Who Owns Your DNA? 24
fialar writes to this "interesting article on how 10 major pharmaceutical companies want
to own your DNA. More specifically, the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Researchers of America (PhRMA), whom no one has hardly heard of.
They want to put pressure on lawmakers to wrest genetic information from private property into their own proprietary data banks. Read the article here."
copyright violations (Score:2)
If it's a limited time frame, then let's shift patents down to 10-20 years limit. The old standard was conceived in an era when innovation happened far less often, and with far more effort, and the payoff period wasn't 2-3 years. The Pharms may balk at this, but I think most people will agree that businesses have a right to a profit, but not a right to unlimited profits. Unlimited profits tends to go hand in hand with gouging.
The really scary thing is that there are some really bright people out there who are asking, "how can we get people to pay for things they already own." The DMCA was a step in that direction, and Pharms owning rights to something that is part and parcel of my being sounds like they're trying to charge me for something I already own.
Good point, so I'll reword my statement (Score:2)
So, I'll reword my little saying:
"I can no more patent a comet than I can patent a genetic sequence. Neither is forged from the fires of the imagination."
Hope that one passes muster.
Except under the DMCA.... (Score:3)
I can no more patent a comet than I can patent a genetic sequence. They are discoveries, and not inventions.
Re:Except under the DMCA.... (Score:1)
Anyway god owns all the IP on the sequences. Historically we have had an exclusive but limited term license. We are now asked to give up some exclusivity to perhaps get a longer term on that license. It's a deal I would go for.
why do we own our DNA? (Score:2)
Why should we own our DNA? If some pharmco makes a bundle of some discover from your DNA, what have they contributed? Major intellectual effort, money and time. What have you contributed? A slimey Q-tip. You get what you give. Royalties paid to people would be akin to a lottery, where your ticket is your DNA. Very few would profit in practice. Got something really valuable? Maybe you are naturally AIDS resistant, or cancer resistant. Hey, hold out for millions. You've got them over a barrel. NOW who is the profiteer? Maybe the IRS will now go after your parents for gift/estate taxes, because after all, you got the DNA from them.
If you want a compromise, maybe consider leaving DNA as private property, but mandating compulsory, nondiscriminatory licensing or something.
Note I am NOT talking about privacy, this is NOT THE SAME as privacy. Taking a routine sample and telling your employer you are at risk of Alzheimers is a heinous crime, and should always be (same goes for any other medical test). Read the article. The Oregon bill is a DNA privacy bill for a reason. The drug companies have a vested interest in maintaining privacy because they know they will be lynched otherwise.
That article reveals the mind of a clueless wonder (Score:2)
The very basis for our uniqueness and complexity will no longer belong to us, but instead will become raw material which can be extracted and exploited for corporate gain.
The author proposes that what makes me an individual is my DNA. So if I were to have an identical twin with identical DNA, neither of us are individuals. Yeah, right. Likewise any corporate research that results in "bioengineering discoveries" from my/our DNA that is turned into a product by the big mean (mean=profitable) corporation isn't really a product that can be differentiated from myself/ourselves. So the company is really selling me/us without my/our consent. Yeah, right ;)
--Chuck
Natural DNA Belongs to NO ONE. (Score:3)
You seem to see evil in people demanding money for works based on their unique genetic advantages. Good. The problem is that you instead say that this right should be turned over to pharmacutical companies. No way in hell.
Natural genetic code formed by billions of years of evolution is a public commons. It should be the property of all mankind. No company should be able to withhold the right of others to look at the DNA within themselves. The idea that a pharmacutical company should be able to patent tests on certain genes is ludicrous. It's the most obvious application of the Human Genome Project! Once you know what a gene does, testing to see if people have a problem created by that gene by looking for its presense is obvious, even to people who are not practioners versed in the art.
Natural genes that provide advantages to people are discoveries, not inventions. I don't have a problem with patenting unique created sequences, but patenting anything based on something discovered in nature is just a revolting abuse of the patent system. That's not innovation. That's not creativity. That's just taking something already existing and making sure that no one can use it without paying you for having noticed it.
If you want to see the evil that companies can do when they decide to enforce gene licenses, look no further than our favorite repeat offender, Monsanto.
Perhaps you should consider the recent Slashdot article about Monsanto suing a farmer in Canada who was growing crops based on Monsanto seeds that blew onto his property. Monsanto successfully proved that since they owned the patents to the genetically altered corn, they owned exclusive rights to the growth of the corn. Since he hadn't signed their extortionist contracts to grow the corn, he couldn't grow it, even though successive generations had been produced on his land. Futhermore, he couldn't grow crops based on seeds he had stored from the previous few years. Essentially, his business was destroyed because the Canadian courts ruled that since Monsanto owned the IP rights to the genes in the crops, they also own the rights to production of any derived works.
Now let's put those same rights of ownership of the genes that make you and me into the hands of a profiteering third party. What if your child gets a genetic enhancement that helps cure a disease? Can the company demand that your child pay a licensing fee for any children that they have? If you refuse, can they order any derivative works based on your child's genes destroyed or turned over to them?
Now, I think it's unlikely that anything this bad will ever happen with humans, but it wouldn't surprise me if it did. Greed seems to be the primary motivating factor of society today.
Sold mine to some guy: (Score:1)
--
Re:Any idea (Score:1)
Drug companies may actually have to share profits if valuable genetic material is used as the basis for a pharmaceutical.
In return for the right to use the material as they see fit and not potentially share any profits with you, I'm sure they'll have no problem at all with doing anything reasonable to ensure your privacy.
Probably the scariest part of this is the dreaded "Law of Unintended Consequences". If the only thing given up was the potential profits some drug manufacturer might be able to make from something derived from my DNA, there would be no problem. The potential benefits of these discoveries far outweigh any hypothetical money I don't have. What other uses are there which this type of legal change might affect? Big Brother type things might be least of our worries.
Who Owns Your DNA? (Score:1)
Re:Any idea (Score:1)
Have you read the Constitution? (Score:1)
I can no more patent a comet than I can patent a genetic sequence. They are discoveries, and not inventions.
Here is the appropriate line from the U.S. Constitution, Article I, Section 8:
Re:Editorial, not article (Score:1)
Yes I'm aware that a full gram is a very big grain of salt.
Possible Future (Score:2)
Attornies at Law
It has come to our attention that you are illegally using the copyrighted genetic material of our client 'OneBigCorp.Com'. Furthermore we have learned that you are attempting fo create further self replicating entities using our property (children). Under the DCMA we have insterted a 'self help' section into your genetic code. This letter is to inform you of it's activation.
Sincerly
Shyster
(The reader's heart then turns to jelly)
I own my DNA (Score:1)
Always remember, violence solves everything.
Er... Well, y'know. You can't make an omelette without um... destroying a forest. Or something.
Editorial, not article (Score:2)
It essentially says that PhRMA is lobbying to have a bill passed that enforces some rights while reduces others. The only opinion given is the author's own, no expert opinion is given. Even when the author gives his(?) opinion it is not supported by facts but by buzzwords (exploited, gold rush, Faustian bargain, individuality, etc.). As well informed as the author may be, there isn't any information conveyed that could lead any reader to form a logical conclusion. It is merely hype and bluster and (hate to say it) propaganda.
As written, this article is a complete waste of time.
Much like this comment.
Dancin Santa
Any idea (Score:1)
Re:Any idea (Score:1)
Wall Street (Score:1)
how can you patent something a billion years old (Score:1)
Finally a lawsuit we can love... (Score:1)
Oops, just kidding. But I'll bet such a farmer would get huge public support.
All your DNA are belonging to AOL. (Score:1)
Join now for only 22.95 per month and get access to your own DNA.
Who Owns Your DNA? (Score:1)
Re:All your DNA are belonging to AOL. (Score:1)