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by jrkelly
4727 days ago
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Well computer programs are protectable by copyright. I work in this field (at a startup) and I think it may be better if we were allowed to protect engineered DNA sequences with copyright as you suggest. Would be less expensive and faster than patents. There is actually a company looking to take this idea to court:
http://www.nature.com/news/bioengineers-look-beyond-patents-... "Last year, the company petitioned for US copyright protection of the DNA sequence for a fluorescent green protein, without success, but has launched an appeal. Its plan, says Christopher Holman, a law professor at the University of Missouri–Kansas City who is working with DNA2.0, is to pursue the appeal until the issue is heard in court." It took a similar case to make software copyrightable:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_copyright#History_in_t... |
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Aren't patents at least not applicable to non-commercial uses? Using copyright seems even worse.
I'm against any legal protection of any DNA sequence. This seems like the sort of thing that doesn't just have the potential to greatly stifle innovation but also to take on a very dystopian shape…