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Originally posted by Realtruth
Bowman replanted second-generation seeds
Monsanto argued that Bowman was in violation of the Technology Agreement for the seeds.
Bowman contends that Monsanto’s patent rights were exhausted once he bought the seeds and that use of progeny seeds is an expected use of the product.
Originally posted by Realtruth
For someone that claims to be poor you sure are a big cheerleader for Monsanto.
Your colors are showing bigtime here.
Originally posted by alfa1
Originally posted by Realtruth
Bowman replanted second-generation seeds
Monsanto argued that Bowman was in violation of the Technology Agreement for the seeds.
Bowman contends that Monsanto’s patent rights were exhausted once he bought the seeds and that use of progeny seeds is an expected use of the product.
A remarkably poor example if you're trying to make any kind of point here.
The lawyer for Monsanto, Seth Waxman, was being questioned by Judge William Bryson, from the U.S. Appeals Court for the Federal Circuit. In the case, a group of mostly organic farmers had hauled Monsanto into court, claiming that they are being damaged by the possibility that Monsanto might sue them. Bryson wanted to know what actions would convince Monsanto to sue a farmer, and Waxman came up with this:
"In the real world, Judge Bryson, the cases Monsanto brings are cases in which it has come to learn that the farmer is not purchasing any Roundup Ready seed, but is spraying his fields with Roundup, and the plants are surviving. If the farmer were not spraying, by definition he wouldn't be taking advantage of Monsanto's technology."
Under Waxman's common-sense standard, Monsanto wouldn't have brought its case against Schmeiser. That's because in that case, the company did not produce any evidence that Schmeiser was taking advantage of Monsanto's technology by spraying his crop with Roundup.
But farmers sprayed so much Roundup that weeds quickly evolved to survive it. “What we’re talking about here is Darwinian evolution in fast-forward,” Mike Owen, a weed scientist at Iowa State University, said.
Originally posted by alfa1
So a summary of the thread so far.
Originally posted by burntheships
I disregard the rest of your post as an attempt to frame an entire thread
not worthy. Why do you attempt this?
Originally posted by charles1952
I suppose you do, but I'm curious as to why you think that.
Originally posted by burntheships
No one changed the topic
Originally posted by burntheships
...about the dozen negative aspects of GMO
Originally posted by alfa1
Originally posted by burntheships
...about the dozen negative aspects of GMO
Yeah, just like that.
A topic change.
Originally posted by burntheships
Well you can not hardly discuss the reasons Monsanto promised not
to sue the little farmers for small amounts of contamination without
discussing the reasons the farmers object to the contamination in the
first place, now could you?
... a fear of being sued by defendants for patent infringement and “request[s] that Monsanto expressly waive any claim for patent infringement it may ever have against [plaintiffs] and memorialize that waiver by providing a written covenant not to sue.” (Id. )
Plaintiffs asserted that defendants’ failure to respond to the letter would make it “reasonable for [plaintiffs] to feel they would be at risk of having Monsanto assert claims of patent infringement against them should they ever become contaminated by transgenic seed potentially covered by Monsanto’s patents.”