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, Part 1 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 3
... believe Americans have lost neither their willingness nor their ability to innovate . Rather , it is the system within which the innovation process functions which must be restructured , providing a more favorable climate for the ...
... believe Americans have lost neither their willingness nor their ability to innovate . Rather , it is the system within which the innovation process functions which must be restructured , providing a more favorable climate for the ...
Page 34
... believe that the factual data accumulated on this subject to date points inexorably to one solution or another for every given case . Each new fact seems to be interpreted differently depending on one's preconceptions . If , for example ...
... believe that the factual data accumulated on this subject to date points inexorably to one solution or another for every given case . Each new fact seems to be interpreted differently depending on one's preconceptions . If , for example ...
Page 39
... believe the commercialization of new ideas would be stimulated while , at the same time , the public interest in competition could be protected . Needless destruction of patent incentives by taking title for the Government would be ...
... believe the commercialization of new ideas would be stimulated while , at the same time , the public interest in competition could be protected . Needless destruction of patent incentives by taking title for the Government would be ...
Page 40
... believe , in general , that ideas owned by all will be developed by none . I also think that trying to decide at the time of contracting whether an invention which might be made in performing the contract will later more likely be ...
... believe , in general , that ideas owned by all will be developed by none . I also think that trying to decide at the time of contracting whether an invention which might be made in performing the contract will later more likely be ...
Page 41
... believe that march - in rights are preferable to a policy that a contractor's exclusive rights would be extinguished after a specif- ic number of years unless the contractor justified an extension . I think that the extinguishing of ...
... believe that march - in rights are preferable to a policy that a contractor's exclusive rights would be extinguished after a specif- ic number of years unless the contractor justified an extension . I think that the extinguishing of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
advance waiver Aeronautics and Space Agency or designee agreement Atomic Energy Act background patent cense commercial utilization companies Contracting Officer Contributions Board Department of Defense DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY determination disclosure domestic effective employees exclusive license exclusive rights Federal field of technology filed firms foreign patent funds Government contracts Government patent policy Government's granted Harbridge identified inventions industry innovation issue march-in rights ment NASA NASA's National Aeronautics nonexclusive license obtain paragraph participation patent application Patent Counsel Patent Licensing patent owner patent portfolio Patent Rights clause patent system percent performance petition petitioner practice procedures procurement proprietary data reasonable research and development Rights in Technical rights to inventions royalties royalty-free section 305 Senator SCHMITT situations small business specific Subcommittee subcontracts subject invention Subpart take title technical data tion title to inventions U.S. patent United United States Code waived waiver recipient
Popular passages
Page 102 - 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 430 - ... in the nineteenth century and in the first half of the twentieth century. The Federal patent law still responds to the Constitutional objective "to promote the progress of ... useful arts by securing for limited times to ... inventors, the exclusive rights to their . . . discoveries.
Page 146 - Officer. (3) Nothing contained in this clause shall imply a license to the Government under any patent or be construed as affecting the scope of any licenses or other rights otherwise granted to the Government under any patent.
Page 62 - 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 99 - ... against the United States in the Court of Claims for the recovery of his reasonable and entire compensation for such use and manufacture.
Page 61 - ... a necessary incentive to call forth private risk capital and expense to bring the invention to the point of practical application.
Page 99 - 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 249 - 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.
Page 107 - To the point of practical application" means to manufacture, in the case of a composition or product, to practice in the case of a process, or to operate in the case of a machine and under such conditions as to establish that the invention is being worked and that its benefits are reasonably accessible to the public.
Page 193 - Each contract entered into by the Administrator with any party for the performance of any work shall contain effective provisions under which such party shall furnish promptly to the Administrator a written report containing full and complete technical information concerning any invention, discovery, improvement, or innovation which may be made in the performance of any such work.