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Full-Text Articles in Law
Publish Or Perish, Gideon Parchomovsky
Publish Or Perish, Gideon Parchomovsky
Michigan Law Review
The race model has been the darling of patent economists and game theorists. This model assumes that the winner, namely the first to invent, takes the patent grant with the market dominance that comes with it, whereas the second comer, in the best tradition of sports contests, obligingly accepts her loss and quietly vanishes from the scene. While the sports analogy has provided a useful framework for understanding the economics of invention, it has obfuscated an important aspect of the inventive process: the possibility of strategic publication of research findings in order to prevent the issuance of a patent to …
A Higher Nonobviousness Standard For Gene Patents: Protecting Biomedical Research From The Big Chill, Sara Dastgheib-Vinarov
A Higher Nonobviousness Standard For Gene Patents: Protecting Biomedical Research From The Big Chill, Sara Dastgheib-Vinarov
Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review
In In re Deuel, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled in favor of a patent applicant and found that DNA molecules encoding a protein were nonobvious under section 103 of the Patent Act. Since then, companies specializing in genomic research have filed numerous DNA sequence applications, instigating a troubling trend of patent filings within the biotechnology field. Currently these companies are stockpiling partial DNA sequence patents which have no known function. This Comment presents scientific, political, religious, and ethical justifications for heightening the nonobviousness standard for gene-related patents under section 103 of the Patent Act. …