Banner - Boxes in Trunk

Distributions & Inventorship

Distribution is the up-front definition of how prosecution expenses and any net benefits (income) will be divided.

INVENTORSHIP DISTRIBUTION POLICY - 91茄子's Royalty Distribution Policy

Whether or not there is an IIA with a collaborating institution, the reimbursements and royalties are distributed according to 91茄子鈥檚 University Policy Manual, Section 10.16, article 21 Patents: Royalties, which is reproduced in the table below.

91茄子's IP Policy States

All direct expenses associated with patenting, protecting and preserving Patent rights, maintaining the Patent, the licensing of Patent and related property rights, and such other costs, taxes or reimbursements as may be necessary by law will be covered before any distribution of royalties. [Please refer to the online Policy for the latest, accurate information about all 91茄子 Policies.]

The remaining amount (net benefits) will be distributed as shown in the table:

Inventor(s) as Personal Property means 40% of the royalty is paid directly to the inventor(s).

Inventor(s) to apply to their research provides a 10% 鈥減ayment鈥 from 91茄子鈥檚 60% share to the inventor(s) for lab equipment or research purposes.

Net-benefits distribution between 91茄子 and Inventors

Table - Inventor split

INTER-INSTITUTIONAL AGREEMENT - IIA's Impact on all Distributions

If research is collaborated between 91茄子 and one or more universities, an IIA defines how expenses and net benefits are to be divided amongst the collaborating institutions, not the inventors.

The division between 91茄子 and its faculty inventor(s) is set by 91茄子鈥檚 IP Policy (See University Policy Manual, Section 10.16, article 21 Patents: Royalties).

First Distribution is to the Institutions

The first consideration for distribution is between 91茄子 and the other University (or Universities). The Inter-institutional Agreement documents the agreed-to division of expenses and net benefits (royalties) between the collaborating institutions, as illustrated in the figure below using arbitrary percentages between 91茄子 and the collaborating institution.

Impact of IIA on Net-benefits distribution between 91茄子, the other institution, and 91茄子 Inventors

NOTE: Royalties are distributed once all patent prosecution and licensing expenses are recouped by 91茄子 and the collaborating institution, if any.

In this hypothetical case, 91茄子 is limited to 55% of the royalties (and expenses). The 55% of the royalties are subsequently divided between 91茄子 and its inventor(s) based on 91茄子鈥檚 IP Policy.

Each inventor鈥檚 share of the 40% Personal Property is based on the agreed-to distribution captured in Sophia, as illustrated in the figure. This division would also apply to the 10% for inventor(s)鈥 lab.

Although how net benefits are distributed amongst the inventors can be changed at any time, if the distribution is not defined prior to royalties coming in, disagreement may arise between the inventors.

The next section explains why external (non-91茄子) inventors have 0% distribution in Sophia.

91茄子 DISTRIBUTIONS IN SOPHIA - How Distributions are Entered in Sophia

Sophia requires the distribution percentages among the inventors to sum to 100%. The example below shows a distribution table for two 91茄子 inventors and two external inventors.

Table in Sophia showing the net-benefit distribution between 91茄子 inventors

The two external co-inventors have 0% in the table because their university sets their distribution and, hence, do not show up in Sophia. Their actual percentages will appear on their Patent Management System.

INVENTORSHIP vs AUTHORSHIP - Why understanding the difference is important

Inventorship is a legal definition, refined through statutes and case law, and is limited to natural persons. It differs significantly from authorship. Inventorship depends only on the claims and not any other text included in the body of the patent application or issued patent. In summary, Inventorship is about who came up with the idea of the invention, while authorship is about who wrote or created the content related to the invention or research.

An inventor in the U.S. is someone who contributes to the conception of any part of an invention. A person who only works at the direction of others, merely identifies a problem to be solved, or executes instructions to perform experiments is not an inventor.

AI cannot be an inventor on a U.S. Patent and AI cannot be an author on a U.S. Copyright.

Two or more individuals may be co-inventors of an invention even though they did not work together on the invention at the same time or in the same place or make the same type or amount of contribution to the invention. However, they must contribute in a significant way to the invention as claimed.

Inventorship can change during the prosecution of a patent application as patent claims are changed. For example, if an individual adds new functionality to the invention which results in one or more additional Claims, that individual is added as a co-inventor. Conversely, if the Claims an individual contributed to the invention are rejected during prosecution, that individual is removed from the list of inventors.

Inaccurate Inventorship can invalidate the Patent or cause the Patent to lose value when licensing or selling the Patent.

Income distribution from an invention is not solely determined by inventorship but can apply to a wider group and involve other staff. An author can be included in the distribution of royalties for a patented invention, but it depends on the specific agreements and contracts in place. The best way to ensure that the author receives a royalty payment is to formally document this arrangement in a written agreement. This agreement should specify the percentage of royalties the author will receive, the payment terms, and any other relevant details.