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WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute of Technology Immediate Past President AUTM
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WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Page 1: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology

April 25, 2005

Ann M. HammerslaSenior Counsel, Intellectual Property

Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyImmediate Past President AUTM

Page 2: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Trends in US Research Collaborations

• US University Research and Technology Transfer Culture

• MIT Mission for Research Collaboration and Technology Transfer

• Types of US University Research Collaborations

• Types of US University Technology Transfer Collaborations

Page 3: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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US University Culture

Foundation for Successful University Research and Technology Transfer

Programs:

Bringing interested parties together that are equally committed to the advancement of science and education and the eventual

commercialization of technology.

Page 4: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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US University CultureContinued

• Primary university business is to educate and conduct state-of-the-art research.

• University research is curiosity-driven with the requirement to publish and to grant degrees.

• Increasing research goal of some US universities and research faculty is for economic benefit to their community and personally.

Page 5: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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US University CultureContinued

• Most US faculty do not research in areas for which commercial IP will be developed.– Reported by Thursby and Thursby, March 5,

2004• 4,702 faculty they followed from 11 major US

research universities from 1983-1999 (61,407 observations).

• Only 2,939 in science and engineering disclosed IP.

Page 6: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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US University CultureContinued

• Physical Science = 19% of all disclosures• Engineering = 45% of all disclosures• Biological Sciences = 35% of all

disclosures• Percent of Faculty who disclosed by field

– Physical Science - 5.5%– Engineering = 11%– Biological Science = 8.5%

Page 7: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Benefits for MIT to Participate in Research and Technology Transfer

• MIT Mission – based on 4 valuesUnfettered transmission of knowledge through

educational activities.Creation of new knowledge through research

and other scholarly activities.Service to the nation (and world).Service to humanity.

Page 8: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Technology Transfer

• Unlimited in types, forms, and definitions– Publications, presentations, education

– Patents, copyrights• Formal licensing programs

– Increasing in number and a heightened focus on covering costs, economic development (especially public institutions vs. private institutions;) increasing revenues for institution

• Public Domain

• Defensive Patenting

• Increase value of software

Page 9: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Research Collaboration Trends

• MIT Fiscal Year 1996: Total Sponsored Funds– US Government = 68%

– Industry = 18%

– State, Local and Foreign Govs. = 4%

– Other = 10%

Page 10: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Research Collaboration TrendsContinued

• MIT Fiscal Year 2005: Total: 1.028B– U.S. Federal

Government: 79%

– Industry: 11%

– Local, state & foreign governments: 4%

– Other: 6%

Page 11: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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2003 AUTM Licensing Survey

Research$38.525 billion

Discovery15,510 disclosures1 per $2.3 million

Intellectual Assets7,921 new U..S. patent applications

Transfer for Commercialization4,507new licenses and options(25,864 active)374 company starts and 471 New Commercial

Products

FY2003 data reported by 198 North American academic institutions.

Page 12: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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FY 2003 AUTM U.S. Results

+10.1%$38.525 BResearch Expenditures

+7.7%15,510Invention Disclosures

+8.2%7,921New U.S. Patent Applications

+12.3%3,933U.S. Patents Issued

+4.5%4,507Licenses Signed

-6.7%374New Companies Formed

+5.7%$1.306 billionLicense Income

% Change vs. FY2002

FY2003

(n=198)ACTIVITY

Source: FY01 AUTM Licensing Survey.

Page 13: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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University Technology Transfer Productivity

$310.7 BResearch

139,830Disclosures

Commercialization Strategy

41,597 Licenses(30,593 still active)

4,694 Start-Ups(3,115 still operational)

products

Triage

platforms

61,507 U.S. Patent Applications32,026 U.S. Patents Issued

Source: AUTM Licensing Surveys, FY91-FY03

Page 14: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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US Trends for Increasing Need For Dispute Prevention and Dispute Resolution

• Increasing research collaborations• Increasing number of formal technology transfer

programs• Increasing number of non-exclusive licenses• Increasing “value” of patents from both

universities and industry• New IP industry: Assignment of patents from 1

company to another for the sole purpose of patent prosecution – no added technical value by 2nd company

Page 15: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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US Trends for Increasing Need For Dispute Prevention and Dispute ResolutionContinued

• Increasing collaborative research and technology transfer with international for profit and non-profit organizations

• Dotcom bubble and its collapse and heightened interest on protection of IP

• Increased world-wide competition

Page 16: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Examples for Increasing Need For Dispute Prevention and Dispute ResolutionContinued

• “Universities are realizing that intellectual property can be a profit center.”

• “A lot of fundamental research in biotech and pharmaceuticals is coming out of the universities, but the pharmaceutical industry doesn’t want to pay unless prodded.”

Page 17: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Examples for Increasing Need For Dispute Prevention and Dispute ResolutionContinued

• “In most agreements for exclusive licenses the licensee indemnifies and covers defense costs. Only the exclusive licensees have the right to bring and control a lawsuit.”– US universities control infringement lawsuits if

it non-exclusively licenses because “one nonexclusive licensee could put the validity of the patent at risk.”

Page 18: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Examples for Increasing Need For Dispute Prevention and Dispute ResolutionContinued

• Not all lawsuits are seeking to enforce patents held by the institutions. In a lawsuit by the university of ______ a lawsuit was brought by the university against a company who had as determined by the US courts committed copyright infringement by using the university’s faculty paper and results in their patent application.

Page 19: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Examples for Increasing Need For Dispute Prevention and Dispute ResolutionContinued

• “Despite the possible recoveries (universities) are not actively searching for litigation….”

• The costs of litigation are often prohibitive.• Increasing collaborative research =

increased difficulty in determining where the invention occurred, who the owner is, etc.

Page 20: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Increasing US University Dispute Resolution Needs

• Neutral Evaluation Process

• Neutral Evaluators who understand the science

• Neutral evaluators who are familiar with and understand university policies and practices and the student environment

• Neutral Location - ???

• Binding and non-binding

Page 21: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Increasing US University Dispute Resolution Needs

• Understanding of the body of law that is applicable to universities: Bayh-Dole; tax laws, federal research regulations, international law, publication requirements, export laws, tax-exempt laws, unrelated business income tax, privacy issues of students, research relationships, corporate partners, etc. etc.

Page 22: WIPO Dispute Resolution in International Science & Technology April 25, 2005 Ann M. Hammersla Senior Counsel, Intellectual Property Massachusetts Institute.

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Questions?????

Thank you!

Ann Hammersla

Senior Counsel for Intellectual Property

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Office of Intellectual Property Counsel

5 Cambridge Center, NE25-230

Cambridge, MA 02142

Phone: (617) 258-8980

Fax: (617) 253-1850

E-mail: [email protected]