The OP is about copyright not patent law.
Okay. That's a distinction I always have trouble with. Aren't they both covered in IP though? But you're right, the thread is about copyright law.
They use a sysnersis route that was developed useing goverment funding 60 years ago. By your standards they should have not be able to make a patent claim on the resulting chemical.
I have no idea what "sysnersis" is, and I have no idea how to find out what "sysnersis" is, but - I will say
once again - I didn't say no IP rights, I said limited or no IP rights. Obviously this is a case for limited IP rights, not for no IP rights.
You seem to think that funding is more dirrect than it is.You get your money back in that the company pays for the required trials.
Okay, I'm not sure I get what you're saying, but I think I get it well enough to feel like you're probably right. If that makes sense. And I'm not being sarcastic.
When then perhaps you should have sold a more limited set of rights.
Right, that misses my entire point. My point is that there should be limitations on what you're able to bargain away. I don't expect you to agree with this. I realize that "freedom of contract" is a very popular view.
He was always free to release music under the name Prince Rogers Nelson. Warner Bros held the trademark on "Prince".
I wonder if that first sentence is true. Either way, it doesn't matter to me. He should have been able to use "Prince," "Prince Rogers Nelson," "P.R. Nelson," "Prince Rogers," or whatever else he wants that is part or all of his own real name. I can see
maybe having some restrictions on "Nelson," because there's a band called Nelson, and there might be some confusion. But otherwise, it's his own name, and if I'm asked what my
ideal copyright law would be, it would include that any contract provision that prevented a performer from performing under his own name would be unenforceable.
They were also right in their view of how the albums he wanted to release would sell.
Irrelevant to what we're talking about.
Why? If they want to sell those rights why shouldn't they be able to?
That's what I'm saying. Why? Because the thread is called "Ideal copyright law," and that's my ideal copyright law.