Warrior for Truth
@Warrior_for_Truth
25 January, 06:03
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Only people mentioned by Sabrinagal in this post can reply
J.J. Jameson
@jjj
26 January, 04:02
In response Sabrina Gal to her Publication
Not really. Misleading beyond belief, if anything.
The first three patents are:
A proposed treatment
A detection mechanism for blood samples
A proposed method to produce a vaccine
They don't patent the disease. None of them do.
The first three patents are:
A proposed treatment
A detection mechanism for blood samples
A proposed method to produce a vaccine
They don't patent the disease. None of them do.
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DeeDee ...
@beatledeedee
27 January, 08:59
In response J.J. Jameson to his Publication
Indeed, the patenting of genetically modified or isolated viruses is nothing new, says David Schwartz, a patent lawyer and partner at the Canadian intellectual property firm Smart & Biggar.
"You can’t patent a disease condition per se, such as cancer or influenza," says Schwartz. "But if you’re talking about patenting a lifeform like a bacteria or virus, if altered by man, the answer there is yes."
You can’t patent something that is naturally occurring, he says, but if an organism is modified in some way, it is patentable.
"You can’t patent a disease condition per se, such as cancer or influenza," says Schwartz. "But if you’re talking about patenting a lifeform like a bacteria or virus, if altered by man, the answer there is yes."
You can’t patent something that is naturally occurring, he says, but if an organism is modified in some way, it is patentable.
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