Tag Archives: Warren Woessner

Part II – Mayo’s Brief Goes Back to A (Non-Precedential) Past

In my last post on Mayo v. Prometheus, I noted that Mayo is cutting a trail of (legal) tears to ultimately rely on the reasoning underlying the “LabCorp dissent” (548 U.S. 132, 136). In this dissent from a dismissal of … Continue reading

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EPO Ruling On Inventiveness Of Drug Polymorphs

Thank you to Dr. Stefan Danner, a German and European Patent Attorney at DHS Patentanwaltsgesellschaft mbH in Munich for letting us post the current issue of the biotech IP newsletter dealing with the recent EPO decision concerning the patentability of … Continue reading

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Mayo’s Brief Goes Back To A (Non-Precedential) Future

You all may be suffering from Prometheus v. Mayo fatigue by now, but this remains the most important IP case before the Supreme Court, and may well alter the course of life sciences patenting for the foreseeable future. I know … Continue reading

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DNA Patenting “Urban Legend” Debunked At AIPLA

The  most interesting presentation at the Annual AIPLA Meeting – which is not yet over – was Professor Christopher M. Holman’s talk – “Deconstructing the myth that 20% of  the human genome is patented” which was based on his paper … Continue reading

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