Fighting disease, combating hunger, preserving the balance of life on Earth: the future of biotechnological innovation may well be the future of our planet itself. And yet the vexed state of intellectual property law--a proliferation of ever more complex rights governing research and development--is complicating this future. At a similar point in the development of information technology, "open source" software revolutionized the field, simultaneously encouraging innovation and transforming markets. The question that Janet Hope explores in Biobazaar is: can the open source approach do for biotechnology what it has done for information technology? Her book is the first sustained and systematic inquiry into the application of open source principles to the life sciences. The appeal of the open source approach--famously likened to a "bazaar," in contrast to the more traditional "cathedral" style of technology development--lies in its safeguarding of community access to proprietary tools without discouraging valuable commercial participation. Traversing disciplinary boundaries, Hope presents a careful analysis of intellectual property-related challenges confronting the biotechnology industry and then paints a detailed picture of "open source biotechnology" as a possible solution. With insights drawn from interviews with Nobel Prize-winning scientists and leaders of the free and open source software movement--as well as company executives, international policymakers, licensing experts, and industry analysts--her book suggests that open source biotechnology is both desirable and broadly feasible--and, in many ways, merely awaiting its moment.
Author(s): Janet Hope
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 441
Contents......Page 8
Abbreviations......Page 10
1 An Irresistible Analogy......Page 14
2 The Trouble with Intellectual Property in Biotechnology......Page 41
3 Intellectual Property and Innovation......Page 81
4 Welcome to the Bazaar......Page 119
5 Open Source Licensing for Biotechnology......Page 155
6 Foundations of the Biobazaar......Page 201
7 Financing Open Source Biotechnology......Page 250
8 Biotechnology’s Open Source Revolution......Page 305
Notes......Page 348
References......Page 380
Acknowledgments......Page 404
Index......Page 412