “developing” the inventions … Continue reading
Posted in Technology Transfer
Tagged diagrams, fantasy, process, technology transfer
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Pensé and Perspectivability-2
I have been writing about my sense of perspective–something not possible in an infinite university, according to the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Though I have worked at and for universities in technology transfer for a couple of decades, I … Continue reading
Posted in Bayh-Dole, Bozonet, Technology Transfer
Tagged dues, NISTwits, remember, snark, technology transfer
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Nine Points to Consider (with regard to AUTM’s licensing survey), 1-7
The Association of University Technology Managers, a front group for university licensing professionals, conducts an annual survey of the universities that its members work for. The survey asks for various metrics regarding inventions, patenting, licensing, startups, and revenue. The survey … Continue reading
Two Published Accounts of University Licensing: WARF and Stanford
Universities generally keep secret their licensing metrics. Yes, they report the number of inventions, patents, licenses, and startups in a given year–but they don’t report how those numbers relate to one another. The inventions reported in a given year have … Continue reading
Posted in Metrics
Tagged invention, metrics, Stanford, technology transfer, university, WARF
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AAU, APLU, and others aim to “bolster” federal technology transfer, 6
We are working through the advice that AAU, APLU, and other “higher education associations” have provided to NIST on how to improve federal laboratory technology transfer. Do you expect that these associations thoroughly vetted their draft response with all their … Continue reading
Posted in Bayh-Dole, Bozonet
Tagged inventions, money, technology transfer, waste
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Some reading for technology transfer professionals
Every so often I have asked people what articles ought to be required reading for people in university technology transfer. One great suggestion is David Teece’s “Profiting from technological innovation: Implications for integration, collaboration, licensing and public policy.” Another has … Continue reading
Posted in Technology Transfer
Tagged reading list, technology transfer
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The bozonet on mount stupid
I mentioned “mount stupid” last week in a three-part article on the University of Utah. Mount stupid is a bit of a meme derived from accounts of the Dunning-Kruger effect, which I have referred to in developing an account of … Continue reading
Posted in Bozonet, Technology Transfer
Tagged bozonet, dunning-kruger effect, mount stupid, technology transfer
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The Special Case Keeps Giving
Here is the special case university research invention. I have expanded it to show the logic. A special case invention is one that cannot be used without “development” and the “development” involves substantial effort at private expense and the “development” … Continue reading
Posted in Bayh-Dole, Bozonet, Innovation, Technology Transfer
Tagged Bayh-Dole, development, early stage, patent, technology transfer, university research
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