Northwestern Intellectual Property Policies. OSR-Evanston Quarterly Network Monday, April 13 th Ben Frey, J.D., Senior Contracts Manager

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Northwestern Intellectual Property Policies OSR-Evanston Quarterly Network Monday, April 13 th Ben Frey, J.D., Senior Contracts Manager

Overview Define baseline terms (IP, patents, inventions, copyright) IP ownership under NU policy by: Faculty Students Consultants External Collaborators Government Royalties Copyright

What is Intellectual Property? Includes anything intangible that is created by people and can be legally protected Two most relevant categories: patent and copyright A patent protects an invention that is new, useful, not obvious, and fully disclosed to the public An invention is technology that may be patentable Copyright protects a particular expression of an idea Ideas themselves are not protectable Other types of IP: trademarks, designs, trade secrets

OSR and INVO: Helping Manage IP Intellectual Property and New Ventures Office (INVO) (formerly Technology Transfer): Manages faculty invention disclosures Files / prosecutes patent applications Licenses IP to third parties, NU startups, etc. OSR works with INVO to: Identify IP issues at proposal stage Negotiate appropriate IP terms at award stage Manage certain post-award IP obligations, including final patent reports and payment of tech fees

Patent Process at NU INVO releases back to PI PI / student develops invention PI submits invention disclosure to INVO INVO chooses to file INVO files patent application Patent issues Patent rejected/ abandoned, application published INVO communicates with USPTO

NU Patent and Invention Policy Current policy became effective August 31, 2011 Generally consistent with other US universities policies University owns any inventions made by faculty, staff, or students that are created: Within the normal field of their employment responsibility at the University (Broadly interpreted) OR Using University resources (Includes space, materials, or facilities other than the Library)

Student Inventions/Patents Policy applies to undergrads, grad students, and postdocs BUT student may petition INVO to release invention rights University will generally release rights unless: NU contributed substantial / essential resources (funds, space, materials) There is an existing, separate agreement with a third party (sponsored research, license, etc.) Student collaborated with faculty other than the class instructor Invention was created as a work for hire

Examples Dr. Tony Stark in Materials Science and Engineering invents an Iron Man suit in his lab Stark invents the suit entirely on his own time at home Clark Kent in Medill (Journalism) invents the suit in his office Kent invents the suit on his own time at home Kent and his student, Jimmy Olsen, invent the suit as part of Kent s class NU student Jimmy Olsen invents the suit at home Who owns the IP?

Consulting Professor Kent designs the suit, then signs a separate consulting agreement with Stark Industries assigning the IP to the company Who owns the IP?

Consulting Faculty cannot assign, license, or transfer rights to inventions; only University can Faculty must notify their dean/director and INVO of any inventions arising from consulting engagements

External Collaborators NU Professor Kent travels to Stark Industries and develops the suit while at the company Stark Industries researcher Pepper Potts comes to NU and develops the suit while at Kent s lab Pepper Potts comes to NU and both she and NU Prof. Kent develop the suit together Who owns the IP?

External Collaborators Patent and invention policy applies to NU faculty s inventions, wherever developed, and to inventions developed at NU, whoever is the inventor(s) If an external PI is coming to NU, or if a NU PI is going to an external institution, it is important to get them (and their employer) to sign a visiting scientist agreement Note: NU and an external collaborator/sponsor can agree to IP terms in a specific agreement that differ from NU policy

Government Rights NU Professor Steve Rogers develops new shield technology under a grant from the U.S. Army NU licenses the shield technology to Stark Industries Who owns the IP?

Government Rights Under the Bayh-Dole Act, NU can elect to own title to federally funded IP and assign rights to that IP In this case: NU owns the IP Stark Industries has rights to the IP US Army also has rights to the IP

Who Gets Royalties? For most inventions, royalties are split: 33% to the inventor (shared, if multiple inventors) 17% to the inventor s department 17% to the inventor s school 33% to Central Administration / Office of Research For blockbuster inventions, the inventor s share stays the same but some of the department/school share goes to OR

A Note on Copyright Creators own the copyright to anything they create at NU EXCEPT if it s a work for hire (contractual arrangement or in performance of an administrative duty to NU) Creators receive all royalties to traditional works NU may share in royalties for software / computer applications if Northwestern has provided extraordinary resources (more than 1/3 of an average faculty s annual effort or the equivalent salary) AND Creator signs an agreement Copyright policy currently under review for update

Questions? Patent and Invention Policy: http://www.invo.northwestern.edu/policies/patent-invention-policy-current Copyright Policy: http://www.invo.northwestern.edu/policies/copyright-policy