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Tag Archives: patents
BIO’s IP Priorities for 2011
As we start a new year, the BIO Intellectual Property Department has determined their 2011 priorities. Intellectual Property remains a foundational priority for BIO and our 1100 biotechnology company members. BIO’s IP department has approved the following priorities for 2011: 1) PTO reforms to improve efficient, timely and quality examination 2) Congressional patent reform legislation 3) Improving IP protection in key foreign markets 4) IP legal developments in the courts 5) Protecting the breadth and flexibility of the patent Read More >
Patently BIOtech
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Tags: Bayh-Dole, BIO, Biotechnology Industry Organization, economic development, Intellectual Property, International, IP, Patent Reform, patent reform in foreign markets, patents, Supreme Court, Technology Transfer, Technology Transfer, United States Patent and Trademark Office
Tags: Bayh-Dole, BIO, Biotechnology Industry Organization, economic development, Intellectual Property, International, IP, Patent Reform, patent reform in foreign markets, patents, Supreme Court, Technology Transfer, Technology Transfer, United States Patent and Trademark Office
Innovation Alliance Event “Patents, Innovation and Job Creation: A Virtuous Circle”
An event is coming up on patents, innovation and job creation at the Newseum on Friday January 21. The keynote speakers are PTO Director David Kappos and Retired Chief Judge of the Federal Circuit Paul Michel. Other industry experts and executives will participate in panel discussions. Below is the news release. As the U.S. economy struggles with high unemployment, the Innovation Alliance hosts a half-day discussion with inventors, entrepreneurs, business leaders, and industry experts on the Read More >
Patently BIOtech
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Tags: David Kappos, economic development, economic growth, Events, Gene Quinn, Gregory Junemann, Hank Nothhaft, Harry Leonhardt, innovation, Innovation Alliance, job creation, Kim Hart, Lisa Kuuttila, patent, patents, Paul Michel, Robert Alt, United States Patent and Trademark Office, US Federal Circuit of Appeals, William Merritt
Tags: David Kappos, economic development, economic growth, Events, Gene Quinn, Gregory Junemann, Hank Nothhaft, Harry Leonhardt, innovation, Innovation Alliance, job creation, Kim Hart, Lisa Kuuttila, patent, patents, Paul Michel, Robert Alt, United States Patent and Trademark Office, US Federal Circuit of Appeals, William Merritt
AUTM’s 2010 Better World Report Highlights
AUTM released their Better World Report for 2010 highlighting academic innovations commercially developed through technology transfer that are improving the quality of life. Here is a quote from their press release. A device that allows the blind to ―see‖ via electrical pulses applied to the tongue…a collagen scaffold to treat damaged joints…a new vaccine to prevent shingles…an artificial lung that provides patients with both mobility and comfort during treatment…a program that vastly improves literacy among Read More >
Patently BIOtech
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Tags: Association of Technology Transfer Managers, AUTM, Bayh-Dole, BIO, biotechnology, economic development, federally funded research, Global Health, government funded research, healthcare, Licensing technology, modern medicine, new drug development, NIH, patents, Research and Development, Senator Birch Bayh, Senator Dole
Tags: Association of Technology Transfer Managers, AUTM, Bayh-Dole, BIO, biotechnology, economic development, federally funded research, Global Health, government funded research, healthcare, Licensing technology, modern medicine, new drug development, NIH, patents, Research and Development, Senator Birch Bayh, Senator Dole
USPTO Economic Research Agenda
The USPTO has a new Office of the Chief Economist and they have recently published their research agenda. USPTO Economic Research Agenda The OCE is embarking upon an aggressive economic research program to provide evidence on a range of matters relevant to policymaking and the effect of IP on economic outcomes more generally. These include: (1) Relating IP to economic growth, performance and employment, including: (a) IP and entrepreneurship (b) IP and wider Read More >
IPWatchdog.com interview of Bayh-Dole insider
A great article from IPWatchdog.com giving Joe Allen’s (a Birch Bayh staffer) insider perspective on the passage of the Bayh-Dole Act. The Article’s Introduction: William Shakespeare once wrote: There is a tide in the affairs of men Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; Omitted, all the voyage of their life Is bound in shallows and in miseries. See Julius Caesar. We caught the tide– but just barely. That the Bayh-Dole Act passed was amazing. Read More >




