Recent Updates

Last post
Notes from the biomass will continue at nftb.net. My...
spitshine - 2006-07-16 13:11
Stubborn
OK, you got me. While technically not blogging at the...
spitshine - 2006-07-07 10:55
Greetings from another...
Greetings from another HBS-founder (media-ocean.de)....
freshjive - 2006-06-15 20:06
HBS manifesto will be...
Hi there! I am one of the hard blogging scientsts. We...
020200 - 2006-06-15 18:13
Latter posts - comment...
Things to do when you're not blogging: Taking care...
spitshine - 2006-04-29 18:46

About this blog

About content and author

A few posts of interest

The internet is changing... Powerpoint Karaoke
Quantifying the error...

Link target abbreviations

[de] - Target page is in German
[p] - Paywall - content might not be freely available
[s] - Subscription required
[w] - Wikipedia link
More...

Search

 

Archive

October 2005
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
 
 
 
 
 
 
 1 
 2 
 4 
 8 
10
13
15
16
17
18
19
20
22
24
26
27
28
29
30
31
 
 
 
 
 
 

Credits

The human genomes is almost free

The company (and university) lawyers will have to fire people now: only 20% of the human genome is claimed by patents, a recent report in Science finds. The authors run BLAST to map nucleotide sequences from patents to genes and their analysis is geared towards a high specificity and is restricted to human sequences. Many patents try to cover more genes, also using insights gained in model organism, so the number given is only one amongst many plausible answers.
At the end of the day, the patent holder will have to convince a court that the information of the gene sequence enabled some one else to generate profit. Do you need to know which gene is actually targeted by your novel drug when you started working on a particular disease?
[Thanks Jason]

Trackback URL:
https://binf.twoday.net/stories/1057721/modTrackback

Elsewhere...

Status

Online for 7161 days
Last update: 2006-07-16 13:11

Blogs
Conferences
Databases
Journals
Meta
Misc.
Papershow
Patents
PPI
Predictions
Publishing
The young PI
Useful tools
Profil
Logout
Subscribe Weblog