-
Senior Member
-
Senior Member
Originally Posted by NeedHairASAP
update: Hairs coming in surprisingly well at the 1.5 month mark. Excited to see how things look at the 12 month mark. Will maybe post my pictures in the coming weeks.
Please do ! Would love to see them. I'm scheduled for the 14th of next month myself.
-
Senior Member
What patenting HST achieves as opposed to not patenting it?
How does it protect technology from not being used by someone else when its not known unless he revelead all the details and are publicly known ?
Can it stop company abc from using the same technique and calling it xyz instead of hst, gho wouldnt even know what technique this clinic is using to start off with
i feel this is just a marketing ploy,what if someone patented HT, fue or fut?
-
Originally Posted by didi
What patenting HST achieves as opposed to not patenting it?
How does it protect technology from not being used by someone else when its not known unless he revelead all the details and are publicly known ?
1) Best Answer
2) More specific
Originally Posted by didi
...what if someone patented HT, fue or fut?
This is regulated by law:
Basically, you can't patent normal transplants; e.g. transplantation of whole/intact hearts, livers, kidneys etc - as well as transplantation of whole/intact hair follicles.
But IF you find a way to make 2 hearts or livers or kidneys or hair follicles from 1 - THIS is patentable. The reason for the latter is to encourage scientists/researchers to enable the latter one day - simply for a better (medical) life in future.
-
Senior Member
..So HASCI should fully disclose details of the technique in order to get patent for it(protect it), including 'magicGho juice' where he baths grafts and everything thats related to hst as it makes no sense and it probablly isnt allowed to patent somethning and keep it secret,right?
Wouldnt reveling too much details screw hasci over as anyone could copy and use it,
How do patent firms verify that his claims are accurate?
-
Senior Member
we don't deserve this....well at least the critics don't
thank you based Dr Gho!!!!!
-
I see this as a HUGE benefit for the competition as it encourages others to find other means of hair multiplication that could potentially be better.
Competition breeds innovation. When that happens, the consumer comes out on top!
-
Originally Posted by didi
How do patent firms verify that his claims are accurate?
Simply by asking ...
https://register.epo.org/espacenet/a...24279&tab=main
... and if you scroll down - they had LOTS of questions in the past.
-
Originally Posted by hellouser
I see this as a HUGE benefit for the competition as it encourages others to find other means of hair multiplication that could potentially be better.
Correct!
... and Dr. Gho knows this too.
-
Originally Posted by 534623
Correct!
... and Dr. Gho knows this too.
Well Gho is going to cash in for sure. At some point though, the patent is going to expire and be free for use by everyone.
But its a business, hes not doing the procedure because he cares about serving the public because hes a humanitarian, he's doing it for the money and everyone else involved with it.
I really do wonder for those who think that Gho's technique is a scam... if his technique didn't regrow donor hair through all the years he's been doing it... wouldn't he have been SUED by now???
Similar Threads
-
By sanook in forum Techniques in Possible Donor Regeneration and Multiplication
Replies: 100
Last Post: 11-05-2012, 02:32 PM
-
By Dutch_Dude in forum Hair Loss Treatments
Replies: 49
Last Post: 06-24-2012, 09:02 PM
-
By stillinHS1994 in forum Men's Hair Loss: Start Your Own Topic
Replies: 6
Last Post: 07-22-2011, 05:02 PM
-
By DepressedByHairLoss in forum Cutting Edge / Future Treatments
Replies: 13
Last Post: 03-01-2011, 08:24 PM
-
By zxc in forum Hair Loss Treatments
Replies: 3
Last Post: 11-07-2010, 06:14 AM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
Forum Rules
|
» IAHRS
» The Bald Truth
» americanhairloss.org
|
Bookmarks