What is a crime?

Michael Perelman michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
Thu Feb 18 11:01:26 PST 1999


To begin with, being poor, sitting on the sidewalk. In Chico, skateboarding. How about vagrancy, homelessness?

Here's a story from my book: Modern Class Warfare in the Age of the Information Revolution (soon to be in paper).

Consider the case of Petr Taborsky, an undergraduate college student in chemistry and biology, who took a job as a laboratory assistant at the University of South Florida College of Engineering in 1987. The lab employed him to do testing for a project studying methods to make sewage treatment cheaper and more efficient (Anon. 1996b).

On his own, Mr. Taborsky discovered a way to turn a clay-like compound, similar to cat litter, into a reusable cleanser of sewage, a process that has many potentially valuable applications. He said that he made his discovery after the project had ended and that he did conduct any of his experiments as part of his job.

The project's principal investigator, Robert P. Carnahan, maintains that Mr. Taborsky was part of a research team and that the discovery stemmed from the team's decisions. The university said the sponsor of the project, a subsidiary of Florida Progress, a utility holding company, had all rights to the research.

A jury convicted Mr. Taborsky of grand theft of trade secrets in 1990. He was sentenced to a year's house arrest, a suspended prison term of 3 1/2 years and probation for 11 1/2 years, as well as 500 hours of community service. Mr. Taborsky violated the terms of his sentence when he obtained three patents related to the research. He was assigned to chain-gang duty for two months, although he was transferred later to a work-release center in Tampa.

The litigation continues. Mr. Taborsky still faces civil and criminal charges. In addition, the ownership of the three patents is still in dispute.

This case has ominous overtones. The university seems to accept that Mr. Taborsky made the discovery on his own. If he had done so at the behest of the project management, his employers would have ample documentation to invalidate Mr. Taborsky's claim to intellectual property. In addition, had Mr. Taborsky's employers been aware of any great expertise on his part, they probably would have paid him more than his minimal salary of $8 per hour.

The case seems to revolve around the question of who owns the rights to Mr. Taborsky's brain. I suspect that Mr. Taborsky would not have taken an interest in the subject of his discovery if had he never been employed by the university. Even so, if Mr. Taborsky had made the discovery on his own, after he ceased working for the project, then his claim would seem to be on solid ground.

How then can employers defend their right to intellectual property unless they have access to the brains of their employees even after their employment has ended? So here we have a clever student condemned to laboring on a chain gang over a dispute about the inner workings of his brain. The possibilities for panoptic intrusion are limitless.

In another notable case, IBM fired an employee, Virginia Rulon-Miller, a sales manager for dating someone who worked for a competitor (Rulon-Miller v. International Business Machines 1985). At the time, the courts found in favor of the employee, but that decision is more than a decade old. Today, the courts are far more sympathetic to the actions of business. Had she been a scientific worker, the temptation to terminate her would be even greater.

Unless corporations have full control over the brains of their employees, how can they be protect the corporate cache of intellectual property? How can they ensure that information from the brains of their employees does not drift into the brains of unauthorized persons?

But wait! Remember the claims of Nelson and Winter that firms are the repositories of knowledge. How could the defection of a mere human being threaten the economic welfare of a firm? --

Michael Perelman Economics Department California State University michael at ecst.csuchico.edu Chico, CA 95929 530-898-5321 fax 530-898-5901



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