[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 14, Volume 5]
[Revised as of January 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 14CFR1274.208]

[Page 472-476]
 
                     TITLE 14--AERONAUTICS AND SPACE
 
                   CHAPTER V--NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
                          SPACE ADMINISTRATION
 
PART 1274_COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS WITH COMMERCIAL FIRMS--Table of Contents
 
                  Subpart 1274.2_Pre-Award Requirements
 
Sec.  1274.208  Intellectual property.

    (a) Intellectual property rights. A cooperative agreement covers the 
disposition of rights to intellectual property between NASA and the 
recipient. If the recipient is a consortium or partnership, rights 
flowing between multiple organizations in a consortium must be 
negotiated separately and formally documented, preferably in the 
Articles of Collaboration.
    (b) Rights in patents. Patent rights clauses are required by statute 
and regulation. The clauses exist for recipients of the agreement 
whether they are--
    (1) Other than small business or nonprofit organizations (generally 
referred to as large businesses) or
    (2) Small businesses or nonprofit organizations.
    (c) Inventions. There are five situations in which inventions may 
arise under a cooperative agreement--
    (1) Recipient Inventions;
    (2) Subcontractor Inventions;
    (3) NASA Inventions;
    (4) NASA Support Contractor Inventions; and
    (5) Joint Inventions with Recipient.
    (d) Recipient inventions. (1) A recipient, if a large business, is 
subject to section 305 of the National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 
(42 U.S.C. 2457) relating to property rights in inventions. The term 
``invention'' includes

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any invention, discovery, improvement, or innovation. Title to an 
invention made under a cooperative agreement by a large business 
recipient initially vests with NASA. The recipient may request a waiver 
under the NASA Patent Waiver Regulations to obtain title to inventions 
made under the agreement. Such a request may be made in advance of the 
agreement (or 30 days thereafter) for all inventions made under the 
agreement. Alternatively, requests may be made on a case-by-case basis 
any time an individual invention is made. Such waivers are liberally and 
expeditiously granted after review by NASA's Invention and Contribution 
Board and approval by NASA's General Counsel. When a waiver is granted, 
any inventions made in the performance of work under the agreement are 
subject to certain reporting, election and filing requirements, a 
royalty-free license to the Government, march-in rights, and certain 
other reservations.
    (2) A recipient, if a small business or nonprofit organization, may 
elect to retain title to its inventions. The term ``nonprofit 
organization'' is defined in 35 U.S.C. 201(i) and includes universities 
and other institutions of higher education or an organization of the 
type described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. The 
Government obtains an irrevocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free license.
    (e) Subcontractor inventions--(1) Large business. If a recipient 
enters into a subcontract (or similar arrangement) with a large business 
organization for experimental, developmental, research, design or 
engineering work in support of the agreement to be performed in the 
United States, its possessions, or Puerto Rico, section 305 of the Space 
Act applies. The clause applicable to large business organizations is to 
be used (suitably modified to identify the parties) in any subcontract. 
The subcontractor may request a waiver under the NASA Patent Waiver 
Regulations to obtain rights to inventions made under the subcontract 
just as a large business recipient can (see paragraph (d)(1) of this 
section). It is strongly recommended that a prospective large business 
subcontractor contact the NASA installation Patent Counsel or 
Intellectual Property Counsel to assure that the right procedures are 
followed. Just like the recipient, any inventions made in the 
performance of work under the agreement are subject to certain 
reporting, election and filing requirements, a royalty-free license to 
the Government, march-in rights, and certain other reservations.
    (2) Non-profit organization or small business. In the event the 
recipient enters into a subcontract (or similar arrangement) with a 
domestic nonprofit organization or a small business firm for 
experimental, developmental, or research work to be performed under the 
agreement, the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 200 et seq. regarding ``Patent 
Rights in Inventions Made With Federal Assistance,'' apply. The 
subcontractor has the first option to elect title to any inventions made 
in the performance of work under the agreement, subject to specific 
reporting, election and filing requirements, a royalty-free license to 
the Government, march-in rights, and certain other reservations that are 
specifically set forth.
    (3) Work outside the United States. If the recipient subcontracts 
for work to be done outside the United States, its possessions or Puerto 
Rico, the NASA installation Patent Counsel or Intellectual Property 
Counsel should be contacted for the proper patent rights clause to use 
and the procedures to follow.
    (4) Notwithstanding paragraphs (e)(1), (2), and (3) of this section, 
and in recognition of the recipient's substantial contribution, the 
recipient is authorized, subject to rights of NASA set forth elsewhere 
in the agreement, to:
    (i) Acquire by negotiation and mutual agreement rights to a 
subcontractor's subject inventions as the recipient may deem necessary; 
or
    (ii) If unable to reach agreement pursuant to paragraph (e)(4)(i) of 
this section, request that NASA invoke exceptional circumstances as 
necessary pursuant to 37 CFR 401.3(a)(2) if the prospective 
subcontractor is a small business firm or nonprofit organization, or for 
all other organizations, request that such rights for the recipient be 
included as an additional reservation in a waiver granted pursuant to 14 
CFR 1245.1. The exercise of this exception

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does not change the flow down of the applicable patent rights clause to 
subcontractors. Applicable laws and regulations require that title to 
inventions made under a subcontract must initially reside in either the 
subcontractor or NASA, not the recipient. This exception does not change 
that. The exception does authorize the recipient to negotiate and reach 
mutual agreement with the subcontractor for the grant-back of rights. 
Such grant-back could be an option for an exclusive license or an 
assignment, depending on the circumstances.
    (f) NASA inventions. NASA will use reasonable efforts to report 
inventions made by its employees as a consequence of, or which bear a 
direct relation to, the performance of specified NASA activities under 
an agreement. Upon timely request, NASA will use its best efforts to a 
grant recipient first option to acquire either an exclusive or 
partially-exclusive, revocable, royalty-bearing license, on terms to be 
negotiated, for any patent applications and patents covering such 
inventions. This exclusive or partially-exclusive license to the 
recipient will be subject to the retention of rights by or on behalf of 
the Government for Government purposes.
    (g) NASA support contractor inventions. It is preferred that NASA 
support contractors be excluded from performing any of NASA's 
responsibilities under an agreement since the rights obtained by a NASA 
support contractor could work against the rights needed by the 
recipient. In the event NASA support contractors are tasked by NASA to 
work under the agreement and inventions are made by support contractor 
employees, the support contractor will normally retain title to its 
employee inventions in accordance with 35 U.S.C. 202, 14 CFR part 1245, 
and E.O. 12591. In the event the recipient decides not to pursue right 
to title in any such invention and NASA obtains title to such 
inventions, upon timely request, NASA will use its best efforts to grant 
the recipient first option to acquire either an exclusive or partially 
exclusive, revocable, royalty-bearing license, upon terms to be 
negotiated, for any patent applications and patents covering such 
inventions. This exclusive or partially-exclusive license to the 
recipient will be subject to the retention of rights by or on behalf of 
the Government for Government purposes.
    (h) Joint inventions. (1) NASA and the recipient agree to use 
reasonable efforts to identify and report to each other any inventions 
made jointly between NASA employees (or employees of NASA support 
contractors) and employees of Recipient. For large businesses, the 
Associate General Counsel (Intellectual Property) may agree that the 
United States will refrain, for a specified period, from exercising its 
undivided interest in a manner inconsistent with the recipient's 
commercial interest. For small business firms and nonprofit 
organizations, the Associate General Counsel (Intellectual Property) may 
agree to assign or transfer whatever rights NASA may acquire in a 
subject invention from its employee to the recipient as authorized by 35 
U.S.C. 202(e). The agreement officer negotiating the agreement with 
small business firms and nonprofit organizations can agree, up front, 
that NASA will assign whatever rights it may acquire in a subject 
invention from its employee to the small business firm or nonprofit 
organization. Requests under this paragraph shall be made through the 
Center Patent Counsel.
    (2) NASA support contractors may be joint inventors. If a NASA 
support contractor employee is a joint inventor with a NASA employee, 
the same provisions apply as those for NASA support contractor 
inventions (see paragraph (g) of this section). The NASA support 
contractor will retain or obtain nonexclusive licenses to those 
inventions in which NASA obtains title. If a NASA support contractor 
employee is a joint inventor with a recipient employee, the NASA support 
contractor and recipient will become joint owners of those inventions in 
which they have elected to retain title or requested and have been 
granted waiver of title. Where the NASA support contractor has not 
elected to retain title or has not been granted waiver of title, NASA 
will jointly own the invention with the Recipient.
    (i) Licenses to recipient(s). (1) Any exclusive or partially 
exclusive commercial licenses are to be royalty-bearing

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consistent with Government-wide policy in licensing its inventions. It 
also provides an opportunity for royalty-sharing with the employee-
inventor, consistent with Government-wide policy under the Federal 
Technology Transfer Act.
    (2) Upon application in compliance with 37 CFR Part 404--Licensing 
of Government Owned Inventions, all recipients shall be granted a 
revocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free license in each patent application 
filed in any country on a subject invention and any resulting patent in 
which the Government obtains title. Because cooperative agreements are 
cost sharing cooperative arrangements with a purpose of benefiting the 
public by improving the competitiveness of the recipient and the 
Government receives an irrevocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free license 
in each recipient subject invention, it is only equitable that the 
recipient receive, at a minimum, a revocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free 
license in NASA inventions and NASA contractor inventions where NASA has 
acquired title.
    (3) Once a recipient has exercised its option to apply for an 
exclusive or partially exclusive license, a notice, identifying the 
invention and the recipient, is published in the Federal Register, 
providing the public opportunity for filing written objections for 60 
days.
    (j) Preference for United States manufacture. Despite any other 
provision, the recipient agrees that any products embodying subject 
inventions or produced through the use of subject inventions shall be 
manufactured substantially in the United States. ``Manufactured 
substantially in the United States'' means the product must have over 50 
percent of its components manufactured in the United States. This 
requirement is met if the cost to the recipient of the components mined, 
produced, or manufactured in the United States exceeds 50 percent of the 
cost of all components required to make the product. In making this 
determination, only the product and its components shall be considered. 
The cost of each component includes transportation costs to the place of 
incorporation into the product and any applicable duty whether or not a 
duty-free entry certificate is issued. Components of foreign origin of 
the same class or kind for which determinations have been made in 
accordance with FAR 25.101(a) are treated as domestic. Scrap generated, 
collected, and prepared for processing in the United States is 
considered domestic. The intent of this provision is to support 
manufacturing jobs in the United States regardless of the status of the 
recipient as a domestic or foreign controlled company. However, in 
individual cases, the requirement to manufacture substantially in the 
United States, may be waived by the Assistant Administrator for 
Procurement (Code HS) upon a showing by the recipient that under the 
circumstances domestic manufacture is not commercially feasible.
    (k) Space Act agreements. Invention and patent rights in cooperative 
agreements must comply with statutory and regulatory provisions. Where 
circumstances permit, a Space Act Agreement is available as an 
alternative instrument which can be more flexible in the area of 
invention and patent rights.
    (l) Data rights. Data rights provisions can and should be tailored 
to best achieve the needs and objectives of the respective parties 
concerned.
    (1) The data rights clause at Sec.  1274.905 assumes a substantially 
equal cost sharing relationship where collaborative research, 
experimental, developmental, engineering, demonstration, or design 
activities are to be carried out, such that it is likely that 
``proprietary'' information will be developed and/or exchanged under the 
agreement. If cost sharing is unequal or no extensive research, 
experimental, developmental, engineering, demonstration, or design 
activities are likely, a different set of clauses may be appropriate.
    (2) The primary question that must be answered when developing data 
clauses is what does each party need or intend to do with the data 
developed under the agreement. Accordingly, the data rights clauses may 
be tailored to fit the circumstances. Where conflicting goals of the 
parties result in incompatible data provisions, agreement officers for 
the Government must recognize that private companies entering into 
cooperative agreements bring resources to that relationship

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and must be allowed to reap an appropriate benefit for the expenditure 
of those resources. However, since serving a public purpose is a major 
objective of a cooperative agreement, care must be exercised to ensure 
the recipient is not established as a long term sole source supplier of 
an item or service and is not in a position to take unfair advantage of 
the results of the cooperative agreement. Therefore, a reasonable time 
period (i.e., depending on the technology, two to five years after 
production of the data) may be established after which the data first 
produced by the recipient in the performance of the agreement will be 
made public.
    (3) Data can be generated from different sources and can have 
various restrictions placed on its dissemination. Recipient data 
furnished to NASA can exist prior to, or be produced outside of, the 
agreement or be produced under the agreement. NASA can also produce data 
in carrying out its responsibilities under the agreement. Each of these 
areas must be covered.
    (4) For data, including software, first produced by the recipient 
under the agreement, the recipient may assert copyright. Data exchanged 
with a notice showing that the data is protected by copyright must 
include appropriate licenses in order for NASA to use the data as 
needed.
    (5) Recognizing that the dissemination of the results of NASA's 
activities is a primary objective of a cooperative agreement, the 
parties should specifically delineate what results will be published and 
under what conditions. This should be set forth in the clause of the 
cooperative agreement entitled ``Publication and Reports: Non-
Proprietary Research Results.'' Any such agreement on the publication of 
results should be stated to take precedence over any other clause in the 
cooperative agreement.
    (6) Section 1274.905(b)(3) requires the recipient to provide NASA a 
government purpose license for data first produced by the Recipient that 
constitutes trade secrets or confidential business or financial 
information. NASA and the recipient shall determine the scope of this 
license at the time of award of the cooperative agreement. In addition 
to the purposes given as examples in Sec.  1274.905(b)(3), the license 
should provide NASA the right to use this data under a separate 
cooperative agreement or contract issued to a party other than the 
recipient for the purpose of continuing the project in the event the 
cooperative agreement is terminated by either party.
    (7) In accordance with section 303(b) of the Space Act, any data 
first produced by NASA under the agreement which embodies trade secrets 
or financial information that would be privileged or confidential if it 
had been obtained from a private participant, will be marked with an 
appropriate legend and maintained in confidence for an agreed to period 
of up to five years (the maximum allowed by law). This does not apply to 
data other than that for which there has been agreement regarding 
publication or distribution. The period of time during which data first 
produced by NASA is maintained in confidence should be consistent with 
the period of time determined in accordance with paragraph (h)(2) of 
this section, before which data first produced by the recipient will be 
made public. Also, NASA itself may use the marked data (under suitable 
protective conditions) for agreed-to purposes.