The benefits and costs of strong patent protection: a contribution to the current debate
Article Abstract:
Present inclinations towards stronger patent protection may not be able to incite technological and economic progress. On the contrary, it could impede the latter. Modern economists believe that strong patent rights are generally favorable to economic progress. However, some empirical studies have proven correct earlier views that strong patents were not crucial to persuading invention. Another negative attribute of strong patents is their tendency to necessitate substantial economic costs.
Publication Name: Research Policy
Subject: Social sciences
ISSN: 0048-7333
Year: 1998
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
The role of information in licensing contract design
Article Abstract:
Licensing contract terms between Spanish and foreign companies that involve a technology transfer are examined. Patents, utility designs, franchises and trademarks are considered as components of technology transfer. Most of the 1991 contracts examined did not provide specifications for technology transfer licenses of any kind and instead showed greater valuation for royalty income.
Publication Name: Research Policy
Subject: Social sciences
ISSN: 0048-7333
Year: 1996
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
The market economy, and the scientific commons
Article Abstract:
The practical inventions can be patented whereas scientific findings cannot be. Patenting scientific findings is bad for the advance of science and technology.
Publication Name: Research Policy
Subject: Social sciences
ISSN: 0048-7333
Year: 2004
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: The Twentieth Century: An American sexual history. Coming attractions: Sexual expression in the next decade. Taking action on sexual health
- Abstracts: When clerks meet customers: a test of variables related to emotional expressions on the job. Introducing survival analysis to organizational researchers: a selected application to turnover research
- Abstracts: When clerks meet customers: a test of variables related to emotional expressions on the job. part 2 Contribution of concrete cognition to emotion: neutral symptoms as elicitors of worry about cancer
- Abstracts: The memorial society option. Being there: Contributions of the nurse, social worker, and Chaplain during and after a death
- Abstracts: Embodied habitus. Life, movement and the fabulation of the event. From Reproduction to transformation: social movement fields and the radical habitus