Talk:Gilbert Chu
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] patents
In the US if one works for a university on a grant supported project, it is required by the terms of the grant that the individual investigator assign the rights to the university. Intellectually, the inventor is still the inventor, and it always counts on his CV. He even receives a few percent of the royalties, although the university keeps the lion's share. The legal document that was not understood is, quite simply, a patent license for people using his patents, "Application, Serial Number 60/208,073 filed May 4, 2000, STANFORD’s U.S. Patent Application, Serial Number 09/811,762 filed March 19, 2001, "
STANFORD has an assignment of Data Reproducibility Analysis for Microarrays and Significance Analysis of Microarrays (“SAM”), developed by Gilbert Chu, Rob Tibshirani and Virginia GossTusher, ("Invention[s]"), as described in Stanford Docket S00220, any Licensed Patent(s), as hereinafter defined, which may issue to such Invention(s), and any Software, as hereinafter defined, which was created for such Invention(s). It will have been issued by now, but it takes a professional searcher to find the number because of the many Chu's, & the many Stanford Patents DGG 08:42, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Notability
The notability tag was removed, as the article clearly cites that he is an award-winning scientist, highly cited as a principle author and the brother of a Nobel winner. Vassyana 17:14, 2 February 2007 (UTC)