It does, but more tangentially than directly.
Conservatives should not cheer for piracy on intellectual property, the same as someone else trying to steal others labor.
This wasn't piracy; it did not occur on the seas. This was not theft of intellectual property, the results of it perhaps, but not the property itself -- but it was not theft at all, he made a legal purchase. Moreover, it wasn't even a violation of his contract with them -- he did not keep the seed; if they wanted to prevent something like this from happening they would have also included a "you can't sell this to the general public"- or "anyone you sell this to has to sign a copy of this contract"-type clause.
I'm sorry, but they were in the wrong; the guy found a perfectly legitimate, legal (and lawful, he broke no law) loophole.
Also my observation: Monsanto may have won this case, but they already have lost a huge battle in PR.
I have to ask if that even matters; Congress has horrid PR -- like the lowest ever -- and yet they're still allowed to conduct business as usual.
Not true, as I said in previous comment. “Keywords - Unanimous and limited scope” on this SCOTUS decision. Don't try to interpret it into encompassing all issues under the sun.