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“These are the ideas that people come to America to get away from.”Rubio
How should society view a cure for a ailment of limited duration that takes another's life to 'cure'?
It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion. ...Dean Inge
He bought soybeans, planted them, and harvested them.
At what point did he infringe their patent? When he bought them? When he planted them? When he harvested the crop?
That looks, to me, like you're saying that merely by buying a seed that might have been patented, and doing what farmers have been doing for thousands of years, then he's a thief?If I buy a GM car with the purpose of using it to produce more of GMs patented technology, even if I don't buy the car directly from GM, and then actually produce the patented product, it is patent enfringement. Its an open and shut case.
Does Monsanto's patent place everybody in the world under the obligation to not permit their product to reproduce?
We're all here because
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“These are the ideas that people come to America to get away from.”Rubio
How should society view a cure for a ailment of limited duration that takes another's life to 'cure'?
It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion. ...Dean Inge
That's not what you oringally claimed.
If you want to re-use your seed, don't buy Monsanto's seeds.
It is that simple.
These people aren't just throwing seeds in a field and letting them grow.
They are PURPOSELY spraying them with Round Up, knowing full well in good that they are using a product that won't be killed with Round Up while normal Soybeans wouldn't.
They are PURPOSELY and KNOWINGLY taking full advantage of patented technology to produce more patented technology.
Like I said, when I first came into this thread, I'm fine with steps 1-8 (buy seeds and replant).
It is step 9 (then grow in a manner dependent on HAVING them Round Up resistance) that is the issue and as far as I know where Monsanto is suing.
These people are PURPOSELY reproducing a product based on a patent that is dependent upon the patent.
If somebody can show me where it isn't step 9 that is generating the issue, I'll say in that case Monsanto is wrong.
Is that a goalpost in your pocket, or are you just happy to see him?
What the court ruled was that none of the people in the courtroom had been threatened. Not that nobody in the world had.
Now, actually, Monsanto does have contracts with every person who has purchased their seed, specifying exactly that. The farmer who buys Monsanto seed is permitted to sell the beans, but he isn't allowed to keep some of them, and use them as next year's seeds. (And I assume that there are restrictions on who he can sell the beans to. I assume that he can't sell them to his neighbor, so the neighbor can plant them next year, either.)Which is completely absurd because cars don't reproduce themselves. What Monsanto is saying with this patent is equal to a cattle farmer who buys a heifer being required to surrender any calves born to that heifer to the seller of the heifer. It is wrong, it is absurd, and it needs to be struck down.
The catch, here, is that the licensed, under contract, Monsanto customer farmer, sold his beans (perfectly legally) to a local elevator. And the elevator sold the beans to a local customer. (Which is also allowed. If Farmer 2 had bought those beans and fed them to his pigs, Monsanto wouldn't be complaining.) And the customer (Farmer 2) then did something which Farmer 1 isn't allowed to do, according to his contract.
A better analogy would be
like Monsanto saying that a farmer who buys a heifer is allowed to sell any offspring to a slaughterhouse, but that somebody who then buys that offspring from the slaughterhouse can't breed it.
We're all here because
we're not all there
If a use a GM bumper to create more bumpers where I bought the bumper from an agreement from a junk yard that I'd buy 10 random bumpers, it doesn't void GMs patents.
---------- Post added February-18th-2013 at 08:06 PM ----------
AND do the breeding in a manner dependent on the patent!
Monsanto owns the patent on their engineered DNA. Not on a trademarked advertising name.
---------- Post added February-18th-2013 at 08:10 PM ----------
Wow, look! Moving the goalposts again.
We've gone from "ho didn't buy patented product" to "he didn't buy pure patented product" to "he didn't buy product that was specified in writing to be patented".
You're the one claiming he didn't buy patented product. Back up your claim. Show us the bill of sale that specifies that he didn't buy any patented soybeans.
We're all here because
we're not all there
Formerly known as "Liberty"
But every single Monsanto farmer is "reproducing a patented product"
And this guy didn't "buy Monsanto seed". He bought "gimmee a hundred bushels of whatever you've got".
(Now, did he know that 90% of the farmers in the county are using Monsanto seeds? I think it's a safe bet.)
But this isn't like buying a DVD and copying it. Copying a DVD isn't what I consider a normal use of the DVD.
But planting soybeans (and letting them grow, and produce a vastly bigger pile of soybeans) is what soybeans are for.
We're all here because
we're not all there
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“These are the ideas that people come to America to get away from.”Rubio
How should society view a cure for a ailment of limited duration that takes another's life to 'cure'?
It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion. ...Dean Inge
I never claimed that anyone in the courtroom had been bullied, look back over my posts, all I have claimed is that Monsanto routinely bullies farmers.
There are such things as illegal contacts, just because a contract says you give away your rights does not mean that the contract is legal.Now, actually, Monsanto does have contracts with every person who has purchased their seed, specifying exactly that.
There is no such thing.
Monsanto didn't patent reproduction. (Soybeans already knew how to do that.)
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But let's take your assertion and look at it:
Let's say that spraying roundup somehow infringes Monsanto's patent. (Maybe they should make people who buy Roundup sign a contract? "If this product is sprayed on crops, then said crops must be sold, and cannot be retained for use as seed?")
If Farmer Bob buys a bunch of soybeans, and that bunch are 90% patented. He plants them. He harvests a crop that's 90% patented.
Far as you're concerned, he can do what he wants with them? Use them as seed? Sell them to other people for use as seed? Long as he doesn;t spray Roundup on them, he's clear?
How about the people who buy their seeds from Farmer Bob? Are they allowed to spray Roundup on them?
---------- Post added February-18th-2013 at 08:28 PM ----------
Ah, still pretending that soybeans aren't seeds, are we?
We're all here because
we're not all there
------
“These are the ideas that people come to America to get away from.”Rubio
How should society view a cure for a ailment of limited duration that takes another's life to 'cure'?
It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion. ...Dean Inge
If you don't spray them, they will lose the gene (there won't be an incentive to keep them). Genes not used will be evolutionarily lost.
Then they won't be covered by the patent and spraying them with Round Up would kill them.
People spraying soybeans with Round Up are trying to circumevent a patent.
**EDIT**
Larry, on one level this is an interesting question, and I'm not sure where to draw the line. Practically based on what I know, this is where Monsanto is drawing the line. If you are an organic farmer and end up with Monsanto genes in your field and aren't spraying them with Round Up, Monsanto is not coming after you.
As far as I know, Monsanto is coming after people that are PURPOSELY growing soybeans in a manner that is depdendent upon the soybeans containing their patented technology.
At that point in time, they are knowingly reproducing a patented technology. I think that's a pretty obvious patent infringement.
---------- Post added February-18th-2013 at 08:44 PM ----------
Again, an agreement to buy 10 random car parts from a junk yard does not void any patents the original manufacturer has on said car parts.
Last edited by PeterMP; February-18th-2013 at 07:48 PM.
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