![]()
EXPORT CONTROL POLICY
Updated policy and procedures on tangible exports and acceptance of 3rd
party proprietary or restricted information
DECISION TREE
To assist in determining the applicability of export controls
![]()
If you have questions about the applicability of export control regulations
to a particular situation, or about any of the information presented on this
page, contact:
Steve Eisner,
Export Control Officer
steve.eisner@stanford.edu
(650) 724-7072
In the course of their Stanford work, Principal Investigators and other researchers may be asked to accept confidential, proprietary or restricted information, materials, software code or technology from a sponsor or third party. The sponsor or third party - a company or a government agency, for example - will require that the researcher sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA), sometimes also called a Confidential Disclosure Agreement (CDA) or Confidentiality Agreement.
These can come up in the context of several kinds of institutional arrangements, including equipment or software loans, technology licensing, data sharing agreements, or material transfer agreements. In these kinds of university agreements, a Stanford office, usually the Office of Sponsored Research or the Industrial Contracts Office, will be involved and can negotiate appropriate terms on behalf of the University.
NOTE: NDAs are generally NOT permitted for class projects at Stanford. Students should not be asked to sign an NDA in order to participate in a class project, and companies should not provide any information to project-based classes if they are not willing to permit the information to be made public.
In other cases, a sponsor or third party may ask an individual at Stanford to sign such an agreement as part of an ongoing or proposed activity in which there is mutual interest, such as a clinical trial or potential collaborative research project. In these cases, the NDA is between the sponsor or third party and the individual. The researcher cannot sign on behalf of Stanford University.
NOTE: Work done as part of a consulting arrangement falls outside of the individual's Stanford responsibilities. The guidance on this page does not apply to consulting arrangements. Because of the signficant risk involved, in no way should an individual who has accepted the receipt of export controlled information under a consulting agreement either bring such export controlled information onto campus or use it in any "incidental" way with Stanford property.
Standard Templates (see http://www.stanford.edu/group/ICO/researchAdmins/raConfidential.html).
A standard template for a Non-Disclosure Agreement is available from Stanford's Industrial Contracts Office.
| Dean of Research Office | Industrial
Contracts Office |
| Office
of Sponsored Research | Office
of the General Counsel |