I am a third-year PhD candidate working on cultivated meat. In my research, I have developed a new and original approach to making cultivated meat that has the potential of being highly scalable and help reach economic parity, more than most other known methods that companies are working on.
My supervisor has left it up to me to decide whether to patent this method or not. I have half-based beliefs that patenting would be counter-productive in helping cultivated meat reach the market sooner, but I acknowledge that I am not knowledgeable enough in IP law/structures to really know.
If I do decide to patent the method, the patent will mostly belong to and be written by the Tech Transfer office at my university, which is of course for profit. I am not sure I trust them to consider my wish to make a fairly non-limiting patent. The usual course of this kind of thing is then for the tech transfer office to open a private startup to further develop the method. In any case, I intend to publish the method in a scientific journal. If we patent it, then it would be published after filing.
What would be best for the field as a whole - a scenario where scientists patent their findings and then publish them, or where they just publish everything open source? Given that most scientists do patent and keep everything secret within companies, what would be best to do in my position?
Congrats on having invented something exciting!
Usually, the best way to get innovative new technology into the hands of beneficiaries quickly is to get a for-profit company to invest with a promise of making money. This can happen via licensing a patent to an existing manufacturer, or creating a whole startup company and raising venture capital, etc.
One of the things such investors want to see is a 'moat': something that this company can do that no other company can easily copy. A patent/exclusive license is a good way to create a moat.
There are some domains like software where simply publishing 'open source' ideas causes those ideas to get used, but for most domains including manufacturing, my default expectation is that new tech is not used unless someone can make money off it. Pharma is a great example - there are tons of vaccines and niche treatments that we don't have manufacturing for, even though we know how, because nobody can make enough money doing it.
I'd be really interested to hear whether you are considering seeing this idea through yourself? It sounds like you're doing a Ph.D; but if you would consider dropping out to work on this as a startup, then I think doing so would be one of the best ways to maximize this idea's chances for success. (In large part because your brain probably contains tons of highly relevant info for making this product work at scale!)
You wrote: "most scientists do patent and keep everything secret within companies" -- but I wonder if this indicates confusion, since usually patents don't keep things secret, they are published. Patents just allow their owner a legal monopoly on technology for a limited time.
Can you get introduced to any food-manufacturing people (ideally folks at bigger companies, in charge of finding + investing in new food products), who you can talk to about your idea, even just to get advice? Or, founders of similar food tech companies who came up with a good idea and had to decide whether to patent it?