Outstanding Achievements In Biopiracy - 2004 34
mr_don't writes "The Coalition Against Biopiracy is hosting yet another 'Captain Hook Awards,' for 'Outstanding Achievements in Biopiracy.' So far, only a few nominees have been submitted, but a key one is for Melbourne-based Genetic Technologies for 'having patented the non-coded DNA of all living creatures, including humans.' The web site is calling for 'help to identify the Greediest, Most Offensive and Dangerous biopirates from across the globe' -- I am sure Slashdot readers certainly know of a few."
Yet another example... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yet another example... (Score:2)
Re:Yet another example... (Score:2)
It seems to me thats exactly what they are doing.
A little more info please (Score:4, Interesting)
So what's the problem with that? I'd like to see a little evidence that they've indeed "patented the non-coded DNA of all living creatures", and not just come up with some convenient way to analyze it.
Re:A little more info please (Score:2, Interesting)
So what's the problem with that? I'd like to see a little evidence that they've indeed "patented the non-coded DNA of all living creatures", and not just come up with some convenient way to analyze it.
If your working on 'junk DNA' in any species, you will have to pay them royalties I'd say that that counted as a patent (I bet that the patent is written so broardly that it covers all techniques (both persent and undiscover
Re:A little more science please (Score:1)
Maybe not a Biopirate (Score:3, Funny)
Is this illegal and if not, why not? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this illegal and if not, why not? (Score:2)
My deity! (Score:1, Funny)
Put on your raincoats and helmets, lads; the pigs'll be flying over at any moment!
Re:Is this illegal and if not, why not? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Is this illegal and if not, why not? (Score:4, Insightful)
The way this stuff's going, I'd be willing to pay a few extra bucks in taxes to hire some smart, big-brained muthas with field experience (I think that's especially important) who are going to say "no" when they should and say "yes" when they should. Put the chimps who are doing it now out on their asses.
Re:Why don't they patent the art of lovemaking? (Score:2)
Re:Why don't they patent the art of lovemaking? (Score:1)
Intron patents (Score:5, Informative)
Looking at the summaries of the intron ("Junk DNA") patents, they seem to be applications of completely general techniques and knowledge (restriction digests & DNA sequencing (first developed in the 1960's), introns (discovered in 1977), and PCR amplification (invented in 1985)) to a subsection of the domain the prior techniques were intended to cover.
It's a bit like having someone invent the automobile then someone else patenting "Using an automobile to deliver packages"
Specifically the patents seem to be:
1. Use primers derived from dna sequence flanking the intron and immediately inside the intron to PCR amplify the intron
2. Do stuff (sequence, map restriction sites) with the intron sequence you've amplified in step one.
This isn't to diminish any insight the inventor might have had into the importance of "junk DNA", but the method described is a straightforward application of more general processes.
~Phillip
Was it just me... (Score:3, Funny)
I was beginning to wonder where they'd gone...
No, just me? Oh. Oops.
To whom does DNA belong? (Score:3, Interesting)
But what about DNA in other life forms? I have a piebald gerbil, who everyone thinks is the prettiest of the lot. Whose is her DNA? Have I the right to breed from her and sell the offspring? Probably not if you believe the animal rights extremists {BTW, if you're one of them: organic fertiliser is made from animals} but what's a gerbil going to do by way of revenge? {Apart from escape from her cage and chew through my CAT5 in several places, but that's too horrible a thought to contemplate}. However, once I have sold any of my fancy-coloured gerbils, I lose all claim to them. I can't prevent them breeding {actually it is physically possible to sterilise a gerbil, but the anaesthetic is the sticking point; too little and it dies of pain, too much and it never comes around. You could dilute the dope to measure it [easier to measure whole grammes at 0.1% than milligrammes at full strength], but you'd need to re-purify it before administering it.} Anyway. The point is that if I breed an animal or a plant, its DNA does not belong to me.
Or, suppose I had bred a certain Medicinal Herb that had particularly fine qualities, with the intention of selling it in ten-pound wraps. If I really wanted to make sure nobody else could grow my wonder Weed, then I should be responsible for making sure it has no viable seeds in it -- and if I fail, and someone else starts selling the same product cheaper, well, that's my tough titty. {Don't try this at home, kids; the offspring from first generation hybrids may bear little resemblance to the parent stock. Draw some mendel diagrams if you want to prove it to yourself.} DNA is in the Public Domain. We just haven't quite finished recovering the source from the munged binaries we were given.
At any rate, we need to push for an INTERNATIONAL law that there is NO "INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY" IN LIVING THINGS, and impose sanctions on countries whose laws do not recognise this concept. This may upset a few rich people, but so did the abolition of slavery. Ultimately it would ensure that science would benefit society {e.g. disease-resistant crops to feed the world} rather than harming it {e.g. high-maintenance crops upon which biotechnology and associated companies, and precious few others, get fat}.
God has a patent... (Score:1)
Re:God has a patent... (Score:2)
but some might view it as prior art!
Consider Stallman's essay on "Biopiracy" (Score:3, Interesting)
I came across an interesting essay of RMS' on "biopiracy" [stallman.org] that is worth considering.
this is a great idea! FOR ME TO POOP ON. (Score:1)
Introns are the non-coding segments of DNA, the parts of the code that do not specially get transcribed and translated into proteins. However, many scientists have discovered cases where the introns often dictate the expression levels of exons (protein coding regions) around them.
My question is this, if this company "owns" the introns and claims to make a medically useful technology based on controlling protein expression, bu
Far-reaching patents (Score:2)
Maybe that's a good thing (Score:1)