Registro completo |
Provedor de dados: |
AgEcon
|
País: |
United States
|
Título: |
ACCESSING OTHER PEOPLE'S TECHNOLOGY: DO NON-PROFIT AGENCIES NEED IT? HOW TO OBTAIN IT
|
Autores: |
Nottenburg, Carol
Pardey, Philip G.
Wright, Brian D.
|
Data: |
2004-03-24
|
Ano: |
2001
|
Palavras-chave: |
Research
Agricultural biotechnologies
Patents
Intellectual property
Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies
|
Resumo: |
As patents and other forms of intellectual property become more pervasive in the next generation of biotechnologies, designing policies and practices to ensure sufficient freedom to operate (i.e., the ability to practice or use an innovation) will be crucial for non-profit agencies in the developed and developing world, especially those intent on developing improved seed varieties and other technologies destined for commercial release. Are non-profits exempt from intellectual property claims? What constitutes infringement of a patent? How does a non-profit establish its freedom to operate? We address these issues in this paper and evaluate various options for accessing other people’s technologies. Options include cross- licensing agreements, research-only or cost-free licenses, market segmentation strategies, mergers or joint ventures, and patent pooling or clearinghouse mechanisms. Responding creatively to the new intellectual property environment will have far reaching consequences for the future of non-profit research.
|
Tipo: |
Working or Discussion Paper
|
Idioma: |
Inglês
|
Identificador: |
12834
http://purl.umn.edu/16099
|
Editor: |
AgEcon Search
|
Relação: |
International Food Policy Research Institute>EPTD Discussion Papers
EPTD Discussion Paper
79
|
Formato: |
56
application/pdf
|