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Survey of Universities: Effects of Madey v Duke Decision on the Research
Exemption
The 2002 Federal Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in Madey v. Duke held that the experimental use defense against
a claim of patent infringement is “very narrow and strictly limited”
and does not apply per se to university research. Until this
decision, it had been widely accepted that an experimental use
exemption existed for purely scientific research to study and
understand a patented invention, including its limited use to make new
innovations that may or may not be outside the scope of the original
patent. This decision may have an impact on university research,
either through a chilling effect through fear of infringement or
increased costs on the part of universities to conduct patent searches
and acquire licenses to patented technologies to undertake a project.
To assess the impact of this ruling on the
conduct of university research, the Association of American
Universities (AAU), the Association of American Medical Colleges
(AAMA), the Council on Governmental Relations (COGR), and the National
Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges (NASULGC)
organized a workshop last fall, which convened university officials
involved in developing and administering institutional policies
governing university research and intellectual
property.
Workshop participants agreed that additional
data would be needed to fully assess the impact of the Madey v. Duke
decision. Accordingly, the workshop sponsoring organizations,
working with SIPPI, have prepared a survey designed to provide
information to the membership of AAU, COGR, AAMC, and NASULGC about
challenges to universities’ research use of patented
technologies.

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