This is what is frustrating about these things. On one hand, if you
work your ass off for years, it's nice to feel like you will get
rewarded for your hard work, and have ownership over whatever product
or IP you created. On the other hand, it seems to hinder people
making progress on their own work unless they pay X amount of $ to
license said technology. I understand you can use anything you want
in R&D, but you can never make a profit off something if you've used
someone else's IP. Or rather, you can, but you might get sued. Of
course, I am generalizing because I don't know all the rules, and
haven't bothered to learn them as it subtracts from time doing
science.
In terms of "patented" proteins or plasmids, at what point would
modifying the sequence slightly make it a new entity?
As in, you find you can add an extra codon which doesn't affect the
desired behavior of the protein of interest, so does that mean it is
no longer covered by the original IP?
Also, I can't imagine a company going after someone for IP
infringement if the payout wouldn't be worth it.
Can someone really patent a DNA sequence, or just the application of
the protein which results from the DNA sequence.
As in, I didn't think the actually gene for Taq was able to be
patented, but plasmids which had the gene and were used in recombinant
production of the Taq protein was what was actually patented. I don't
know..it's a slippery slope I suppose.
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 1:46 PM, Sebastian Cocioba <scocioba@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm using a CDS derived from DNA 2.0s proteins. They are in fact IP free.
> The sequence is only given once you buy the plasmid. They are quite
> expensive.
>
> Sebastian S. Cocioba
> CEO & Founder
> New York Botanics, LLC
> Plant Biotech R&D
> ________________________________
> From: Mega [Andreas Stuermer]
> Sent: 4/26/2014 1:44 PM
> To: diybio@googlegroups.com
> Subject: [DIYbio] IP free fluorescent protein
>
> Does anyone know whether there are IP free fluorescent proteins?
>
> I remember Cathal once mentioned the patent of wild-type GFP just expired.
> However, I would need some easy to use and bright *FP. Excitation like
> common GFP would be nice.
>
> EGFP is still patented.
>
> What about the DNA 2.0 proteins, are their sequences known?
>
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Re: [DIYbio] IP free fluorescent protein
11:24 AM |
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