Remove Intellectual Property Management Remove Invention Remove Licensing Remove Marketing
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The Bayh-Dole Act: Fostering Innovation Potential Across All Industries

IP.com

government typically retained ownership of inventions resulting from federally funded research. The Act allows not-for-profits, small businesses, and institutions to own and control the IP generated from federally funded research, providing them with the autonomy to make decisions about licensing and commercialization.

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3 Core Elements of Intellectual Property Strategy

IP.com

By disclosing an enabling description of an invention to the public, with a provable publication date and authenticity, it becomes prior art. Monetization involves more than just getting products to market faster with exclusionary rights. Defensive publishing is becoming an important part of a comprehensive IP protection strategy.

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Methods of Commercializing Intellectual Property – Part II

Intepat

Commercialization Through Franchising Franchising is essentially a subset of licensing whereby the owner of an intellectual property grants the franchisee to replicate the entire business concept in a different location. Thus, spin-offs often function as an important means of technology transfers within the market.

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Framing an effective IP strategy in the Corporate

IP and Legal Filings

The corporation innovates various IP and use them for their products or can license them to the third parties, which generate revenues for the corporation in the form of license fees. For any such valid infringement, the prerogative to sue the other for the intellectual property violation always lies with the corporation.

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