首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
"Conquest by Patents" →Patents are a form of intellectual property rights often touted as a means to give ’incentive and rew
"Conquest by Patents" →Patents are a form of intellectual property rights often touted as a means to give ’incentive and rew
admin
2012-01-14
38
问题
"Conquest by Patents"
→Patents are a form of
intellectual property
rights often touted as a means to give ’incentive and reward’ to inventors. But they’re also a cause for massive protests by farmers, numerous lawsuits by transnational corporations and indigenous peoples, and countless rallies and declarations by members of civil society. It is impossible to understand why they can have all these effects unless you first recognize that patents are about the control of technology and the protection of competitive advantage.
Lessons from History
In the 1760s, the Englishman Richard Arkwright invented the water-powered spinning frame, a machine destined to bring cotton-spinning out of the home and into the factory. It was an invention which made Britain a world-class power in the manufacture of cloth.
To protect its competitive advantage and ensure the market for manufactured cloth in British colonies, Parliament enacted a series of restrictive measures including the prohibition of the export of Arkwright machinery or the emigration of any workers who had worked in factories using it.
From 1774 on, those caught sending Arkwright machines or workers abroad from England were subject to fines and 12 years in jail.
→ In 1790, Samuel Slater, who had worked for years in the Arkwright mills, left England for the New World disguised as a farmer. A He thereby enabled the production of commercial-grade cotton cloth in the New World and put the U.S. firmly on the road to the Industrial Revolution and economic independence.B Slater was highly rewarded for his achievement.C He is still deemed the ’father of American manufacturing’.D To the English, however, he was an intellectual property thief.
Interestingly, patent protection was a part of U.S. law at the time of Slater’s deed. But that protection would only extend to U.S.
innovations
, It is worth remembering that until the 1970s it was understood, even accepted, that countries only enforced those patent protections that served their national interest. When the young United States pirated the intellectual property of Europe-and Slater wasn’t the only infringer-people in the US saw the theft as a justifiable response to England’s refusal to transfer its technology.
By the early 1970s, the situation had changed. U.S. industry demanded greater protection for its idea-based products-such as computers and biotechnology-for which it still held the worldwide lead. Together with its like-minded industrial allies, the U.S. pushed for the inclusion of intellectual property clauses, including standards for patents, in international trade agreements.
When U.S. business groups explained the ’need’ for patents and trade-marks in trade agreements, they alleged $40-60 billion losses due to intellectual property piracy; they blamed the losses on Third World pirates; they discussed how piracy undermined the incentive to invest; and they claimed that the quality of pirated products was lower than the real thing and was costing lives.
→The opposition pointed out that many of the products made in the industrial world, almost all its food crops and a high percentage of its medicines had originated in plant and animal germplasm taken from the developing world. First, knowledge of the material and how to use it was stolen, and later the material itself was taken. For all this, they said, barely a cent of royalties had been paid. Such unacknowledged and uncompensated appropriation they named ’biopiracy’ and they reasoned that trade agreement patent rules were likely to
facilitate
more theft of their genetic materials. Their claim that materials ’collected’ in the developing world were stolen, elicited a counterclaim that these were ’natural’ or ’raw’ materials and therefore did not qualify for patents. This in turn induced a counter-explanation that such materials were not ’raw’ but rather the result of millennia of study, selection, protection, conservation, development and refinement by communities of Majority World and indigenous peoples.
Others pointed out that trade agreements which forced the adoption of unsuitable
notions
of property and creativity-not to mention an intolerable commercial relationship to nature-were not only insulting but also exceedingly costly. To a developing world whose creations might not qualify for patents and royalties, there was first of all the cost of unrealized profit. Secondly, there was the cost of added expense for goods from the industrialized world. For most of the people on the planet, the whole patenting process would lead to greater and greater indebtedness; for them, the trade agreements would amount to ’conquest by patents’-no matter what the purported commercial benefits.
Glossary
intellectual property: an invention or composition that belongs to the person who created it
Look at the four squares [■] that show where the following sentence could be inserted in the passage. Arriving in the U.S., he sought financing and recreated from memory an entire Arkwright factory and all its equipment. Where could the sentence best be added? Click on a square [■] to insert the sentence in the passage.
选项
答案
A
解析
Chronological order as well as cause and effect are transitional devices that connect the insert sentence with the previous and following sentences. "Arriving in the U.S." in the insert sentence would have to follow the reference in the previous sentence to the time when Slater "left England for the New World." The recreation of the factory in the insert sentence was the cause that "enabled the production of commercial-grade cotton cloth in the New World" mentioned in the following sentence.
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/EUyO777K
0
托福(TOEFL)
相关试题推荐
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26whicharebasedonReadingPassage2below.TheConquestofMalariainItal
Atthestartofthetutorial,thetutoremphasisestheimportanceofAnimportantpartofteamworkishavingtrustinyour
A、avisagrantingindefinitestayB、avisawithworkrightsC、astudentvisaA
A、theysawitwasblack.B、theybelievedinthesupernatural.C、theywantedtheinventortobefamous.B
Completethenotesbelow.WriteONEWORDONLYforeachanswer.EngineeringforsustainabledevelopmentTheGreenhou
Whatdoesthepassagemainlydiscuss?Accordingtothepassage,themostdramaticchangetotheoceanscausedbyplanktonduri
Thewaterof(the)Atlantic,Pacific,andIndianOceans(makeup)70.8percent(to)theEarth’s(surface).
PatentsandInventionsWhenaninventionismade,theinventorhasthreepossiblecoursesofactionopentohim:first,hec
PatentsandInventionsWhenaninventionismade,theinventorhasthreepossiblecoursesofactionopentohim:first,hec
随机试题
某女士,月经7个月不行,乳房胀痛,精神抑郁,少腹胀痛拒按,烦躁易怒,舌紫黯,有瘀点,脉沉弦而涩。证属()
肉芽组织的结局是()。
我国《合伙企业法》规定,合伙人有下列哪种情形的,发生当然退伙?()
已知质点沿半径为40cm的圆做圆周运动,其运动规律为:s=20t(s以cm计,t以s计),若t=1S,则点的速度与加速度的大小为()。
论述科举制度的演变及其历史作用。
设平面图形由曲线和直线x+y=4所围成,试求该平面图形的面积A,以及废平面图形分别绕x轴、y轴旋转形成的旋转体的体积Vx和Vy.
Hisparentsdiedwhenhewasyoung,sohewas______upbyhisgrandma.
设循环队列为Q(1:m),其初始状态为front=rear=m。经过一系列入队与退队运算后,front=15,rear=20。现要在该循环队列中寻找最大值的元素,最坏情况下需要比较的次数为
問題10 次の文章を読んで、後の問いに対する答えとして最もよいものを、1?2?3?4から一つ選びなさい。 我が身が生涯に望み、知りうることは、世界中を旅行しようと、何をしようと、小さい。あきれるくらい小さいのだが、この小ささに耐えていかなければ、学問はた
Whenandwheretobuildthenewfactory(notdecide)______yet.
最新回复
(
0
)