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National Cooperative Research Act of 1984

Introduced: September 14, 1983 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 34 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Oct 11, 1984
Became Public Law No: 98-462.
Oct 11, 1984
Signed by President.
Oct 3, 1984
Presented to President.
Oct 3, 1984
Measure Signed in Senate.
Oct 1, 1984
House Agreed to Conference Report by Voice Vote.
Oct 1, 1984
Conference report agreed to in House: House Agreed to Conference Report by Voice Vote.
Sep 26, 1984
Senate agreed to conference report by Voice Vote.
Sep 26, 1984
Conference report agreed to in Senate: Senate agreed to conference report by Voice Vote.
Sep 21, 1984
Conference Report 98-1044 Filed in House.
Sep 21, 1984
Conference report filed: Conference Report 98-1044 Filed in House.
Sep 20, 1984
Conferees agreed to file conference report.
Sep 20, 1984
Conference committee actions: Conferees agreed to file conference report.
Aug 10, 1984
Additional Conferee Gregg Appointed to the Conference Committee by the Speaker of the House.
Aug 9, 1984
Senate agreed to request for conference. Appointed conferees. Thurmond; Mathias; Hatch; Dole; Biden; Metzenbaum; Leahy.
Aug 9, 1984
Senate disagreed to the House amendments by Voice Vote.
Aug 9, 1984
Resolving differences -- Senate actions: Senate disagreed to the House amendments by Voice Vote.
Aug 9, 1984
House Requested a Conference and Speaker Appointed Conferees: Rodino, Brooks, Edwards (CA), Seiberling, Hughes, Synar, Crockett, Schumer, Feighan, Fuqua, Fish, Moorhead, Hyde, Sawyer, Lungren.
Aug 9, 1984
House Insisted on its Amendments by Voice Vote.
Aug 9, 1984
Resolving differences -- House actions: House Insisted on its Amendments by Voice Vote.
Aug 9, 1984
House Incorporated H.R.5041 in This Measure as an Amendment.
Aug 9, 1984
Passed House (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Aug 9, 1984
Passed/agreed to in House: Passed House (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Aug 9, 1984
Called up by House by Unanimous Consent.
Jul 31, 1984
Passed Senate with amendments by Yea-Nay Vote. 97-0. Record Vote No: 209.
Jul 31, 1984
Passed/agreed to in Senate: Passed Senate with amendments by Yea-Nay Vote. 97-0. Record Vote No: 209.
Jul 31, 1984
Measure laid before Senate by unanimous consent.
May 3, 1984
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 842.
May 3, 1984
Committee on Judiciary. Reported to Senate by Senator Thurmond with an amendment. With written report No. 98-427. Additional views filed.
Apr 3, 1984
Subcommittee on Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks. Hearings held. Hearings printed: S.Hrg. 98-1008.
Mar 22, 1984
Committee on Judiciary. Approved for reporting, subject to agreement.
Mar 12, 1984
Committee on Judiciary. Hearings concluded. Hearings printed: S.Hrg. 98-972.
Oct 26, 1983
Committee on Judiciary. Hearings held.
Sep 14, 1983
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Judiciary.
Sep 14, 1983
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Title I: Short Title - Declares that this Act may be cited as the National Productivity and Innovation Act of 1983.

Title II: Joint Research and Development Ventures - Provides that no joint research and development program shall be deemed illegal per se in any action under the antitrust laws.

Limits to actual damages, interest thereon, and the cost of suit the amount that any person or State may recover in an antitrust action based on conduct that is part of such a program and that has been disclosed to the Attorney General and the Federal Trade Commission.

Authorizes any individual participating in such a program to file with the Attorney General and the Commission a notification describing the program and specifying conduct to be performed under the program. Directs the Commission to publish in the Federal Register a notice of each such notification, including a description of the participants, the program, and its objectives. Declares that material submitted as part of such notification shall be available to the public upon request, unless the Attorney General or the Commission determines that the individual who submitted the notification shows good cause for not disclosing certain material. Allows an individual to withdraw a filed notification before it is published and accompanying material is made publicly available.

Exempts actions and determinations of the Attorney General or the Commission concerning such notifications or antitrust actions or investigations from judicial review.

Title III: Intellectual Property Licensing Under the Antitrust Laws - Amends the Clayton Act to provide that agreements to convey rights to use, practice, or sublicense patented inventions, copyrights, trade secrets, trademarks, know-how, or other intellectual property shall not be deemed illegal per se in actions under the antitrust laws.

Limits to actual damages, interest thereon, and the cost of suit the amount that any person or State may recover in an antitrust action based on such an agreement.

Title IV: Patent and Copyright Misuse - Prohibits a patent or copyright owner who is entitled to relief for patent or copyright infringement from being denied relief or being deemed guilty of misuse or illegal extension of the patent right or copyright by reason of doing any of the following, unless such conduct violates the antitrust laws: (1) licensing the patent or copyright under terms that affect commerce outside the scope of its claims; (2) restricting a licensee in the sale of a patented or copyrighted product; (3) obligating a licensee to pay excessive royalties, royalties that differ from those paid by other licensees, or royalties not related to a licensee's sale of the patented or copyrighted product; (4) refusing to license a patent or copyright to any person; or (5) otherwise using the patent or copyright allegedly to suppress competition.

Title V: Process Patents - Requires a process patent to grant the patentee the right to exclude others from using or selling products produced by that process. Includes as patent infringement the unauthorized use or sale of a product of a patented process. Places the burden of proving that a product was not produced by the patented process on the defendant in a patent infringement action if the court finds that: (1) a substantial likelihood exists that the product was produced by that process; and (2) the claimant has exhausted all reasonable means of determining the process used and was unable to make such determination.

What's happening now October 11, 1984

Became Public Law No: 98-462.

 Committees of jurisdiction 2