Research for Intellectual Property

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September 30, 2012
The right of the federal government to reuse, modify, reproduce, perform, display, release, and disclose data - particularly computer software - has become an important topic in contract negotiations. We describe the valuation methods used by DOD and industry to estimate software development costs and to assign value to data rights licenses that are broader than the default license described in DFARS. We find that the benefit to DOD arises from the impact of such licenses on future competition and costs. Two things must occur for expanded licenses to be worth the additional cost to DOD: the additional information covered by the license must be transferrable to alternative suppliers, either competing commercial companies or organic DOD facilities. Second, the information covered by the license must be useful to alternative suppliers, to the extent that it actually lowers their production costs.
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March 1, 2009

Modeling and simulation (M&S) is used to support military training, acquisition, and programmatic decisions, but relatively few M&S resources are reused throughout the life cycle of an acquisition program or shared across programs or between the services. This study outlines a business model that balances the government’s desire for increased awareness of, and access to, reusable M&S software and technical data at a fair price, with industry’s need to protect its intellectual property and receive compensation commensurate with the true value of its M&S products.

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