Showing posts with label patents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patents. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

ITSSD Issues New Report Detailing How Foreign Government Regulatory and Standards Initiatives Seek to Convert Privately Developed Intellectual Property-Rich High Technologies into Virtually Free-of-Charge 'Public Interest' Assets Mostly at the Expense of U.S. Innovators and Investors

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/itssd-us-high-tech-innovations-face-gathering-perfect-storm-of-compulsory-licensing-and-royalty-free-interoperability-frameworks-abroad-111988199.html


ITSSD: U.S. High-Tech Innovations Face Gathering 'Perfect Storm' of Compulsory Licensing and Royalty-Free Interoperability Frameworks Abroad

PRINCETON, N.J.Dec. 16, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In the Washington Legal Foundation Working Paper published today and in the Global Trade & Customs Journal article to be released in February 2011, international business and regulatory attorney Lawrence Kogan identifies and describes the growing number of foreign regulatory frameworks and national standards initiatives designed to convert privately developed intellectual property-rich high technologies into virtually free-of-charge 'public interest' assets mostly at the expense of U.S. innovators and investors.
These articles are based on Mr. Kogan's continuing involvement in the work of the World Intellectual Property Organization Standing Committee on the Law of Patents and a related event he recently convened on this subject while attending the body's 15th session meetings during October 2010 in Geneva, Switzerland.
According to Mr. Kogan, "such market intervention mechanisms are grounded in United Nations human rights, technology transfer and wealth redistribution soft law declarations and ambiguous UN environmental and World Trade Organization treaty provisions that have already begun to weaken the prevailing neo-liberal exclusive private property right basis for patents, trade secrets and copyrights which has long provided an invaluable incentive for undertaking high-risk technological research & development, innovation and commercialization activities. 'BRIC' nations, in particular, seek to replace the current international system with a state-centric utilitarian regulatory model that guarantees to their public constituents universal access to U.S. high technologies at pre-determined concession-rate prices," emphasizes Kogan. "However, the European Union, for economic competitiveness and trade protectionist reasons, is also involved."
"Capital-intensive technology development and commercialization already engenders significant economic and legal risks and other uncertainties.  Given the precarious state of today's global economy, it simply defies logic and common sense that governments and civil society organizations would seek to create additional regulatory and policy risks capable of stifling discoveries and innovations that could lead to the job creation, knowledge dissemination and other downstream public benefits they desire," Kogan believes.
"Consequently, it would be unwise for the U.S. innovator and investment communities to be lulled into a false sense of security by U.S. and foreign government assurances that these frameworks are narrowly focused and applicable only in a limited number of instances," warns Kogan. "Much to the contrary, compulsory licensing and government procurement interoperability regimes are quite broad and expansive, applying to a number of technology industry sectors including, but not limited to, software, broadband, healthcare, energy, transportation, education, emergency and disaster management, and defense/national security. Thus, competent counsel should be retained as soon as possible to identify possible public and private law opportunities to mitigate such risks."
The Institute for Trade, Standards and Sustainable Development (ITSSD) is a non-partisan non-profit legal research, analytics and educational organization that examines international law relating to trade, industry and positive sustainable development. The WLF article is accessible at: http://itssd.org/KoganWP.pdf and http://www.wlf.org/0misc/KoganWP.pdf  , and the GTCJ article Abstract at:  http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1721267.
Website:  www.itssd.org
CONTACT: ITSSD, +1-609-658-7417, info@itssd.org
SOURCE Institute for Trade, Standards, and Sustainable Development
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Friday, March 21, 2008

Russia Can Secure Greatest Biotech Market Advances Following US, Not EU Innovation Model

ITSSD: Russia Can Secure Greatest Biotech Market Advances Following US, Not EU Innovation Model

PRINCETON, N.J., March 21 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In a short article published today by the Washington Legal Foundation, US international trade and business lawyer Lawrence Kogan and Russian Government lawyer Yelena Bakulina highlight the common bases in Russian and US history that have triggered new thinking in Russia about how to use privately owned patent rights and cooperative government-university-industry technology transfer arrangements to secure successful market commercialization and peaceful adaptation of publicly-owned bio-warfare technologies.










The article arose from Kogan's June 28, 2007 presentation at a symposium convened by the Vyatka State University, Kirov, Russia, [http://www.vshu.kirov.ru/] as part of a longstanding joint Russian-US cooperative nonproliferation program overseen by the International Science and Technology Center (ISTC), Moscow, Russia. [http://www.istc.ru/]







According to Bakulina and Kogan, "The [US] federal government['s]...transference of innovation from energy, space, and defense to that of the private sector, and...the American experience in innovation and intellectual property may be advantageous to use in Russia..."

Furthermore as the authors note, "The Kirov Region certainly has the potential to develop effective innovation systems supported by the investment and protection of privately owned intellectual property in the sphere of modern high tech technology. If properly managed...this could create jobs, know-how and other economic and social benefits in the Kirov Region."


"Such an approach," adds Kogan, "would allow Russian biotechnology markets to leapfrog those of the European Union to capture a greater share of the global marketplace for biomedical and bioenvironmental products and processes. Unfortunately, the current EU innovation model is fixated on governmental market control via regulation rather than on market facilitation via economic incentives that ease the burdens and costs of doing business," emphasizes Kogan. "The EU Commission is more obsessed with dictating the rules of the game to ensure 'parity-over-progress' than with providing hi tech European businesses operating in the biotech sectors with
the necessary property rights-based enabling environment and economic freedom to grow and prosper. "Consequently," Kogan notes, "EU biotech and pharma companies have increasingly relocated operations to the US."


The Institute for Trade, Standards and Sustainable Development (ITSSD) is a non-partisan non-profit international legal research and educational organization that examines international law relating to trade, industry and positive sustainable development around the world. This and related ITSSD articles are accessible online at:
http://www.itssd.org/Publications/03-21-08balukina.pdf; http://www.itssd.org/ and http://itssdinternationaliprights.blogspot.com/.


CONTACT: ITSSD, +1-609-951-2222, info@itssd.org

Sunday, January 20, 2008

The Key to Economic Development is the Presence of the Institutions of a Free Society: Property Rights, Rule of Law, Free Markets & Limited Government

In the words of one Ugandan-born American bioscientist, John Kilama, PhD,


“The key to economic development is the presence of the institutions of a free society: property rights, the rule of law, free markets and limited government… Strong intellectual property rights, administered and enforced in an impartial manner, have been an important part of this framework. As a result…countries… which have [put this]… institutional framework [] in place have experienced the growth of ‘knowledge-based’ industries — to the benefit of all” (emphasis added).


According to this same expert,


“Explosive rates of innovation have taken place in countries, such as South Korea, Mexico, Jordan and Singapore, which have understood that growth and prosperity can only occur once the institutional framework is in place. If intellectual property rights are responsible for restricted access to medicines in poor countries, then drugs should be plentiful in countries where the patents are expired or were never present. On the contrary, many of the most critical drugs that Africa still lacks have been off-patent for 30 or 40 years. These include most anti-diarrhoea drugs, antibiotics, derivatives of penicillin and cephalosporin, many antihypertensive drugs and almost all antipyretic drugs. The human genome project hardly serves as a basis for completely altering the current model of intellectual property rights. While it has provided information with potential use, the benefits of its initial research must not be overstated.


Removing property rights and making companies conduct open-source research and development could to lead to disaster. Without the chance of recovering investments, why would research-based pharmaceutical companies invest large sums in drug development? Open-source models might work in some businesses that are not so capital-intensive, but it is a pipe-dream to rely on the philanthropy of chemists, physicians, researchers and financiers to contribute voluntarily to such schemes.”


See John Kilama, “Protecting Patents Protects Patients”, Bangladeshweb.com (7/22/05), at: http://bangladesh-web.com/view.php?hidDate=2005-08-03&hidType=FEA&hidRecord=0000000000000000053492 ; John Kilama, “Drug Patents Are Part Of The Cure”, Business Day (7/28/05), at: http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A73957 .

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Former ITSSD Intern Reveals How American & European Activists and Politicians Attack U.S. Intellectual Property Rights

The New War on Drugs:
Activists and Politicians Attack Intellectual Property Rights


Capital Research Center - Organizational Trends

January 2008

http://www.capitalresearch.org/pubs/pdf/v1199294989.pdf

America’s pharmaceutical industry is the envy of the world and the savior of millions of sick people. But activist groups, many of them founded by Ralph Nader and funded by liberal foundations, are campaigning to limit the industry’s incentives to produce new life-saving drugs. Their strategy focuses on undermining the intellectual property rights that protect pharmaceutical innovation.

By Karl Crow


Karl Crow is a 3rd Year student at Temple University's Beasley School of Law. In 2007 he was an intern at the Institute for Trade, Standards, and Sustainable Development (ITSSD) in
Princeton, New Jersey.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Most Indian drug majors too in line for patent protection

14 Dec, 2007, 0046 hrs IST,Khomba Singh, TNN




NEW DELHI:

It’s not just global drug discovery majors that are seeking patent protection. Out of the 8,000 drug patent applications in India filed between 1995 and 2004, about 40% are from Indian pharma companies.

Domestic majors such as Ranbaxy Laboratories, Dr Reddy’s Laboratories and Cipla have filed over 100 patent applications each. Between 1995 and 2004, the Indian patent office received over 8,000 patent applications related to medicine.

Ranbaxy Laboratories, India’s largest drug maker, has claimed protection for 112 drugs during the period, including few which are at various stages of clinical development. In addition, Ranbaxy has also filed 30 patents in 2006, including seven for new drug delivery systems (NDDS), which are in advanced stages of development.

Similarly, other pharma majors such as Cipla and Dr Reddy’s Laboratories have each sought protection for over 100 drugs, says Dr Amit Sengupta who reviewed the mailbox applications in India in collaboration with the health ministry. However, many of these applications, both from global MNCs and Indian companies, are frivolous which may not qualify as a candidate for a patent.

According to Professor Carlos M Correa, a former member of the World Health Organisation (WHO) Commission on Intellectual Property, Innovation and Public Health (CIPIH), many of the patent applications worldwide are merely ‘new laboratory techniques’ and therefore would not qualify for patents. “The pipeline of discovery drugs are drying up. While there are around a million applications in the US, only 20 new chemical entity (NCE) got US Food and Drug Administration’s approval in 2005 compared to 51 in 1997,“ he said.

[THIS IS NOT BRAIN SCIENCE - WHEN FACED WITH IDEOLOGUES LIKE DR. CORREA WHO DISPISE PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS, ESPECIALLY IPRs, PROMOTE CONVERSION OF PRIVATE PROPERTY INTO PUBLIC COMMUNAL PROPERTY AND SEEK TO JUSTIFY DEVELOPING COUNTRY GOVERNMENT EXPROPRIATION OF PATENTS WITHOUT PAYMENT OF FAIR & ADEQUATE COMPENSATION, PROFIT-SEEKING LIFE SCIENCES COMPANIES IN THE PHARMACEUTICAL & BIOTECHNOLOGY SECTORS WILL SLOW DOWN THEIR DEVELOPMENT OF PATENTABLE MEDICINES.]**

Companies are now merely tinkering with the existing drug and seeking patent applications for the same. Only 2-3 application from each of the Indian companies are serious contenders for a patent, Dr Sengupta added. However, some innovator companies feel that there are many innovations which deserve patent protection. “Innovations are either patentable or non-patentable. Patent offices are getting mature to weed out those inventions which do not merit a patent and one should look at the actual data of patents rejected before a claim like this is made, “ Novartis India vice-chairman and MD Ranjit Shahani said.

Since India became trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights (TRIPS)-compliant in 2005, both global and Indian companies have rushed to claimed protection for new drugs or innovations. If drugs get patented, the innovator company will get exclusive marketing right for 20 years. Few global companies have already got patent for drugs in cancer, anti-Aids and other therapeutic areas.

REQUEST TO MAKE INDIAN PATENT INFORMATION PUBLIC

The petition: REQUEST TO MAKE INDIAN PATENT INFORMATION PUBLIC

Dear Mr. Prime Minister: With the 2005 amendments, the Indian patent regime has come a long way. Indeed, India is turning out to be a trendsetter of sorts. Asian countries such as the Philippines are in the process of modelling their patent regime on the Indian Patents Act.

Sadly however, the current state of affairs at the Indian patent office (IPO) leaves much to be desired. Whilst there are a number of issues for concern, we focus on two of the most pressing ones.

1. Creating Comprehensive Patent Database

Firstly, despite India’s IT prowess, we do not have a full-fledged electronic patent database as yet. As you can appreciate, such a resource is of tremendous value to all patent stakeholders—inventors, industry, policy makers, civil society, academicians and members of the public. Most importantly, it will be a blessing for patent examiners. Owing to their inability to readily access prior patent application, they are currently handicapped in their examinations.

Some information is made available electronically by the IPO, but this is far from ideal. Critical components of a patent application, such as the claims and the complete specification are not available. It bears noting that almost all the major patent offices worldwide provide comprehensive patent information via publicly accessible databases. It also bears noting that the National Informatics Center (NIC), an agency of the Ministry of Information Technology, was tasked with the responsibility of creating a comprehensive patent database. Despite receiving funds for this task from WIPO as far back as 1993-96, they have not been able to deliver!

2. Uploading Patent Office Decisions

Secondly, it is lamentable that patent office decisions are never published. Illustratively, there are over 7000 pharmaceutical applications to be examined and many of them are under opposition. The patent office has accepted or rejected several cases, relying in part on section 3(d), an innovative section unique to India.

Pharmaceutical patents impact not just the applicant and his/her opponent, but also the man/woman on the street interested in accessing affordable medicines—a sentiment that has formed the basis of our well thought out patent regime. You will therefore appreciate the importance of making these decisions public. Greater public scrutiny of patent office decisions is likely to spur more transparency and accountability.

Currently, one has to write to the patent office and specifically request individual decisions—a terribly inefficient way of doing things. Today, most decisions by Indian courts are uploaded onto their respective websites within few days of the judgment being handed down. We therefore request you to urge the concerned authorities to do the same for patent office decisions. It will interest you to know that patent office decisions were published for a short period in the 1990’s.

A revival of this trend is absolutely essential, albeit in an “electronic” format and in a more timely fashion. Here again, as you may know, most advanced patent jurisdictions have websites that contain such information. In short, a website detailing comprehensive patent information, including patent office decisions will create more transparency and make the IPO more accountable. It will also equip stakeholders with timely information on patents. This will in turn lead to a more informed use of the patent system and better policy suggestions.

We therefore humbly request you to take this up on a priority basis. You will appreciate that the two concerns outlined above are not very resource intensive. More importantly, they will be an excellent example of India leveraging its IT prowess to achieve a worthwhile public policy goal.

Thanking you, we remain, Most sincerely yours, Shamnad Basheer Mrinalini Kochupillai Aysha Shaukat Prashant Reddy Duncan Bucknell Sumathi Chandrasekharan For: SpicyIP CC: Dr. Sam Pitroda, Chairman,The National Knowledge Commission Mr Kamal Nath, Minister for Commerce and Industry Mr Kapil Sibal, Minister for Science and Technology Dr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission

WIPO Consults On Protecting Traditional Knowledge, Genetic Resources

By Catherine Saez

How best to protect traditional knowledge, traditional cultural expressions and genetic resources against misappropriation and misuse was the main theme of a recent community consultation in the form of a roundtable organised by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).

The WIPO event on 10-12 December came in response to “the strong level of interest expressed by many national authorities and community representatives in sharing experience and developing dialogue and cooperation on practical initiatives to build capacity for appropriate protection.” The event was announced two weeks before it took place. WIPO said it aims to strengthen the practical capacity of holders of traditional knowledge (TK), traditional cultural expressions (TCEs, or folklore) and genetic resources (GR). It is preparing, among other things, a TK documentation toolkit, guidelines and a database for GR, and a creative heritage project.

The informal roundtable was organised around four workshops (creative heritage, TK and GR in the patent system, TK toolkit, and “customary law”) where participants were invited to share views and experiences. Work was then reported to all participants for discussion. Jacob Simet, rapporteur of the creative heritage session, said that “a great part of the problem could be addressed at the institutional and community level.” He said the misappropriation of TK and TCEs is worsened by tourism, thereby creating a dilemma for communities as it provides benefits while at the same time acting as an agent of misappropriation when, for example, tourists take photographs or film indigenous communities.

[TOURISTS AND INDUSTRY CANNOT MISAPPROPRIATE THAT WHICH NO ONE OWNS. UNLESS 'TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE' CAN BE REDUCED TO PATENTABILITY CRITERIA OR RECOGNIZED AS A 'TRADE SECRET', TWO FORMS OF PRIVATE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, THEN IT REMAINS IN 'THE COMMONS' AND IS OWNED BY NO ONE ]**

On the database project, participants on the closing day generally agreed that each country has a different level of examination and thus the database structure should be put together in a standardised and prescribed language taking into consideration local needs and focusing on the goals reflected in the recently adopted WIPO Development Agenda.

In the current system, patent examiners use an array of databases, according V K Gupta, a panel co-convener. “A system should be set up to ease the work of patent examiners,” he said, and suggested a systematic use of metadata, which provide greater detail. Many participants were concerned about protection of the database, which they said should not enter the public domain, but instead should be reserved for the sole use of patent examiners at the risk of betraying the trust of contributors. Xuan Li of the intergovernmental South Centre asked how the database was going to protect the rights of TK holders in cases such as Chinese traditional medicine that uses very complex plant preparations with over 20 ingredients. It would be very difficult to determine novelty in a patent application involving such products, she said.

Participants appeared to concur and said that patent examiners should be skilled and trained in different specialties. Li said that in the case of Chinese medicine it would be additionally difficult to examine a patent application given that China has 55 ethnic communities, each with their own preparations. The toolkit workshop synthesised the benefit and danger of documentation, according to participants.

The issue of confidentiality in particular was put forward as the group shared their questions about whose interest lies behind documentation, who is funding it and what kind of problem would arise if the databases were linked to funders. Brendan Tobin, rapporteur on the TK toolkit workshop, said that “if you can’t enforce the obligation of confidentiality, you need to take this into consideration.” He also said it was important to ensure that the TK databases are, in the main, established and maintained by communities, and that ownership of management structure should, where possible, be with local communities.

The potential danger of “catastrophic” disclosure, with the database “going wild on the Internet” also was a serious concern for the roundtable participants, with the effort to protect traditional knowledge possibly having, in this scenario, the reverse effect. According to WIPO’s Antony Taubman, the organisation has no initiative to establish a database but “would only ever work with existing initiatives, and would rather be a portal for access for patent examiners.” It should be a practical tool enhancing both protection and patent quality, he said.

WIPO has been working on different initiatives to address the issue of misappropriation of TK, TCEs and GR for the last five years, Taubman said. “WIPO wants to take it to the operational level,” he said, emphasising the organisation’s wish to produce non-binding guidelines meant to reflect best practices. The first phase of the guidelines, which currently are being written, is to reach out and solicit experiences and opinions. The first draft is expected to be released early next year. Roundtable participants recognised a need for capacity building and introducing safeguard mechanisms to protect the database. Manuel Ruiz from the Third World Network mentioned that the Honey Bee Database, which involves grassroots innovations, is an initiative that has won the trust of the communities. Catherine Saez may be reached at csaez@ip-watch.ch.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Patents Assume Increasing Global Importance Value Reflected in the Steady Increase of United States and Foreign Issued Patents

Despite fundamental challenges, including increasing hurdles to obtain and enforce proprietary rights, the centuries-old United States patent system is still regarded as a reliable mechanism for inventors and product developers to preserve the legal protections covering their technological achievements.

An enduring value is that patents instill confidence that the necessary legal exclusivity will be available for those seeking to recoup often sizeable investments during their products’ lifetimes. This is evident in the steady increase in issued patents over the years.

In a single year, 1996, the United States and foreign patent offices issued 121,805 patents. A decade later in 2006, the number of patents issued was 196,436, an increase of 38%. There was a 32% difference in the U.S. patents alone issued in 1996 and 2006, that is, an increase from 69,419 to 102,267, respectively. From the inception of patents to the end of 1996, a total of 3,455,886 were issued by the U.S. and foreign countries, while the U.S. alone issued 1,910,390, according to data from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

In April 2005, Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Technology Review magazine reported that the $150 billion earned globally from patent licensing that year was expected to grow by some 30% a year for the next several years. On that basis, earnings from patent licensing fees could exceed $250 million this year.

The right to patent an invention has its genesis and mandate in the U.S. Constitution. “As patent law evolved, one of the purposes was to encourage disclosure of inventions so that science could benefit and progress—in return, the inventor was granted a limited-term government monopoly,” says Lita Nelsen, director of Technology Licensing at MIT.“The basic premise is that you expose your invention to the public such that interested parties learn from it, in exchange for a monopoly,” says Mike Slessor, managing director, Office of Technology Transfer, California Institute of Technology.

Technology driven businesses are by far the largest users of patents. Contract research and engineering services companies and the technology transfer and licensing operations of research universities, among others, are also involved. Nelsen says that in university licensing, “Patents are used to accelerate the movement of state-of-the-art research into the economy by providing an incentive for companies to invest in early stage, unproven technologies.” She acknowledges that universities in general constitute a small player in the overall patent world, compared to commercial entities. “The fruits of university researchers’ efforts are not products but very early risky development opportunities, which if placed in the public domain will cause people to wait until someone else demonstrates that they actually work,” says Nelsen.

University licensing received a boost from the passage of the 1980 Bayh-Dole Act—before which less than 250 patents a year were granted to universities. MIT had some form of licensing since the 1930s, but prior to the act, universities were not very conscious of patents. “Their policies were either nascent or non-existent, and they may have coped with it on an ad-hoc basis—then once Bayh-Dole came in, there was much more uniformity,” Nelsen explains.This act allows universities to retain ownership of inventions funded with federal research grants.

The universities’ end of the bargain requires them to file for patent protection and pursue commercialization. Hundreds of leading universities operate highly efficient and capable technology licensing offices and, like MIT and CalTech, the patents they acquire and manage come almost exclusively from efforts of researchers within their university. Considerable cooperation exists among universities and their researchers.

“This is a societal mission rather than a competitive business,” says Nelsen.“Our job is to find out if our researchers’ ideas are new, generally via extensive literature searches,” says Nelsen. The next step is to weigh the effort and money to secure a patent, against investor interest, she notes. Most patents are used defensively, to ward off competitors. “Legally, patents are a mechanism to exclude potential competitors. A university has little interest in this exclusionary approach because it is not in competition with the commercial world. “We are, however, interested in getting interested parties to invest early in as yet unproven technologies,” explains Nelsen. “So we give them the right to exclude others.”

MIT’s licensing office has dealt with leading-edge technologies such as light emitting diodes (LED), computer caching of large amounts of data over multiple servers, diagnostics for bladder cancer, agents for heart imaging, superconductors, and advanced battery technologies, among others, according to Nelsen. The office also oversees inventions in laboratory instrumentation. “A number of our faculty members are now working on microfluidics, which is likely to be important in anything from cell counting to chromato- graphy,” says Nelsen. Every year, the MIT technology transfer group sees some 500 technology disclosures from which it acquires about 200 to 300 new patents. It grants about 100 licenses, and starts some 25 to 30 companies a year, some of which are now quite substantial. “In numerical terms, we have had the most impact in biotechnology,” says Nelsen.

“CalTech’s licensing office is here solely to help researchers and inventors navigate the post-invention, pre-commercialization stages of getting their technologies to market,” says Slessor. Success stories include image sensor technology that was used in the Voyager and Cassini space missions. “This is at the forefront of low-power, high- performance image sensors,” Slessor adds. Another huge success was the gene sequencer that became a foundation for Applied Biosystems human genome mapping work. Slessor says that his group gets about 200 to 300 disclosures a year from researchers. “For about two-thirds of those we pursue, we get at least a U.S. patent. If there is a good business case, we will seek foreign protection as well.” Over its ten years in existence, the CalTech technology transfer office initiated about 150 start-up companies. This is a hugely important area for technology-driven companies.

Bill Munroe, director of Licensing and Business Development at Beckman Coulter, states, “Patents and intellectual property are an ever growing focus in the field of medical diagnostics. We are certainly very active in trying to obtain patents for the technologies we develop, as well as obtain licenses that are necessary for some of the products we want to introduce. We expend much time and effort to make sure we understand the landscape.” “As we go forward, there will be an even greater need for this, especially when it comes to novel content such as the assays that run on the equipment. Certainly, the fundamental technologies that go into some of the equipment are patented, and you need to acquire licenses to practice some of those technologies.“That is key for getting into certain areas, and is particularly true in the area of molecular diagnostics and hematology where we are very active,” says Munroe. He adds that while patenting technologies is central in the R&D and product development processes, “We don’t make product decisions because of a patent; we make patent decisions because of products.”

Contract research and engineering service companies like Invetech, KMC Systems, Battelle, Stratec and Cambridge Consultants among others provide product development services to large numbers of client companies. “The business model is fee for service,” says Andreas Knaack, director, Instrument Design and Development with Invetech. “This means that we are hired to develop products as fast as possible with the maximum value for money, when you consider cost against product benefits and product features.” Knaack says that Invetech works somewhat differently from a number of contract researchers in that they transfer all patents and other intellectual property to the clients who engage and pay for Invetech’s services. “When a company outsources the development of technology, it is critical that there be a clear understanding of who will own the IP generated in the process,” says Knaack. “We provide the full complement of ideas to our clients, and we work with them to identify the ideas that are worth patenting. This is quite pivotal to our clients. They need to protect their business positions.”

Invetech works on very early research, such as new detection technology in spectrophotometers, as well as with products that are already well defined by clients but which need detailed solutions. Both situations offer opportunities for Invetech to help enhance its clients IP portfolio, according to Knaack. In the future, he sees a trend toward smaller technology— samples, reagent volumes, footprint—and the need for greater throughput with larger instrumentation. In clinical diagnostics, one of Invetech’s areas of focus, he sees more movement toward point-of-care testing, which will require smaller-sized consumables, and more use of microfluidics, nanotechnology and highly sensitive optics.

In the near future, CalTech’s Slessor does not anticipate dramatic changes in the patent arena. “As companies increasingly look for good innovations outside their R&D departments, there will be more pressure on university researchers to come up with ideas,” he says.

Beckman Coulter’s Munroe notes that patents may become harder to enforce in the future. Legal adjustments in the standards for obviousness may provide patent infringers a new basis for arguing that a patent is invalid. Proposed changes such as limiting the number of claims and continuations in patent applications would make it more difficult to obtain patents—and if you do get them, it will be more difficult to enforce them, he notes.“

Assuming that some of the proposed changes to our patent laws do not happen, I do not see any dramatic changes in the next several years. I envisage the continuation of a system that essentially works,” says Nelsen. This is important, she adds, because “patents and intellectual property are becoming increasingly important around the world.”

Bernard Tulsi is a freelance writer based in Newark, Delaware. He may be contacted at btulsi@comcast.net or by phone at 302-266-6420.

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