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The History of stealing ideas - an anniversary

iosaf | 31.07.2008 17:24 | Analysis | Globalisation | History | World

On this day the 31st of July in 1790, one Samuel Hopkins (aged 47) made a piece of history when his improved method "in the making of Pot ash and Pearl ash by a new Apparatus and Process" became the first US patent with George Washington's signature. This was a way of protecting Samuel Hopkins improvement of an Ethiopian idea which had been used globally for several hundred years. A important milestone in the history of property as theft had been passed.

"As of February 2008, the PTO has granted over 7,950,000 patents"

We now live in a world where everything from gizmo to gimmick, nicknack to genetic code is filed away under a patent or patent-pending.

The result has not been the protection of endeavour rather the usurption of human genius. Capitalist speculation has married that of Science to ensure a world of sick babies whose parents can't afford miracle cures.

Recent history provides the example of Brazilian efforts to bypass US drug-giant Merck's patent on an Aids drug in 2007.

"....Merck offered Brazil almost a third off the cost of production, pricing the pills at $1.10 (£0.55) instead of $1.59. But Brazil wanted its discount pegged at same level as Thailand, which paid just $0.65 per pill. "From an ethical point of view the price difference is grotesque," said President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. "And from a political point of view, it represents a lack of respect, as though a sick Brazilian is inferior," he added......"
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6626073.stm

The Brazilians instead looked to Indian-made versions of Efavirenz for just $0.45 each. But patent law is one of the nastiest toothed heads on the hydra monster of globalisation. Last month Brazilians found themselves challenging Indian patent law on HIV drugs yet again as this excerpt from "The Hindu" newspaper attests :-

"....CHENNAI: Patients from Brazil have asked the Delhi patent office not to grant a patent pending on the HIV drug tenofovir because it would prevent the import of low-cost generic medicines from India they say are important for their national AIDS treatment programme, upon which 1,80,000 Brazilians depend.

This is the first time that a group from outside the country has challenged a patent pending in the country since the introduction of product patents in India in 2005. It shows how far other developing countries rely on the production of generic medicines and illustrates the strength of the demand for exports from the Indian pharmaceutical industry.

ABIA (Brazilian Interdisciplinary AIDS Association) filed the opposition jointly with the Indian non-governmental organisation SAHARA (Centre for Residential Care and Rehabilitation) on Thursday to a patent submitted by Gilead Sciences before 2005 and kept in waiting. The Patent Amendment Act, 2005 (Section 25) allows any affected party to object to a patent before it is granted. ABIA and Sahara are appealing on the grounds that the drug is a modification of an already known compound and therefore not eligible for a patent under Section 3(d) of India’s patent law. Gilead also has a patent pending for tenofovir before the patent office in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

“We want more options to promote competition in the market and bring down drug prices,” Gabriela Chavez, a pharmacist with ABIA told The Hindu over telephone from Brazil. “If the patent is granted in Brazil but not in India, Brazil has the option to apply for a compulsory licence [a provision for public health emergencies sanctioned by the World Trade Organisation] to buy the drug at lower cost from Indian companies. If the patent is not granted in Brazil or India, Brazil has the option to import either the key ingredients or the finished medicines from Indian companies,” she said......"

 http://www.thehindu.com/2008/06/27/stories/2008062761291700.htm

As we see the lack of drugs or technology in the third world is not always due to lack of capability to produce such things - but simply because the right to use an idea has been stolen.

These stories and lawsuits of the theft of ideas are repeated ad nauseum around the world, especially the poor world. Leaving aside that the drugs were made we presume by humans whose gifts had been honed by Western education & universities, perhaps plausibly with a small element of that noble wish to make humanity's lot better not the tower blocks of lawyers who fight the patent claims or the equally tall towerblocks of executive who set the price and worth of treating or not-treating every human being.

Copyright © Trademarks ™ & Patents ® are all the protection systems which steal rather than prevent theft of ideas.

The US Constitution's copyright clause of 1787 predated Samuel Hopkins' by 3 years. "Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the United States Constitution, known as the Copyright Clause, the Copyright and Patent Clause (or Patent and Copyright Clause), the Intellectual Property Clause and the Progressive Clause, empowers the United States Congress: “To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Clause

So We could also remember the Starbucks versus Ethiopia argument on the copyright of coffee beans. 3 years ago the state of Ethiopia began what would become a monumental struggle when they announced their intention to trademark their Coffee Bean. The Ethiopian highlands & the surrounding "horn of Africa" were the origin of the drink coffee as far back as the 9th century [common era]. Specifically the Ethiopian state wanted to assert internationally recognised intellectual copyright on a range of coffee beans which to this day are mostly cultivated in the east African state. Many welcomed the move as evidence that late 20th century capitalism which has seen ownership concepts extended to ideas, living organisms & even specific genecodes could be a game which the poorest states might play to their advantage as well. Then came the orchestrated response of the Seattle USA based multi-national corporation Starbucks
(c/f this comment for more  http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/06/401728.html?c=on#c198218 )

If we accept that the cornerstone of capitalism and materialism is the usurption of the right to land use and the ridiculous notion that land or subsoil may be owned, as most Anarchists do, then we must also accept that the next brick of the structure is Patent and Copyright law.

________________________{(©)/(™)+®)} = {($)/(£)+(€)}____________________

"Information wants to be Free"

"Until information is free no human will be free".

________________________{(©)/(™)+®)} = {($)/(£)+(€)}____________________


Wikilinks

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trademark
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USPTO
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idea-expression_divide
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_patents_under_TRIPs_Agreement
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_patents_under_the_European_Patent_Convention
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_programs_and_the_Patent_Cooperation_Treaty


iosaf

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

Patents

31.07.2008 21:08

If you don't allow the pharmeceutical firms to patent their AIDS medicines (and you can't say these were 'stolen' from anyone), then where's their incentive to put money into research and clinical trials?

kinc


"Saving lives".

01.08.2008 14:17

is the sweet & rather innocent answer to that last question. But obviously in our post-heroic and post-nobel age, saving lives is not an incentive to do anything.

iosaf


Innocent indeed

02.08.2008 07:20

If you spend billions [and that is no exaggeration for modern drugs) on developing a 'life saver', and let everyone else manufacture it for free, you go bust. Hence no new drugs.

So, firm X spends billions on its new product. Firm Y, which has done no research and not spent a penny on the product, is allowed to copy the product for free. You could apply a term to firm Y - parasite.

kinc


I feel so innocent - tell me Is Pfizer the victim of parasites???

03.08.2008 17:57

Pfizer is the largest drugcorp on the planet with 2007 revenue at 48.418 billion USD and net income at $8.144 billion USD. it spent the most on R&D - a whopping $7.65 billion. gosh who writes their copy?

Their top drugs include "the number-one selling drug Lipitor (atorvastatin, used to lower blood cholesterol); the neuropathic pain/fibromyalgia drug Lyrica (pregabalin); the oral antifungal medication Diflucan (fluconazole), the long-acting antibiotic Zithromax (azithromycin), the well-known erectile dysfunction drug Viagra (sildenafil citrate)"

Pfizer has been involved in controversies over the medicine Diflucan (generic name fluconazole). In 1998, a campaign by Thai public health groups led to the elimination of the Pfizer monopoly on selling fluconazole in Thailand, and the price of the antifungal drug decreased from 200 baht to 6.5 baht in nine months, vastly expanding access to the medicine for AIDS patients. Faced with pressure for compulsory licenses to the Pfizer patent on this drug, Pfizer later established a program for limited access to the medicine in Africa.

Pfizer is a respected name in Africa. That's why Nigeria allowed them to test a miracle cure there and took so long in realising that they were simply experimenting with their babies.

# “Value of Black Bodies”. BlackWomb: History, Culture, and Power. 6 June, 2007.  http://blackwomb.blogspot.com/2007/06/value-of-black-bodies.html
# “Double Standards in Nigerian Health”. The American. 26 June 2007.  http://www.american.com/archive/2007/june-0607/double-standards-in-nigerian-health/
# “Nigeria Sues Pfizer Over Child Drug Trial”. West Africa Review. 10 June 2007.  http://www.loccidental.net/english/spip.php?article292
# “Nigeria: Court Adjourns Killer Drug Case Against Pfizer”. All Africa Global Media. 3 October 2007.  http://allafrica.com/stories/200710031150.html
# “Pfizer Faces $8.5 Billion Suit Over Nigeria Drug Trial”. Yahoo News. 24 October 207.  http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070930/bs_nm/pfizer_nigeria_dc;_ylt=A9G_R3Hh_f9GI7QAUgCyBhIF

In 2001, Pfizer asked the U.S. government to pressure the Brazilian government against issuing compulsory licenses for the patents on the AIDS drug nelfinavir.

In the meantime their profit margins were not affected but they went on growing big and bigger.

As one would expect from the makers of Viagra.

iosaf


Patently obvious

04.08.2008 08:19

A nice sidestep. Okay, you don't like drug companies. That's a separate issue from patents.

Using other peoples' work without paying for it is still parasitical.

kinc


the most profitable patents on the planet are drug patents

04.08.2008 18:40

So I don't really understand how you can write I am sidestepping the issue or drug patents have nothing to do with patents.

I don't particularly like the other top Fortune 500 corporations either. But the majority of them don't generate wealth through patents So I'm not going to discuss another issue by examining them in a comment.

However, there are a myriad of examples of instances where you use other peoples' ideas without paying for them. Open software is the most well known & probably doesn't need an explanation on a node of a global network dedicated to its propagation. But perhaps mention of open hardware which is less well known might be a good idea.

Stemming from "the challenge by Kofi Annan" (former household name of the UN - Tony Blair authorised Mi6 to earwig him using the UKUSA agreement which stops states spying on their own people by asking another state to do it for them  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UKUSA )

oh how I digress..,

Open Source Hardware read about it yourself :  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source_hardware & realise that though Edison said (or almost said) genius was 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration, he really should have said the recognition of genius is 1% inspiration and 99% patenting.

io