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For decades, cannabis breeders grew the plant that everyone profits from. They selected, stabilized and preserved genetics under prohibition, often at real personal risk. Then legalization arrived, and much of that work was absorbed into the commercial market with little credit, less consent and almost no compensation.

Strains were renamed. Lineage was blurred. Provenance became a marketing suggestion rather than a fact.

Now, a new initiative is trying to formalize something the culture has long argued for but rarely enforced: if you use a breeder’s genetics, you ask permission, you give credit and you pay them.

That idea sits at the heart of a new program launched by Arcana Collective, which recently introduced what it calls the PAC framework. PAC stands for Permission, Acknowledgement and Compensation, and while it arrives via a company announcement, the idea itself cuts much deeper than any single brand.

At stake is a question that growers, breeders and even consumers increasingly care about. Who owns cannabis genetics, and who gets to benefit from them?

Why breeders have been easy to ignore

Cannabis genetics sit in a strange legal gray zone. Because the plant remained federally illegal for so long, traditional intellectual property protections were either unavailable or meaningless. Breeders relied on reputation, trust and community norms rather than contracts or courts.

When legal markets emerged, those informal protections collapsed. Genetics moved faster than the people who created them. Cuts changed hands. Seeds circulated. Commercial operators often treated elite genetics as raw material rather than authored work.

For growers, this created a familiar frustration. You could buy a cut called one thing in one state and another thing somewhere else. Claims of authenticity were hard to verify. And the people who actually created those plants were often invisible.

What PAC actually tries to do

The PAC framework is simple by design. Before a breeder’s genetics enter Arcana’s library or are used commercially, there must be explicit permission. The breeder must be publicly acknowledged. And compensation must be built into the relationship.

That might sound obvious, but in cannabis, it is not standard practice.

Arcana’s first PAC partners include breeder Marty Calabrese, known for Triangle Kush, and Shannon Risden and Nick Risden, associated with Bickett OG. Rather than stripping those genetics of their history, the framework is designed to preserve lineage and formally connect plants back to the people who developed them.

Whether PAC becomes a meaningful industry standard or just one company’s policy remains to be seen. But the fact that it exists at all signals a shift.

Why this matters to growers

For growers, this is not an abstract ethics debate. It is about access, trust and long-term value.

As genetics become more centralized through tissue culture, licensing and verified libraries, the question of legitimacy will matter more. Growers will increasingly need to know not just what a strain is called, but where it came from and under what terms it is being used.

A framework like PAC offers a way to evaluate genetics providers beyond hype. Did the breeder consent? Are they named? Are they still involved? Is compensation ongoing or symbolic?

Those questions help growers avoid investing time and money into genetics that may later become legally or culturally contested.

A credibility signal, not a marketing claim

One detail worth noting is how restrained the rollout is. There are no claims that PAC will solve genetic theft overnight. No declarations that this is the future of cannabis. Just a framework and two initial partnerships.

That restraint matters, especially in an industry where grand claims are common.

It also matters that this effort centers breeder relationships rather than strain branding. The focus is not on launching new products, but on how collaboration happens upstream.

The bigger shift underneath

Cannabis is entering a phase where culture and commerce are finally colliding at the genetic level. As companies race to secure exclusive cultivars and defend intellectual property, the industry is being forced to answer uncomfortable questions about ownership, credit and extraction.

Breeders have been warning about this for years. PAC is not the only response, but it is one of the clearest attempts to put shared values into a formal structure.

For High Times readers, especially growers and longtime heads, the takeaway is not that Arcana necessarily has the answer. It is that the conversation is finally moving in the right direction.

Cannabis was built on collaboration, not erasure. If the legal industry wants legitimacy, it will need to respect the people who built the plant before it was profitable.

Whether PAC becomes a model or a footnote will depend on whether others follow it, improve it or challenge it. Either way, breeders are no longer invisible, and that alone marks a shift worth paying attention to.

Photo: Shutterstock

The post Cannabis Was Built by Breeders. The Legal Market Is Being Forced to Acknowledge That first appeared on High Times.