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AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGY




Bold and creative thinkers at UC Davis push innovation to its limits. Last year
alone, InnovationAccess assessed 177 invention disclosures, filed 159 patent
applications and completed 77 license agreements.



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BROWSE RECENT TECHNOLOGIES

Browse our list of most recently developed technologies below.





 Agriculture & Animal Science / Biotechnology / Communications / Computer
/ Energy / Engineering / Environment / Imaging / Materials & Chemicals / Medical
/ Nanotechnology / Optics and Photonics / Research Tools / Security and Defense
/ Semiconductors / Sensors & Instrumentation / Transportation / Veterinary


Search All Technologies


GETTING STARTED




Our intellectual property officers are experts in their designated fields and
are available to help you find and proceed with acquiring new cutting edge
technologies.


HOW THE LICENSING PROCESS WORKS

To begin the licensing process, you may first identify a desired technology, or
alternatively, you may contact us directly at innovationAccess@ucdavis.edu and
we will assist you in identifying technologies that suit your company’s needs.
You will then have the opportunity to sign a confidentiality agreement and learn
more about the technology.

Once the licensing process is underway, an agreement will be drafted conforming
to common UC patent license terms. At this time, you will also be given the
option of securing a low-cost, time-limited, letter agreement while negotiations
proceed. This time-limited agreement provides you with the commitment that UC
Davis will refrain from further marketing of this technology.


Contact Us





FEATURED INNOVATIONS






PROOF-OF-CONCEPT GRANTS AWARDED TO ADVANCE INNOVATIONS TO COMMERCIAL
OPPORTUNITIES

July 28, 2022/by Caleb Jones




UC DAVIS ENABLED STARTUP DEVELOPING TECHNOLOGY TO COMBAT DEGENERATIVE DISEASES

July 14, 2022/by Caleb Jones




UC DAVIS AFFILIATED STARTUP AIMS TO IMPROVE DETECTION OF CONGENITAL HEART
DEFECTS IN NEWBORNS

April 29, 2021/by Karina Saravia-Butler




REPURPOSING USED ELECTRIC VEHICLE BATTERIES FOR SOLAR POWER STORAGE

April 6, 2021/by Karina Saravia-Butler




UC DAVIS STARTUP DEVELOPS MONITOR THAT MEASURES BABY’S BLOOD OXYGEN SATURATION
IN THE WOMB

June 24, 2020/by Karina Saravia-Butler




Learn more about the

Latest UC Davis Innovations




FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS




All/Copyright/Disclosure/Installation/Intellectual Property/Inventions/Material
Transfer/Misc/Patents/

Why Do I Need to Get a Material Transfer Agreement (MTA) Before I Exchange
Materials with Other Researchers?

Material Transfer Agreements (MTAs) are very important agreements that allow
researchers to either receive or transfer research materials critical to
carrying on research and provide clarity as to what conditions, terms,
limitations the research material may be used and what happens to any
discoveries (i.e., intellectual property) that are made using that research
material. For example, MTAs address liability and indemnification issues, rights
to publish, and whether there are controls over using the materials in other
research. MTAs can also serve to protect patent rights. UC Davis
InnovationAccess negotiates and signs MTAs on behalf of the campus for
transferring all materials, whether in or out, to research institutions,
non-profits or commercial companies. Learn more about transferring research
material or data.

Tell me about confidentiality / non-disclosure / secrecy agreements at UC Davis.
Who signs them?

Good question! Several units at UC Davis are authorized to negotiate and sign
confidentiality agreements, also known as CDAs, non-disclosure agreements or
secrecy agreements. Ideally, you will work with the unit most likely to help you
with the next stage agreement. If you are exploring a research agreement, you
should contact the Sponsored Programs office. If you may provide services, you
will work with either Contracting Services or Sponsored Programs – contact one
of them for assistance. If this regards software, contact the copyright officer
in UC Davis InnovationAccess. If this is about transferring materials or
discussing/licensing technology, UC Davis InnovationAccess will handle it. If
you are going to provide personal consulting services as permitted by university
policy, you will negotiate and sign the confidentiality agreement yourself,
although if you have concerns about language related to ownership of inventions,
UC Davis InnovationAccess will be glad to answer questions about whether your
agreement may conflict with UC policies (e.g., UC Patent Policy, Conflict of
Commitment and Conflict of Interest policies).

Why should I disclose an invention to UC Davis?

Under the Patent Acknowledgment you signed upon starting work at the university,
you have an obligation to disclose all of your inventions, whether or not
patentable, to UC Davis InnovationAccess for evaluation. The disclosure is made
using the Record of Invention (ROI) form to UC Davis InnovationAccess. UC Davis
InnovationAccess will review your ROI and make a determination whether the
university has ownership in the invention as described above and, if yes,
whether or not the university will file a patent application for that invention.
The development, distribution and commercialization of your invention may
provide significant public benefit and generate income for research and
education at UC Davis. A licensee of your invention may wish to sponsor research
in your laboratory. Also, inventors receive a portion of net income generated by
their inventions.

I’ve been working on something interesting. At what point do I submit a Record
of Invention (ROI) form? Should I disclose before I submit an abstract or
manuscript?

The ideal time to disclose an invention to UC Davis InnovationAccess is as soon
as you believe you made a patentable invention (i.e. after it has been reduced
to practice and well before it has been published or presented publicly). If you
disclose an invention after it has been published or publicly presented, some or
all of the patent rights may have been lost.

Disclosing to UC Davis InnovationAccess well before publication affords many
advantages, including proper assessment of the technology, development of an
appropriate invention management and marketing plan, and the ability for
interested companies to evaluate the licensing opportunity.

Complete a Record of Invention (ROI) form, sign it, have your signature
witnessed as indicated, and send it via e-mail to InnovationAccess@ucdavis.edu
with the original ROI sent through intercampus mail, or you can deliver by hand
during office hours. If you are not sure, call UC Davis InnovationAccess for
assistance.

What is a “public disclosure”?

A public disclosure is any publication that is 1) enabling to a person of
ordinary skill in the art, 2) sufficiently accessible, 3) and disclosed under
non-confidential (implied or explicit) circumstances. Journal articles,
including online publications prior to the journal’s hardcopy release, posters,
slide shows, thesis publications, websites, e-mails, verbal presentations, and
even funded grant applications (the NIH posts the title and abstract online and
makes the application available in response to a Freedom of Information request)
may be considered a public disclosure.

In most foreign countries, such a disclosure prior to filing a patent
application will forfeit the ability of the university to obtain patent rights
and, therefore, foreign patent applications will not be filed. The U.S. allows a
one-year grace period from the date of public disclosure to apply for a U.S.
patent. Ideally, an inventor will submit a Record of Invention (ROI) to UC Davis
InnovationAccess before he/she publicly discloses the invention in any detail.
UC Davis InnovationAccess can then review the ROI and determine whether filing
an application is appropriate.

If you are uncertain if a disclosure will be considered an enabling public
disclosure, please contact UC Davis InnovationAccess.

Does filing a Record of Invention (ROI) form protect patent rights?

Filing a formal Record of Invention form with UC Davis InnovationAccess is not
equivalent to filing a patent application and does NOT directly or automatically
protect patent rights. Protection of patent rights is only obtained through
filing a patent application. UC Davis InnovationAccess assesses each invention
in terms of patentability and licensability, in order to determine whether to
file a patent application. If the invention is appropriate for patent filing, UC
Davis InnovationAccess works with the inventor(s) and with outside law firms to
file and prosecute patent applications. UC Davis InnovationAccess will continue
to manage the patent application as long as it is deemed commercially valuable.

What happens to my Record of Invention (ROI)?

An Intellectual Property Officer in UC Davis InnovationAccess will be assigned
to your invention. The invention will be given a UC case number and may be
reported to sponsors or co-inventing institutions, if required. After evaluating
the invention for patentability and commercial potential, a patent application
may be filed.

If the invention is ready to be marketed, UC Davis InnovationAccess will develop
a non-confidential description (NCD) of your invention for marketing purposes. A
list of companies that may be interested in licensing the invention will be
compiled from many sources. Perhaps the most important of these sources are
referrals from the inventors themselves. These companies will be given the NCD
and any public publications. Any third party who desires detailed, confidential
information will be required to sign our standard confidential disclosure
agreement.

Who should be listed as “inventors”?

Unlike authorship of a scientific publication, inventorship is determined in
accordance with U.S. patent law. It is not uncommon for the inventors on a
patent application to not be the same as the authors on a corresponding
scientific publication. A lawful inventor is one who makes an inventive
contribution to one or more of the patent claims that formally define the
invention. Someone who provides equipment, space or money, no matter how
critical to the development of the invention, is not an inventor. Also, someone
who only performs work under the supervision of another party is not an
inventor, even though that person may have worked long hours or conducted a
critical experiment. An issued patent that fails to correctly and completely
name the inventors may be ruled invalid under certain circumstances.

Because patent claims may change as the patent application is being drafted and
also while it is undergoing prosecution by the patent office, the names of the
inventors may change as well. For the purposes of filing your Record of
Invention (ROI) form with UC Davis InnovationAccess, simply name as inventors
any individuals who you believe have made a creative contribution to the
invention (a creative contribution may include contributing a seminal idea
towards the conception of the invention or overcoming a technical hurdle in the
reduction to practice of the invention). Your Intellectual Property Officer can
provide you with a brief description of inventorship and a few relevant
guidelines. When necessary, UC Davis InnovationAccess will retain outside patent
counsel to determine inventorship.

I made an invention on my own time without university resources. Can I
commercialize my invention myself?

Under the Patent Acknowledgment, you agreed to disclose all inventions – even
those made on your own time or as a consultant – to UC Davis InnovationAccess so
that UC Davis InnovationAccess can determine if the university has any rights to
the invention. You will be entitled to own your invention if: a) you made the
invention without using any university facilities or resources, b) the invention
is not subject to a third party obligation, such as a sponsored research grant,
and c) the subject matter of the invention falls outside the scope of the
subject matter of the research conducted by you and your immediate work group.
If the university has no rights to your invention, UC Davis InnovationAccess
will, at your request, provide you with a non-assert letter. More information
can be found here.

I am thinking of starting a company that will focus on the technology developed
in my lab. Should I contact anyone at the university?

UC Davis InnovationAccess is available to discuss your plans to receive future
research funding at UC Davis related to company’s business interests, and how
this might impact your plans to found the company. If your company is interested
in licensing the rights to this invention, this may create a potential conflict
of interest under the California Political Reform Act of 1974. UC Davis has
procedures to help mitigate this conflict.

To start, your Intellectual Property Officer (IPO) will as you to file a Record
of Invention form with UC Davis InnovationAccess. The IPO handling your case
will determine the appropriate licensing strategy for this technology which may
or may not include licensing to your start-up. The IPO has an obligation to seek
the best means to commercialize the invention for the benefit of the public.

I want to copyright or trademark something. Where do I start?

While they’re all intellectual property, copyrights and trademarks are handled
differently than patents and material transfers at UC Davis.

Copyrights happen automatically now – you don’t have to actually do anything to
get one. Details about copyrights, including how to get and register them, is
here.

Trademarks also happen automatically – when the eligible mark is used in
interstate commerce, you have a trade (or service) mark. Registration is
unnecessary and expensive, but sometimes a very good idea. UC Davis trademarks
must be handled by specialized attorneys hired by UC. For more information and
to get the process started, go here.

What’s the difference between copyrights, patents and trademarks?

Put simply, the three protect different aspects of the products of our minds,
hence the name intellectual property. Patents protect ideas. Copyrights protect
original expressions of those ideas. And trademarks protect the value associated
with things like name, slogans, and logos associated with a commercial product
which is often associated with something patented or protected by copyright. For
more information on patents at UC Davis go here, and for more on trademarks at
UC Davis, go here.

There are actually six copyrights – the legal rights to control what people can
do with creative work(s), usually called “works” for short. Federal copyright
law gives copyright owners exclusive rights to:

 * Copy the work
 * Distribute the copies
 * Make the derivative (new) works such as translations, modifications and
   format changes
 * Publicly perform the work
 * Publicly display the work, and
 * Digitally transmit sound recordings.

For the limited lifetime of the copyrights, one needs permission of a copyright
owner to do any of these but there are exceptions including certain library and
archive uses (beyond the scope of this website), Fair Use and the TEACH Act for
the distance education.

What works are protected by copyright?

Copyright protects “original works of authorship” that are “fixed in any
tangible medium of expression…” This means literary works, including software
and web pages; musical works (including words); dramatic works (including
music); pantomimes and choreography; pictorial, graphic and sculptural works;
motion pictures and audiovisual works; sound recordings; and architecture.

Ephemeral works such as unrecorded speech, music or dance are not fixed in a
tangible medium and so are not protected by copyright, although the prewritten
text to a lecture would be. A simple way to protect your creativity is to record
it!

Material that is not eligible for copyright protection includes ideas, facts,
procedures, processes, systems, and concepts, although those might be
patentable; nor titles, short phrases, and names, which might be trademarks; nor
works containing no original authorship, works with expired copyrights, and
works created by U.S. government employees in the performance of their jobs.
Material that is not protected by copyright is in the Public Domain and can be
freely used, including for the creation of new copyright-protected works. For
more, go here.

Who owns copyrights?

Ownership can be complicated, especially in a research institution. You can find
great information on ownership of works whose creation is some way associated
with the University of California go here.

How long do copyrights last?

The answer to this has changed several times since the first US Copyright Act in
1790. The earliest protection lasted 14 years from registration. As of January
1, 1978, copyrights spring into being automatically and last for the life of the
author plus 70 years, and it can be longer for unpublished or corporate works.

To make it more complicated, in the past some works which would otherwise
qualify for copyright protection actually didn’t because some formality such as
registering with the Copyright Office or including a copyright notice was
skipped; these are said to have gone straight to the Public Domain. There are
some great tools online to help figure this out. But to be safe, assume that all
types of works which can be protected, are protected, even if there’s no
copyright notice, and be particularly careful with new media such as material on
the Internet.

Can I use someone else’s work for teaching, research or in my coursework?

This is a good question which warrants a detailed answer. Go here.

Do I need to do anything before I distribute UC Davis’s copyrighted work?

Of course! Sharing copyright-protected work that belongs to The Regents of the
University of California requires thoughtful consideration, but can be simple
and quick if you plan ahead, as many necessary steps are easier to do as the
material is created rather than after-the-fact. For more information, go here.

How do I publish my article as ‘open access?’

Historically, academic journals required authors to assign their personal
copyrights to their scholarly works in order to be published. Sometimes authors
had to pay additional costs! The trend is towards “open access,” which means
that the article has been published in a print or electronic journal that makes
articles available at no charge, although sometimes after a period of paid
access. This makes research results more widely available, sooner.

To assist authors in negotiating terms of publication, the NIH in 2008 began
requiring that articles resulting from NIH funding be made available in “open
access” within 12 months. In July 2013 the university established its own UC
Open Access Policy to assist authors in negotiating publication agreements.

Since publication agreements are usually signed by research authors rather than
The Regents, compliance is up to the authors. Changing publication agreements
retroactively can be difficult or impossible, so advance planning is key, which
can start with choosing author-friendly publishers using resources such as
the Sherpa RoMEO database. Information to help authors do so is the UC Davis
library website.

I want to ‘open source’ my software. How do I do that?

“Open Source” (or OS) is a commonly misunderstood term; it means simply that the
software source code is available. The conditions – shareability, commercial or
nonprofit use limits, cost – are in the copyright license that goes with the
particular code. There are hundreds of “official” open source licenses, each
with different terms and conditions.

Take a look at “Software is Special” and the answer to FAQ 6 above for more
information on how to provide the information the campus copyright officer needs
to determine the appropriate open source license for your code.

I found my syllabus/old exams/course materials on a website which I did NOT give
permission to do so! How do I make them stop?

As the copyright owner of your course materials, you’re the only one who can go
after these sites for copyright infringement. You could send a “cease and
desist” letter to the owner of the website. However, Congress passed the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) in 1998 to provide a usually-simpler way to do
it. Basically, you send a “notification” with certain information/statements to
the DMCA agent (list here) for the Internet Service Provider (ISP) hosting the
website. If your notification has all the right information they have to take
your copyright-protected material down “expeditiously.”

For Course Hero, use their form
here: https://www.coursehero.com/copyright-infringement/

However, this is a bit whack-a-mole – you will need to monitor the website(s)
for new postings or materials and repeat the DMCA notification each time. A more
comprehensive way to approach this is to change the behavior of the students who
are providing your intellectual property to the website. Most often they simply
don’t know this is copyright infringement rather than intentionally wanting to
violate your intellectual property. Students for time immemorial have shared
notes and old exams, and the concept that doing it online is very different than
passing out paper copies just doesn’t occur to them. Suggestions:

 * Let your students know that what they are doing is illegal!
 * Put a copyright notice with your name and the year published on all of your
   materials!
 * Proactively announce at the beginning of and during your course that your
   course materials are just that – yours – and that prior to putting them on a
   website your explicit permission should be requested. (Note: there are some
   times when that may not be required, such as to comply with the ADA, but the
   point is to make them stop and think.)

What is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and why did I lose my
Internet connection?

The DMCA (as commonly abbreviated) was enacted in 1998 as a way for copyright
owners to address copyright infringement via illegal file sharing through
internet service provider networks. UC Davis is considered one of those
networks, and The Regents comply with the DMCA for a variety of reasons. You can
get more information here.

Do I really need to know this stuff about copyright?

Yes. It may sound complicated, but copyright relating to UC Davis gets easier
with time. Everyone is responsible for taking care of the copyrights they deal
with; since each situation depends on the facts, the person who knows the facts
best is in the best position to do the right thing. Getting it wrong can be
expensive and can potentially lead to loss of a job or criminal liability! Rare,
it’s true, but it happens.

And complying with copyright law is the right thing to do – we respect other
people’s copyrights, and we expect them to respect ours.


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