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Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg...

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Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)
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Page 1: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Creating a Research Use

Exemption that Better Fulfills

the Patent BargainKatherine J. Strandburg

DePaul University College of Law(2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Page 2: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

The Shrinking US Experimental Use

Exemption• Pecuniary interests of the patentee

⇓• Commercial v. Non-Commercial Nature of the Use

But . . . unstable because

Financial motives of infringer (commercial v. non)≠

Financial impact on patentee (incentives to invent)

DOOMED TO SHRINK – “Legitimate business of the infringer”

Page 3: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Experimenting “on” v.

Experimenting “with”

• Distinction seems to be gaining support

• Comports with emphasis on disclosure -- use of inventive idea during patent term

• Separate recouping appropriable investment from control over follow-on innovation

Page 4: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

“Experimenting On”

Does it undermine incentives to invent?

KEY THEORETICAL IDEA:

Self-disclosing

v.

Non-self-disclosing Inventions

Page 5: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

“Experimenting On”

• Incentive to Invent:– Free rider theory– Assumes inventive idea appropriable upon

commercialization– Trade secrecy not possible

Applies to self-disclosing inventions only!

• Incentive to Disclose:– Assumes inventive idea not disclosed by commercialization– Trade secrecy possible, patent “quid pro quo”

Applies to non-self-disclosing inventions only!

Page 6: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

“Experimenting On”• Self-disclosing inventions

– Patent system provides “reimbursement” of investment– Increased disclosure requirements have little effect

• Non-self-disclosing inventions– Disclosure is primary public payoff– “Reimbursement” for invention not necessary– Increased disclosure requirements have large effect

“Experimenting on” - inherently differentiates between

these two types of inventions- does not have large impact on

incentive to invent

Page 7: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

“Experimenting On”

• = increased disclosure requirement

• Should be permitted

• Self-disclosing/non-self-disclosing distinction is “self-executing”

Page 8: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

“Experimenting On”v.

“Experimenting With”

Proposed test:

Could the use be replaced by more information about the invention?

YES: “Experimenting On”NO: “Experimenting With”

Page 9: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

What about “Experimenting With” (Research Tools)?

• Trickier because cannot separate use of invention and use of inventive idea

Research use has:

direct impact on patentee’s market for invention

AND• direct impact on follow-on innovation

Page 10: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

When Should We Worry?

• Only if tool patentee uses exclusivity to slow down publicly beneficial research by:

- not commercializing- not licensing to the best researchers

• Only slows down research if:No close substitutes for toolNo close substitutes for research

problem

Page 11: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

When Might This Happen?

Tail Wagging the Dog? “Easy” research tools, difficult research

- Tool inventor competence

- Tool inventor resources

- Misaligned incentives:

Reputational incentives

Larger share of smaller pie

Page 12: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Can We Distinguish . . .

“Easy” tools, “Hard” research (tool patent may be a problem)

v.“Hard” tools,“Easy” research(tool patent not a

problem)

Inventor control of follow-on innovation(may be a problem)

v.Inventor recovery of investment(purpose of patent)

Page 13: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Proposal

• Separate “exclusivity term” from “investment recovery term”

• Two-tier patent term3-4 years complete exclusivityfollowed by compulsory licensing

Gives tool inventor chance to demonstrate:“hard” tool/”easy” researchcompetenceintent to promote rapid research

Page 14: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Thoughts on TRIPS

• Article 27: OK?

• Article 30: “limited”? “not unreasonable conflict with normal exploitation”? “not unreasonably prejudice legitimate interests” (patent holder and third parties)

• Article 31: Could work if procedure designed appropriately

Page 15: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)
Page 16: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Figure 1

T

Invention

No Invention

Fig. 1

R

Page 17: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Figure 2

No Invention

Invention

R

T

P

Invention

No Inve

ntion

P

RT

Page 18: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Figure 3

Invention w/Patent

Invention

w/ or w

/o

Patent

R

T

P

Self-Disclosing

Non-Self-

Disclosin

g

R

T

P

Page 19: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Figure 4

Self-Disclosing Patent

R

T

P

Non-Self-DisclosingTrade Secret

Non-Self-DisclosingTrade Secret or Patent

Page 20: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Figure 5

R

P

T

I II III

I

Page 21: Creating a Research Use Exemption that Better Fulfills the Patent Bargain Katherine J. Strandburg DePaul University College of Law (2004 Wisconsin L. Rev.)

Figure 6S

IRI3R=Ic I3P

I3S

A B

C

D


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