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In
the event a college or university provides substantial resources
to a faculty member or professional staff member for creation
of a work and the work was not an institutional work created
under a sponsorship agreement, individual agreement, or special
commission agreement, the college or university and the creator
shall own the intellectual property rights jointly in proportion
to the respective contributions made. Substantial circumstances
exist when resources provided are beyond the normal support
services extended to individuals for development of work products.
(Board Policy 3.26, Part 4, Subpart B.5)
The
following questions may help you make a determination about
when and whether your use of college or university resources
will be considered "substantial" (or when it will at least
raise a question as to whether the college or university is
entitled to joint ownership in the created work):
- Will
I use college or university resources beyond normal services
available to other faculty members? Will I pay for the use
of these resources?
- Will
I receive some additional compensation from the college
or university in the form of a monetary payment, grant,
release time, or some other benefit for my development/creation
of the intellectual property?
- Will
the college or university provide support such as money,
staff, facilities, computer resources, etc., that is beyond
normal services available to other faculty members and critical
to the development/creation of the intellectual property?
If
the answer to any of the above is "yes," a potential "substantial
use" situation could arise. You should take steps to clarify
ownership issues with the college or university before work
begins so there is no confusion in the future about your ownership
and use of the intellectual property created.
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