Disgraced Hwang wins court battle over dog cloningDisgraced South Korean scientist Hwang Woo-Suk has won a copyright battle over dog-cloning techniques his colleagues said Saturday. A Seoul district court on Friday ruled that his cloning technology is different from procedures patented by the Seoul National University Not to be confused with the University of Seoul. Seoul National University (SNU) is a national research university in Seoul, South Korea. Founded in 1946, SNU was the first national university in South Korea, and served as a model for the many national and public . RNL RNL Resistance and Liberation (gaming) RNL Rede das Novas Licenciaturas (Portugese) RNL Round Nosed Lead (ammunition) RNL Refit Notification Letter RNL Required New Line Bio, which bought the patent from the university, filed a lawsuit against the Sooam Biotech Research Center led by Hwang a year ago after Hwang's team produced cloned dogs for a foreign biotech company. "The court accepted that Sooam's technology is a new invention, which is different from the existing technique bought by RNL Bio from the Seoul National University," Hwang's colleague Hyun Sang-Hwan told AFP (1) (AppleTalk Filing Protocol) The file sharing protocol used in an AppleTalk network. In order for non-Apple networks to access data in an AppleShare server, their protocols must translate into the AFP language. See file sharing protocol. . An RNL Bio official said the company was considering an appeal. A team of researchers at the Seoul National University produced the world's first cloned dog, an Afghan hound Afghan hound (ăf`găn), breed of tall, swift hound originating about 5,000 years ago in ancient Egypt. Its modern ancestors were perfected in the northern part of Afghanistan and introduced into England after World War I. named Snuppy, in 2005, under Hwang's stewardship. But Hwang was later fired by the university after his landmark studies on cloned human stem cells in 2004 and 2005 were exposed as fraudulent. Hwang has no claim over the university's dog cloning technology as South Korean law The legal system of South Korea is a civil law system that has its basis in the Constitution of the Republic of Korea. History The South Korean legal system effectively dates from the introduction of the original Constitution of the Republic of Korea and the states that intellectual property developed by a government-run institution belongs to the state. Prosecutors here last month demanded a four-year jail term for Hwang, who is on trial for fraud, embezzlement embezzlement, wrongful use, for one's own selfish ends, of the property of another when that property has been legally entrusted to one. Such an act was not larceny at common law because larceny was committed only when property was acquired by a "felonious taking," i. and ethical breaches in connection with the fraudulent research.
|
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion