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35 Comments

  1. DangerDaveOG on

    Doesn’t mean much. Just means you technically can’t propagate and sell it. But even then if you do at small scale nothing will happen.

  2. NextWarthog5083 on

    Thank you! Never noticed a sticker like that before. So silly.

  3. _Laughing_Man on

    When I see this I make sure to propagate them out of spite lol

  4. sebastixnrubio on

    A text on a sticker is not a user agreement lol not even legally binding. I’d propagate the heck out of it, yes I’m that pity.

  5. MISSdragonladybitch on

    What this means is the person who spent time ( likely several years and generations) hybridizing this gets a royalty. It’s not much, a few cents per plant, but it adds up! This is often how they make their living.

    If you want to prop it for yourself, that’s fine, just don’t sell it. If you want to sell it, you can usually contact the breeder and get permission so long as they get their royalty, which is – I kid you not – somewhere between $0.03 and $0.27 per plant, in my experience. And when Costa farms is selling thousands, it adds up.

  6. mcmonkeylove on

    They can take the props from my cold dead hands! FREEEEEEEEDOM!!!

  7. Plant breeders rights, or a small chance of a patent I would have to read up on this particular cultivar.

    The reason this is a thing, and perhaps a good thing, is that developing plants is expensive. Breeding new more productive or disease resistant crops is pricey, finding or creating or inducing new houseplant breeds and species is expensive. Scaling up, developing Tissue Culture or propagation protocols for large scale commercialisation is expensive.

    If once you introduce something to the public your competition can copy and distribute your work that is no way to turn a profit and really hampers R&D cost recovery. So without Plant Breeders rights the investment in plant innovation will tank.

    For home copies, the company will not care. For local plant for plant trades on facebook, the company will not care. Perhaps your small etsy store will even fly under the radar and be small enough the company will not care. But if you own a nursery, expect lawyers.

  8. Realistic-Bass2107 on

    I found it in their website and it’s a Pothos, correct?

  9. Rare-Crab-844 on

    it’s definitely a much bigger deal when you work in plant retail- like my boss has us propagate plants where we can, but a lot of the plants we grow are patented, and if we propagated those or even collected seed in some cases, our business would get in HUGE legal trouble.
    technically you still aren’t supposed to propagate off a plant you purchased for yourself either… but it’s more ethical that taking a cutting off a patented plant that you didn’t pay for.

  10. schmeetlikr on

    essentially the same funtion as “not for resale” on the individual items in a multipack of sodas or candy etc

  11. HibiscusGrower on

    They won’t come after you if you propagate it to have a spare or to give to your mom. They put this on so that nurseries don’t propagate them on a large scale.

  12. gwhite81218 on

    Scientists develop cultivars of plants and then patent them. Their skill, research, resources, and time are valuable, so they would like to make some money off of the product. Think of it like renting a movie versus pirating it.

    Now, they don’t worry about a plant hobbyist making a few extra plants. They care about commercial greenhouses propagating their work and making big profit off of them, as that greenhouse is now selling a unique and desirable cultivar. If that happens, the developers will see very little income. Imagine if a movie came out and people only watched the pirated version. Except these are plant scientists. They’re not exactly rolling in the dough like a film production company lol.

    You will hear of greenhouses propagating patented plants and then being sued because they have effectively denied the developers their income. If a greenhouse wants to sell a patented plant, they must purchase the plant from the approved sellers first.

  13. FloraMaeWolfe on

    Welcome to plant patents.

    PPAF probably means Plant Patent Applied For.

  14. EpicGigglez on

    It just means it’s patent protected and believe it or not alot of Epipremnum aureum varieties are not suppose to be propagated. Manjula being one of the biggest ones. Yet people still do it and sell them. You are one small fish in a big pond.

  15. Jeramy_Jones on

    If you propagate it they’re not gonna know about it unless you advertise that you did.

  16. fourcatsandadog on

    👀 oh nooooo, a piece of the plant accidentally fell off and into this jar of water! How crazy!

  17. I think propping for your own pleasure is fine. Propping and selling is what is against the copyright (?) laws.

  18. Remarkable_Peach_374 on

    HAH! Fuck you. I bought this plant and now I’m going to prop it out of spite. Bitch.

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