As foundation models converge on similar benchmarks and price points, defensibility migrates downstream from architecture to data. If a company can patent the mechanisms by which biological data is structured, curated, or fed into training – its a bet that IP law will do what technical differentiation increasingly can’t.
When the model is a commodity, the patent office becomes the new moat.
For the data industry, the real question is what a defensible patent on a ‘data layer’ would even mean in practice – indexing schemas, annotation pipelines, licensing terms, or something more fundamental about how bio data gets tokenized. If enforceable, it could set a precedent that reshapes how bio-data licensors price access, since a patented pipeline changes the bargaining position between data suppliers and model builders overnight.
As AI Models Become Commodities, a Bio-Native AI Company Just Moved to Patent the Data Layer Beneath the Models