"Does this seem fair? A plant breeder at a public university manages to grow a long-necked broccoli that, for easy cutting, stands tall above its leaves. Then a company that has used his creation to breed a slightly different broccoli submits it for a patent, claiming ownership over the very idea of long-necked broccoli.
So far, the company, Monsanto subsidiary Seminis, has failed to persuade the U.S. Patent Office to grant it a broad 'utility patent.' But Seminis has appealed. If it succeeds, the original breeders, who shared their seeds freely, could be barred from working with their own seeds.
Surely there’s a better way."
Nathanael Johnson reports for Grist July 25, 2014.
SEE ALSO:
"Linux for Lettuce" (Virginia Quarterly Review)
"Open-Source Seeds: While They Spread Shoots, They Plant Ideas"
Source: Grist, 06/27/2014