Remove topic subject intellectual-property
article thumbnail

How to Create Remarkable Teams PART 2 – Collaboration

Ask Atma

Some examples of shared team learning are: Regular seminars and guest lecturers: Bring in experts and professors on various topics related to the history, science, or culture of your industry as well as sociologists, anthropologists, and technologists who work in peripherally related fields. These are just a few examples.

Team 52
article thumbnail

Understanding the Copyright Wars: Aereo, Google, and GoldieBlox

Harvard Business Review

The controversy around recent cases involving Google, GoldieBlox, and Aereo show we may need a refresher on this topic, and a reminder that fair use does include commercial use. Notice that even though the technology subject to the current copyright debate is new, the debate is age-old. Information & technology Innovation Internet'

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Why Companies and Universities Should Forge Long-Term Collaborations

Harvard Business Review

But both sides face familiar obstacles, especially when it comes to navigating non-disclosure agreements and creating a flexible but constructive master research agreement that accounts for potential intellectual property (IP). The first draft (from the company) wanted the agreement to cover a broad range of general topics (e.g.,

article thumbnail

The 3 Preconditions for an Entrepreneurial Society

Harvard Business Review

Intellectual property rules were created on the assumption that ownership matters, but today we are more interested in access — to streamed music, to the use of a car, to information that we can use. Some observers have argued that we need a hybrid “third way,” designed for today’s gig economy.

article thumbnail

The Ex-Im Bank Fight and the Future of Global Competitiveness

Harvard Business Review

with corporations directed privately, albeit subject to various rules and regulations in a "mixed economy," to promote fair competition, protect needed social goods and build the fundamental infrastructure of society in which business can flourish. At the other end of the spectrum are nations like the U.S.

Banking 10
article thumbnail

The Case for Trade, and Why American Leaders Need to Make It

Harvard Business Review

It would also establish rules for economic activities that are typically beyond the scope of trade deals negotiated by other countries—activities such as intellectual property, e-commerce, government procurement, and customs and delivery services. That failure will have implications for other critical topics on which the U.S.