SOURCE: IBM
June 27, 2007 09:00 ET
Academia, IT Industry Leaders Create New Principles for Sharing Collaborative Research
Principles Speed Collaboration, Innovation
ARMONK, NY--(Marketwire - June 27, 2007) - To speed innovation and decrease the time to
market for cutting-edge solutions and ideas, leading universities and
information technology (IT) companies announced today a set of guiding
principles for sharing intellectual property resulting from collaborative
research.
The new Free Participant Use Principles are designed to provide a common
starting point for discussions about collaboration in an industry where
cross-licensing of technology is the norm, and rapid time to market is the
business imperative. The ability to drive faster contract negotiations
between universities and business will result in increased innovation and
competitiveness -- for universities as well as business.
The principles document an additional model for handling the intellectual
property rights that arise from collaborative research between industry and
university participants. They will be useful in situations where the
participants intend for the results to be available to each other without
fee, and to be available to others on either a free or reasonable fee
basis. Further, the principles do not define the types of research to be
conducted. Use will be determined on a case-by-case basis once the
research goals of the collaborators are agreed upon.
Companies and universities realize that these principles enable
collaboration only for some specific situations and address business needs
of companies and obligations that universities have in those situations.
However, the value of the principles extends beyond translation into a
single agreement. Consistent with other proposed collaboration strategies,
these guiding principles will foster a higher level discussion. A
discussion centered on goal identification and agreement, while also
allowing institutions (universities and IT companies) to apply individual
policies and practices across the spectrum of collaborative research
models, providing another helpful tool allowing companies and universities
to work together.
With a goal to improve collaboration and enable 21st century innovation,
these principles were developed by members of the University-Industry
Innovation Summit Team -- a group who together address IT intellectual
property barriers. Complementing other organizations that address
collaborative research across all industries, such as the National
Academies' University-Industry Demonstration Partnership, the Summit Team
collaborators include Carnegie Mellon University, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, University of California at
Berkeley, University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, University of Texas at
Austin, Cisco, HP, IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel, and the Ewing Marion Kauffman
Foundation.
University & Industry Support Quotes:
Beth Burnside, Vice Chancellor for Research at the University of
California, Berkeley, said, "Berkeley is always pleased to enable faster
and easier collaboration between our faculty and industry partners, as we
share the goal of producing research that is optimally useful to the
public. These principles provide a useful new tool to help us more quickly
facilitate collaboration and confirm for universities and the information
technology industry an option to use when engaging in collaborative
research."
"We applaud the University-Industry Innovation Summit team's leadership in
working to improve the innovative and collaborative environment so
essential to maintaining the US competitive edge in today's global
marketplace," said Pradeep Khosla, dean of Carnegie Mellon University's
College of Engineering.
"Georgia Tech participates in collaborative research activities in all
forms across the research spectrum, and about 20 percent of that research
is sponsored by corporations," states Jilda Garton, Associate Vice Provost
for Research and GTRC General Manager. "We are excited to help create new
contracting process improvement tools which help both parties work together
to produce meaningful research."
"These principles enable organizations to reach agreement on how they
envision the research results being used and then, if appropriate, guide
the specific negotiations," states Dr. Charles Zukoski, Vice Chancellor for
Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "They are
another example of how we achieve our mission to lead, enable and support
research initiatives, technology transfer and economic development for a
globally competitive research university such as University of Illinois."
"At Rensselaer we work with a diverse group of industries and need a
variety of practices available to us to commence research based on the
collaborative model being discussed and level of the partnership. These
principles offer a new way to discuss intellectual property rights
resulting from the research and offer us flexibility to use them
independently and with other agreements," states Charles Carletta,
Secretary of the Institute and General Counsel for Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute.
"We are pleased to endorse a set of collaborative principles that set the
stage for a better understanding of the common interests of industry and
universities. Beyond the principles themselves, the effort of the
University-Industry Innovation Summit team is a clear indication that both
industry and universities recognize that effective collaboration is key to
the nation's ability to innovate and to successfully compete globally,"
said Juan M. Sanchez, Vice President for Research, The University of Texas
at Austin.
"The Cisco Research Center is pleased that the Summit team has developed
another set of principles for handling intellectual property that arises
from collaborative research between universities and industry," said Dr.
Douglas Comer, Vice President of Research at Cisco Systems. "Collaboration
between Cisco and universities is an integral part of our program to engage
in meaningful research, and the principles help make such engagement more
productive for both sides. The framework defined by the principles will
enable university researchers to undertake projects that have greater
potential impact, and we thank all members of the Summit team who worked to
reach agreement."
"There are many ways that universities and the IT industry collaborate,"
said Gina Poole, Vice President, University Relations & Innovation
Programs, IBM. "In the past, there has been a 'one size fits all' approach
on how we address these collaborations. We are creating innovative, new
approaches to help negotiate collaborations, and the Free Participant Use
principles offer a solution to one specific research model."
Lesa Mitchell, Vice President, Advancing Innovation at the Ewing Marion
Kauffman Foundation, states, "Research data would suggest that successful
university-industry collaborations are essential to remaining competitive
in our knowledge economy. The Kauffman Foundation is very supportive of
initiatives such as these principles that foster these collaborations."