• IP defenders are intellectually disingenuous hypocrites.

    think about patenting plant tissue and germ plasm. they claim it is so novel compared to the seed/tissue developed during domestication, that it must obviously be considered unique and special. at the same time, they argue it is neither unique or special enough to warrant any community oversight or regulation for environmental impacts.

    and when you look at the genetic code of transgenic germplasm… 99.99999% of it was declared “freely gifted” by the peripheral/colonized peoples, but the curious little tweak added by capital formations must receive its rents and royalties forever.

    look up every domesticated plant we love and rely on in the developed world, and look at the geographic origin of their domestication. it is highly instructive in why some (statistically all) germplasm is free and some is made artificially scarce to extract exorbitant rents.

    • vovchik_ilich [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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      3 days ago

      Yeah, it makes no sense to allow the patenting of literal living creatures…

      Another funny one to me is tools and machines, it’s literally telling people: “NO! ONLY I CAN ARRANGE ATOMS IN THIS ORDER!!!” Kinda wild that we allow that