“Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension"

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

“Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension". / Minssen, Timo; Mimler, Marc.

3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. red. / Rosa Maria Ballardini; Marcus Norrgård; Jouni Partanen. Wolters Kluwer , 2017. s. 117-148.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Minssen, T & Mimler, M 2017, “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension". i RM Ballardini, M Norrgård & J Partanen (red), 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. Wolters Kluwer , s. 117-148. <http://retro.kluweriplaw.com/CommonUI/book-toc.aspx?book=TOC-Ballardini-2017>

APA

Minssen, T., & Mimler, M. (2017). “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension". I R. M. Ballardini, M. Norrgård, & J. Partanen (red.), 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology (s. 117-148). Wolters Kluwer . http://retro.kluweriplaw.com/CommonUI/book-toc.aspx?book=TOC-Ballardini-2017

Vancouver

Minssen T, Mimler M. “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension". I Ballardini RM, Norrgård M, Partanen J, red., 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. Wolters Kluwer . 2017. s. 117-148

Author

Minssen, Timo ; Mimler, Marc. / “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension". 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. red. / Rosa Maria Ballardini ; Marcus Norrgård ; Jouni Partanen. Wolters Kluwer , 2017. s. 117-148

Bibtex

@inbook{73507fa640ea4a4bb96c15c21834c5b4,
title = "“Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension{"}",
abstract = "The enormous opportunities and the broader implications of bioprinting raise a wide variety of crucial legal issues. These may range from the regulation of the science and its{\textquoteright} societal effects to questions regarding the commercialization of the technology. Regarding commercialization aspects, one issue that must be addressed concerns the question of what types of products and uses should be regarded as protectable subject matter under the relevant intellectual property right (IPR) frameworks. Considering that the availability IPRs might have a great impact on where the greatest investments and scientific efforts in this technology will made, this is an utterly important question. In addition to trade secrets, copyrights, trademarks and other IPR-related rights, patents will certainly play a major role in that respect and will be at the focus of this paper. In this paper, we examine what sorts of bioprinting- inventions are being patented or would be- protectable under European and US patent laws. Rather than focusing on the highly relevant questions that 3D printing poses for patent infringement doctrines and research exemptions , this paper concentrates on the question of patentable subject matter and patentability. To this end, we start out by (1) briefly describing the relevant state of the art in bioprinting. This allows us to better describe and understand the current bioprinting patent landscape (2), and to examine in how far any future inventions stemming from such technology would meet the most basic U.S. and European patent requirements (3). A related question is of course, if some bioprinting technologies should be categorically excluded from patentability, i.e. even when meeting the most basic patent criteria. We address this specific issue by discussing patent- limitations and morality exclusions from patent law (4), which will allow us to complete the paper with some concluding remarks (5). Suggested Citation: Minssen, Timo and Mimler, Marc, Patenting Bioprinting-Technologies in the US and Europe– the 5th Element in the 3rd Dimension (April 4, 2017). Minssen, T & Mimler, M 2017, “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension{"}, Working Paper, forthcoming in: RM Ballardini, M Norrg{\aa}rd & J Partanen (red), 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. Wolters Klu. Available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2946209 .",
author = "Timo Minssen and Marc Mimler",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789041183828",
pages = "117--148",
editor = "Ballardini, {Rosa Maria} and Norrg{\aa}rd, {Marcus } and Partanen, {Jouni }",
booktitle = "3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology",
publisher = "Wolters Kluwer ",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension"

AU - Minssen, Timo

AU - Mimler, Marc

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - The enormous opportunities and the broader implications of bioprinting raise a wide variety of crucial legal issues. These may range from the regulation of the science and its’ societal effects to questions regarding the commercialization of the technology. Regarding commercialization aspects, one issue that must be addressed concerns the question of what types of products and uses should be regarded as protectable subject matter under the relevant intellectual property right (IPR) frameworks. Considering that the availability IPRs might have a great impact on where the greatest investments and scientific efforts in this technology will made, this is an utterly important question. In addition to trade secrets, copyrights, trademarks and other IPR-related rights, patents will certainly play a major role in that respect and will be at the focus of this paper. In this paper, we examine what sorts of bioprinting- inventions are being patented or would be- protectable under European and US patent laws. Rather than focusing on the highly relevant questions that 3D printing poses for patent infringement doctrines and research exemptions , this paper concentrates on the question of patentable subject matter and patentability. To this end, we start out by (1) briefly describing the relevant state of the art in bioprinting. This allows us to better describe and understand the current bioprinting patent landscape (2), and to examine in how far any future inventions stemming from such technology would meet the most basic U.S. and European patent requirements (3). A related question is of course, if some bioprinting technologies should be categorically excluded from patentability, i.e. even when meeting the most basic patent criteria. We address this specific issue by discussing patent- limitations and morality exclusions from patent law (4), which will allow us to complete the paper with some concluding remarks (5). Suggested Citation: Minssen, Timo and Mimler, Marc, Patenting Bioprinting-Technologies in the US and Europe– the 5th Element in the 3rd Dimension (April 4, 2017). Minssen, T & Mimler, M 2017, “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension", Working Paper, forthcoming in: RM Ballardini, M Norrgård & J Partanen (red), 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. Wolters Klu. Available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2946209 .

AB - The enormous opportunities and the broader implications of bioprinting raise a wide variety of crucial legal issues. These may range from the regulation of the science and its’ societal effects to questions regarding the commercialization of the technology. Regarding commercialization aspects, one issue that must be addressed concerns the question of what types of products and uses should be regarded as protectable subject matter under the relevant intellectual property right (IPR) frameworks. Considering that the availability IPRs might have a great impact on where the greatest investments and scientific efforts in this technology will made, this is an utterly important question. In addition to trade secrets, copyrights, trademarks and other IPR-related rights, patents will certainly play a major role in that respect and will be at the focus of this paper. In this paper, we examine what sorts of bioprinting- inventions are being patented or would be- protectable under European and US patent laws. Rather than focusing on the highly relevant questions that 3D printing poses for patent infringement doctrines and research exemptions , this paper concentrates on the question of patentable subject matter and patentability. To this end, we start out by (1) briefly describing the relevant state of the art in bioprinting. This allows us to better describe and understand the current bioprinting patent landscape (2), and to examine in how far any future inventions stemming from such technology would meet the most basic U.S. and European patent requirements (3). A related question is of course, if some bioprinting technologies should be categorically excluded from patentability, i.e. even when meeting the most basic patent criteria. We address this specific issue by discussing patent- limitations and morality exclusions from patent law (4), which will allow us to complete the paper with some concluding remarks (5). Suggested Citation: Minssen, Timo and Mimler, Marc, Patenting Bioprinting-Technologies in the US and Europe– the 5th Element in the 3rd Dimension (April 4, 2017). Minssen, T & Mimler, M 2017, “Patenting Bioprinting Technologies in the US and Europe– The 5th element in the 3rd dimension", Working Paper, forthcoming in: RM Ballardini, M Norrgård & J Partanen (red), 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology. Wolters Klu. Available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2946209 .

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9789041183828

SP - 117

EP - 148

BT - 3D printing, Intellectual Property and Innovation – Insights from Law and Technology

A2 - Ballardini, Rosa Maria

A2 - Norrgård, Marcus

A2 - Partanen, Jouni

PB - Wolters Kluwer

ER -

ID: 169882153