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EU Software Patent War Ignites Again

Posted by Zonk on Thu Sep 21, 2006 03:59 PM
from the another-skirmish dept.
pieterh writes "ZDNet UK has a detailed article on the heating-up of the software patent debate in Europe. A new motion before the European Parliament calls for a harmonised patent court (EPLA) that would be able to enforce software patents across Europe. This comes just 15 months after the EP rejected the infamous Computer Implemented Inventions directive." From the article: "Patents on software are formally disallowed under the European patent system, but are routinely granted by the European patent office, according to critics. They are currently difficult to enforce in many EU member states, something critics say would be changed by the failed software patent directive, and now by the EPLA. Software patents are generally considered to add to the legal costs of large enterprises, as well as creating a hostile legal environment for smaller software businesses and open source projects."
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  • by User 956 (568564) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:01PM (#16156844) Homepage
    ZDNet UK has a detailed article on the heating-up of the software patent debate in Europe. A new motion before the European Parliament calls for a harmonised patent court (EPLA) that would be able to enforce software patents across Europe.

    Yes, because clearly the best solution isn't to simply fix the law, but to create an entirely new governmental bureacracy.
    • by Qzukk (229616) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:18PM (#16156973) Journal
      the best solution isn't to simply fix the law

      The law is fixed. The law specifically disallows software patents. The "infamous" directive mentioned in the writeup failed, so the law still specifically disallows software patents. The patent office issues them anyway. Isn't it funny how laws telling people what to do result in fines, jail time, and execution if you break them, but laws telling the government what to do have absolutely no punishment when the government breaks them?

      So to enforce the patents, whoever is behind this clusterfuck intends to create an entirely new court system, specifically for the purpose of "legislating from the bench".
      • The "infamous" directive mentioned in the writeup failed, so the law still specifically disallows software patents. The patent office issues them anyway.

        Right. Which means the law is broken, because the penalties aren't a deterrent.
        • Clearly it is broken.
          I support laws that enable the public at large to admin a kick to the testicles of anyone proposing to patent any software. To support ERA, give the offenders a choice between the public kick in the nads, or a double-bit axe shoved up teh *ss.
          This software patent insanity needs to stop and just go away. Copyright reg's and laws already cover software code- we don't need to overburden the patent system with this shite!
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      All we want to do is create a harmonised patent court. Let a thousand, nay, a thousand thousand voices sing in unison the beauteous virtues of the patent.

      Join me, my children.

      Won'drous pa-tent fill'd with light
      Bless'd be thine en-dur-ing sight
      Yield thine cof-fers 'fore my suit
      Ren-der o-thers' ef-forts moot.

      Righ-teous pa-tent guard these joys
      Lest a-no-ther have such toys
      Hold for me mine right-ful worth
      All these thoughts u-pon this Earth.

      Beau-teous pa-tent for mine good
      As an in-verse Ro-bin Hood
      Suck-le-ing a
  • by patrixmyth (167599) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:05PM (#16156871)
    Ah, remember the good old days with patent and copyright law was crafted to ENCOURAGE innovation and PROTECT creative work, rather than STIFLE competition and REWARD petty lawsuits? No? Well, me neither, but I've seen the footprints in the woods.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Yes.

      The mission statement of the copyright act under which I grew up:

      "The main object to be desired in expanding copyright protection accorded to music has been to give the composer an adequate return for the value of his composition, and it has been a serious and difficult task to combine the protection of the composer with the protection of the public, and to so frame an act that it would accomplish the double purpose of securing to the composer an adequate return for all use made of his composition and a
    • Out of curiosity, can you provide an example of when the patent system has failed to "PROTECT creative work"?
  • by TheWoozle (984500) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:09PM (#16156909)
    It's too bad that I can't patent a political process by which ridiculous laws are passed by clueless people. I'd be the richest man in the universe.
  • Sad, isn't it ? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mickwd (196449) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:10PM (#16156913)
    From the article:

    In rebuttal, the three groups have filed a motion calling for "balance between the interests of patent holders and the broader public interest in innovation and competitive markets"

    Sad, isn't it, when the groups opposing this are calling for a "balance" between patent holders and the greater public good.

    Surely, the whole point of patents was "the broader public interest in innovation and competitive markets" ?

    So how can McCreevy and co. get away with opposing "the broader public interest in innovation and competitive markets", the will of our elected EU politicians, and the wishes of by far the majority of the population who have expressed an interest in the matter ?

  • by flooey (695860) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:17PM (#16156962)
    Patents on software are formally disallowed under the European patent system, but are routinely granted by the European patent office, according to critics. They are currently difficult to enforce in many EU member states,...

    You mean member states aren't willing to enforce patents that aren't allowed to be granted in the first place? What is this world coming to?
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        I believe that's rather how the whole mess started in the US- and as you might expect, some douche bag lawyer started interpreting this to mean that software *itself* was patentable. The momentum started building, the USPTO was making a nice chunk of change on patent fees, so really didn't see any impetus to change, and suddenly, we were left with something that is completely out of control. And now that there are established and entrenched interests, fixing the problem will an order of magnitude more diffi
  • international issues (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sedyn (880034) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:18PM (#16156966)
    I've always wondered about how patents work beyond their own borders (I don't understand patent law very well).

    For example, if patent office A says that something is obvious, but patent office B in another nation claims that it isn't (and subsequently grants the patent, potentially to another company) what are the possible ramifications and remedies? Or is a company expected to request patents by all offices? Or once a patent is declared invalid in one jurisdiction is anyone else (in another nation) allowed to apply for it?

    What I just asked could be complete non-sense, but it is something that I am curious about.
    • by Burz (138833) on Thursday September 21 2006, @06:50PM (#16157936) Journal
      For example, if patent office A says that something is obvious, but patent office B in another nation claims that it isn't

      The answer is you sign a "free-trade" treaty to "synchronize" your "intellectual property" laws with the United States. Then you just do whatever the Americans tell you.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:20PM (#16156995)
    The enormous cost (3million EUROS) of litigating any patent dispute means small businesses simply cannot benefit from having patents when a large company infringes their patents . We absolutely do not want software patents because they are harmful to innovation in our own businesses. Indeed, we demand any attempt to introduce them in Europe is completely rejected. Two years ago, over 200,000 small businesses in Europe signed a petition to the European Commission totally rejecting the idea of introducing software patents in Europe, and totally rejecting the idea of harmonising legal processes in a way that might support software patents.
    • Please tell me how any of this is unique to software patents.

      If you want to argue that the entire patent system should be abolished, feel free to do so. Otherwise, I'd love to hear what makes software patents a special case from a small vs. large business perspective...
        • the problem, which you seem to acknowledge, of patents being completely useless to SMALL business

          I acknowledged no such thing. I think patents can be quite useful for small businesses. My point is simply that all the rage directed at software patents in particular is somewhat misplaced.

          Look, in an ideal world, small businesses would be able to sue big businesses to their heart's content. But in the real world, some people have more money than others. Unavoidable fact.

          That doesn't mean that patents shoul
            • So they should be able to influence public policy for every one else? To "preserve the status-quo"?

              Putting those words in quotes implies that I said that, which is completely dishonest. I said nothing of the sort. What I'm saying is that it's inevitable that some businesses won't be able to afford to assert their patents. However, in the absence of a better alternative, just because some businesses can't afford to assert their patents doesn't mean that NO businesses should be able to.

              "America has the bes
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                copyright laws aren't sufficient to protect software inventions

                Sorry, I have been coding for over thirty years there is NO "invention" taking place in that process any more than a plumbers or carpenters solution to a tricky bathroom remodeling around a basement support pole is patentable. Solving these issues can be done by any competent practitioner, similar coding would be created by a majority of the programming community given a correctly defined problem. I.E. what we do is OBVIOUS and NOT patentable.
                D

                • I'm usually running through the code execution path in my head as I'm writing my beautiful poetry. I'd love to hear about how you write software if you are incapable of thinking a program through before you write code?

                  Way to miss the point and mangle my words. All inventions obviously start out as ideas. But please -- continue to explain to me how software is merely equivalent to a mental step.
            • Your argument falls down because it contains an illogical step. I and most SMALL businesses are not arguing for the abolition of patents. We are arguing against introducing a harmful new type of patent in Europe that will be very financially damaging to SMALL businesses in Europe. What we SMALL businesses want is very simple. We need the existing level-playing field for business in Europe to continue as it is because otherwise software patent lawsuits will be extremely financially harmful to our SMALL bus
                • it ought to be crystal clear that without software patents any SMALL business can copy Microsoft's ideas just as much as they can copy the ideas of the SMALL business.

                  Your naivety is scary. The problem isn't whether you can copy the idea -- it's whether you can actually COMPETE. Do you have millions of dollars to throw at advertising? Government lobbyists? Exclusive contracts with major institutions? I don't think you understand what it takes to be successful against these companies.

                  As for your intere
                  • by csirac (574795) on Thursday September 21 2006, @09:55PM (#16158638) Homepage
                    Your naivety is scary. The problem isn't whether you can copy the idea -- it's whether you can actually COMPETE.

                    Your ignorance is scary. Do you really believe they need your help, and the patent office's help to continue succeed as they are already? They don't need software patents NOW, so what makes you think they need them at all?

                    Do you have millions of dollars to throw at advertising? Government lobbyists? Exclusive contracts with major institutions?

                    This is absolutely laughable. Why the hell do you think litigation should be the answer to everybody's problems?

                    Have you ever worked for a small company? Worked with one? Worked in a country outside the USA? _LARGE_ business names that you've never even heard of, let alone the ones you have, employ a tiny tiny fraction of employment to the workforce the world over. Consequently they also provide a tiny fraction of overall services to other businesses, and government.

                    Your understanding of business seems to be lacking, although I'll also admit I'm just an engineer that happens to work for a small company. This year we've done several contracts for the federal government of Australia; and one for a large multinational. The rest of our business is to other small businesses, but by no means do we need: government lobbyists (well, we do now - because we have software patents, thankyou FTA!), advertising dollars, or "exclusive" contracts with major institutions (we're already their best choice based on technical merit, we don't need secret handshakes to earn money).

                    I don't think you understand what it takes to be successful against these companies. ... I can't respond to that statement without resorting to expletives... all I can suggest is try and open your eyes a little, and look before you think.

                    All these guys are asking for is the status quo, like he said. Not world domination - just to keep doing what they're doing. Patents are meant to encourage innovation which benefits mankind by way of enabling a temporary monopoly that rewards the inventor, NOT to encourage monopolies (using ideas that are often: obvious, duplicates of, or outright created by other inventors years earlier), NOR are they meant to simply act as a vehicle to crush competition.

                    MOST engineers I know from university are employed by small niche companies, some of them even employed by big names/big government for parts of contracts these guys tend to be best at. It's amusing that without even looking, they are fully aware of some of their products infringing on patents (thanks to industry journals publicising stupid patents) from their big-name competitors - the best they can do is hope they stay small enough to avoid attention. You do not need to be "number 1" to be a useful entity. Are you saying all small businesses should be abolished because they're useless? That there's no point to them, so stepping on their toes doesn't matter? The point is that without patents, small businesses are turning a profit, employing most of the workforce, but what you're saying is that you know better?

                    Next we'll see music patents. Seriously, the biggest threat to small business is other businesses ripping off their copyright, which is much simpler to prosecute even if the other side has a huge army of undead lawyers.

                    I'm an engineer at a small company (less than $2 million AUD a year), and I'm holding up a small system that's completely developed in-house used as part of our service business. We are profitable because my wages plus off-the-shelf hardware costs a fraction of what the license fees for an off-the-shelf software product with proprietary hardware would be. Thanks to the Free Trade Agreement with America, we're now open to frivilous patent litigation from the big name companies selling their solutions in the USA and elsewhere.

                    Where does that leave my small company? Up shit creek, actually. We have no interest in filing patents for "our" innovations; what the hell would we fight them with? A
                  • huh (Score:3, Insightful)

                    You work for a law firm--an "intellectual law" firm--writing patents.

                    So basically you are a flunky who makes a living from the patent industry. That explains your hysteria: terror. Wouldn't it be horrible if we were free to think? Don't think about it before asking your masters at the law firm.
        • I write hundreds of potentially patentable algorithms and combinations of algorithms every week

          No you don't. Pure algorithms aren't patentable. You need to understand that in their current state, software patents are essentially business method patents, tied to a computer structure. They are, essentially, patents on an inventive computer-implemented means of accomplishing some task.
            • Oh, you mean like apparatus for switching view via button press and such? I don't write those? You coulda fooled me.

              I'm sure there's prior art for that. It's not patentable.
                • It would be more useful if you linked to the actual patent, so I can see what was actually infringed.

                  I'm willing to bet that Adobe held a patent for a fairly specific use of tabs, and that's what Macromedia infringed on. I'd also be VERY interested to learn what the countersuit involved, since it resulted in Adobe paying out more than it won in the initial suit.

                  Seriously, a couple of vague sentences in Wikipedia, lacking references to source materials, doesn't do much to prove a point.
            • Which is commonly called "software" and specifically excluded from patentability in the EPC.

              Yup. And that's what we're talking about. Some people agree with the law, and others don't. You're simply restating the problem.
    • The traditional western freedom to express anything in terms of mathematics.

      Where so-called "intellectual property" leads us is nothing short of enclosure of the mind.
  • by ClamIAm (926466) on Thursday September 21 2006, @04:34PM (#16157101)
    I think it's safe to say most Slashdotters prefer a form of government where they have a voice, and this probably means most of us favor some form of liberal democracy. Well, Wendell Philips said it best when he described the price of liberty as "eternal vigilance". There will always be forces in the world trying to subvert liberty to serve their own ends, and this means that there must always be people who will stand up for what is right.

    I realize this is kind of a sappy/idealistic post, but, um, I think there's some measure of truth here.
      • by Shawn is an Asshole (845769) on Thursday September 21 2006, @05:38PM (#16157518)
        I can't for the life of me figure out what makes people hate software patents more than other types of patents...

        For one thing, software already has copyright. Why does it also need patents?

        Say I write a song with a I-IV-V progression. I have copyright on that song now. Should I also be able to patent the I-IV-V progression and begin suing everyone over it?
        • For one thing, software already has copyright. Why does it also need patents?

          Non-software patents are no different and have the same relationship. You can get a copyright on the implementation design and a patent on the abstract design. Chemical process patents for example, which no one seems to care about, are entirely indistinguishable from software patents in this regard. The idea that software is somehow different on the basis of a copyright is a fallacy and obscures the real issue.

          Which is not

          • Because software inventions are closer to mechanical inventions, with modules analogous to moving parts, than they are to a piece of art or prose.

            Shouldn't the INVENTION be protected, not just the specific implementation of the invention?

            Actually, the patents on mechanical inventions do patent the specific implementation, and not the idea itself. You cannot patent the concept of converting flammable fuels into motive force, but you can patent a specific implementation of an internal combustion engine. S

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              You cannot patent the concept of converting flammable fuels into motive force,

              which is the same as saying you can't patent an algorithm

              but you can patent a specific implementation of an internal combustion engine

              which is the same as saying you can patent a specific use of an algorithm.

              Your example is entirely consistent with software patents.
                  • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                    You only get into the details of the implementation if REQUIRED to.

                    This approach is then a real problem. Do you really deserve to "own" the ideas in the patent you're writing? The second it's filed, how many real-world implementations out there are suddenly infringing because other developers had to follow similar logical processes to arrive at a solution that solves the same problem?

                    I can't help but think that the real innovators that advance technology in this world are disadvantaged, stifling progress -
                  • by KwKSilver (857599) on Thursday September 21 2006, @10:58PM (#16158857)
                    Actaually, your arguments in this thread--taken at face value--make a powerful case to outlaw all patents. Thanks.
            • What invention? Software is the implementation, just as a book is the implementation and nobody invents a book!

              If you change the words of a book, you no longer have the same book. In that sense, a book merely implements itself. Not so with software. You can use a completely different code base, a completely different operating system, a completely different hardware base, and still arrive at the same result. That RESULT is the invention, i.e., the PURPOSE of the software. A book is not at all comparabl
                • If you change the source code to a piece of software, you no longer have the same software.

                  But you have the same INVENTION. You are missing the entire point of software patents. Nobody wants to patent their specific code -- they want to patent the inventions that happen to be implemented in code.
                    • What inventions? We don't invent software, we develop it, solving the problems as we go.

                      You mean you don't come up with an invention before you start writing the code? Remind me never to use your software...
            • No, patents always covered the specific implementation of the idea, not the idea itself. That was why getting the claims right was important, because you had to make them as general as possible to cover minor variations, but were not supposed to be able to make them so general as to cover everything.

              But software patents always amount to giving a monopoly on an idea, not an implementation of an idea.


              Patents in ALL areas are as broad as the applicant can get away with. If you don't think mechanical patent ap
        • I don't see how a broken economic and legal system justifies patenting what are a cross between a mathematical formula and an instruction booklet.

          I'm not sure I understand your analogy... so before I respond, can you please provide an example to clarify?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I want to know who would be liable for any losses due to the EPO's granting of patents against their mandate (the EPC).

    If the EPO is not liable, then senior EPO staff or examiners must be personally liable because these (invalid) software patents are not issuing themselves. Perhaps that mister McCreevy (who is not a Microsoft sock-puppet) could contribute his personal wealth and spare time to the defense of the liable party.

    If the EPO are not liable for their actions then why would a private company or indi
  • by Opportunist (166417) on Thursday September 21 2006, @07:19PM (#16158081)
    The best solution would be to simply disallow patenting software altogether. Software implementations are already covered by copyright, and that's about as much as there should be to keep competition running. The US have patentable software, and we've seen far too many instances where the system has been abused to patent ridiculous implementations for the sake of stifling competition.

    And that's anything but free market!
  • Eh,,, (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Barts_706 (992266) on Friday September 22 2006, @02:39AM (#16159367) Homepage Journal
    Once in my life I felt proud to be Polish - it was when we blocked the issue of software patents.

    It looks like we have won the battle, but the war will continue as long as there is overload of bureacracy in EU and moloch corporations to be lobbying.

    Personally, being a Linux user (perhaps not the most advanced around, but at least trying) I shiver at the tought of software patents being introduced and what effect this might have on our distributions. No left-click, no double-click, no <insert_your_favourite_nix_feature_here>?

    I do hope this issue will be bounced back again. For the sake of us all.
      • ... and that is why many IP cases are accepted on a contingency fee basis.

        Remember, in the legal world, just because you can't afford it doesn't mean you won't find someone to take it on for you.
          • We author and sell software which is adequately protected by copyright.

            Clearly you do not understand the difference between patents and copyright. Copyright merely covers a specific representation of an invention. Patents cover the fundamental nature of the invention itself. Can you imagine coming up with an amazing invention in Java, only to have Microsoft copy it in .NET? Good luck trying that one under copyright law.
              • Clearly you do not understand 91/250/EEC:

                So just because the law is written a certain way, that means it's completely rational and correct?

                I'll be sure to remind people of that the next time the DMCA comes up in discussion.

                Can you imagine comming up with an amazing 'invention' in your latest novel, only to have another author write something similar in a completely different book? Personally, I'd be flattered.

                Since when does flattery have anything to do with business interests???
                  • The non-patentablity of software is enshrined in the EPC and supported by historical EPO documentation.
                    It's not just the law, it's the opinion of the majority and was the opinion of the patent office before a wealthy minority began trying to force a change.


                    In other words, "The majority agrees with me, therefore I am right."

                    Why don't you go do that if it makes you feel better about losing this argument!

                    Good counterargument.

                    Since when do hard working, ligitimate businesses object to a little healthy competiti
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward
          Empirical research which JUST DOESN'T SHOW that patents are in any way beneficial, only that, AT BEST, they've failed to be catastrophically bad! (note that "research" is only counting software startups, and I've got a sneaking suspicion its counting software patent troll startups AS "software startups" too. The two are not substitutable. Any company that employs (or retains) more lawyers than programmers is not a "software company"!).

          See Lenz's take on the paper: http://k.lenz.name/LB/?p=10 [lenz.name] -
          And Kinsella'