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About
MIHR
PIPRA
Fiocruz, Brazil
bioDevelopments- Institute
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ANDERSON, Mark
Mark Anderson is a U.K.-qualified solicitor who specializes in intellectual property and commercial transactions. He founded Anderson & Company, the Technology Law Practice™, in 1994, after having spent seven years with Bristows, a specialist IP law firm in London. He works from offices overlooking the River Thames in the Oxfordshire countryside. Most of his clients are biotech and IT companies and universities in the U.K. and continental Europe. He is a member of the U.K. Intellectual Property Lawyers Association and a member of the IP Working Party of the Law Society of England and Wales. He has written and co-authored several books on IP-related subjects, including Technology Transfer: Law, Practice and Precedents, 2nd ed. (Haywards Heath: Tottel, 2003) and Modern Law of Patents: Butterworths, 2005).
Abstract
Commercialization Agreements: Practical Guidelines in Dealing with Options
Abstract:
An option to acquire rights in university intellectual property (IP) may be encountered in several guises: as a stand-alone agreement, as a clause within an agreement (for example, a sponsored research agreement or a material transfer agreement), or as a “pipeline,” or IP framework, agreement for a university spinout company. Although the grant of an option may often form quite a small part of a larger agreement, the grant can raise important issues in terms of an organization’s IP commercialization strategy. This is especially true of pipeline agreements that are, effectively, a specialized form of option agreement. The purpose of this chapter is threefold:
- to provide an introduction to options, and their uses, and including legal, practical, and negotiating issues
- to provide suggested templates along with guidelines concerning completion of the templates
- to consider and discuss some of issues that are problematic or of particular concern to universities.
The chapter attempts to provide information that is useful for both the beginner and the experienced research-contracts or technology transfer professional. The breadth of material covered may give the mistaken impression that university contracts are wrought with legal and commercial difficulties. Usually, this is not the case. But sometimes differences of expectation, practice, or legal culture can arise between parties negotiating an agreement, particularly in international transactions.
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