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  • Rough initial thoughts on the Copenhagen Accord

    by Tom Athanasiou

    Copenhagen was
    obviously a failure—at least if you judge it by “the numbers,” the formal
    emission targets and financial commitments that are needed to support a fair
    and effective emergency global climate mobilization. If you judge it, that is, by what is necessary.

    The more pressing
    question, though, is whether Copenhagen was a failure when judged against, not
    what is necessary, but rather what was possible. This is a much more difficult question, and it
    has far more to do with judgment than with calculation. And, here, very little is obvious.

    At the moment,
    I’m willing only to risk a few initial thoughts. The
    first is that Copenhagen is a great deal more than the Copenhagen Accord. And that from the point of view of public
    education and movement building, it was an obvious success. Everyone, from Barack Obama on the one hand,
    to Lumumba Di-Aping, the Sudanese chair of the South’s “G77 plus China”
    negotiating bloc on the other, from me to, I’m willing to bet, you as well,
    dear reader, knows one hell of a lot more about the climate crisis, and its
    politics, than we did a year ago.

    Not that we
    didn’t already know that climatic destabilization is triggering a planetary
    emergency. This has been obvious for
    years. The difference now is rather that—thanks to the 350 movement—and here I mean not only the folks at 350.org but also Mohamed Nasheed, the
    President of the Maldives and a whole lot of terrified scientists, we know we know it. And that we know it with appalling, quantitative
    confidence.  

    The bad news
    is that, after Copenhagen, we also know that the elites are manifestly not up
    to the task of saving the world. That what
    is needed, as the Copenhagen street had it, is “system change not climate
    change,” and that lacking system change, our governments are quite incapable of
    organizing a decisive response to the climate crisis. The bad news, more particularly, is that if
    we in “civil society” are to do better than our putative leaders, if indeed we
    are to successfully force them to break their own chains of powerlessness,
    we’re going to have to break out of the “dysfunctional system” frame, which
    blames everyone and no one, and actually dare to assign a bit of responsibility
    for the Copenhagen fiasco. The bulk of
    which, alas, will have to go to the wealthy world.

    We know, most
    of us, more about the demonstrations than we do of the negotiations, so let’s
    attend to the latter. Consider that the hundreds
    of inside-game NGOs grouped under the banner of CAN, the Climate Action Network International,
    who came to Copenhagen having prepared, as best they could, to play all the way
    through the endgame. They even had a
    scenario analysis close at hand, one that grouped  the possible outcomes into categories like Breakthrough,
    Foundation, Greenwash, and Collapse.  It
    was a useful exercise—scenario analysis often is—but the power of the Copenhagen
    drama, as it finally came down, defeated all attempt at easy
    characterization. I supposed that, if
    you had to pin it down, the outcome came down somewhere between Greenwash and Collapse. 

    The semi-official
    movement frame is “not done yet,” and all told, looking at the Copenhagen
    Accord and the 2010 negotiating schedule, it seems fair enough. Obama himself took the same line, in a
    late-night press
    conference
    that was actually pretty badly received, calling the Accord a
    “meaningful agreement”, but adding that “this progress is not
    enough,” and “we have come a long way, but we have much further to go.”  Which is a fairly obvious point, given that the
    Accord, such as it is, seems (see for example the Climate Scorecard) to
    condemn us to about 3.9 degrees C of warming. This is the “Four Degree World” scenario, and
    it’s an fairly magnificent understatement to say that we want to avoid it at
    almost all costs. 

    But of course Copenhagen
    was not the end of the game. The
    negotiations will continue, as will the organizing, and with the next major
    conference scheduled for Mexico City in November of 2010, they are quite
    certain to have a major impact on the United States. And if, in the meanwhile, we in America can
    manage to pass halfway decent climate/energy legislation, we may yet discover
    that the Obama strategy—which John Holdren, his chief science advisor,
    characterized during Copenhagen as, simply, “getting started”—offers a
    plausible way forward, one that can make progress even in a nation ridden by
    insane right-wing ideologues.

    Or maybe
    not.  The difficulty here is that understanding
    can too easily degenerate into accommodation. Yes, we are paralyzed by Republican
    oppositionism, and yes this
    constrains our choices
    , but the fact remains that, by refusing to accept
    anything like our proper share of the responsibility for the global crisis now
    threatening to overcome us, we make the
    dithering and dysfunction
    inevitable. Which of course brings us to the equity side of the story, and here there
    are several key points to report.  

    One is that, in
    a signal development, several self-defined vulnerable country blocs emerged in
    Copenhagen to play extremely significant roles, and managed to do so while
    protecting not only their local interests, but also the interests of the
    developing countries as a whole. The
    first of these blocs, of course, was AOSIS, the Association of Small Island
    States, which face rising seas and, in extreme cases like Tuvalu, actual
    short-term inundation. But Africa, which
    has discovered the extent of its own vulnerability, also played a critical role,
    and by so doing helped to protect the South as a whole from being blamed for
    Copenhagen’s failure to deliver. 

    Not that the
    right-wing press won’t blame it anyway, but at the risk of appearing
    ridiculous, I’ll add that it’s getting hard for even the most jaded of our
    pundits to overlook the injustices and tragedies that the people of Africa now
    face.  For while the African people are
    among the world’s most innocent, in terms of their historical contributions to
    the climate crisis, they will also be among the most brutally impacted, and
    this is an injustice too obvious to be easily set aside. Witness the open
    letter
    that Desmond Tutu sent to all heads of state during Copenhagen, a
    letter that noted that:

    If
    temperatures are not kept down then Africa faces a range of devastating threats
    such as crop yield reductions in places of as much 50 percent in some countries by
    2020; Increased pressure on water supplies for 70 – 250 million people by 2020
    and 350 – 600 million by 2050; The cost of adaptation to sea level rises of at
    least 5 – 10 percent of gross domestic product.

    With these sorts of prospects at hand, it’s difficult
    to be too sympathetic to the North’s domestic political problems. Which is why I believe—and this might perhaps
    just be wishful thinking—that the rich world will fail to effectively evade
    responsibility for Copenhagen. There are
    counter-arguments, of course, and gross media distortions by the score, but so
    far the failure to reach a better deal is not being blamed wholly on the South.
    And given that the large “emerging
    economies” signed onto the Accord, it’s unlikely that it will be. 

    Indeed, given the wealthy world’s failure to adopt
    strong domestic emission reduction targets, and its equally egregious failure
    to put a decent mitigation/adaptation support package onto the table, the
    Copenhagen endgame—in which the emerging economies agreed to the Accord while
    the weaker and more vulnerable states balked—may well have been the best
    possible outcome.  (Watch the final, 3:10 a.m. plenary here;
    you won’t regret it!)

    In this
    regard, it may not be absurd to hope that, as Copenhagen passes into history,
    the overall framework by which we understand rich-world commitments will shift
    in significant ways. For one thing, and
    despite a clear desire to do so (it inconveniently requires them to “act first”
    to significantly reduce their emissions) the rich countries did not quite
    succeed in sidelining the Kyoto Protocol. 
    Copenhagen, to be sure, laid out a two-track negotiating process,
    including a “Convention track” in which both the U.S. and China can, perhaps,
    both be eventually coaxed into accepting their fair shares of the global
    effort,  but the “Kyoto track” has also
    been extended. This gives us a clear
    mandate—to continue the battle to force the wealthy countries to make
    commitments on the scale demanded by the science, and by their own historical
    responsibility and capacity to pay—and just as importantly it gives us a
    context within which to do so.

    The road ahead
    is clear enough. The next big date is
    Feb. 1, 2010, by which time countries of all kinds are expected to pledge
    their emissions reductions. When they
    do, the battles will predictably, and quite properly, flare up all over again.

    For the
    moment, let me add only that Copenhagen, for all its disappointments, marked a
    turning point. The need for a global
    emergency mobilization is obvious, and with it, a set of social and political
    challenges that can no longer be denied.
    These challenges will get clearer in the days and years ahead, but the
    essential situation is already before us, ready to be discovered—with the
    atmosphere’s ability to absorb carbon now critically limited, we face the
    greatest resource-sharing problem of all time. 

    The climate
    problem, in other words, is and remains an international justice problem. It’s more than this, of course, but justice is nonetheless the key. If we fail to solve it, it will be in large part because we refused to see it as such.

    Related Links:

    Profile: Indian youth activist Ruchi Jain

    Sarkozy scrambles to salvage carbon tax

    Brazil’s Lula signs law cutting CO2 emissions






  • Give to EFF This Holiday Season and Receive Free BookMooch Points

    This holiday season, for every $10 you donate to EFF, you can receive one BookMooch point, worth one free book of your choice, from BookMooch founder and EFF board member John Buckman! Just join BookMooch and then email the receipt of your donation here to redeem your points. (You can find John Buckman’s official announcement on the Bookmooch blog.)

    BookMooch is a community built around exchanging used books — it’s completely non-commercial and costs nothing to join or use. Members list books that they are willing to exchange, list books that they want to receive, and earn points based on their participation. You get one BookMooch point when you send someone else a book; you spend one BookMooch point when you “mooch” (receive) a book from another member. Take advantage of this promotion to get some free books while supporting EFF and the ongoing fight for digital civil liberties!

  • Student’s Go Vegan Cookbook: Over 135 Quick, Easy, Cheap, and Tasty Vegan Recipes


    Product DescriptionThe choice to follow a vegan lifestyle is simple when you’ve got a cookbook full of delicious recipes representing the very best of gourmet, ethnic, and basic cuisine—served up vegan style! Even better, these dishes are tailored to fit a student’s schedule and budget, making a vegan diet possible for just about anybody. Carole Raymond brings flavor and depth to vegan food with just a few inexpensive ingredients and recipes that are simple enough for eve. . . More >>
    Student’s Go Vegan Cookbook: Over 135 Quick, Easy, Cheap, and Tasty Vegan Recipes

    Student’s Go Vegan Cookbook: Over 135 Quick, Easy, Cheap, and Tasty Vegan Recipes is a post from the Vegetarian Vitamins Guide blog where you can find suggestions and advice from vegetarians and vegans on vegetarian diets, supplements, vitamins and overall nutrition.

    Related Vegetarian Vitamins Posts:

    1. What are some great-tasting, inexpensive, convienent vegan recipes? I'm a vegetarian, not a vegan but I find…
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    3. Quick Easy Chinese Vegetarian Cooking. Easy, Healthy, And Delicious Chinese Vegetarian Cookbook Package. Complete…
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  • Fasting blood sugar ?

    Pre-diabetic here. If my fasting is 110, is damage already done to my pancreas? Also no meter, need to get one by my dr. does think a OGTT is necessary at this point. Both parents are type 2. The reason I ask is because I hear that usually the fasting is the last to go. Is that true? Thank you!
  • James Altucher: Microsoft Will Buy AOL Next Year

    jerry yang steve ballmer steve case aol time warner photoshop

    James Altucher, one of our favorite market mavens, has just published his list of predictions for 2010.

    The most striking: AOL gets picked up by Microsoft.

    From the Wall Street Journal:

    AOL is a private-equity dream come true at current levels.  Over the next four years it is going to generate more cash than market cap and then the rest is gravy if it can figure out how to wind down or sell the business without losing too much money or, heaven forbid, transform the business so it becomes exciting again. But, before that happens, why wouldn’t Microsoft buy it? Check out this chart comparing aol.com + yahoo.com + msn.com. 

    Rather than buy Yahoo for $22 billion it can buy AOL for one-tenth of that and now compete face-to-face against Yahoo. It’s a no-brainer and I expect it to happen in 2010 once the dust settles around its spinoff/IPO from Time Warner (TWX).

    Eddie Elfenbein has summarized the nine other predictions for next year.

    1.) The S&P 500 will touch 1300 at some point during the year.
    2.) Unemployment goes down to 8%.
    3.) GDP hits an annualized 6% by Q2 as inventories get restocked.
    4.) Dendreon (DNDN) is acquired.
    5.) B will the best letter in the BRIC countries: Brazil, Russia, India, China.
    6.) Health care will greatly outperform the S&P in 2010.
    7.) Banks start lending money again.
    8.) Either Apple or Amazon will develop the killer tablet computing product (or be close to it for 2011).
    9.) The world will not end.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • CEO Of Goldman Sachs-Owned Molycorp Is Psyched About Treasury’s Protectionist Attitude Towards China And Gold Mining

    Last week we flagged an interesting announcement from The Treasury regarding a proposed invesment from China in a gold mine in Nevada.

    In announcing its intention to block the deal, the Treasury cited national security issues.

    Well this is music to the ears of Molycorp — a company engaged in the mining of rare earth metals — which has received subsidies from the government, as well as a major investment from Goldman Sachs (GS).

    The company has made a big deal out of the fact that that China is expanding its global mining share, and thus it should be eligible for subsidies. In fact, it’s big strategy seems to be playing the scare card.

    And so we’re not surprise to see this approving Tweet out of the company in regards to the move from Treasury. Protectionism ahoy!

    molycorp

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • REPORT: Track-focused, budget-oriented Toyota FT-86 on the way

    Filed under: , , , , , , , ,

    Toyota FT-86 Concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The latest issue of EVO hasn’t dropped into our laps yet, but our favorite Brit pub apparently got the scoop on another variant of the Toyota FT-86 — one that’s supposedly track tuned and considerably cheaper than the model due to arrive in 2011.

    Powered by the same Subaru-sourced, Toyota-tuned boxer four, this supposedly stripped out variant could dispatch some of the standard model’s amenities and come equipped with upgraded brakes and suspension components specifically designed for track work and drifting duty. According to EVO, a fully optioned FT-86 would carry a price tag of around $27,000, while this budget-oriented performance model will retail for around $22,000 — a similar setup to the Hyundai Genesis Coupe RSpec.

    EVO goes on to report that Toyota’s crosstown rivals are working on a one-make race series for the Honda CR-Z and plan to campaign the hybrid hatch at the 24 hours of Nurburgring enduro in May. The more the merrier we say…

    [Source: EVO via FT86Club via Jalopnik]

    REPORT: Track-focused, budget-oriented Toyota FT-86 on the way originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 22 Dec 2009 14:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The fruit issue

    I’ve been avoiding fruit for the most part since I was DX’ed and was wondering what you guys do to deal with the fruit issue? I have found a new love in blueberries and I occasionally have an apple, which I deal with fine if it’s a small one that is tart, or orange.
    Any tricks you guys have to include more fruit?
  • iPhone Now The Most Popular Phone In The US

    iphone trophy

    Ranking cell phone companies is a tough thing to do. Some of these companies have a bunch of popular handsets, whilst others have just one or two yet manage to sell as many or more. Rank the companies by cumulative sales across all of their lines and the results will swing one way; rank them model-by-model, and they might look completely different.

    Such is the case with the iPhone, according to the latest numbers from The Nielsen Company. While RIM’s marketshare with their BlackBerry line is still nearly double that of Apple’s, the iPhone has now surpassed everything else to become the most popular phone in the US.

    The iPhone’s lead is fairly tight, coming in at 4.0% of all mobile phone owners while the BlackBerry 8300 series follows closely behind at 3.7%. The rest of the list is made up primarily of feature phones, outside of appearances by the BlackBerry Storm and the BlackBerry 8100 series in 7th and 10th respectively. As the iPhone 3GS doesn’t make an individual appearance on the list, we’re assuming that they’ve combined the 3G and 3GS into one product line.

    Screen shot 2009-12-22 at [ December 22 ] 10.53.00 AM

    A few more interesting tidbits gleaned from the Nielsen report:

    • The most popular reason people pick pre-paid phones isn’t because the lack of contract — that’s actually #4 — but because the plans are more straightforward. It’s followed by “No monthly bills” and “Emergency use only”.
    • 21% of households now use mobile phones only, with no land line to call their own. This is up from 15% in 2006
    • 15% of households now own at least one smartphone

    Crunch Network: TechCrunch obsessively profiling and reviewing new Internet products and companies


  • Proposal for university technology licensing reform named ‘breakthrough idea’

    A concept to create an open, competitive licensing system for university innovators — the brainchild of researchers at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City, MO — is one of Harvard Business Review’s “Ten Breakthrough Ideas for 2010.” Current restrictions imposed on the commercialization of federally funded discoveries in the U.S. slow the diffusion of new technologies, according to an HBR article by Robert E. Litan, vice president for research and policy at the Kauffman Foundation, and Lesa Mitchell, vice president for innovation. Such limitations are detrimental to the U.S. economy and to the universities, they argue. “We know that there are many vital innovations and discoveries languishing in university labs because of a suboptimal licensing system at many universities,” Litan says. “One simple amendment to the Bayh-Dole Act would allow faculty members to choose their own licensing agents/experts and bring these discoveries to market quickly.” Mitchell and Litan argue that if faculty members could choose their own licensing agents, increased competition would speed up the commercialization of new technologies while allowing universities to collect the same royalties as under the current system.

    Source: TD Ameritrade

  • Oxford technology to allow payments via cell phone

    Harried holiday shoppers should welcome a security technology developed at the U.K.’s Oxford University. Bill Roscoe, PhD, professor of computing science and senior research fellow, is developing technology that will allow shoppers to make payments using their mobile phones. The technology is designed to work in almost all situations: person-to-person, in a shop or restaurant, at a vending machine, online, or as part of a telephone conversation. “We have technology which enables anyone to easily create a secure connection between two devices,” Roscoe explains. “It can work via Bluetooth, WiFi, the internet, or across ordinary telephone or SMS connections.”

    The core of the technology is a security protocol that enables strong cryptographic keys to be created with the least possible work. “The protocol prevents anyone from doing any searching to break into the transaction,” Roscoe explains. When using the system, a payer would check whether a short numeric code (4-8 digits for most applications) generated within his or her phone is the same as the one generated by the payee. Since the number is random, it does not have to be secured. The process ensures that the customer’s mobile is correctly connected to the store or individual mobile receiving the payment, which can be made through electronic cash or credit stored on a mobile phone, authorization of a credit card payment, or instruction to a bank to pay a merchant or individual a specified amount. Payment occurs without the exchange of sensitive information such as credit card numbers or PINs, and the phones do not need hardware modifications. “The technology puts the payer in charge of the connection and lets him or her have direct control over how much is paid and to whom — very much like a check,” Roscoe says. Isis Innovation, U-Oxford’s tech transfer company, is working with Roscoe and seeking partners to commercialize the technology.

    Source: PhysOrg.com


  • Capcom turns Dark Void retro, releasing 8-bit Dark Void Zero on DSiWare

    Turns out Capcom has more pseudo-NES goodness in store for early next year. Aside from Mega Man 10, They’re also putting a retro sheen on Dark Void with the DSi platforming title, Dark Void Zero.

  • Va Tech to commercialize student’s patented toy

    Here’s another innovation with a holiday spin. A palm-sized modular toy that was created by a fourth-year industrial design student in the College of Architecture and Urban Studies at Virginia Tech has been awarded a design patent and is available for licensing through Virginia Tech Intellectual Properties Inc. (VTIP). Created by Kelly Harrigan of Manassas, VA, the toy took the top prize last year in a competition for wooden game or design objects for ages 3 to 99 hosted by Swiss toymaker Naef Spielzeug. Harrigan layered the wooden shapes of her toy with a type of ceramic magnet called ferrite – thus, the toy’s name “Ferra.” The modular design “allows for smooth movement between pieces and the opportunity to create several configurations,” Harrigan adds. When laser cut, the toy can be produced with little material waste.

    Source: Newswise

  • mocoNews Quick Hits 12.22.09


    Mozilla

    »  Some startups say the iPhone is more than just a cash machine for app developers … It’s the bridge to building “the next generation of big tech companies.” [LAT]

    »  Mozilla is “thisclose” to launching a Firefox for mobile browser. Code-named “Fennec,” the Nokia N900 will supposedly get it first. [BBC News]

    »  When it comes to being the fastest 3G network—at least in terms of data—*AT&T* wins, hands down. [Gizmodo]

    »  TuneWiki, Flixter and Google Voice make it into Digits’ list of the “best-reviewed” Android apps of 2009 [WSJ]

    »  A video review of Google and Yahoo’s free WIFI campaigns for the holidays. [AdAge]

    »  U.S. netbook sales revenue is forecast to hit $11.4 billion this year, up 72 percent vs. 2008. But growth in 2010 will be flat. [DisplaySearch]


  • Lord Lucas Wants UK Digital Economy Bill To Include Remedy For Bogus Copyright Threats

    We’ve heard so many stories of copyfraud that many of us have been wondering why there aren’t greater penalties for making bogus copyright claims. It appears at least someone over in the UK is asking the same question. We already noted how Lord Lucas, a technology aware member of the House of Lords who can program and has run some digital businesses, was speaking out against Peter Mandelson’s Digital Economy Bill, noting that the entertainment industry is to blame for not adapting.

    Now, via Michael Scott, we learn that Lord Lucas has introduced an addition to the Digital Economy Bill adding remedies against those who bring “groundless” copyright claims:

    169A. Remedy for groundless threats of infringement proceedings

    (1) Where a person threatens another person with proceedings for infringement of copyright, a person aggrieved by the threats may bring an action against him claiming–
    (a) a declaration to the effect that the threats are unjustifiable;
    (b) an injunction against the continuance of the threats;
    (c) damages in respect of any loss which he has sustained by the threats.
    (2) If the claimant proves that the threats were made and that he is a person aggrieved by them, he is entitled to the relief claimed unless the defendant shows that the acts in respect of which proceedings were threatened did constitute, or if done would have constituted, an infringement of the copyright concerned.
    (3) Mere notification that work is protected by copyright does not constitute a threat of proceedings for the purposes of this section.
    (4) A copyright infringement report within the meaning of section 124A(3) of the Communications Act 2003, if notified to a subscriber under section 124A(4) of the Communications Act 2003, does constitute a threat of proceedings for the purposes of this section.”

    While it would be nice to see those who are falsely accused of copyright infringement have at least some stronger legal rights, it seems unlikely that this gets anywhere.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Well, that was certainly interesting!

    Two hours after breakfast this morning (around 7:30), my BG was 96. About 9:45, I got hungry, and decided to eat something (practice group lunch later today, at 1:30–no way I was going to make that without sustenance). I walked downstairs and grabbed an egg, sausage, and cheese cup from the sandwich place (they make it without a bagel for me, and give me an extra egg).

    I decided to walk back up to my office, on the 24th floor. When I got there, my BG was 120. Usually, I only measure my post-exercise blood sugar after a half-hour bike ride, and the exercise takes my BGs down. This is the first time I’ve seen a post-exercise rise in BG. (Of course, this is exactly why Dr. Bernstein says that he’d rather have his patients run a mile than run a block to catch a bus.)

    45 minutes later–and after eating my snack–BG is down to 110. I guess I will continue to climb the stairs (I like the benefits to my cardiovascular health), but I will probably try waiting until later in the day, when my BGs tend to run lower anyways.

  • Los Ford dispondrán de WiFi a bordo con el sistema Sync

    Como muchos de vosotros sabreis, los Ford del mercado americano disponen del sistema Sync, una solución tecnológica de entretenimiento que incorpora conectividad a Internet. Por el momento no esta disponible en Europa aunque se afirma que llegará a lo largo del 2010.

    Ford con el Sistema Sync

    Gracias a este sistema, los pasajeros podrán navegar por Internet si se pincha un modem HSPA en el puerto USB del coche. Este creará un punto de acceso WiFi que estará protegido por encriptación WPA2 (lo mismo que un router doméstico recien instalado) y una lista de usuarios autorizados para evitar el gorroneo.

    Por otra parte, actualmente en Estados Unidos es mucho más barato acceder a internet mediante móvil mientras que en España y el resto de paises europeos es más caro. Lo más seguro es que el resto de fabricantes adopten una posición similar a la de Ford en los próximos años.

    Related posts:

    1. Ford confirma el motor V8 de 5.0 litros para el Mustang GT
    2. Fotos del Ford Focus RS
    3. Ford C-Max 2010, imágenes oficiales
  • Three affordable software tools for tech transfer and licensing professionals

    They may not work with X-Box, Wii, or PlayStation and the entertainment value is definitely not a selling point, but three great software tools specifically designed to assist tech transfer and licensing professionals may be just the ticket for last minute TTO stocking stuffers. All three are offered at discounted and affordable rates through partnership with 2Market Information, parent company of Tech Transfer E-News.

    • Competitive Analysis Valuation (CAV) software provides a straightforward method for determining IP value. Created by nationally recognized IP law expert Ted Hagelin, the CAV Software yields clear and logical valuation results through a single program platform for negotiation, planning and reporting purposes. CLICK HERE for details.
    • ktMINE provides hands-on access to an incredibly rich source of royalty rate data in more than 6,000 searchable full-text license agreements and detailed agreement summaries. This online, interactive IP database allows you to quickly find true market comparables and benchmarks. CLICK HERE for details.
    • The US FDA Regulatory Calculator provides users with a potential FDA predicate, regulation product code, and the classification and regulatory pathway associated with a medical technology. With this tool, you’ll save hours in initial research and eliminate the need for outside experts early in the process – as well as minimize the potential for miscalculations with due diligence, technology assessment, planning, and commercialization. CLICK HERE for details.
  • JDRF, J&J collaboration on diabetes seeks academic research

    The New York City-based Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation will work with the Johnson & Johnson Corporate Office of Science and Technology and its affiliates to speed the development of drug targets and pathways that promote the survival and function of insulin-producing cells in individuals with diabetes. The joint program plans to fund research at academic centers around the world that could eventually lead to novel drug targets and industry collaborations for the treatment of type 1 diabetes. The program will solicit grant proposals from academic and medical research foundations for one- or two-year research projects focusing on agents and compounds that safely promote the survival and function of beta cells — cells within the pancreas that produce insulin and are lost in the immune attack that causes type 1 diabetes. Preserving or maintaining beta cell mass and activity in people with type 1 diabetes can reduce insulin requirements, enable easier and more effective control of the disease, and lower the risk of short- and long-term complications. “This program will clearly help accelerate the translation of basic research into therapies useful in the treatment of diabetes,” says Alan J. Lewis, PhD, president and CEO of JDRF.

    Source: PR Newswire