University of Tulsa
We were able to locate detailed royalty sharing information for the University of Tulsa dating as far back as 1994. An email from a representative of the University of Tulsa stated that the school has had two iterations of its policy on patent royalty distribution.
Summary
Institution | Start | End | Flat | $0-10k | $10-50k | $50-100k | $100-300k | $300-500k | $0.5-1M | >$1M | Fee | Lab | More |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
University of Tulsa | 1994 | 2016 | Yes | 0.40 | 0.40 | 0.40 | 0.40 | 0.40 | 0.40 | 0.40 | 0 | No | No |
Policy Excerpts
2017 Policy
IP Policy of The University of Tulsa (2017)
In those cases where the University has ownership rights in the invention or copyrightable material and where the University licenses the intellectual property and receives royalty or other income from an invention, patent, potentially patentable work, copyrighted computer program, or other copyrightable work subject to this Intellectual Property Policy made by a faculty member or student, other than work for hire, the inventor(s)/creator(s) shall receive 455 (forty-five percent) of the net income from the invention or copyrighted material, which is defined as gross fees and royalties received by the University minus the out-of-pocket expenses associated with the protection and exploitation of the patent or copyright protection, including fees associated with patent filing, copyright registration and any other continuing costs associated with the licensing or other commercialization of the patent or copyright.
1994 Policy
IP Policy of the University of Tulsa (2014)
In those cases where the University has full ownership rights in the invention or where the University receives royalty or other income from an invention, patent, potentially patentable work, copyrighted computer program, or other potentially copyrightable work subject to this Intellectual Property Policy made by an employee or student, the inventor(s) shall receive 40% of the net income from the invention or registered and copyrighted computer program, which is defined as gross royalties received by the University minus the out-of-pocket expenses associated with the protection and exploitation of the patent or copyright protection, including fees associated with patent filing or copyright registration and any other continuing costs associated with the licensing or other commercialization of the patent or copyright.