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Greenhouses for Innovation: Balancing Patent Rights and Public Good with Laura Peter
Episode Description
Laura Peters provides rare perspective to intellectual property awareness, having served as Deputy Director at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office under Andre Iancu before becoming Executive Director of Research at UNC Charlotte. She tackles persistent misconceptions about patents in university settings, where publication incentives often overshadow commercialization opportunities.
Peters explains how patents function as temporary greenhouses for innovators—protecting ideas for 20 years before releasing them to public knowledge. Her work focuses on helping researchers understand that intellectual property extends far beyond patents and that securing rights doesn't conflict with open knowledge principles.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
- Universities reward publications over patents, creating commercialization barriers
- Researchers often conflate all IP rights with patents, missing broader protections
- Open knowledge advocates can still benefit from patent rights and public dedication
- Patents publish after 18 months, contributing to collective innovation knowledge
- Trade secrets are rising as patent uncertainty increases in AI and other sectors
- Subject matter eligibility reforms could strengthen innovation protection
- University culture change requires extensive education and community building
- Patents preserve innovator legacy across global innovation records
Understanding IP Matters is brought to you by the nonprofit Center for Intellectual Property Understanding (CIPU) with generous support from its partners and sponsors. The podcast provides leading innovators and experts the space to share their IP stories.