Starting from the July 2017 Graduation period, Politecnico is going to
implement a new pilot phase
COPYRIGHT AND INTELLECTUAL
AND INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
- Copyright
- Creative Commons Licences (CC)
- Intellectual and Industrial Property Rights
- Theses containing patentable results, software
or works of industrial design
- Embargo
Copyright
Graduation
theses are among the works protected by the Law on Copyright (no. 633 of
22/04/1941). Article 1 states that “this law protects the works of
the mind having a creative character and belonging to literature, music,
figurative arts, architecture, theatre, or cinematography, whatever the style
or form of expression”; article 2 of the same law includes a list of
non-exhaustive examples of protected subject matter and explicitly mentions scientific
works among them. According to national jurisprudence “the graduation thesis is
a work of the mind which can be protected in accordance with copyright law” (cfr. App. Perugia, 22 February 1995, in Pluris
database).
Copyright law protects the style, not the idea, of a work.
The style must
have a particular degree of creativity and novelty. The student who has written
the thesis is the author of the thesis; therefore, he/she fully owns the moral
and economic rights to it.
Creative
Commons licenses (CC)
Creative Commons licenses help authors
retain the right to economically exploit their own creative work, while
allowing others to use it free of charge under certain terms. Thanks to these
licenses the author establishes an agreement with his/her users: the authorship
of the work is clearly acknowledged, but at the same time the work can be
disseminated and shared. The traditional copyright system prescribed by the law
establishes that a work cannot be used without permission of the author, while
Creative Commons licenses allow certain types of uses.
These licenses facilitate the sharing
process of a work; they use a clear
language that even search engines can easily understand, and help authors
clarify which rights they want to transfer to their users. When authors choose
a Creative Commons License, they retain copyright, but offer to the community
some exclusive rights that are normally reserved to authors by copyright law.
If you choose to release your work with
a Creative Commons License which includes the “non-commercial” attribution, you
require the users of your work (licensees) not to use it for commercial
purposes. In any case, the creator (who owns the rights to the work covered by
the license) can decide any time to use his/her work for commercial purposes.
We suggest you release your theses with
a CC BY-NC-ND license: this license limits the use that potential readers can
make of your work, since they can’t change it in any way or use it commercially.
We remind you that:
- your thesis must not include any part
covered by copyright and used without explicit permission of the author. It
must not include personal and sensitive data, any other confidential data or
information protected by industrial secret.
- if your thesis contains a reference to
any discoveries or ideas that will be patented in the future, you need to postpone the dissemination or
publication of your thesis until the patent has been registered. After filing
the patent application, you must place your thesis under an 18-month embargo.
Intellectual and
Industrial Property Rights
The results of a
research activity carried out by a student for his/her thesis project can be
worth being protected by Industrial
Property Rights (for instance, a patent) or copyright (for example, software
and works of industrial design). The Industrial and Intellectual Property
Rights Regulations of Politecnico di Torino (issued with Rectoral Decree no.
299 of 22/07/2007) provide the regulatory framework adopted by the University
in this field. All students are required to accept these Regulations when they
enrol in any Bachelor’s degree programme and comply with these rules.
Industrial and Intellectual Property Rights Regulations are available on the
website of Politecnico.
Theses containing patentable results, software or
works of industrial designIf your thesis
contains results which are susceptible of patent protection, first of all, you
must verify with your Supervisor if your thesis meets the requirements for patent
protection of the invention; then, you need to contact the competent
Politecnico office before your thesis oral defence.
In addition to
this, before you submit your thesis, you must follow the dedicated procedure
and request that the confidentiality of
your thesis is preserved for a period of time sufficient to verify if it meets
the requirements for protection of the
findings and eventually to apply for a patent.
We remind you
that, before applying for a patent, you must keep your invention strictly
confidential; in fact, any form of “pre- dissemination” (for example, during
the thesis oral defence) invalidates the patentability of your findings.
If your thesis
includes software or works of industrial design, we recommend you inform the
competent offices of Politecnico.
Reference is
made to the Industrial and Intellectual Property Rights Regulations of
Politecnico di Torino (issued with Rectoral Decree no. 299 of 22/072007) which
regulates the ownership of intellectual and industrial property rights and
internal procedures in this field.
Embargo
When access to a
thesis needs to be restricted for a certain period of time, you may apply for
an embargo to be placed on public access to your thesis; in this case, the
University will not publish or disclose the contents of your thesis, including
data and images contained in the document, except for metadata (name and last name,
thesis title, etc.).
During the
embargo period a thesis is kept in the institutional archives of the University
and no public access to it is permitted; only metadata will be of public
domain.
As a general
rule, the embargo period lasts 12,18 or 36 months but you can apply for a
longer embargo period. When the embargo period expires, your thesis will be
released to open access, unless you request otherwise and justify the extension
request.
An embargo period
can be granted if the request is duly justified, in particular in the following
cases:
- necessity to
avoid disclosure of thesis results that are susceptible of being patented, in order to preserve the
novelty requirement for the patent.
- confidentiality
agreements or prior arrangements or contracts with outside organizations or
companies,
- confidentiality
and/or ownership of the results belonging to outside organizations or companies
which took part in the research activity;
- publication
- public security
(if the content of the thesis can somehow threaten public or national security)
- privacy reasons (
if the thesis is about a person who is still alive or has recently died and
there is a risk of privacy violation)