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Fab Lab,
Intellectual Property & Sharing
           Peter Troxler
        trox@fabfolk.com
Peter Troxler
•  2 years FabLab Amsterdam
  –  during this time also working with
     Creative Commons Netherlands
•  since 2009 freelance FabLab expert & coach
  –  community stewardship
  –  FabLab topics: business models, management,
     documentation & sharing
  –  setting up Fab Labs: Switzerland (Luzern,
     Zurich), Netherlands (Rotterdam), …
Intellectual Property
•  the notion, that the results of intellectual
   or creative work have the same (legal)
   qualities as physical property
•  this idea makes some sense with unique
   artworks
•  hard to understand why something that
   can be copied without taking away the
   original should be property
History of Patents
•  Patents apparently existed in ancient Greece
•  Monopolies, granted by the kings, e.g.
   –  1105 Count William of Mortagne grants a patent to a Norman
      abbot for erecting wind mills
   –  1449 Henry VI grants a patent to John of Utynam for making
      stained glass
•  15th century Venice: patents on glass-making, mainly to
   control the trade
•  1624, UK: Statute of Monopolies – Parliament act against
   monopolies granted by the Crown
= monopolies should be granted only for the introduction of
   new manufactures to the inventor
•  1790 patent law in the US
•  1791 patent law in France
History of Copyright
•  15th century Europe: the printing press
•  Crown & church felt a need to control printing –
   license to print and trade books (i.e. censorship)
•  England, 16th century: printers guild – Stationers’
   company
•  1709 Statute of Anne An Act for the Encouragement
   of Learning, by vesting the Copies of Printed Books
   in the Authors or purchasers of such Copies, during
   the Times therein mentioned
= trade regulation
   –  limiting the term of protection
   –  breaking up the monopoly of the Stationers’ Company:
      copyright availability to anyone
Intellectual Property Protection
•  protection of the commercial* interests of a
   creator/inventor
•  a monopoly to use the creation/invention
   (thing) for commercial gain
•  various types or protection, depending on
   the type of thing
•  some types arise automatically, some types
   only on registration
      * in some types and legislations also moral interests
Fab Charter
Secrecy: designs and processes developed in fab labs must remain
available for individual use although intellectual property can be
protected however you choose

•  Sharing for individual use – learning
•  This is provided for in some of the legal IP protection mechanisms
   (privat use, educational “exception”, fair use
The Stuff We Make
What
type of thing
Things that
work
Ornamental
things
Beautiful
things
Electronic
cirquits
Code
(Software)
Documen-
tation
The Stuff We Make
What            Legally
type of thing   speaking
Things that     inventions
work            (technology)
Ornamental      industrial
things          designs
Beautiful       works of art
things          and literature
Electronic      ? work of art
cirquits        and literature
Code            invention /
(Software)      work of art
Documen-        work of art
tation          and literature
The Stuff We Make
What               Legally            Protection
type of thing      speaking           mechanism
Things that        inventions         Patent   1

work               (technology)
Ornamental         industrial         Industrial
things             designs            design right   2

Beautiful          works of art   Copyright
things             and literature
Electronic         ? work of art  Copyright
cirquits           and literature
Code               invention /        Patent /
(Software)         work of art        Copyright
Documen-           work of art    Copyright
tation             and literature

1   also: Utility model   2   Trademark: distinctive sign or indicator
Patent
•  A patent consists of a set of exclusive rights granted by a sovereign
   state to an inventor or their assignee for a limited period of time
   in exchange for the public disclosure of an invention.
•  The rights typically include the right to prevent others from
   making, using, selling, or distributing the patented invention
   without permission.
•  A patent is granted upon application
•  Typically a patent application must include one or more claims
   defining the invention which must meet the relevant patentability
   requirements such as novelty and non-obviousness.
•  A patent lasts normally 20 years.
Industrial Design Right
•  An Industrial Design Right protects the visual design of objects that
   are not purely utilitarian.
   An industrial design consists of the creation of a shape,
   configuration or composition of pattern or color, or combination of
   pattern and color in three dimensional form containing aesthetic
   value. An industrial design can be a two- or three-dimensional
   pattern used to produce a product, industrial commodity or
   handicraft.
•  The rights typically include the right to prevent others from
   making, using, selling, or distributing the object without
   permission.
•  The Design Right protection is granted upon application – however
   in the EU there is the Unregistered Design Right that automatically
   gives protection of 3 year from the first disclosure of the design
•  A design must be novel and have individual character
•  Design rights last normally up to 25 years in 5 year periods (need
   to be renewed)
Copyright
•  Copyright gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights:
•  Copyright it is "the right to copy", the right to determine who may
   financially benefit from it, who may adapt the work to other
   forms, who may perform the work (related rights); and it gives the
   creator the right to be be credited for the work, not to have it
   falsely attributed, and to not have their work used in a derogatory
   or prejudicial manner (moral rights).
•  Copyright arises automatically with the (physical) creation of the
   work. In the US, copyright can be registered which gives additional
   rights to recompensations in case of infringement
•  Copyright is applicable to any expressible form of an idea or
   information that is substantive and discrete. Some countries
   require the notion of originality.
•  A note on moral rights: those can not be traded.
•  Copyright normally lasts 70 years post mortem auctoris
Utility Models
•  A utility model is an intellectual property right to protect
   inventions. This right is available in a number of many national
   statutes. It is very similar to the patent, but usually has less
   stringent patentability requirements.
•  Petty patent (Indonesia), “poor man’s patent”
•  Term often 6 to 15 years
Trademarks
•  A trademark is the right to sue for unauthorized use of that
   trademark
•  A trademark requires registration (®) – but not in the US, there it
   is sufficient to use it in trade, so there also exist unregistered
   trademarks (™)
•  A trademark is typically a name, word, phrase, logo, symbol,
   design, image, or a combination of these elements. There is also a
   range of non-conventional trademarks comprising marks which do
   not fall into these standard categories, such as those based on
   color, smell, or sound.
•  The registration of a trademark can be revoked
•  Trademark needs to be maintained (renewed), typically every 10
   years, indefinitely
Integrated Circuit Topologies
•  Because of the functional nature of the mask geometry, the
   designs cannot be protected under copyright law (except perhaps
   as decorative art).
•  Because individual lithographic mask works are not clearly
   protectable subject matter, they also cannot be effectively
   protected under patent law.
•  So since the 1990s, national governments have been granting
   copyright-like intellectual property rights conferring time-limited
   exclusivity to reproduction of a particular layout.
•  Protection term is much shorter: 10…15 years
•  Protection upon registration or first commercial use
Trade Secret
•  A trade secret is a formula, practice, process, design, instrument,
   pattern, or compilation of information which is not generally
   known or reasonably ascertainable, by which a business can obtain
   an economic advantage over competitors or customers. In some
   jurisdictions, such secrets are referred to as "confidential
   information" or "classified information".
•  A company can protect its confidential information through non-
   compete and non-disclosure contracts with its employees or
   business partners.
The Stuff We Make
What             Legally        Protection     What is still
type of thing    speaking       mechanism      possible
Things that      inventions     Patent         private use,
work             (technology)                  research†
Ornamental       industrial     Industrial     private use,
things           designs        design right   inspiration
Beautiful        works of art   Copyright      private use,
things           and literature                educational
Electronic       ? work of art  Copyright      privat use,
cirquits         and literature                educational
Code             invention /    Patent /       see above
(Software)       work of art    Copyright
Documen-         work of art    Copyright      private use,
tation           and literature                educational

†   WARNING: not in the US
The Stuff We Make
What             Legally        Protection     What is still   Sharing
type of thing    speaking       mechanism      possible        mechanism
Things that      inventions     Patent         private use,    Defensive
work             (technology)                  research        publication
Ornamental       industrial     Industrial     private use,    ?
things           designs        design right   inspiration
Beautiful        works of art   Copyright      private use,    Creative
things           and literature                educational     Commons
Electronic       ? work of art  Copyright      privat use,     Creative
cirquits         and literature                educational     Commons
Code             invention /    Patent /       see above       FLOSS
(Software)       work of art    Copyright                      licenses
Documen-         work of art    Copyright      private use,    Creative
tation           and literature                educational     Commons

†   WARNING: not in the US
Defensive Publication
•  A defensive publication, or defensive disclosure, is an intellectual
   property strategy used to prevent another party from obtaining a
   patent on a product, apparatus or method for instance.
•  The strategy consists in disclosing an enabling description and/or
   drawing of the product, apparatus or method so that it enters the
   public domain and becomes prior art.
•  Therefore, the defensive publication of perhaps otherwise
   patentable information may work to defeat the novelty of a
   subsequent patent application.
•  Needs to be available to a “relevant audience” (e.g. conference,
   trade journal)
Creative Commons
•  A system of public licenses that grant reuse of copyrighted work
•  The strategy is to use a publicly available, standardized license to
   replace the normal contractual relationship between rights holder
   and user.
•  Rights holder can select, which restrictions s/he wants to add to
   the general permission to use, distribute or perform the work
   additionally to crediting the creator and mentioning the license
    –  Share-alike – user must re-license derivatives under the same license
    –  Non-commercial – use in connection with “making money” is not allowed (not
       even fundraising for a charity or putting on a blog with Google Ads to cover
       hosting costs)
    –  No derivatives – use only unaltered copies
•  There are (up to now) national versions of the licenses – the idea
   was to adapt the licenses to national legislation. This is probably
   going to disappear
•  Pay attention to compatibility issues when re-using material
FLOSS
•  Free / Libre / Open Source Software
•  Free Software
    –    Freedom   0:   to run the program for any purpose
    –    Freedom   1:   to study how the program works, and change it
    –    Freedom   2:   to redistribute copies
    –    Freedom   3:   to improve the program, and release modified versions
•  Various licenses
   –      GPL
   –      LGPL
   –      BSD
The Stuff We Make
What            Legally        Protection     What is still   Sharing
type of thing   speaking       mechanism      possible        mechanism
Things that     inventions     Patent         private use,    Defensive
work            (technology)                  research        publication
Ornamental      industrial     Industrial     private use,    ?
things          designs        design right   inspiration
Beautiful       works of art   Copyright      private use,    Creative
things          and literature                educational     Commons
Electronic      ? work of art  Copyright      privat use,     Creative
cirquits        and literature                educational     Commons
Code            invention /    Patent /       see above       FLOSS
(Software)      work of art    Copyright                      licenses
Documen-        work of art    Copyright      private use,    Creative
tation          and literature                educational     Commons
Case FabFi
•  open-source, FabLab-grown system to transmit wireless ethernet
   signals across distances of up to several miles
•  Documentation available at http://code.google.com/p/fabfi/wiki/
   WikiHome?tm=6 under a Creative Commons by unported license,
   3.0
•  General project description available at http://fabfi.fablab.af/
   under a Creative Commons by-sa license
•  Uses various software components under various licenses, e.g.
   Squid web caching is distributed under the GNU General Public
   License (version 2), other licenses include the new BSD license
   (SchoolNet parts) and the Apache 2.0 license (LuCId http slave)
Case Ultimaker
•  Open Source, FabLab-grown 3D printer, based on the RepRap
•  Documentation available at http://reprap.org/wiki/Ultimaker
   %27s_v1.5.4_PCB and http://wiki.ultimaker.com/Main_Page under
   the GNU Free Documentation License
•  Lasercut drawings available at http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:
   13571 under Creative Commons by-nc unported license ver. 3.0
•  Note that the GNU FDL and CC-BY-NC are not compatible; GNU FDL
   allows commercial reuse, GNU FDL requires preservation of
   “Invariant Sections”.
Neil Gershenfeld
The bad news is that intellectual property
is no longer protectable.
The good news is that intellectual property
can still exist, but it will not be based on
control of scarce resources.
Companies will seek compensation by how
they add value, not on their control of IP.
Sources Used
•    FabFi documentation
        –   http://fabfi.fablab.af
        –   http://code.google.com/p/fabfi/wiki
•    Frumkin, M. (1945). The Origin of Patent Law. Journal of the Patent Office Society 27 (3) March 1945, 143-149. Available online:
     http://www.compilerpress.ca/Library/Frumkin%20Origin%20of%20Patents%20JPOS%201945.htm
•    Schlesinger, D. (2010). The Globalization of Science and Technology. Available at http://www.weforum.org/sessions/summary/
     globalization-science-and-technology
•    Ultimaker documentation:
        –   http://reprap.org/wiki/Ultimaker%27s_v1.5.4_PCB
        –   http://wiki.ultimaker.com/Main_Page
        –   http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:13571
•    Wikipedia articles on the subjects (all under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, http://creativecommons.org/
     licenses/by-sa/3.0/):
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_patent_law
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_of_Utynam
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_copyright_law
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statute_of_Anne
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_design_rights
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agreement_on_Trade-Related_Aspects_of_Intellectual_Property_Rights
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gebrauchsmuster
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_model
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trademark
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trade_secret
        –   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_circuit_layout_design_protection

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Fab Lab IP and Sharing Mechanisms

  • 1. Fab Lab, Intellectual Property & Sharing Peter Troxler trox@fabfolk.com
  • 2. Peter Troxler •  2 years FabLab Amsterdam –  during this time also working with Creative Commons Netherlands •  since 2009 freelance FabLab expert & coach –  community stewardship –  FabLab topics: business models, management, documentation & sharing –  setting up Fab Labs: Switzerland (Luzern, Zurich), Netherlands (Rotterdam), …
  • 3. Intellectual Property •  the notion, that the results of intellectual or creative work have the same (legal) qualities as physical property •  this idea makes some sense with unique artworks •  hard to understand why something that can be copied without taking away the original should be property
  • 4. History of Patents •  Patents apparently existed in ancient Greece •  Monopolies, granted by the kings, e.g. –  1105 Count William of Mortagne grants a patent to a Norman abbot for erecting wind mills –  1449 Henry VI grants a patent to John of Utynam for making stained glass •  15th century Venice: patents on glass-making, mainly to control the trade •  1624, UK: Statute of Monopolies – Parliament act against monopolies granted by the Crown = monopolies should be granted only for the introduction of new manufactures to the inventor •  1790 patent law in the US •  1791 patent law in France
  • 5. History of Copyright •  15th century Europe: the printing press •  Crown & church felt a need to control printing – license to print and trade books (i.e. censorship) •  England, 16th century: printers guild – Stationers’ company •  1709 Statute of Anne An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by vesting the Copies of Printed Books in the Authors or purchasers of such Copies, during the Times therein mentioned = trade regulation –  limiting the term of protection –  breaking up the monopoly of the Stationers’ Company: copyright availability to anyone
  • 6. Intellectual Property Protection •  protection of the commercial* interests of a creator/inventor •  a monopoly to use the creation/invention (thing) for commercial gain •  various types or protection, depending on the type of thing •  some types arise automatically, some types only on registration * in some types and legislations also moral interests
  • 7. Fab Charter Secrecy: designs and processes developed in fab labs must remain available for individual use although intellectual property can be protected however you choose •  Sharing for individual use – learning •  This is provided for in some of the legal IP protection mechanisms (privat use, educational “exception”, fair use
  • 8. The Stuff We Make What type of thing Things that work Ornamental things Beautiful things Electronic cirquits Code (Software) Documen- tation
  • 9. The Stuff We Make What Legally type of thing speaking Things that inventions work (technology) Ornamental industrial things designs Beautiful works of art things and literature Electronic ? work of art cirquits and literature Code invention / (Software) work of art Documen- work of art tation and literature
  • 10. The Stuff We Make What Legally Protection type of thing speaking mechanism Things that inventions Patent 1 work (technology) Ornamental industrial Industrial things designs design right 2 Beautiful works of art Copyright things and literature Electronic ? work of art Copyright cirquits and literature Code invention / Patent / (Software) work of art Copyright Documen- work of art Copyright tation and literature 1 also: Utility model 2 Trademark: distinctive sign or indicator
  • 11. Patent •  A patent consists of a set of exclusive rights granted by a sovereign state to an inventor or their assignee for a limited period of time in exchange for the public disclosure of an invention. •  The rights typically include the right to prevent others from making, using, selling, or distributing the patented invention without permission. •  A patent is granted upon application •  Typically a patent application must include one or more claims defining the invention which must meet the relevant patentability requirements such as novelty and non-obviousness. •  A patent lasts normally 20 years.
  • 12. Industrial Design Right •  An Industrial Design Right protects the visual design of objects that are not purely utilitarian. An industrial design consists of the creation of a shape, configuration or composition of pattern or color, or combination of pattern and color in three dimensional form containing aesthetic value. An industrial design can be a two- or three-dimensional pattern used to produce a product, industrial commodity or handicraft. •  The rights typically include the right to prevent others from making, using, selling, or distributing the object without permission. •  The Design Right protection is granted upon application – however in the EU there is the Unregistered Design Right that automatically gives protection of 3 year from the first disclosure of the design •  A design must be novel and have individual character •  Design rights last normally up to 25 years in 5 year periods (need to be renewed)
  • 13. Copyright •  Copyright gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights: •  Copyright it is "the right to copy", the right to determine who may financially benefit from it, who may adapt the work to other forms, who may perform the work (related rights); and it gives the creator the right to be be credited for the work, not to have it falsely attributed, and to not have their work used in a derogatory or prejudicial manner (moral rights). •  Copyright arises automatically with the (physical) creation of the work. In the US, copyright can be registered which gives additional rights to recompensations in case of infringement •  Copyright is applicable to any expressible form of an idea or information that is substantive and discrete. Some countries require the notion of originality. •  A note on moral rights: those can not be traded. •  Copyright normally lasts 70 years post mortem auctoris
  • 14. Utility Models •  A utility model is an intellectual property right to protect inventions. This right is available in a number of many national statutes. It is very similar to the patent, but usually has less stringent patentability requirements. •  Petty patent (Indonesia), “poor man’s patent” •  Term often 6 to 15 years
  • 15. Trademarks •  A trademark is the right to sue for unauthorized use of that trademark •  A trademark requires registration (®) – but not in the US, there it is sufficient to use it in trade, so there also exist unregistered trademarks (™) •  A trademark is typically a name, word, phrase, logo, symbol, design, image, or a combination of these elements. There is also a range of non-conventional trademarks comprising marks which do not fall into these standard categories, such as those based on color, smell, or sound. •  The registration of a trademark can be revoked •  Trademark needs to be maintained (renewed), typically every 10 years, indefinitely
  • 16. Integrated Circuit Topologies •  Because of the functional nature of the mask geometry, the designs cannot be protected under copyright law (except perhaps as decorative art). •  Because individual lithographic mask works are not clearly protectable subject matter, they also cannot be effectively protected under patent law. •  So since the 1990s, national governments have been granting copyright-like intellectual property rights conferring time-limited exclusivity to reproduction of a particular layout. •  Protection term is much shorter: 10…15 years •  Protection upon registration or first commercial use
  • 17. Trade Secret •  A trade secret is a formula, practice, process, design, instrument, pattern, or compilation of information which is not generally known or reasonably ascertainable, by which a business can obtain an economic advantage over competitors or customers. In some jurisdictions, such secrets are referred to as "confidential information" or "classified information". •  A company can protect its confidential information through non- compete and non-disclosure contracts with its employees or business partners.
  • 18. The Stuff We Make What Legally Protection What is still type of thing speaking mechanism possible Things that inventions Patent private use, work (technology) research† Ornamental industrial Industrial private use, things designs design right inspiration Beautiful works of art Copyright private use, things and literature educational Electronic ? work of art Copyright privat use, cirquits and literature educational Code invention / Patent / see above (Software) work of art Copyright Documen- work of art Copyright private use, tation and literature educational † WARNING: not in the US
  • 19. The Stuff We Make What Legally Protection What is still Sharing type of thing speaking mechanism possible mechanism Things that inventions Patent private use, Defensive work (technology) research publication Ornamental industrial Industrial private use, ? things designs design right inspiration Beautiful works of art Copyright private use, Creative things and literature educational Commons Electronic ? work of art Copyright privat use, Creative cirquits and literature educational Commons Code invention / Patent / see above FLOSS (Software) work of art Copyright licenses Documen- work of art Copyright private use, Creative tation and literature educational Commons † WARNING: not in the US
  • 20. Defensive Publication •  A defensive publication, or defensive disclosure, is an intellectual property strategy used to prevent another party from obtaining a patent on a product, apparatus or method for instance. •  The strategy consists in disclosing an enabling description and/or drawing of the product, apparatus or method so that it enters the public domain and becomes prior art. •  Therefore, the defensive publication of perhaps otherwise patentable information may work to defeat the novelty of a subsequent patent application. •  Needs to be available to a “relevant audience” (e.g. conference, trade journal)
  • 21. Creative Commons •  A system of public licenses that grant reuse of copyrighted work •  The strategy is to use a publicly available, standardized license to replace the normal contractual relationship between rights holder and user. •  Rights holder can select, which restrictions s/he wants to add to the general permission to use, distribute or perform the work additionally to crediting the creator and mentioning the license –  Share-alike – user must re-license derivatives under the same license –  Non-commercial – use in connection with “making money” is not allowed (not even fundraising for a charity or putting on a blog with Google Ads to cover hosting costs) –  No derivatives – use only unaltered copies •  There are (up to now) national versions of the licenses – the idea was to adapt the licenses to national legislation. This is probably going to disappear •  Pay attention to compatibility issues when re-using material
  • 22. FLOSS •  Free / Libre / Open Source Software •  Free Software –  Freedom 0: to run the program for any purpose –  Freedom 1: to study how the program works, and change it –  Freedom 2: to redistribute copies –  Freedom 3: to improve the program, and release modified versions •  Various licenses –  GPL –  LGPL –  BSD
  • 23. The Stuff We Make What Legally Protection What is still Sharing type of thing speaking mechanism possible mechanism Things that inventions Patent private use, Defensive work (technology) research publication Ornamental industrial Industrial private use, ? things designs design right inspiration Beautiful works of art Copyright private use, Creative things and literature educational Commons Electronic ? work of art Copyright privat use, Creative cirquits and literature educational Commons Code invention / Patent / see above FLOSS (Software) work of art Copyright licenses Documen- work of art Copyright private use, Creative tation and literature educational Commons
  • 24. Case FabFi •  open-source, FabLab-grown system to transmit wireless ethernet signals across distances of up to several miles •  Documentation available at http://code.google.com/p/fabfi/wiki/ WikiHome?tm=6 under a Creative Commons by unported license, 3.0 •  General project description available at http://fabfi.fablab.af/ under a Creative Commons by-sa license •  Uses various software components under various licenses, e.g. Squid web caching is distributed under the GNU General Public License (version 2), other licenses include the new BSD license (SchoolNet parts) and the Apache 2.0 license (LuCId http slave)
  • 25. Case Ultimaker •  Open Source, FabLab-grown 3D printer, based on the RepRap •  Documentation available at http://reprap.org/wiki/Ultimaker %27s_v1.5.4_PCB and http://wiki.ultimaker.com/Main_Page under the GNU Free Documentation License •  Lasercut drawings available at http://www.thingiverse.com/thing: 13571 under Creative Commons by-nc unported license ver. 3.0 •  Note that the GNU FDL and CC-BY-NC are not compatible; GNU FDL allows commercial reuse, GNU FDL requires preservation of “Invariant Sections”.
  • 26. Neil Gershenfeld The bad news is that intellectual property is no longer protectable. The good news is that intellectual property can still exist, but it will not be based on control of scarce resources. Companies will seek compensation by how they add value, not on their control of IP.
  • 27. Sources Used •  FabFi documentation –  http://fabfi.fablab.af –  http://code.google.com/p/fabfi/wiki •  Frumkin, M. (1945). The Origin of Patent Law. Journal of the Patent Office Society 27 (3) March 1945, 143-149. Available online: http://www.compilerpress.ca/Library/Frumkin%20Origin%20of%20Patents%20JPOS%201945.htm •  Schlesinger, D. (2010). The Globalization of Science and Technology. Available at http://www.weforum.org/sessions/summary/ globalization-science-and-technology •  Ultimaker documentation: –  http://reprap.org/wiki/Ultimaker%27s_v1.5.4_PCB –  http://wiki.ultimaker.com/Main_Page –  http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:13571 •  Wikipedia articles on the subjects (all under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-sa/3.0/): –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_patent_law –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_of_Utynam –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_copyright_law –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statute_of_Anne –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_design_rights –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agreement_on_Trade-Related_Aspects_of_Intellectual_Property_Rights –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gebrauchsmuster –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_model –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trademark –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trade_secret –  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_circuit_layout_design_protection