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Services
to Faculty, Graduate Students, and Staff:
The Intellectual Property Office
helps Penn State inventors understand and follow the University's
patent and copyright policies and procedures, and provides counseling
on intellectual property matters. Our staff members
- screen inventions and discoveries
made in University facilities for patentability, commercial potential,
and general marketability (to begin this process, you need to
fill out an invention disclosure or software disclosure form),
- assess the value of patent protection
and, if appropriate, file patent applications at no cost to the
inventor,
- market Penn State patents and
copyrights to companies interested in new product development,
and
- prepare and negotiate confidentiality
agreements, material transfer options, and licensing agreements
with interested companies.
An invention is the physical embodiment
of a discovery. For it to qualify for a patent, it must be novel,
non-obvious, and useful. If you invent or discover something you
believe is patentable, you should promptly prepare an invention
disclosure. Electronic copies of the following disclosure forms
and the accompanying instruction sheets are available:
Invention
Disclosure Form
Software Disclosure
Form
Our list of Frequently
Asked Questions defines "inventorship" and explains in more
detail what is patentable, who owns an invention, who pays for the
patent, and how royalties are shared.
This FAQ
list also references the relevant Penn State policies
on patents and copyrights (Policy RA11), technology
transfer (RA12), and coauthorship
(RA13), and refers those interested in more information on patents,
trademarks, and copyrights to such sites as the
US
Patent and Trademark Office, and the US
Copyright Office. If you
have additional questions, please send an e-mail
to the Intellectual Property Office or contact a member of our
staff.
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