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      The Future of Breach of Confidence and the Protection of Privacy

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      Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal
      Informa UK Limited

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          Privacy

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            The Patent Controversy in the Nineteenth Century

            The patent system has lately been subjected to investigations by committees of Congress, and reforms have been proposed to meet some of the most serious criticisms. In recent publications commenting on these discussions it has been suggested that opposition to the patent system is a new development. A writer of a “history of the patent monopoly” asserted that “there never has been, until the present time, any criticism of this type of exclusive privilege,” and he attributed the allegedly new attitude to “modern witch-hunters,” “hungry aspirants to public office,” and, by innuendo, to enemies of all private property.
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              Photoinactivation of viruses.

              Although the photodynamic effect was demonstrated against viral targets more than seventy years ago, the use of photosensitisers as antivirals in vivo has been slow in gaining acceptance. From a clinical viewpoint, this may be due to the pronounced side effects produced in several cases of the phototreatment of herpes genitalis in the early 1970s, the unfortunate patients presenting with post-treatment Bowen's disease. Currently, the clinical use of photosensitisers in this field is limited to the treatment of laryngeal papillomata. However, considerable progress has been made in the photodynamic disinfection of blood products. Photoantivirals have traditionally been targeted at viral nucleic acid, in many cases via an intercalative mechanism. However, given the potential for deleterious sequelae associated with this route, the design of new photosensitisers should encourage alternative targets, such as viral enzymes or the cell envelope (where this exists). Targeting is obviously determined by the chemistry of the photosensitiser employed and there are many different structural types available. The chemistry, photochemistry and cellular effects of the various agents are discussed, along with future prospects for this exciting area of medicine.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal
                Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal
                Informa UK Limited
                1472-9342
                1757-8469
                April 27 2015
                January 2007
                April 27 2015
                January 2007
                : 7
                : 2
                : 137-173
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Senior Lecturer in Law, King's College London. Thank you to Lionel Bently, Robert Burrell, Daniel Mah, Makeen Makeen and the anonymous referees for their instructive comments and to the participants of the 2006 SLS Conference Intellectual Property subject section for their feedback on an earlier version of this article.
                Article
                10.1080/14729342.2007.11421481
                7fafb058-6cad-423a-b136-fc374ef5559d
                © 2007
                History

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