Can a professor patent and license a technology if the development used software with non-commerical license?

General Tech Technology & Software 2 years ago

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Posted on 16 Aug 2022, this text provides information on Technology & Software related to General Tech. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.

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manpreet Tuteehub forum best answer Best Answer 2 years ago

Suppose a professor or student at a university uses software like Rosetta (a protein folding software) for their research. Rosetta has free academic licenses as well as paid commercial licenses available. The professor or student uses an academic license for their research.

Now, suppose eventually that professor or student discovers a new technology (e.g. they design a new medically useful drug using Rosetta). Is the professor or student allowed to patent their discovery and license that patent (or start a company that uses it)?

In other words, does the use of the non-commercial software license mean that any technologies developed using that software couldn't be monetized? Or does it just mean that nobody working for a commercial organization can use the software (a weaker constraint)? If the latter case, what would prevent companies from using small nonprofit proxy organizations to do research under the noncommercial license, only to then patent and transfer the patented technology to the main company?

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manpreet 2 years ago

This depends somewhat on the terms of the license, in that a license might have language that prohibits such a use. But typically, academic licenses are pretty vague and only say that the use must be academic, or non-commercial. This does not preclude an author getting a $100 royalty, or a free copy of a book, from a paper that was published and use academically-licensed software. This is because the basic purpose of the research is academic, not product-development – though many purely academic inquiries turn out to be marketable, and there might be a nice payoff from some line of research.

Universities often have rules that prohibit workarounds such as you propose (the university will try to lay claim to the patent).


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