or You decide.http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/19/opinion/19crichton.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
3/20/2006 8:41:23 PM
3/20/2006 8:48:08 PM
Is there any way out of it? Or to change it?I mean, it's not like the sky is falling or anything (re: unenforceable), but this is flatly rediculous. I don't understand why we allow patents of facts.[Edited on March 20, 2006 at 8:54 PM. Reason : ...]
3/20/2006 8:54:28 PM
patents: the new slaveryBefore the information age, they actually served a good purpose.Now, they are the most evil things in the world.Patents are fucking wrong. Period.They keep the rich rich, and keep the poor from being rewarded for their creativity—what patents were originally intentioned to do.It is an attack on nature and autonomous thought.One of the most glaring proofs of this is the fact that unlike copyright, the original author/creator of a patentable process doesn't automatically get the patent upon the authoring/creation. IOW, someone can use their own intellectual effort to create a process, be the sole entity that performs the process, but then, years later, someone with shit tons of money can come in, copy what they are doing exactly, "buy" the patent, and force the original author/creator to cease and desist.Also, more and more natural substances are being given patents.Sativex.....Red Rice Yeast....This will be the biggest issue in the 21st century, and with any luck, I personally will murder everyone who supports this bullshit.
3/20/2006 9:07:47 PM
By MICHAEL CRICHTON
3/20/2006 9:09:36 PM
http://tinyurl.com/z38dqRequired reading for this thread.The Economist frequently has pretty good articles on patents.
3/20/2006 9:58:06 PM
A fascinating case. I would find it troubling if the Supremes found it OK to patent a "basic biological relationship." There are still many mysteries of life out there waiting for us. But shedding the light of discovery on a mystery does not necessarily mean you get to own its answer. If you invent something that puts that answer to work, now that's a different story.
3/20/2006 11:33:25 PM
why the fuck not, you can already patent a plant that you had no part in selectively breeding for thousands of years, they may as well patent thinking, too
3/21/2006 1:35:56 PM
^has that actually happened with anything except the enola bean? that's the only one i can think of and i'm pretty sure it's getting tossed out but they're just dragging ass doing it.
3/21/2006 4:30:04 PM
if you construct a new genome for a plant, then you ought to be able to patent it.as long as you're constructing something, patents are great. the problem is when you patent methodologies.but i'm not saying its wrong to patent methodologies - I can easily see a compelling reason why you should be allowed to do so.
3/21/2006 4:36:46 PM
3/21/2006 5:19:13 PM
^eh, wasn't that where a drug company tried to sue dietary supplement companies or something? i couldn't find anything on google except "omg lower your cholesterol naturally!" sitesi wouldn't really consider that patenting a plant, which is what i was asking about (as in the companies will sue you if you grow the plant). i've heard people mention it pretty often but that enola case is the only one i can think of in which a company actually patented a pre-existing plant variety.[Edited on March 21, 2006 at 5:36 PM. Reason : .]
3/21/2006 5:35:38 PM
3/21/2006 6:26:50 PM
Well fuckI'd better start cashing in on my patent on Modus PonensI was wondering when this thing would come in handy** try to argue with me and I'll sue you for royalties, bitch
3/21/2006 6:30:14 PM
3/21/2006 6:34:08 PM
3/21/2006 6:49:18 PM
i think some people in this thread hold a patent on getting pwnt
3/21/2006 7:02:31 PM
3/21/2006 8:36:35 PM
3/21/2006 8:38:27 PM
gg
3/21/2006 9:14:00 PM
3/21/2006 9:20:28 PM
I dunno how I really feel about it. I mean, if it was a buttload of money and time going into research that important fact, then they should by all means be entitled to royalties in its use. The same way a chair design is patented and royalties are given. In this case, however, the idea itself is the expression of the design and so may be entitled to protection.
3/22/2006 12:11:19 AM
3/22/2006 2:22:34 PM