Federal laboratories play a unique role in the U.S. economy. Research and development conducted at these labs has contributed to the advancement or improvement of such key general-purpose technologies as nuclear energy, computers, the Internet, genomics, satellite navigation, the Global Positioning System, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality. Digital output from federal laboratories includes data, metadata, images, software, code, tools, databases, algorithms, and statistical models. Importantly, these digital products are nonrivalrous, meaning that unlike physical products, they can be copied at little or no cost and used by many without limit or additional cost.
Advancing Commercialization of Digital Products from Federal Laboratories explores opportunities to add economic value to U.S. industry through enhanced utilization of intellectual property around digital products created at federal laboratories. This report examines the current state of commercialization of digital products developed at the federal labs and, to a limited extent, by extramural awardees, to help identify barriers to commercialization and technology transfer, taking into account differences between government-owned, contractor-operated (GOCO) and government-owned, government-operated (GOGO) federal labs.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Summary
1 Introduction
2 The U.S. Federal Laboratory System
3 Digital Products and Federal Policy for the Innovation Economy
4 Patents, Trade Secrets, Digital Products, and Federal Laboratories
5 Copyrights, Digital Products, and Federal Laboratories
6 Technology Transfer Pathways for Digital Products
7 Measuring the Commercialization of Digital Products from Federal Laboratories
References
APPENDIXES
Appendix A: Agendas
Appendix B: Biographies of Committee Members
Appendix C: Definitions of Digital Products
Appendix D: List of Federal Laboratories