NASA Launches Searchable Database Of Public Domain Patents (slashgear.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from SlashGear: NASA has released a bunch of patents for its technologies so that anyone can use them. A total of 56 'formerly-patented' technologies developed by the government are now available in the public domain, meaning they can be used for commercial purposes in an unrestricted manner. To make it easier to find these technologies and others like them, NASA has also created a new searchable database that links the public to thousands of the agency's now-expired patents. According to NASA, the patents it has released may have non-aerospace applications that could help companies with commercial projects underway. Of the 56 formerly-patented technologies, users will find things like methods of propulsion, thrusters, rocket nozzles, advanced manufacturing processes, and more. NASA is "encouraging entrepreneurs to explore new ways to commercial NASA technologies," says NASA executive Daniel Lockney. Here's a direct link to search the database to your heart's content.
Why aren't patents owned or funded by the federal government in the public domain? Can anyone justify why the Bayh-Dole Act gives universities control of patents generated by federally funded research? If NASA, NSF, or some other government agency gives a grant to a university to do research, the university owns the patents and they must be licensed by the public. Can anyone justify this? I'm glad to see patents in the public domain, but it's not nearly enough.
We've reached a disappointing time in history when NASA's new launch is a "Searchable Database".
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
Allow anyone to file a public domain patent at no cost (or a trivial cost, like $10). So if you've got an idea you think is so simple that it shouldn't be patentable, but you're worried that if you don't patent it someone else might succeed at tricking the patent office into granting it and suing you, you can just file it as a public domain patent. You cannot make any money off of it, so you aren't charged much money for it.
Basically it flips around the first-to-file concept of invalidating a patent if you can prove you thought of the idea before the patent filing date. Under that model you have to first be sued for patent infringement, then have to come up with the proof invalidating it and hope it sticks. Under this model, you can file the proof ahead of time, and it will serve as your guaranteed get out of patent infringement free card - automatically invalidating any future patents incorrectly granted for the same concept.
Say you're a government agency and you need a compiler for BCPL
I think this sort of thing isn't patentable. At least not by the company or university funded to do the work. The 'novel' idea has already been thought of by the agency. The company has just been hired to do the design and coding grunt work to a specification.
I don't doubt that a lot of this goes on already. Government inventions being in the public domain (classified stuff aside), there's no profit motive. So they pass the idea on to a buddy at a private s/w firm in exchange for a few bureaucrats taking a financial interest in the product on the side.
Have gnu, will travel.
Pretty few posts on this topic, I must say...
That said, since NASA is paid by tax-payers' money, they should make available ALL of their patents to ALL the citizens...
--- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
Yeah, all the way back to March 18, 2016...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?