Patent policy: hearings before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, Ninety-sixth Congress, first session, on S. 1215 ....U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979 - Patents and government-developed inventions |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 37
... NASA was established in 1957 , and its patent policies were adopted without much discussion , on the basis that space was going to be a new area of technology like atomic energy . Therefore , NASA was to take title to inventions , but ...
... NASA was established in 1957 , and its patent policies were adopted without much discussion , on the basis that space was going to be a new area of technology like atomic energy . Therefore , NASA was to take title to inventions , but ...
Page 46
... NASA has pioneered in this field . I think NASA has been most successful because it has devot- ed a lot of real time and attention to this and put good people on it . Senator SCHMITT . Could we provide some kind of a surgical means by ...
... NASA has pioneered in this field . I think NASA has been most successful because it has devot- ed a lot of real time and attention to this and put good people on it . Senator SCHMITT . Could we provide some kind of a surgical means by ...
Page 47
... NASA and the Energy Research and Development Adminis- tration . I assisted in formulating patent policy for those agencies , drafting President Kennedy's Statement of Government Patent Policy in 1963 , proposing to the Com- mission on ...
... NASA and the Energy Research and Development Adminis- tration . I assisted in formulating patent policy for those agencies , drafting President Kennedy's Statement of Government Patent Policy in 1963 , proposing to the Com- mission on ...
Page 50
... NASA . The Congress enacted without much discussion a policy under which NASA would take title to invention made in its programs but the administrator could waive some rights back to the contractors . It was vaguely felt that " space ...
... NASA . The Congress enacted without much discussion a policy under which NASA would take title to invention made in its programs but the administrator could waive some rights back to the contractors . It was vaguely felt that " space ...
Page 53
... NASA's patent poli- cies , which includes for the record a number of appendices . Since early in NASA's history , our patent program has been viewed as an integral part of NASA's overall efforts to stimulate the creation and ...
... NASA's patent poli- cies , which includes for the record a number of appendices . Since early in NASA's history , our patent program has been viewed as an integral part of NASA's overall efforts to stimulate the creation and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acquire title Administrator advance waiver Aeronautics and Space Agency or designee appropriate Assistant General Counsel Atomic Energy Atomic Energy Act award background patent cense commercial application commercial utilization Contracting Officer contractor or inventor Contributions Board Counsel for Patents demonstration DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY determination disclosed DOE's domestic effective employees exclusive license exclusive rights extent facility Federal agency field of technology firms foreign patent foreign rights Government patent policy Government-owned Harbridge identified inventions industry issue march-in rights ment NASA NASA's nonexclusive license obtain Patent Counsel Patent Licensing Patent Rights clause percent performance petition petitioner prior procedures PROCUREMENT REGULATIONS programs proprietary data purpose pursuant reasonable reduced to practice reports research and development retain revocable Rights in Technical royalties Senator SCHMITT situations specific statement subcontract subject invention sublicense subparagraph subpart thereof tion tract United United States Code vention waived waiver recipient waiver requests
Popular passages
Page 40 - The decision of the Secretary or his duly authorized representative for the determination of such appeals shall be final and conclusive unless determined by a court of competent jurisdiction to have been fraudulent, or capricious, or arbitrary, or so grossly erroneous as necessarily to imply bad faith, or not supported by substantial evidence.
Page 13 - ... there has been little significant experience outside of work funded by the government, or where the government has been the principal developer of the field...
Page 48 - The provisions of this clause shall be applicable only if the amount of this contract exceeds $10,000. (a) The Contractor shall report to the Contracting Officer, promptly and in reasonable written detail, each notice or claim of patent...
Page 72 - No amount shall be withheld under this paragraph while the amount specified by this paragraph is being withheld under other provisions of the contract. The withholding of any amount or subsequent payment thereof shall not be construed as a waiver of any rights accruing to the Government under this contract. (i) Subcontracts. (1) For the purpose of this paragraph the term "Contractor...
Page 92 - The contractor agrees that to the extent it receives or is given access to proprietary data or other technical, business or financial data in the form of recorded information from DOE or a DOE contractor or subcontractor, the contractor shall treat such data in accordance with any restrictive legend contained thereon, unless use is specifically authorized by prior written approval of the Contracting Officer. (3) Nothing contained in this clause shall imply a license to the Government under any patent...
Page 60 - Government to be kept secret or otherwise withheld from issue) arising out of the performance of this contract or out of the use or disposal by or for the account of the Government of supplies furnished or construction work performed hereunder.
Page 106 - Nothing contained in this clause shall imply a license to the Government under any patent or be construed as affecting the scope of any license or other right otherwise granted to the Government under any patent.
Page 22 - States and domestic municipal governments, unless the agency head determines that it would not be in the public interest to acquire the license for the States and domestic...
Page 59 - Government under this contract, or (ii) utilized in the machinery, tools, or methods the use of which necessarily results from compliance by the Contractor or the using subcontractor with (a) specifications or written provisions now or hereafter forming a part of this contract, or (b) specific written instructions given by the Contracting Officer directing the manner of performance. The...
Page 195 - The utility of this power will scarcely be questioned. The copyright of authors has been solemnly adjudged, in Great Britain, to be a right of common law. The right to useful inventions seems with equal reason to belong to the inventors. The public good fully coincides in both cases with the claims of individuals. The States cannot separately make effectual provision for either of the cases, and most of them have anticipated the decision of this point, by laws passed at the instance of Congress.