Recently, researchers at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) finally announced the new particle discovered last summer is indeed a Higgs boson, a particle predicted purely by mathematical reasoning back in 1964.
If ideas are currency in a knowledge-driven industry such as scientific research, why is intellectual property (IP) so often taken without consent?
Recently, researchers at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) finally announced the new particle discovered last summer is indeed a Higgs boson, a particle predicted purely by mathematical reasoning back in 1964.
If ideas are currency in a knowledge-driven industry such as scientific research, why is intellectual property (IP) so often taken without consent?