Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Aesthetically (1)
- Case law (1)
- Competition (1)
- Congressional intent (1)
- Copyright Act of 1976 (1)
-
- Copyrightability of useful articles (1)
- DNA sequences (1)
- Denicola Test (1)
- Design elements (1)
- Donahue (1)
- Federal agencies (1)
- Fusion of form and function (1)
- Granting copyright protection (1)
- How the final article is perceived (1)
- Human Genome Project (1)
- Human genome (1)
- Industrial art (1)
- Industrial designs (1)
- Judiciary (1)
- Mazer v. Stein (1)
- Nonobviousness (1)
- Novelty (1)
- Patent and Trademark Office (1)
- Patent applications (1)
- Patent law (1)
- Patent system (1)
- Patentability (1)
- Physical or conceptual separability (1)
- Physically or conceptually separate (1)
- Products of nature (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Jurisprudence
Patenting The Human Genome, Rebecca S. Eisenberg
Patenting The Human Genome, Rebecca S. Eisenberg
Articles
The increasing promise of federal funding for mapping and sequencing the human genome has brought with it renewed attention in the research science community to issues of intellectual property protection for products of biotechnology research. Echoing concerns raised a decade ago in the debate over commercialization of academic biomedical research, scientists have called for the free availability of all information generated through the Human Genome Project and have argued against allowing private intellectual property rights in such knowledge. Meanwhile, private parties have quietly been obtaining patents on bits and pieces of the human genome from the Patent and Trademark Office …
Back To Open Season On American Product Ingenuity: Bonito Boats, Inc. V. Thunder Craft, Inc., 24 J. Marshall L. Rev. 209 (1990), Alex Devience Jr.
Back To Open Season On American Product Ingenuity: Bonito Boats, Inc. V. Thunder Craft, Inc., 24 J. Marshall L. Rev. 209 (1990), Alex Devience Jr.
UIC Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Copyrightability Of Useful Articles: The Second Circuit's Resistance To Conceptual Separability, Sally M. Donahue
The Copyrightability Of Useful Articles: The Second Circuit's Resistance To Conceptual Separability, Sally M. Donahue
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.