UN’s WIPO voted Friday to update its IP Patent Treaties for Genetics
Based in Geneva, Switzerland, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the United Nations (UN).
An Intellectual Property (IP) Treaty, according to the UN, includes:
patents
data and digital assets
copyrights
trade secrets
trademarks
designs
patterns
surveillance, space, and defense technologies
anything on the internet
When is the next meeting?
It is to be announced on this website:
Please fast forward to 46 seconds.
Drugmakers with access to the WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) include:
Page five of five pages
https://bvgh.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/2021-March-Snapshot.pdf
WIPO has:
160 Institutional members
171 “Collaborations” with drugmakers and others
171 “Assets” including its vaccine patents
The lists can be accessed using this website and map:
To support the WIPO, Congress approved funding for these people and universities.
They are:
Henry Hertzfeld (George Washington University)
Benjamin Staats (George Washington University)
https://spacenews.com/op-ed-dont-wait-for-a-disaster-industry-led-space-traffic-management/
George Leaua (George Washington University)
Bhaven Sampat (Columbia University)
https://www.publichealth.columbia.edu/people/our-faculty/bns3
Richard R. Nelson (Columbia University)
Lisa L. Ouellette (Stanford Law School)
https://law.stanford.edu/directory/lisa-larrimore-ouellette/
Dr. Audrey Odom John (Washington University in St. Louis)
It is a partial list.
The China Communist Party (CCP) already owns half of the world’s genetic data.
Through WIPO’s databases, it now has access to the other half.
The WIPO was established in 1967.