Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by musicale 1837 days ago
I believe some universities make exceptions for open source projects, which seems fair. Basically if you want to give something away then you can, though the university will still own the copyright. I'm not 100% sure how patents work at such institutions, but I believe they can potentially be licensed for free to open source projects and their derivatives (e.g. they won't demand that Apple pay royalties if they use your open source software in an iPhone, as long as they abide by the open source license terms.)

If you want to make it closed source/proprietary and sell it, then the university wants license fees (but you get a cut of those fees, so it's sort of a kickback scheme, but the university picks the fee and there is a set percentage that you get.)

1 comments

Usually you have to generate several million dollars in revenue before you see a red cent of those 'kickbacks'. How many times do you honestly think that's going to happen when the paper-circuit rewards the "least publishable unit".