Penn State University to auction patent licences

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Penn State University to auction patent licences

Penn State University will auction exclusive licences to patents covering innovations created by its College of Engineering, in what it believes to be the first auction of its kind conducted by a university

penn-state-university.jpg

Penn State University will auction exclusive licences to patents covering innovations created by its College of Engineering, in what it believes to be the first auction of its kind conducted by a university

The university hopes that the event, which will take place from March 31 to April 11, will be the first of many patent licensing auctions it hosts.

It will include about 70 patents in technologies such as fuel cells, acoustics and sensors.

The items will have required minimum bids of between $5,000 and $50,000, depending on the patent. Starting at $5,000 are patents including one relating to a method and apparatus for collecting overspray. For a minimum bid of $50,000, potential buyers can take a shot at a bundle of patents covering frequency detection systems for quadrupole resonance signals and methods for reducing/adjusting couplings.

Penn State’s associate vice-president for research and technology transfer Ron Huss said he hopes the auction will help advertise the university’s patent portfolio to businesses.

"Penn State and other research universities typically have IP that has been marketed by their tech transfer offices but for a variety of reasons has not been picked up by a commercial entity and therefore sits on the proverbial shelf," said Huss in a statement.

"This auction is an effort to get our IP off of the shelf and in the hands of companies that can use the technology, at very favorable terms and price points. The buyers get the rights to use the IP, and the university gets a financial return. It's a win-win situation."

There are no geographical limitations on who can license the patents. Potential bidders will need to register in advance at the university’s website. The winners will have to sign a licensing agreement with the university.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Leaders at the newly merged firm Jones Maxwell Smith & Davis reveal their plan to take on bigger firms while attracting more clients and talent
Charles Achkar, who will bring a team of two with him, said he was excited about joining ‘one of the few strong IP boutiques’
Andy Lee, head of IP at Brandsmiths and winner of the Soft IP Practitioner of the Year award, tells us why 2024 was a seminal year and why clients value brave advice
The deal to acquire MIP's parent company is expected to complete by the end of May 2025
Jinwon Chun discusses the need for vigilance, his love for iced coffee, and preparing for INTA
Karl Barnfather’s new patent practice will focus on protecting and enforcing tech innovations in the electronics, AI, and software industries
Partner Ranjini Acharya explains how her Federal Circuit debut resulted in her convincing the court to rule that machine learning technology was not patent-eligible
Paul Hastings and Smart & Biggar also won multiple awards, while Baker McKenzie picked up a significant prize
Burford Capital study finds that in-house lawyers have become more likely to monetise patents, but that their IP portfolios are still underutilised
Robert Reading and Faidon Zisis at Clarivate unpick some of the data surrounding music-related trademarks
Gift this article