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Academic researchers who鈥檝e developed a potentially patentable invention are faced with quite a complex landscape when it comes to the interplay between patenting and publishing, says 麻豆宿舍电视剧Fellow, Professor Frank Tietze.
In , Professor Tietze offers an introductory insight to those who might embark on the daunting tasks of navigating of both publishing and patenting.
Professor Tiezte is Professor of Innovation Engineering at the University of Cambridge. Research at his Innovation and IP Management (IIPM) laboratory focuses on the role of Intellectual Property (IP) in collaborative innovation processes and systems for emerging and sustainable technologies.
鈥淧atents have a role to play in our common pursuit of scientific and technological progress,鈥 he says, 鈥渘ot the least because they encourage public disclosure of technical and inventive knowledge which otherwise might stay secret.
鈥淥nly if knowledge is being disclosed, others can build on it. In fact, over the years I came to understand that patent databases can be considered the world鈥檚 oldest and largest open-source repositories for technical knowledge.鈥
But does patenting something mean you can鈥檛 then publish about it? And does publishing mean you can鈥檛 patent?
鈥淪ubmitting a patent application should not prevent you from publishing the related research,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he other way around is more likely to present a problem, possibly a serious problem. If you publish a paper first and then want to file a patent application you can encounter problems with the 鈥榥ovelty鈥 criterion [the principle that the invention must not have previously not have been made public], which can ultimately lead to the patent application being rejected.
鈥淚n any case, I would always advise being very careful with publishing if you have made an invention that can be considered patentable.鈥
You can .
Please note, these quotes, and the Q&A in Nature Communications, should not be regarded as legal advice.