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Medicine United States

Biden Backs Waiving International Patent Protections For COVID-19 Vaccines (npr.org) 189

President Biden threw his support behind a World Trade Organization proposal earlier this week to waive intellectual property protections for COVID-19 vaccines, clearing a hurdle for vaccine-strapped countries to manufacture their own vaccines even though the patents are privately held. From a report: "This is a global health crisis, and the extraordinary circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic call for extraordinary measures," U.S. trade representative Katherine Tai said in a statement. "The Administration believes strongly in intellectual property protections, but in service of ending this pandemic, supports the waiver of those protections for COVID-19 vaccines." The pace of vaccinating against COVID-19 in the U.S. is slowing down. In some places, there are more vaccine doses than people who want them. Meanwhile, India is now the epicenter of the pandemic, and just 2% of its population is fully vaccinated. The WTO is considering a proposal to address that inequity, as India, South Africa and over 100 other nations advocate to waive IP rights for COVID-19 vaccines and medications, which could let manufacturers in other countries make their own.
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Biden Backs Waiving International Patent Protections For COVID-19 Vaccines

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  • Patents are not the problem.

    There are no vaccine factories sitting idle anywhere in the world because they don't have permission to make vaccines.

      • It might be parsing words, but the Intercept article reads "..they stand ready to retrofit facilities and move forward with vaccine production if given the chance." The question of what it would take to retrofit these factories, time and expense, versus just focusing on the existing factories would have to be considered.

        It's also the case that these 'volunteers' might not be as adept as producing the vaccine safely. Example one in MD https://www.npr.org/sections/c... [npr.org]

        I'm pro waiving patent protections, and

        • by Mitreya ( 579078 )

          I'm pro waiving patent protections, and indeed the US might garner so much needed international good will by doing that, reimbursing Pfizer/Moderna to some extent, and stabilizing world affairs.

          This!
          I am also pro waiving protections and reimbursing companies at a discount. But a good deed of just waiving someone else's protection seems hypocritical.

          • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

            Well the governments (ie taxpayers) have already provided significant funding to the various companies to develop these vaccines in the first place.

        • I'm pro waiving patent protections, and indeed the US might garner so much needed international good will by doing that, reimbursing Pfizer/Moderna to some extent, and stabilizing world affairs.

          Especially given that vaccine producers like Pfizer got early financial support from the Gates Foundation. Since the company didn't shoulder all the financial risk on its own, I'd argue that supports at least considering waiving the usual patent protections.

          However the fact that it was a private entity like Gates rather than governmental support might complicate that.

          • The "Pfizer" vaccine does not exist.
            It was developed by BioNtech, which got no financial aid what soever to "develop" it, only to manufactor it.
            No idea if the Gates Foundatin was involved in anything regarding that vaccine, though.

            • Kind of.
              The one you're referring to is the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine.
              In China, they use the Fosun–BioNTech vaccine.
              BioNtech designed the vaccines, while Fosun conducted clinical trials and production in China, and Pfizer conducted clinical trials and production in Germany and the US.
              Several parts of the BioNtech mRNA strands came from mRNA sequences developed in the US for MERS vaccines.

              As for financial aid, it's pretty disingenuous to say "they received no financial aid to develop it, only to man
        • The question of what it would take to retrofit these factories, time and expense, versus just focusing on the existing factories would have to be considered.
          How do you actually retrofit an existing factory to produce "more"? Hint: you need to build a new factory strand besides it.
          How do you retrofit an existing plant? You simply retrofit it.

      • by dlleigh ( 313922 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:33PM (#61356228)
        Did you read the article you linked? It explicitly says that patents are not the problem. Patent sharing is useless without the accompanying trade secrets and experience in making these vaccines:

        "On Tuesday, Martin Friede, coordinator of the WHO’s Initiative for Vaccine Research, said that the hub had already received some 50 expressions of interest from companies, including some that have patents on components or processes involved in vaccine manufacturing.
        ....
        Friede emphasized that a lack of know-how, as opposed to patent protections, are the major barrier to expanding production.

        Others agree sharing know-how is key — and getting cooperation from the companies that created the mRNA vaccines is necessary before deciding to retrofit or build facilities to make them. “It’s useless to focus on that if BioNTech and Pfizer and Moderna are not going to surrender the information on how to do it,” Edward Hammond, an independent consultant who works on vaccine manufacturing, said in a recent online roundtable about vaccine production capacity. “If it is the case that we don’t have an open and cooperative and productive technology transfer environment, then the capacity situation looks a little bit different because you’re going to be relying on a different set of technologies.”
        • The way Slashdot works, there's no time to RTFA if you hope to FP. However I admit that I do have to fault the FP for not coming close enough to the key issue of patents versus saving lives.

          Yeah, it's a meta-joke, but I'm not going to get any meta-Funny mod points for it.

        • Did you read the article you linked?

          Yes, but I was drunk. And like most all "The Intercept" article, they have their own spin, subtle phrasing, and click-baiting headlines.

          You, edi_guy, and Beryllium Sphere(tm) all make excellent points that cut to the heart of the issue. Regardless of what politicians, the media, and Internet posters say, It is not patents that are the problem, rather it is the lack of know-how, shortages in material supply chains, issues with quality control and certifications, and possibly a desire to help protect local

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          If the patent does nothing, why are the drug companies bothering to file so many of them?

        • Plus the web of licenses from suppliers. I've read that Pfizer and Moderna do not own the rights to the lipid formulas that were excruciatingly hard to develop but critical to the effectiveness of their vaccines. What do you want to bet there's a lot more like that?

      • A counterpoint to that, from someone who is not specifically a manufacturing expert but does know something about pharma supply chains, is at https://blogs.sciencemag.org/p... [sciencemag.org]

        Could be wrong, of course, but he knows more than I do.

      • Moderna nullified its patent 7 months ago. I don't understand why no one else is making their vaccine if there are idle factories.
      • https://www.thehindubusinessli... [thehindubusinessline.com]

        Ocugen to seek emergency-use nod for Covaxin in US market

        In fact Covaxin has proven efficacy against existing variants.

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      That smacks of "im just saying something I assume"

      • Also colonialist paternalism. Colonists want to keep control and help the world through "charity." This is why France still charges many African nations for the benefits of colonialism and if they don't like it they'll destroy all their capital and infrastructure on the way out⦠as if France itself didn't benefit from centuries of exploitation.
      • Vox has some actual information on the subject in a recent article.
        https://www.vox.com/future-per... [vox.com]

        They've spoken to people who know about pharma manufacturing.

        Today's supply chain issues are temporary. In the longer run, having generics available could make a real difference.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by shanen ( 462549 )

      Not too bad for the rush to FP, but I must beg to differ and insist that patents are part of the problem.

      Accepting your premise, then why don't they build more factories to produce more vaccine? Because of the restrictions on creating such factories, and patents that kill people for profit are important restrictions against building more factories.

      The priorities are quite confused here. I think lives (and time) are MUCH more important than money, but patent attorneys and greedy pharmaceutical executives dis

      • Accepting your premise, then why don't they build more factories to produce more vaccine? Because of the restrictions on creating such factories, and patents that kill people for profit are important restrictions against building more factories.

        For that premise to be true, there would have to be such patents. But there aren't. Patents are national - you have to get a patent in every country you want to assert rights in, and with 195 countries in the world, that gets very expensive, very quickly. Most of the countries are simply not worth the expensive of obtaining a patent, because the local market is too small or unprofitable. As a result, the vast majority of companies obtain patents only in major jurisdictions - the US, EU, UK, China, Japan, Ca

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          Hmm... Thanks for the clarification, though your disclaimer seems to be muddling it. I'm also confused about where you stand on the issue of profits versus saving lives, but my understanding is that most pharmaceutical companies prefer to invest in the most profitable drugs, which tend to be palliatives for chronic conditions, rather than one-time cures and vaccines with more limited profit potential.

          However I think your understanding must be closer to the reality than mine, and yet, in that case, why are s

    • Patents are not the problem.

      There are no vaccine factories sitting idle anywhere in the world because they don't have permission to make vaccines.

      The problem is exactly that there are no vaccine factories sitting idle. The reason for that is that, if you were the type of place that could easily and cheaply build a vaccine factory, you couldn't be sure that you could produce vaccine there since you might get sued for breaching patents. If the patent protections are taken away then you will know that your factory could produce these vaccines. Plus there could be plenty more investment in production of the raw materials needed to produce those vaccin

    • I think they can manage a vaccine factory, probably in less time. But who's gonna spend the money and time of they're gonna get shut down?
  • Short sighted (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:07PM (#61356056)
    So, next time a pandemic rolls around companies may curtail investment knowing their IP will be taken from them as soon as they succeed.

    Hey Biden, buy licenses or actual vaccines for those countries instead.
    • WORLDWIDE PANDEMIC. That means even the people who run those companies could get sick. They could curtail all they want and in the end hurt themselves for the sake of money.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      They also got pre-orders in the millions of doses. They aren't losing money on this deal.

    • Investment. Where did these companies get their money to investigate? The US government, Dolly Parton, all sorts of places were providing R&D funds. Why should they alone reap the benefits?

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Their IP? The U.S. has been funding RNA vaccine technologies for years, that's how the companies were able to throw them together so quickly. And they were paid for the effort.

  • Next pandemic (Score:5, Insightful)

    by stikves ( 127823 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:09PM (#61356062) Homepage

    The current mRNA vaccines are the fruits of about 30 years of hard work. And we are fortunate they had the commercial infrastructure to manufacture these vaccines in time. In fact it was a record time to market, being less than a year.

    What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

    And to be fair, they already pledge sharing their patents in the pandemic:
    https://www.jdsupra.com/legaln... [jdsupra.com]

    • A desire to stay alive regardless of who they are is a strong motivator towards doing the work. That's why healthcare isn't like any other good or service.

    • Re:Next pandemic (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ZombieCatInABox ( 5665338 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:21PM (#61356144)

      What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

      Basic human decency.

      • Re:Next pandemic (Score:5, Insightful)

        by chispito ( 1870390 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:39PM (#61356262)

        What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

        Basic human decency.

        Decency is not "altering the deal" with someone after you get what you want out of them.

      • Re:Next pandemic (Score:5, Insightful)

        by garett_spencley ( 193892 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:51PM (#61356316) Journal

        This is way overly simplistic.

        I want to work in a field where I can be proud of the fact that I'm making the world a better place. I'd love to contribute towards the fight against cancer and other diseases. Yet I still have children to feed and I need to consider what the lives of myself and my spouse will be like when we're too old to work.

        Companies need to pay their employees, their rent, cover other overhead and the entrepreneurs and investors who risked big chunks of their fortunes and put their lives on hold while they tried to build something they believed might make everyone better off deserve to cash in on the fruits of their labour (intellectual and physical) if successful.

        Rather than looking at patent protections and the profit motive as an evil that puts money ahead of people (as if there is a dichotomy there), consider that people sunk a ton of their lives into producing something that others benefit from. I think it's pretty backwards to paint the inventors, researchers and companies as the indecent ones while at the same time suggesting that, despite the fact that they made the world better, they can GTFO as far as their own reward and compensation goes.

        • All that has nothing to do with how the (american) patent system works.
          In most of the nations you can manufacture stuff that is patented "for a reasonable fee".
          In the US, you cant't. The owner of the patent will set a fee you can not pay, and if you do not obligee he will sue you into bankruptcy.
          And note: he will not rump up production to fit world wide demand, he will it keep as low as possible to exploit the 101 economics class principle: supply and demand.
          Completely neglecting that 7 billion people would

      • An entire civilization tried using that as the only reward for your efforts, and here's how that turned out:

        https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHi... [reddit.com]

      • "Basic human decency" - Good luck with that.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The researchers Don't enjoy the benefits of patents, they merely get to keep their job. The boss gets all the benefits.

      People will develop vaccines and medicine to stay alive, not just collect rent.

    • These vaccines were produced from public funding. And mRNA vaccines were produced by the passion of researchers in spite of the pharmaceutical industry and academia: https://billypenn.com/2020/12/... [billypenn.com]
      • by sabri ( 584428 )

        These vaccines were produced from public funding

        They were not. Kariko has been working for BioNTech since 2013. Both BioNTech/Pfizer and Moderna explicitly rejected public funding because, in their own words, "with accepting money comes accepting control".

        You should go and watch The Vaccine: Conquering COVID, on Discovery+. Very informative.

        What Joseph Stalin^H^H^H Biden is trying to do is simply take private property, under the threat of a (the goverment's) gun, and distribute it to the third parties without compensation. There is a word for that: r

        • Who said it was without compensation?
    • The current mRNA vaccines are the fruits of about 30 years of hard work. And we are fortunate they had the commercial infrastructure to manufacture these vaccines in time. In fact it was a record time to market, being less than a year.

      What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

      And to be fair, they already pledge sharing their patents in the pandemic:
      https://www.jdsupra.com/legaln... [jdsupra.com]

      The objective is to manufacture as many vaccines as quickly as possible.

      I think it's possible to do this without making the patents worthless, either use mandatory licensing or simply compensate the drug companies for the waived patents.

      Making a vaccine seems difficult enough that I'm not sure how much this would help. Any company with the infrastructure to manufacture a vaccine at scale should also have the infrastructure to enter a mandatory licensing arrangement.

    • by stikves ( 127823 )

      [replying to multiple threads in one go]

      Katalin Karikó was the lead researcher in making mRNA based vaccines a reality. Her research grants were being rejected, and her university had demoted her. Basically public did not believe in her, until she built her private company, and later merged with BioNTech and became a senior vice president there.

      https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/16... [cnn.com]
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      It is not like a big company swooped in and took the patents. This was a hard working individu

    • Same as the previous generation of researchers?

      Dr. Kariko was not driven by greed. She actually hurt her career for years by pursuing mRNA therapeutics.

      The companies with the manufacturing capacity could be motivated lots of ways, like research funding and purchase guarantees.

    • And we are fortunate they had the commercial infrastructure to manufacture these vaccines in time

      Just FYI. This is one of the things that operation warp speed was about. Giving money to help these companies build this infrastructure, rapidly. There's other things like paying to have trails in parallel and logistical support. But it is important that tax payers helped build a good part of that infrastructure for making these vaccines.

      What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

      The US government is already paying a gigaton of money here for vaccines domestically. Is that not already enough? Additionally, researchers are usually not the ones

    • During that 30 years. No company on earth is willing to invest in research that won't make a dime in what's basically an entire career cycle.

      We shouldn't leave vital research up to the whims of people who can only plan a quarter or two. And as a matter of fact we don't. We just don't talk about it because that way those CEOs can take the credit and money for themselves.
      • by stikves ( 127823 )

        I think you missed out on the part where the researcher herself holds the patents, and built her private company. She is now a SVP at BionTech.
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        Actually, she before when she was at a university, her research was not funded by the government, and grants were rejected. And her current company specifically did not want any public funding either.

    • What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

      No, the researchers are getting paid as much (or little) as they ever do. It's private investors and corporate shareholders who may have cause to be worried, as this may dilute their investment, if it was anything worth noting. Pfizer and Moderna are both being paid in the billions and have a solid business model and essentially exclusive access to the wealt

      • by stikves ( 127823 )

        Once again the original researcher is an SVP at Biontech, and still holds the patents.

        Also, Biontech did not receive public funding for research, but only a recent grant during pandemic to speed up development. And that was German government, not US. That is why Merkel is pretty pissed right now:

        https://www.bloomberg.com/news... [bloomberg.com]

    • They can still sell the vaccines, most vaccines have a large amount of public research funding behind them anyhow. A small change in federal contracting procedures and we'd have publicly owned several of the vaccines without anyone needing to waive or seize anything.
    • by Dan667 ( 564390 )
      I don't want whether I live or die to be decided by people who only want to make the most money.
    • Re:Next pandemic (Score:4, Informative)

      by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot&worf,net> on Thursday May 06, 2021 @05:01PM (#61356538)

      The current mRNA vaccines are the fruits of about 30 years of hard work. And we are fortunate they had the commercial infrastructure to manufacture these vaccines in time. In fact it was a record time to market, being less than a year.

      What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

      Actually, mRNA vaccines have been around for over 50 years. We've known about the possibility of using them since the 70s. However, packaging the mRNA into a form we could use was only done within the past 5 years.

      You see, mRNA by itself is not useful. You can't just inject it and have it work - it needs to "infect" a cell. So you need to enclose it in something that the cell will readily accept.

      But even that's not enough, because the body's immune system will attack it before it gets into a cell (foreign body, after all).

      Also, mRNA is fairly fragile - it's basically designed to hold a temporary non-reproducing copy of a snippet of DNA so it's designed to be easily created, and easily disposed of, Which means it needs to be protected.

      That's been where all the work has gone into. Making mRNA is trivial - a bioreactor with a few cells in it can churn it out all day long. But coming up with the process to coat it with a protective substance so the body doesn't break it down instantly, then coat it with something that the cell will absorb into itself is much more difficult. Did I mention mRNA was fragile?

      As for why do it - well, next pandemic, the first to make it available gets to dictate the price and get lots of sales. The price of Pfizer or Moderna is relatively pricey at around $5 a shot or so, not including costs of transportation and storage. Johnson and Johnson and AstraZeneca are cheaper all around and much easier to store (AstraZeneca can be stored in a standard freezer indefinitely, a refrigerator for weeks, and days at room temperature, while Johnson and Johnson can be stored refrigerated indefinitely and at room temperature for weeks.

      Pfizer and Moderna have tied up the first world (the only places that can afford the cooling technology required to store and transport htem) and charge a lot. AstraZeneca and J&J are really aimed at the rest of the world and they'll get their millions from groups like COVAX that do the whole "buy one donate one" campaigns where first world countries buy it at twice the cost and donate one to the poorer countries that can't afford it.

      Next disease they'll all be on it again. It's still high reward, just less high. You can be sure that even if they used to make billions before, they'll still make billions after, just a few billions less. It would be surprising if they would say "we didn't bother researching this because we'd only make $10B instead of $12B". or "We'll let Moderna make the billions of dollars instead of us".

      • by hoofie ( 201045 )

        Pfizer is $20 a shot Govt wholesale price - big difference between that and $5

        • Pfizer is $20 a shot Govt wholesale price - big difference between that and $5

          Isn't that a price for a whole vial, which contains 5 shots?

    • _International_ patent protection

      It's like getting dropped off at your friend's house and acting like your parents making their parents cut the crust off your sandwiches is something your parents OWE you for being their little shit, I mean Snowflake.

      Sure mom does that for you at home, in exchange for you not making her other chores harder, and nobody gives a damn how ungrateful you are in your own home, that's your business, mom is just happy you're eating.

      The absolute _height_ of entitlement is throwing a

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      They won't be invalidated, just suspended... Temporarily, no less And even then only with respect to development for COVID vaccine generics. Other applications of the patent that are not relevant to COVID19 would still be subject to licensing. Reasonably, their duration should be extended for the same period that they are extended. Once the crisis of short supply has passed, the licensing on the relevant patents would be reinstated.

      If massive numbers of people dying were, in fact, objectively more i

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )
        Blargh.... I typed exactly the opposite of what I meant and didn't see it until I clicked submit, which makes my last statement above make no sense, but hopefully my intent comes through/
    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      Technology developed over 30 years is a series of incremental improvements, used for many different things not just this one vaccine.

      The record time to market was due to a strong push from multiple governments, ie it was paid for by you the taxpayer not by these pharma companies.

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      What would be the motivation of next generation of researchers if they know their patents will be invalidated just when they actually get to use them?

      Brand recognition and government money up front.

      How much money big pharma spend on marketing every year? How much marketing money could compare to the publicly Pfizer is getting now because they have a covid vaccine?

      Also, if no US pharma bothered to create vaccine for the next pandemic, the world will simply use vaccine from China or Russia, which means the publicly goes to Chinese/Russian pharma.

      How many people in the US have heard of the Chinese pharmas who made covid vaccines (yes, plural)? I bet most

  • by LagDemon ( 521810 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:11PM (#61356078) Homepage
    Patents aren't the problem. All of the companies involved are scaling up production as fast as they can, and right now they are hitting hard material limits. There just aren't enough supplies being manufactured to scale up any faster. Patents were never the problem.

    Derek Lowe has a very good write-up at https://blogs.sciencemag.org/p... [sciencemag.org] that explains it well enough that even a politician could understand it.
    • He's a nerd. I've been following his writings for years and have come to respect him. He deserves a careful listen.

    • by Mitreya ( 579078 )
      Yes, yes, most importantly a FREE gesture
      Sort of reminds me of the "eviction ban" that just came up in the news because a judge ruled against it
      Instituting an eviction ban was also a nice free gesture because it doesn't cost anything.
      (Not saying it was a bad idea, but it was sort of like volunteering someone else to help instead of helping yourself)
    • Yeah, I don't really understand the rationale here anyway. Freeing up the patents doesn't mean Moderna/Pfizer (especially) need to give anyone the details of how to make their vaccines. So you won't run into patent issues - does this mean any fucking bozo can just start cranking out these highly specialized pieces of engineering that require careful manufacturing processes, refrigeration, etc...? No. It doesn't.

      Is J&J's vaccine really the target here, I don't see factories just ramping up to produce mrn

    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      Patents aren't the problem.

      Patents are the problem in the sense that they are always a problem. The patent system should be swept away in its entirety.

  • by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:14PM (#61356088)

    There was a lot of funding, at every stage for the long-standing upkeep for starting these vaccines - as soon as it was detected in 2019, it was started, and by January 2020, several vaccines were in their final stage and were onto full testing, by most accounts.

    There were many, many forms of additional funding along the way - so there wasn't much unfunded work done on these things at any stage.

    So yeah - in cases like those, it's fair to say that there's no unlimited rent seeking needed to make sure everyone is paid and happy for their work on this project.

    This isn't one of those tasks that needs unlimited investor frenzy to need motivation to exist. This is basic survival of massive amounts of humanity - and the basis for any minimum continued existence of productivity in any field... you don't need market 'enthusiasm' to keep interests alive on this.

    Not to say that we as a people won't forget this - that we won't cut back on vaccine funding over time, or forget it in budgets ... but we do fund organizations that do keep these things alive, and who have learned how to scale up their projects and industry connections when things start to flare up again - as they will.

    So yeah - this is totally fair, in an financial sense. No unlimited rent seeking in a global pandemic - it's not needed, or helpful for any outcome.

    Patent enforcement also would only slow down the vaccine usage in pockets of the world that will be most crucial to keeping further outbreaks from mutating and spreading it back around.

    Ryan Fenton

  • by cirby ( 2599 )

    Moderna already waived patent enforcement for their vaccine.

    They did it back in October.

    The big problem is that all of the factories that could possibly produce these vaccines are already tied up for at least the next year, and none of the third world countries that are screaming for vaccines have any sort of capacity to make these new, high-tech products.

    Biden can call for free stuff all he wants, but he's got just about zero control over the situation, even if he wasn't clueless about it.

  • Think twice (Score:2, Interesting)

    by cygnusvis ( 6168614 )
    Firms will think twice before making vaccines in the future. If you think developing vaccines isnâ(TM)t about making a profit, I have a bridge to sell you
    • Check out the results from an Oxford study measuring the benefits and harms [service.gov.uk] of the AstraZeneca vaccine. If you missed the key revelation, it's right at the beginning: For every 100,000 people with low exposure risk and ages 20-29, the vaccine will prevent 0.8 ICU admissions, but cause 1.1 serious harms due to the vaccine .

      The problem isn't anti-vaxxers (they can't be convinced), or people with in-depth knowledge of the vaccines (they speak objectively to the risks), it's the horde of useful idiots who a
      • For every 100,000 people with low exposure risk and ages 20-29, the vaccine will prevent 0.8 ICU admissions, but cause 1.1 serious harms due to the vaccine .

        "For people with low exposure risk" is the key. Getting to the point of "low exposure risk" (approx. where the UK was in March) required months of lockdown, and a months-long vaccination campaign of the elderly. Based on where the UK was as recently as February, the risks of covid outweigh the risk of the vaccine in the 20-29 demographic. Very few countries [ourworldindata.org] are in a better spot covid-wise than the UK is now, so for the populations of those countries the under-29s should still be lining up for their AZ sh

  • She might have just laid several golden eggs...but best to cut her down to size because twitter said so.

    Something about eating your seedcorn bears mentioning too.

    These kinds of destructive, ineffectual, virtue-signalling stunts is why I haven't vited for a Democrat in 15 years and never will again.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by hyades1 ( 1149581 )

      No, the reason you haven't voted Democrat in more than a decade and never will again is that you're the kind of vile cunt who likes to say, "Now I've got mine, to hell with everybody else".

      What you got, you got in a world built for you by stronger, better people than you, a world where the American Dream still actually existed. Now that you have been helped through the door, you want to close it on everybody else.

      Fuck you.

      • And the reason you vote Democrat and always will is because you enjoy stealing from your grandchildren and calling it "compassion."

        Go fuck yourself. No one owes you any.

        • You have no idea how I vote. If you knew your own country's history, you'd have to admit that the theft from grandchildren has been conducted by post-LBJ Republicans.

          But you're either too stupid or too ignorant, or both, to acknowledge simple historical facts.

  • We need to take the profit out of health care! and no I'm not saying makeing doctors poor.

  • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @03:50PM (#61356308)

    A good analysis: [marginalrevolution.com]

    Patents are not the problem. All of the vaccine manufacturers are trying to increase supply as quickly as possible. Billions of doses are being produced–more than ever before in the history of the world. Licenses are widely available. AstraZeneca have licensed their vaccine for production with manufactures around the world, including in India, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, China and South Africa. J&J’s vaccine has been licensed for production by multiple firms in the United States as well as with firms in Spain, South Africa and France. Sputnik has been licensed for production by firms in India, China, South Korea, Brazil and pending EMA approval with firms in Germany and France. Sinopharm has been licensed in the UAE, Egypt and Bangladesh. Novavax has licensed its vaccine for production in South Korea, India, and Japan and it is desperate to find other licensees but technology transfer isn’t easy and there are limited supplies of raw materials:

    [...]

    Technology transfer has been difficult for AstraZeneca–which is one reason they have had production difficulties–and their vaccine uses relatively well understood technology. The mRNA technology is new and has never before been used to produce at scale. Pfizer and Moderna had to build factories and distribution systems from scratch. There are no mRNA factories idling on the sidelines. If there were, Moderna or Pfizer would be happy to license since they are producing in their own factories 24 hours a day, seven days a week (monopolies restrict supply, remember?). Why do you think China hasn’t yet produced an mRNA vaccine? Hint: it isn’t fear about violating IP.

    The major bottlenecks are raw materials, factories, and technical capability, none of which are addressed by the patent waiving.

    Overall this decision is probably irrelevant to the pandemic, with the slight possibility of it being harmful if less sophisticated domestic producers start diverting raw materials to low efficiency vaccine factories.

    • And so what ? Even if it takes 18 month for new production chains to come up, at least the humanity as a whole will be better ready to face it. Would this had been done from the start, we wouldn't have lost 6 months already. Do you want to wait for the next, possibly more deadly, pandemic, to waive the protections and then let people die again for 18 more months ? This is not random technology, it is technology that saves lives, that was partly developed using public money. From Mediapart, a French investi
    • Why do you think China hasn’t yet produced an mRNA vaccine? Hint: it isn’t fear about violating IP.

      They do have 1 licensed from BioNTech: Fosun–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, sold by Fosun Pharma.

  • Not sure why I wasn't attributed for the article that I submitted more than half a day ago and went red since then. This is the second time that's happen.

    Anyways I thought this was important as well, and was wondering what people actually thought about the argument that's was not included in the summary.

    "The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America expressed pointed opposition to the Biden administration's support for waiving IP protections. The trade group's members include vaccine makers such

  • by spitzak ( 4019 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @04:58PM (#61356528) Homepage

    I don't understand why the companies don't just freely license the production. It seems like a win all around.
    1. The companies are already making as much vaccine as they can so they are not losing any sales
    2. They could (at some expense) also provide the information needed by the factories that is not included in the patent (one of the main objections mentioned above was the lack of this information).
    3. Conversely, they could also sell some necessary supplies and make money
    4. The license could be for a limited time, so the company has lost nothing
    5. It would stop any idea of the government waiving patent protection
    6. It would be a huge publicity win for the company.

  • were going to make vaccines.
  • by denbesten ( 63853 ) on Thursday May 06, 2021 @09:48PM (#61357174)

    Seems to me that if a company accepts a billion dollars from the taxpayers to develop a vaccine, the resultant intellectual property ought to belong to the taxpayers.

    Of course, such an expectation is best included as part of the granting process, not after manufacturing is well under way.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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