鲍曼诉孟山都公司:可获得专利的自我复制技术和无意侵权新问题的领头羊

Christopher M. Holman
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引用次数: 1

摘要

获得专利的种子具有自我复制的内在倾向,这让人们担心农民可能会因无意的专利侵权而承担责任。为了解决这个显而易见的问题,一些人建议严格限制对自我复制技术的有效专利保护。典型的例子包括否认“第二代”自我复制产品的专利权,甚至广泛宣布这类技术没有资格获得专利保护。事实是,针对无意侵权农民的诉讼在很大程度上仍然是一种假设。然而,市场的变化可能很快使此类诉讼成为现实。在解决由此产生的政策问题时,国会和法院可以使用各种理论工具,这些工具可以有效地保护合法的无意侵权者免于承担责任,同时又不会过度削弱专利激励投资开发自我复制技术的能力。如果做不到这一点,可能会给合成生物学、纳米技术、计算机软件甚至太空探索等领域的大量新兴自我复制技术带来意想不到的戏剧性后果。国会和法院已经解决了与软件和其他数字编码内容有关的无意侵犯版权的问题,一些相同的基本原则可以用来解决由于可获得专利的自我复制技术日益普及而引起的无意侵犯专利的新问题。与此同时,自我复制技术的创新者可能需要认真考虑对复制实施技术限制,作为专利保护的实际替代方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bowman v. Monsanto Co.: A Bellwether for the Emerging Issue of Patentable Self-Replicating Technologies and Inadvertent Infringement
The inherent tendency of patented seeds to self-replicate has led to fears that farmers might face liability for inadvertent patent infringement. To address the perceived problem, some have proposed severely limiting the availability of effective patent protection for self-replicating technologies. Typical examples include denying patent rights to "second generation" self-replicating products, and even broadly declaring such technologies ineligible for patent protection. The fact is, lawsuits against inadvertently infringing farmers remain of largely hypothetical concern. However, changes in the market could soon render such lawsuits a reality. In addressing the resulting policy concerns, Congress and the courts have at their disposal a variety of doctrinal tools that could effectively shield legitimately inadvertent infringers from liability without unduly weakening the ability of patents to incentivize investment in the development of self-replicating technologies. A failure to do so could have dramatic unintended consequences for a host of emerging self-replicating technologies in areas as diverse as synthetic biology, nanotechnology, computer software, and even space exploration. Congress and the courts have already addressed problems of inadvertent copyright infringement that have arisen with respect to software and other digitally encoded content, and some of the same fundamental principles could be recruited to address the emerging issue of inadvertent patent infringement caused by the increasing prevalence of patentable self-replicating technologies. At the same time, innovators in self-replicating technologies might need to seriously consider the implementation of technological restrictions on copying as a practical alternative to patent protection.
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