Diagnostic Kits/A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions

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Revision as of 15:31, 11 September 2009 by AClearwater (talk | contribs) (New page: *(Pressman, L. et al., 2006) The Pressman article reports on an interview which investigates DNA patents at Universities in the United States. The focus of the article is split between:...)
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  • (Pressman, L. et al., 2006) The Pressman article reports on an interview which investigates DNA patents at Universities in the United States. The focus of the article is split between:
    • patenting and out-licensing strategies of
    • licensing negotiations: exclusivity, uses, and terms
    • Protection of non-patented technologies: MTAs, NDAs
  • Institutions chosen for the study had patents of inventions using human DNA and both for profit and non-profits were sampled. The study found that for profit and non-profit entities approach patent and licenses differently:
    • Patenting Behavior
      • For profits more often fill patent applications for all new technologies and then deciding what to pursue based on commercial interest.
      • Non-profits were more selective about when to apply for a patent.
    • Licensing Behavior
      • For both entities, licensing was most often used as a method of commercialization. Licensing for research was very infrequent.
      • One important difference found was that nonprofits were more than twice as likely to license exclusively as compared to for-profit companies.