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Consider the intellectual property aspects of technology transfers in the higher ed world
Author(s) -
Reed Julie L.,
Wagner Justin D.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
campus legal advisor
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1945-6239
pISSN - 1531-3999
DOI - 10.1002/cala.40010
Subject(s) - intellectual property , technology transfer , government (linguistics) , agency (philosophy) , property (philosophy) , business , funding agency , law and economics , engineering , political science , public relations , economics , sociology , law , international trade , social science , linguistics , philosophy , epistemology
Many scenarios exist for technology transfer in commercializing intellectual property in the university environment. Sponsoring organizations may pay to fund research and then use any rights they have in their own company, or use them to found a subsidiary. Government‐funded research may be transferred to a government lab or agency. The university itself may decide to “spin out” technology developed by a faculty member within the university. This generally means the university will assist in the founding of a startup company to commercialize the research. This last scenario is of particular interest here, and the discussion below focuses on the intellectual property considerations in such a transfer, rather than the structure of the company itself.