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June 14, 2013 |

Supreme Court Rejects Human Gene Patents

Reversing decades of federal patent awards, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously ruled that human genes and the information they encode are not patent-eligible.
6 minute read
August 21, 2012 |

The Churn: Lateral Moves and Promotions in the Am Law 200

Littler Mendelson announces new co-presidents starting in January; Dickinson Wright recruits a group of five health care lawyers in Michigan; and Gardere Wynne Sewell hires a government regulation expert from the Department of Energy. The Churn is constant. Please send all announcements to [email protected].
4 minute read
June 13, 2013 |

Justices Reject Human Gene Patents; Fallout May Be Limited

Reversing decades of federal patent awards, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously ruled that human genes and the information they encode are not patent-eligible.
6 minute read
September 17, 2012 |

MOVERS

Jeffrey Anderson joins Bradley Arant Boult Cummings in the Birmingham office as counsel. Plus more law firm movers in this week's column.
3 minute read
March 02, 2012 |

Monsanto wins over Pioneer as first to invent genetically modified corn type

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has affirmed a determination that Monsanto Technology LLC beat out Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc. as the first to invent a type of genetically modified corn.On Feb. 28, a unanimous panel affirmed a December 2010 ruling by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences in favor of Monsanto.
5 minute read
May 08, 2012 |

Intellectual Property

Copyrights: From challenges to patent validity; acronyms as domain names; trademark I-Pad issues; to joint infringment's effect on Cloud computing -- all can be found in our Intellectual Property Supplement.
3 minute read
June 13, 2013 |

Supreme Court Voids Human Gene Patents

Reversing decades of federal patent awards, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday unanimously ruled that human genes and the information they encode are not patent-eligible.
5 minute read
May 29, 2001 |

Patent Thyself

After learning their children were congenitally ill, a Massachusetts couple become unlikely power brokers on the frontiers of intellectual property: They claim they own their own bodies. Necessity inspired them to create a device that gives patients control over the intellectual property at the center of disease research. Their tool? Do-it-yourself patenting. Or, literally, patenting yourself.
14 minute read

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