Date: 2008
Type: Working Paper
More Secrecy...More Knowledge Disclosure? On Disclosure Outside of Patents
Working Paper, EUI MWP, 2008/02
PONCE, Carlos J., More Secrecy...More Knowledge Disclosure? On Disclosure Outside of Patents, EUI MWP, 2008/02 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/8091
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
It is an important concern that innovators by waiving their patent rights might obstruct
the disclosure of knowledge and therefore retard progress. This paper explores this
concern by using a simple model of two innovators who must decide sequentially
whether to protect an innovation with limited patent rights. Two features are crucial to
the disclosure decision. First: the second inventor may use his valid patent right to
exclude the first inventor from using a secret invention. Second: when waiving her
patent right, the first inventor may disclose her knowledge outside of a patent.
Disclosure informs the Patent Office and courts that related inventions from later
inventors may lack novelty and hence should not be protected by valid patent rights.
This paper shows that when the first inventor chooses not to patent the innovation, the
amount of disclosure is related to the intellectual property choices in a paradoxical way:
the amount of disclosure will be ‘large’ (‘small’) when the second inventor chooses
secrecy (patenting) to protect the innovation too.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/8091
ISSN: 1830-7728
Series/Number: EUI MWP; 2008/02
Publisher: European University Institute