¶ … ability of drug developers to protect their intellectual property.
The Me-too drugs
According to Angell, a Harvard Medical School lecturer, the 'me-too' drugs are being put out in the industry in large amounts. They are similar to the present treatments which mean that they are no better than the drugs that are already present in the market treating a similar condition. Even seventy-five percent of the drugs that are being approved by the FDA are me-too drugs so there is always a possibility that it can be more effective than the present drugs in the market but as long as they are effective as compared to a placebo, they would always get the approval of the FDA making it difficult for the drug developers to protect the actual drugs (Jones, 2004).
Inflated prices
The American industry spends a lot of money on marketing as compared to research and at least every 3rd drug that was marketed by the leaders of the industry were invented by small biotech firms or universities, however they are sold at inflated prices to the public. For example, Taxol which is a cancer drug, was discovered by NIH (National Institute of Health), but it was sold by Bristol-Myers Squibb for twenty thousand dollars a year, which is twenty...
In the contemporary cyber environment, innovation does not enhance success. For example, most patents such as songs and books receive low rewards. The author suggests that there is a need to make rules to enhance the bargain of intellectual property owners. Part 2 In the contemporary cyberspace and it world, the traditional copyright law has not been sufficient to protect intellectual property right in the face current development of computer and
HOW EARLY EFFORTSAT DEVELOPINGA COUNTERINTELLIGENCEPROGRAMINTHE 1950s AND 1960s INFLUENCED CURRENT USCOUNTERINTELLIGENCE POLICIESA Master ThesisSubmitted to the FacultyofAmerican Public University SystembyAlexgardo OrriolaIn Partial Fulfillment of theRequirement for the DegreeofMaster of ArtsAugust 2020American Public University SystemCharles Town, WVviTheauthorhereby grantsthe American PublicUniversity System the right todisplay these contentsfor educational purposes.Theauthorassumestotalresponsibility formeetingthe requirementsset by UnitedStates copyrightlawfor the inclusionofany materialsthatare not the author’screation or in the public domain.© Copyright2020by Alexgardo OrriolaAll rights reserved.DEDICATIONI dedicate thisthesisto
CI FinalAbstractThis thesis describes the need for an ethical standard in counterintelligence (CI) so as to facilitate collaboration among the various CI agencies and the private sector. It conducts an analysis of the formation of the counterintelligence program under Angleton, the use of CI within the Federal Bureau of Narcotics under Anslinger, and the use of CI in the Phoenix Program and the FBI’s COINTELPRO. This analysis is used to
Morality of Counterintelligence Ethical Implications and the Need for a Theoretical Framework CI Literature Review Deception is at the core of counterintelligence: yet, it is a problematic core because of the corruption associated with deception in ethical systems. Mattox (2002), for example, observed that the practice of deception “is subject to limitations imposed by the demands of morality” (4). Unfortunately, morality within the realm of counterintelligence is often the first casualty, as
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