Laptop Battery Saskatchewan, Canada -- On the Great Plains of Canada, farmer Percy Schmeiser has engaged in a David v. Goliath battle which could save farmers and consumers around the world from a genetically modified food nightmare beyond anything they have experienced so far.
According to the indictment, Jones would steal various IBM and Penguin computer servers from Verisign's warehouse in Virginia and sell them to Johnson. Johnson would then sell the servers to several individuals, who would sometimes place them for sale on eBay. As a result of this scheme, the indictment alleges that Jones and Johnson caused Verisign to lose more than $120, 000 worth of computer equipment. In the indictment, Jones and Johnson are charged in three counts with causing the interstate transportation of stolen property, namely IBM 330 and 335 servers, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
Thinkpad Farmer Schmeiser's fame in North America is guaranteed to cross the Atlantic as details of his epic tussle in Canada's Federal Court with the GM seed company Monsanto gets up steam.
Computer memory is the quickest, cheapest, and easiest way to improve the performance of your system. Find RAM memory upgrades for desktops, laptops, servers, and printers all backed by a lifetime warranty and guaranteed compatible with your computer. Shipping is an everyday low price of $1.99! Computer Memory Outlet sells memory compatible with all leading computer manufacturers like Dell, Apple, Compaq, HP, Sony, IBM, Lenovo, and many more.”
Microsoft Monsanto has accused the farmer of "stealing" its rape oil super-seeds. Schmeiser is counter-suing the giant American biotechnology company for £4.2 million for polluting his genetically modified (GM) free farmland without his knowledge.
- The National Farmers Union of Canada has called for a national moratorium on producing, importing and distributing GM food.
- A bill introduced in North Dakota (US), backed by the state's wheat farmers, a crop that Monsanto hopes to commercialize by 2003.
Laptop Computers "If just one farmer in Britain or Europe gets one of these Monsanto rape oil seeds that invaded my land, there'll be nobody who won't have contaminated crops in just a matter of years -- whether they like it or not," said 69-year-old Schmeiser as his legal team confronted Monsanto's lawyers in the prairie city of Saskatoon. The trial opened June 5 and is expected to last at least three weeks.
Percy Schmeiser did not buy Monsanto's patented seed, nor did he obtain the seed illegally. Pollen from genetically engineered canola seeds blew onto his land from neighboring farms. (Percy Schmeiser's neighbors and an estimated 40% of farmers in Western Canada grow GM canola). Monsanto's GM canola genes invaded Schmeiser's farm without his consent. Shortly thereafter, Monsanto's "gene police" invaded his farm and took seed samples without his permission. but the court says he must now pay Monsanto $10, 000 for licensing fees and up to $75, 000 in profits from his 1998 crop. It's like saying that Monsanto's technology is spreading a sexually transmitted disease but everyone else has to wear a condom.
Laptop Computer The outcome of the landmark Schmeiser v. Monsanto case could influence how much control biotechnology companies like Monsanto and Advanta -- the Canadian company which this year inadvertently distributed genetically contaminated rape oil seed in Europe -- have over the world's food supply in this century.
"Computer industry analysts estimate that some 60 percent of all corporate data exists only on desktop and laptop computers, " said Walter Scott, CEO of Acronis. "Incorporating Acronis True Image with New Mexico Software backup server is the ideal solution to capture that corporate data and ensure that it is not lost. While traditional server backups are effective for protecting server data, every company should have a combination of server and workstation backup plans."
Desktop Computer "Farmers here are calling it a reign of terror," said Schmeiser as he recalled the bizarre chain of events which brought him into unyielding conflict with Monsanto.
Notebooks Schmeiser, who has grown oilseed rape, known as canola, on his 1,400 acres for 40 years, first detected trouble three summers ago. He sprayed a powerful Monsanto weed killer, called Roundup, around electricity poles and in ditches on the borders of his farm. The herbicide killed all the weeds except for a thin scattering of oilseed rape plants, which stubbornly refused to die.
Lenovo Schmeiser had been crossbreeding his own oilseed rape for more than 30 years, saving seeds from each year's harvest to replant his fields the following season -- as farmers have done for thousands of years. Now, he wondered, had he accidentally created some kind of Frankenstein mutant? The same thing happened when he sprayed a trial strip 30 yards wide in the middle of one of his oilseed rape fields near the hamlet of Bruno, Saskatchewan. Again, some of the plants refused to die.
Hard Drive Schmeiser mentioned his Frankenstein plants to neighbouring farmers and next, unknown to him at first, private investigators arrived uninvited and snipped samples of his crops for DNA testing.
Travelstar Some of the samples tested positive for a gene Monsanto had genetically engineered into oilseed rape to produce an entirely new high yielding variety the company christened Roundup Ready canola. The new gene, taken from a bacterium, enabled Roundup Ready canola to survive Monsanto's flagship Roundup weedkiller.
Gateway North American farmers were deeply impressed by the Monsanto breakthrough: Roundup Ready canola guaranteed increased profit margins because there was no longer any need for expensive herbicides. "Cleaner fields, higher yields," went the marketing slogan. In Canada some 20,000 farmers use the genetically modified rapeseed.
Laptop Parts But Monsanto, whose 210-acre complex near St. Louis, Missouri is reputed to be the biggest biotechnology research centre in the world, needed to recover the huge investment -- estimated at some £250 million over ten years -- it had made into developing Roundup Ready canola.
Software The company therefore patented the new gene and required farmers who bought the seed to sign a Technology Use Agreement preventing them from saving or re-planting the seed or selling it to others.
Hard Drives To get Roundup Ready canola's advantages farmers have to buy new seeds from Monsanto every year. The agreement also states they must destroy any leftover seed each year and let Monsanto inspect their fields.
Electronics Denying that the contract had Stalinist overtones, Craig Evans, Monsanto biotechnology manager, said the company has the legal right to enforce its patent because "the gene still belongs to Monsanto, and you need the Technology Agreement to use the gene." In effect, Monsanto merely "leases" its seed.
Canon "If we can't protect intellectual property, why would we make those investments?" said Evans. "Twenty thousand growers in Canada are watching us, and I want growers to know we are serious about protecting their interests."
Desktop Pc When Monsanto detected its gene in the samples taken from Percy Schmeiser's fields, the company threw the book at him. Monsanto launched legal proceedings, accusing him of "stealing" its seeds and infringing its patent. Monsanto demanded compensation to the entire value of Schmeiser's 1998 crop, plus punitive damages, court costs and his signature on a non-disclosure agreement requiring him to stay silent about the affair.
Desktop Computers Monsanto considered the case criticial if it hoped to protect its patent rights.
Think Pad But in Percy Schmeiser the company had picked a dangerous man as an enemy. He had been Bruno's mayor for several years, a member of the Saskatchewan provincial parliament and a hardy mountaineer who had made three attempts on Everest.
Repair He was outraged by Monsanto's action and countersued for £4.2 million for trespass, crop contamination and defamation, accusing the company of "arrogant, high-handed and shocking conduct and callous disregard for the environment." He said he had never bought Monsanto's seed and, far from being a criminal who wanted to profit from stolen technology, he said he was a victim of that technology invading his property and crops uninvited.
Data Recovery If Monsanto is judged correct, the story becomes relatively simple: farmer obtains seed illegally and gets caught. Monsanto lawyer Roger Hughes told the court that it was impossible for the amount of genetically modified rapeseed found in Schmeiser's fields to have been wind driven.
Cisco But if Schmeiser is correct, it is a story with vast implications -- biotechnology runs amok, polluting farmers' fields, enslaving producers to corporate seed masters and threatening to pollute the world's biodiversity.
Keyboard "This was something that was unleashed into the environment and cannot be controlled," argued Schmeiser's lawyer Terry Zakreski. "The widespread use of Monsanto's genetically modified seeds has let a genie out of a bottle." Schmeiser, who has hired an armed guard since counter-suing, said pollen from Monsanto's Roundup Ready canola is all over the place.
Monitor "The seed blows in the wind [from other farms] and cross-pollinates. I suspect it blew on to my land from a neighbour who planted Monsanto seeds so close to my fields that there wasn't even a fence line in between. Or maybe from the big clouds of canola seed I've watched blowing off loaded trucks passing my farm at harvest time."
Desktop While Schmeiser, who has become a cause célèbre in North America with several websites devoted to him, may not himself have wanted a Monsanto crop, some 75 percent of oilseed rape on the prairies is grown from GM seed.
Infosys Schmeiser describes Monsanto's product as a "noxious weed" and likes to open a pod of oilseed rape to show reporters the tiny black seeds and explain that just one plant produces as many as 10,000 of them. "It's pretty windy here in the prairies," he said drily. "I think Monsanto is trying to make an example of me because other farmers have found unwanted GM seeds on their land. But I didn't watch my grandparents clear the land and build this farm just to have the profits taken over by a big multinational corporation. A lot of these press people say to me 'If Monsanto can do this to you -- contaminate and pollute your land -- then farmers might as well quit farming.'"
Refurbished Laptops The Schmeiser-Monsanto court battle has huge implications for farmers everywhere. If Monsanto wins and Westminster eventually approves the commercial growing of GM crops, Roundup Ready canola may reach European shores intentionally. It has already arrived accidentally, shipped by the Canadian company Advanta last month mixed in with a shipment of traditional seeds. Farmers across Europe tore up crops grown from the Advanta seeds, some of the work paid for with government funds.
Wipro "Never mind Microsoft," said one of Schmeiser's supporters, U.S. farmer Vincent Moye. "Monsanto is the bigger and more dangerous monopoly. We're all gonna be serfs on our own land."
Lap Top As for Schmeiser, he said, "I find it all very stressful. I'd rather be fishing."
[ Comment, Edit or Article Submission ]