By krisnelson on May 30, 2011 in business / education / intellectual property / law / patents / research / science / technology
Madey v. Duke exposed one conflict when industry and universities work in overlapping areas. The 2002 federal court decision highlighted a problem at the intersection of university and industry goals.
Posted in business, education, intellectual property, law, patents, research, science, technology | Tagged Bayh–Dole Act, business, law, License, open access, patents, research, science, technology, Technology transfer |
By krisnelson on May 30, 2011 in business / education / government / intellectual property / law / patents / science / technology
According to Dr. Domonic Montisano of the UCSD’s technology transfer office, their goal is to get university research out to the public through the avenue of commercialization.
Posted in business, education, government, intellectual property, law, patents, science, technology | Tagged Bayh–Dole Act, business, law, License, open source, patents, research, science, technology, Technology transfer |
By krisnelson on Aug 9, 2010 in law / patents / science / science studies
In the American system (and, perhaps to a lesser extent, in all countries following the Anglo-American legal approach), science and scientific evidence emerges and is interpreted through the actions of the parties involved. Expert witnesses testify for a particular side, and are employed by a particular side.
Posted in law, patents, science, science studies | Tagged courts, evidence, expertise, jury, law, science |
By krisnelson on Dec 18, 2009 in business / copyright / culture / intellectual property / law / patents
Techdirt discusses why you shouldn’t be concerned if someone “steals” your work and sells it, noting that “it’s not necessarily a bad thing.”
Posted in business, copyright, culture, intellectual property, law, patents | Tagged business, culture, innovation, intellectual property, law, literary, marketing, publishing, Techdirt |
By krisnelson on Jul 16, 2009 in copyright / education / intellectual property / international / law / open access / patents / research / technology
There’s a new law journal in town: “The International Free and Open Source Software Law Review (IFOSS L. Rev.) is a collaborative legal publication aiming to increase knowledge and understanding among lawyers about Free and Open Source Software issues. Topics covered include copyright, licence implementation, licence interpretation, software patents, open standards, case law and statutory changes.”
Posted in copyright, education, intellectual property, international, law, open access, patents, research, technology | Tagged business, copyright, free, international, law, lawyer, open access, open source, patents, research, RIAA, software, technology, web |
By krisnelson on Jul 3, 2009 in business / constitution / intellectual property / international / law / patents / recommendations / research
A recently published law review article concludes that experiments with “PatentSim,” “a multi-user interactive simulation of patent and non-patent (commons and open source) systems,” do not support the general justification of our current patent system.
Posted in business, constitution, intellectual property, international, law, patents, recommendations, research | Tagged constitution, intellectual property, law, patents, recommended, research |
By krisnelson on Jun 18, 2009 in constitution / copyright / intellectual property / law / patents
There are many who disagree, but the study appears to raise interesting issues regarding the benefit to society of copyright protections. As Mike Masnick writes, copyright is about balancing benefits (incentives to create with the benefits of distribution).
Posted in constitution, copyright, intellectual property, law, patents | Tagged Congress, constitution, copyright, file sharing, intellectual property, law, Michael Geist, Mike Masnick, patents |
By krisnelson on Jun 16, 2009 in business / intellectual property / law / patents / recommendations
Colleen Chien has a paper in SSRN, dated April of 2009, that explores the narrative of patents, from the epithet of “troll” applied to patent owners who seek only to leverage their patent through licensing, and not application, and including our rather romantic perception of an inventor.
Posted in business, intellectual property, law, patents, recommendations | Tagged Colleen Chien, high-tech patents, intellectual property, narrative, patents, software |