Word: patentable
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Compared to other sports, the Olympics have the patent on losers...
David Mamet's The Water Engine, set against the backdrop of the 1933-1934 Chicago World's Fair, depicts one man's struggle to patent his invention and reveal it to the world. The struggle belongs to Charles Lang, who, along with his secret invention (an engine that runs on water), is exploited by corporate mongers whose smooth promises conceal the destructive forces of a society hungry for cash and willing to do anything to get it. The voice of the chain letter throughout the play keeps the audience guessing as to the implications of people, fate and science...
Renova's success inspired something of a rush on vitamin A. But instead of using tretinoin--which would trigger intense FDA scrutiny, not to mention a patent-infringement lawsuit--most over-the-counter skin products contain other forms of vitamin A. Although these compounds, technically known as esters, are not biologically active, the theory is that certain enzymes in the skin would convert at least some of them into tretinoin...
...Courts are the wrong place to decide whether we should be patenting higher life forms," Swenarchuck said. "Our legislatures need to look at the Patent Act and the idea of invention and whether they intend it to cover living creatures...
Until that time, the ruling's critics say, Parliament's original intentions must stand--and in writing the 1869 Patent Act it did not intend that life would be patented...