Glen,

With respect to publicly financed research ending up in the pulbic sector,
you expressed contempt at "misguided  government people who think the best
way to put the technology to the greatest use is to allow anyone to use and
profit from it."

I may have misinterpreted you position, if so correct me, but if I hadn't,
please explain your position.

In my world, the only place for publicly financed technologies are the
public sector. Any other solution hinders futher development, stiffles
market forces, and costs the public big time for what they have already in
essence paid for.

Ted Swarts
Kelowna, British Columbia

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <biofuel@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 09, 2002 8:07 PM
Subject: Re: [biofuel] Solid Catalyst


> Re the solid catalyst that was presumedly developed at Idaho National
Energy
> Lab about three years ago.  How much info was divulged at the time and was
> any attempt ever made to patent the technology?  Patent laws change, but
the
> last time I looked at it, after a public disclosure, the inventor has one
> year to initiate a patent application.  If after a year has elapsed and no
> attempt is made to patent it, the technology everts to the public domain.
> One of the issues a government contractor lab would want to avoid would be
to
> avoid the appearance of preferential treatment.  If the technology were of
> critical importance in an industry, such as it is alleged is the case
here,
> one way to avoid that appearance of preferential treatment would be to let
> the technology revert into the public domain.  Alternatively, if the
> technology were patented, and the technology was not of any particular
value
> to an Agency mission program, why risk the charge of preferential
treatment
> by, say, allowing one of the "big eight" to buy and bury it?  Then, in
> addition, there are  some misguided  government people who think the best
way
> to put the technology to the greatest use is to allow anyone to use and
> profit from it.  Methinks they probably know better, but this position
suits
> their purpose,  which, as indicated, is to avoid  being put in a position
of
> being accused of preferential treatment.  I suggest  do a search to
determine
> whether the invention has been sufficiently disclosed, followed by an
elapsed
> time of at least one year,  to cause the invention to revert to the public
> domain.   Since you have the name of the inventors,  do a literature
search
> to see what turns up.   The procedure used to be, when I worked at a
national
> lab as a development engineer, to submit the disclosure to the government
> contractor patent ofifice, to see whether the government wanted to patent
the
> idea.  If it wasn't strictly mission related, chances are the government
> wasn't interested.  Then, if sufficiently interested, the inventor had to
> option of requesting that he  be allowed to  patent same as in individual.
> Given the urge to publish, the invention  usually had been disclosed in
the
> open literature early in the process.  The government then had a choice:
> allow the individual to patent, or allow the patent to revert into the
publc
> domain, by delaying any decision until 12 months after the disclosure.  I
> remember one case, the "Higgins Ion Exchange Column," where the government
> allowed Higgins to patent, which he did.  Shortly thereafter he left the
> employ of the government contractor and developed a profitable business
> marketing his exchange column.  If this "solid catalyst" item is as
important
> as it appears to be,  the contractor lab could be faced with losing a good
> man, as in the case of Higgins, if they allow the inventor to patent the
> solid catalyst invention.  I suggest, get in touch with the inventor,
offer
> him a joint venture, and support him in whatever way possible.  The
invention
> needs to be patented, because whatever belongs to everyone really belongs
to
> noone.  Unless a proprietary position can be developed, I believe there
would
> be little possibility to develop the necessary funding to get this
technology
> into the marketplace.   But, given the state of the art that is being
> developed here, together, with a proprietary position with this patent --
> ;who knows what could result?
>  .
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
> http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
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>
>

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