众议院讨论一个法案,要求在网上公开政府资助的proposal# Faculty - 发考题
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http://www.nature.com/naturejobs/science/articles/10.1038%2Fnj7
A proposed US bill requiring all funded federal-grant applications to be
posted on a government website would help competitors, including non-US
scientists and businesses, to poach innovative research ideas, warns a group
of US universities and scientific and professional societies. A letter sent
on 15 February from the Coalition for National Science Funding (CNSF) in
Washington DC to the US House of Representatives recommends that the bill
require only abstracts to be posted. Samuel Rankin, associate executive
director of the American Mathematical Society, a CNSF member, says that
publicly open proposals would allow anyone to use researchers' ideas in
potential commercial applications, possibly even before the researcher can
file a patent. "You're giving away a lifetime of work," says Rankin.
A proposed US bill requiring all funded federal-grant applications to be
posted on a government website would help competitors, including non-US
scientists and businesses, to poach innovative research ideas, warns a group
of US universities and scientific and professional societies. A letter sent
on 15 February from the Coalition for National Science Funding (CNSF) in
Washington DC to the US House of Representatives recommends that the bill
require only abstracts to be posted. Samuel Rankin, associate executive
director of the American Mathematical Society, a CNSF member, says that
publicly open proposals would allow anyone to use researchers' ideas in
potential commercial applications, possibly even before the researcher can
file a patent. "You're giving away a lifetime of work," says Rankin.