Patents as Knowledge Artifacts: An Information Science Perspective on Global Innovation
M. S. Rajeevan, B. Mini Devi

TL;DR
This paper redefines patents as knowledge artifacts within information science, analyzing their role in global innovation, technological change, and ethical considerations across AI, biotech, and international patent competition.
Contribution
It introduces a novel perspective by framing patents as knowledge artifacts and explores their implications for innovation, ethics, and information management.
Findings
AI challenges traditional patent authorship and prior art searches.
Biotech patents raise ownership and ethical issues.
Patents are strategic tools in global innovation competition.
Abstract
In an age of fast-paced technological change, patents have evolved into not only legal mechanisms of intellectual property, but also structured storage containers of knowledge full of metadata, categories, and formal innovation. This chapter proposes to reframe patents in the context of information science, by focusing on patents as knowledge artifacts, and by seeing patents as fundamentally tied to the global movement of scientific and technological knowledge. With a focus on three areas, the inventions of AIs, biotech patents, and international competition with patents, this work considers how new technologies are challenging traditional notions of inventorship, access, and moral accountability.The chapter provides a critical analysis of AI's implications for patent authorship and prior art searches, ownership issues arising from proprietary claims in biotechnology to ethical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntellectual Property and Patents · Law, AI, and Intellectual Property · Copyright and Intellectual Property
