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Finding The Lost Einsteins: How to Make Academic Inventing More Inclusive, Invent Together

If more Americans were empowered to identify as inventors and share their inventive ideas, how would our world be different? Because innovation drives our economy, this is a critically important question for all of us. In 2018, a landmark study about who patents inventions in America documented a startling reality, which is that many would-be Finding The Lost Einsteins: How to Make Academic Inventing More Inclusive, Invent Together

Patent Racism, Invent Together

UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER, BYLINE: This is PLANET MONEY from NPR. KAREN DUFFIN, HOST: In the mid-’90s, there was this big new economic theory that was all the rage. It was an idea for how countries can produce unlimited economic growth, which is kind of the whole point of economics. You know, growth means less poverty, more Patent Racism, Invent Together

Gaping Gap, Invent Together

Much work ahead in helping more women and minorities get patents Qualcomm, instrumental in the SUCCESS Act, has commissioned research that provides Congress with information to enhance patent diversity. BY REID CREAGER Twelve percent. That’s the ratio of inventors awarded United States patents in 2016 who are women, according to a February 2019 report by Gaping Gap, Invent Together

The Female Inventor Problem And How Lawyers Are Helping, Invent Together

Going through the patenting process can be intimidating for new inventors, but Jayshree Seth feels fortunate that when she started out at 3M Co. more than two decades ago, she worked with an in-house patent attorney who immediately put her at ease. “He would say things like, ‘Thank you for inventing, Jayshree,’” said Seth, a The Female Inventor Problem And How Lawyers Are Helping, Invent Together

Interview: Laurie Self, Qualcomm VP and counsel of government affairs, Invent Together

Laurie Self began working with Qualcomm as outside counsel while she was a partner at Covington & Burling. She moved in-house to the telecommunications company in 2012, taking on the role of vice-president and counsel of government affairs. Self joined Covington & Burling in Washington DC after graduating from the University of Virginia School of Interview: Laurie Self, Qualcomm VP and counsel of government affairs, Invent Together

Increasing Number of Women Patent Holders Can Spur U.S. Innovation, Grow the Economy, Invent Together

On Thursday, December 1, I attended the Innovation Alliance’s panel on Closing the Patent Gender Gap: How Increasing the Number of Women Patent Holders Can Spur U.S. Innovation and Grow the Economy. The panel, which was moderated by the Licensing Manager for the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, Jennifer Gottwald, Ph.D discussed the recent findings of Increasing Number of Women Patent Holders Can Spur U.S. Innovation, Grow the Economy, Invent Together