Hi all,
I go to a University in Pennsylvania that requires Engineering students to complete a "Senior Design" project during your last term as a student. Generally students will do projects very academic in nature, along the lines of finding more effective RFID methodologies, different algorithm improvements, etc. (things that generally don't interest me greatly). The end purpose of these projects is to be a sort of "capstone" project that incorporates all the things you've learned in school.
I've managed to negotiate a special case where I will be able to essentially do an independent study to create my startup idea as my Senior Design, since it is, in essence, a culmination of all the skills that I've learned thus far. I will essentially need nothing from the University in order to complete this project, outside of their mandatory adviser to oversee the independent study.
My question is this, for those that may have some experience: Does the University legally retain rights to any work that is generated in this project (essentially, the whole company... if I eventually incorporate)? I've made it clear that this is intended to eventually be run as a business, though I am not yet incorporated. I have signed no papers other than a short form that described the project, and whatever I signed when I committed to coming to the University four years ago.
I'm in the process of trying to get to the bottom of the issue by talking to faculty, but I wanted to see what ideas everyone here has first.
1. U.S. patent law says patents belong to the inventor(s), absent either (i) an agreement to assign the patent rights, or (ii) an implied-in-law duty to assign, such as arises when an employee is "hired to invent" or "set to experimenting."
If your university has some sort of written policy about undergraduate- or graduate work belonging to X, you might well be held to have agreed to it by applying and/or enrolling, either in the school or in your particular course. (pg has it exactly right on this point.)
2. U.S. copyright law says that the copyright in original works of authorship (which might or might not include elements of your project) are owned by the author(s) UNLESS (i) there's an agreement to assign the copyright, or (ii) the author's authoring activities took place within the scope of his employment, or (iii) the work fits into one of a comparatively few specific categories -- translations, contributions to collective works, and some others -- AND the parties agreed in writing that the work would be a work made for hire.
3. U.S. trade-secret law might be a little trickier, because it varies state by state. The pretty-much-universal rule, though, is that at least some degree of secrecy is a sine qua non of trade-secret rights.