- Wed Jul 24, 2019 2:06 pm
#66824
Hi Ataraxia!
The line you're referring to tells us that judges often provide a noncommercial research exception to patent infringement. What that means is that if the research being conducted is noncommercial, the judge provides them with an "exception" to the patent infringement laws, meaning that they can conduct the research without being subject to the consequences that may normally come from violating patent infringement laws. Basically, noncommercial researchers are exempt from those laws and are allowed to continue research without legal consequences.
It's similar to how there are often exceptions to copyright infringement for educational purposes. So you might not normally be able to photocopy a book and distribute it, but if you are a teacher distributing it to your class, you maybe be seen as an exception to the normal copyright infringement rules and not subject to the same legal consequences.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey