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W3C Approved Patent Policy: Royalty Free Standards 144

Danny Weitzner writes "The World Wide Web Consortium has approved the W3C Patent Policy based on review by the W3C Advisory Committee and thanks to lots of input and cajoling from the Open Source community and slashdoters. Read the public Director's decision. We're the first major standards organization that sets the explicit goal of producing only standards that can be implemented without paying patent royalties. Our policy requires legal commitments from all who contribute to the development of Web standards that patents held by the contributor will be available on royalty-free terms. Both proprietary and open source software have been critical to the growth of the Web. With this policy, we intend to enabled continued innovation by both open source and proprietary development."
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W3C Approved Patent Policy: Royalty Free Standards

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  • by Waab ( 620192 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:07AM (#6007405) Homepage

    Unfortunately, Bezos already has a patent on the use of a royalty-free patent policy. Though I'm sure he'd be willing to license it to W3C for a reasonable fee.

  • Finally (Score:5, Insightful)

    by KDan ( 90353 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:08AM (#6007408) Homepage
    Some good developments in the great techno-legal world war. There had been too many bad ones lately...

    This one would have been a small disaster if it had gone wrong. Now let's hope the EU makes the right decision too!

    Daniel
    • Re:Finally (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:43AM (#6007671)
      One would never guess from this article that this action was a few months ago considered to be a bad thing by most slashbots. Alan Cox even wrote of this plan that "He could smell the rot from here"
      The problem with a "royalty free" patent, is that it can be sold to someone who then charges you for it.
      This what happened with the jpg pattent. check the previous stories on this subject for more info.
      http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=450 91&cid= 4672042
      http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/savingeurop e.html
  • hmmmm (Score:2, Insightful)

    by daveatwork ( 655626 )
    I wonder whether this will make getting software patents easier or harder, and whether people who failed to get a royalty patent go for one of these instead?
    • Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Informative)

      by aborchers ( 471342 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:10AM (#6007430) Homepage Journal
      I wonder whether this will make getting software patents easier or harder, and whether people who failed to get a royalty patent go for one of these instead?

      It will make no difference. W3C does not issue patents, governments do. The issue here is that patented work with non-free licenses will not be accepted as W3C standards.
  • It's a shame (Score:5, Insightful)

    by truthsearch ( 249536 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:09AM (#6007416) Homepage Journal
    It's really a shame that they have to allow patents at all. If they didn't they'd alienate most commercial contributors who'd then go to another standards body, or none at all. Since they do allow patents, though, it continues to promote the rediculous patenting of software processes.
    • Re:It's a shame (Score:3, Insightful)

      by bmongar ( 230600 )
      Actually allowing the companies to patent it, but only as royalty free allows for defensive patents. That way someone not in the standards org can't patent it.
      • Re:It's a shame (Score:3, Insightful)

        by truthsearch ( 249536 )
        In theory, if it's published by the standards org, no one can then patent it anyway. It should be denied by the patent office... ideally anyway, since we know that doesn't happen. But even if accepted by the USPTO the defence against any patent would be the date the standard is published. I'd rather see the system fixed than use it as a strategy against abuses.
        • Re:It's a shame (Score:1, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward
          Your argument does not apply if patent application filed before standards publication.
        • Re:It's a shame (Score:3, Interesting)

          by bmongar ( 230600 )
          I agree that it would be best to fix the patent system, but the W3C doesnt' have the power to do this, but they do have the power to set up a standards system that allows defensive stratagies. I think it is a good step by the W3C.
        • Re:It's a shame (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Forge ( 2456 )
          Patent law explicitly alows you to file your application up to a year after the 1st publication of the. In other words a "Patent Parasite" can file applications on every W3C RFC after reading the RFC.

          If the RFC is the 1st publication of the idea then the "Patent Parasite" wins.

          At least this way W3C members can criple patent parasite.

          Another step is to use those patented W3C standards to countersue people who attack OSS developers. It's just realy dificult to design a policy for this.
    • Anyone allowing proprietary, patented methods to potentially infect their company would have rocks in their head.

      How can W3C ever trust any closed source IP when it involves placing yourself one clever lawyer away from being sued for applying that IP outside the sandbox of the initial agreement.

      In the current climate, licencing patented methods could be even more deadly in the long run. Licenced companies may end up preparing for an onslaught of creditor raised IP suits ever time a past or present partner
  • by Laglorden ( 87845 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:09AM (#6007417) Journal
    Damn that viral licensing ;)
  • Object of Desire (Score:3, Informative)

    by SimplexO ( 537908 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:09AM (#6007424) Homepage
    It's good that they are doing something to protect the people. Now I just hope they don't screw up XHTML 2 [zeldman.com].
    • while its somewhat offtopic that's an interesting article,

      though I must say the day I'm forced to use a GUI for writing web pages is the day I quit.
      • Re:Object of Desire (Score:3, Informative)

        by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) *
        I just write in old-style HTML and then have "html tidy" do the translation for me. It's a nice free software tool packaged well on Debian and no doubt elsewhere.

        Bruce

        • But surely you can appreciate the desire to fire up vi or whatever and manipulate your code by hand, right? It's not that you nesscessarily need or want to, but the option of coding by hand (from scratch or just to make an adjustment) is nice and reassuring. In some ways it's analogous Open Source software and being able to "work under the hood" if you so desire or need.

          Besides, then you lose your bragging rights to "I actually bothered to make my homepage XHTML 1.1 and CSS2-compliant by hand!" ;-)
          • I made my homepage CSS3 compliant, but since nobody fully supports CSS2 I went back to CSS2. Shame really, CSS3 has some nice features for pages intended to be printed.
            • Re:Object of Desire (Score:3, Informative)

              by kikta ( 200092 )
              Call me wacky, but maybe that's because CSS3 is still under development [w3c.org].
              • I made my homepage CSS3 compliant, but since nobody fully supports CSS2 I went back to CSS2.

                Call me wacky, but maybe that's because CSS3 is still under development.

                CSS2 is not fully supported because CSS3 is still under development? Umm, how did you work that one out?

                By the way, Opera 7 supports a number of the CSS3 drafts (although not the one I was using).

                • I thought it was a typo. Apparently it was just bad logic (and sentence structure). I started with product X. Then I went to product Z. Since no one supports product Y completely, I ended up using product Y. Huh?

                  If you're concerned with full support, then CSS1 is the logical choice. If not, then give CSS3 a go. Just realize that an under-development W3C recommendation isn't meant for a production site.

                  And yes, CSS2 support isn't complete, but it's pretty close. I do all of my sites in CSS2 and don't have
    • Re:Object of Desire (Score:1, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Nice article.

      Summary: Because IE doesn't support the ancient HTML standard OBJECT tag, the author considers it to be "new technology". Now excuse me, but if IE sucks, isn't that IE's problem?

      Switching from IMG to OBJECT is logical. Not only that, but HTML 4.0-compliant browsers will deal with it just fine, making it nice and backwards-compatible. Your browser doesn't support HTML 4.0? I would encourage an upgrade. It's 2003 for chrissakes.
  • by asparagus ( 29121 ) <koonce@gm a i l . com> on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:13AM (#6007448) Homepage Journal
    Somewhere, hopefully, a bunch of patent lawyers are groaning.

    Your own damn fault, guys. You got greedy.

    There's only so many people you can harass at the party before you won't get invited to the next ball. Have fun suing each other out of existance.
    • Re:Good deal... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by TopShelf ( 92521 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:29AM (#6007565) Homepage Journal
      I doubt that this will be that great a deal - instead, look for the W3C to become less and less relevant going forward. In the next few years, you'll see more proprietary development, or worse yet, alternative coalitions made up of proprietary vendors who don't care to give their IP away for free...
      • Re:Good deal... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by JanneM ( 7445 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:36AM (#6007616) Homepage
        That's where the technology buyers become important. When deciding on a particular platform, the PHB's may have a great deal to say about what vendor to use, but it's the tech people (the CTO, if the company is large enough to have one) that determines the basic capabilities of the proposed system. With a stated checkbox-item to use only published W3C standards where applicable, for instance, the buyers can greatly influence what technologies their vendors will support. Some vendor-specific formats nonwithstanding, this is pretty much what has happened in most areas of information technology.

        Vote with your money, in other words.

      • by brlewis ( 214632 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:55AM (#6007758) Homepage
        Couldn't the w3c recognize how much this would hurt them? I mean, look how irrelevant the Internet is now. If the IETF hadn't limited themselves to open standards like TCP/IP, etc., think how popular the Internet might be today! Everybody would be using it!
      • Re:Good deal... (Score:4, Informative)

        by Raphael ( 18701 ) * on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:01PM (#6007799) Homepage Journal
        I doubt that this will be that great a deal - instead, look for the W3C to become less and less relevant going forward.

        Unfortunately, this is already happening. Look at the Web Services area. OASIS [oasis-open.org] has taken the lead for the standardization of most Web Services technologies working on top of SOAP (UDDI, ebXML, SAML, XACML, etc.) Is it a coincidence that OASIS has a RAND policy instead of a royalty-free policy?

        Is is a coincidence that some large companies pulled out of W3C and moved to OASIS? Of course, there are other reasons than the patent policy. The high membership fees of the W3C may be working against it. Also, some political wars between IBM, Microsoft and Sun can explain why some discussions started in some W3C working groups were killed and moved to OASIS. But still, I am hoping that W3C can regain some of the influence that it has lost in the recent months. Otherwise, the royalty-free policy may be largely irrelevant.

      • <sarcasm>
        Great, so instead of having "One web", we have a million compuservs, AOLs and Earthlinks all with portal controlled interwebs. God I love that plan! 40 browsers and activex/java plugins to buy your next DVD online.

        Sign me up.
        </sarcasm>
        • Re:Good deal... (Score:4, Insightful)

          by ralphclark ( 11346 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:31PM (#6008083) Journal
          For crying out loud, will everybody quit bitching! The community - i.e. *us* to large extent - campaigned for this and the W3C actually listened to us. This was one case where people power actually worked. Whether or not it was what you wanted personally, you should be grateful that we as a community do still seem to have some sort of meaningful democracy still available to us.

          We should be thankful for that and move on to the next phase, i.e. campaigning to prevent the balkanization you've predicted.
      • I doubt that this will be that great a deal - instead, look for the W3C to become less and less relevant going forward. In the next few years, you'll see more proprietary development, or worse yet, alternative coalitions made up of proprietary vendors who don't care to give their IP away for free...

        Respectfully, you are talking out of your butt. In fact, this move was made precisely to keep the W3C from becoming irrelevant, by ensuring it will put forth only standards that can be generally implemented.

        G
    • Your own damn fault, guys. You got greedy.

      This comment doesn't make sense to me. Patent lawyers represent their clients/employers. They do what they're told. Yes, they advise their client in patent matters, but if the client says "don't go after this" or "hey, aren't they infringing on my patent?" then the lawyers listen. It's not the lawyers that got greedy, it was the patent holders.

      psxndc

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:13AM (#6007452)
    Might as well have said: "After much deliberation and comittee meetings, we have come to the decision that 15+1 equals 16. And therefore in all of our publications page 15 will be followed by page 16. We should all thank and congratulate those who contributed time, expertise, patience and a spirit of cooperation to this effort."
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Dear A. Coward:

      Please be advised of our patent US#63245431 on "method and process for deciding the page that comes after 16".

      Althought you are currently not infringing on our valuable intellectual property, and we are not required by law to do so, we thought you might appreciate an unsolicited "heads-up".

      Note that we also hold a patent on "method and process for deciding the page that comes before 18", so no trying to come in from the other way.

      Sincerely,

      LawyerDrone
  • Standards Org? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JamesOfTheDesert ( 188356 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:16AM (#6007475) Journal
    We're the first major standards organization that sets the explicit goal of producing only standards that can be implemented without paying patent royalties.

    I could have sworn that, for some time, the W3C used to specificaly state that it did not produce standards, only reccomendations. That, apparently has changed, and I'm wondering just when that happened.

    Along these lines, just how does a vendor consortium such as the W3C become a standards body? Is it simply a matter of judging public acceptance and then declaring oneself to be a standards body? (I think that's basically what OASIS did.)

    • I could have sworn that, for some time, the W3C used to specificaly state that it did not produce standards, only reccomendations. That, apparently has changed, and I'm wondering just when that happened.

      I'm certain of that too. Now you see the W3C website littered with references to their "standards". I have no idea when it happened, but I'm pretty sure it was in the last couple of years.

      • Now you see the W3C website littered with references to their "standards".

        I used to poke fun at WaSP [webstandards.org], the Web Standards Project, because:

        1. WaSP does not follow acroymn standards;there is nothing to correspond to that letter 'a'
        2. Since the W3C produced reccomendations, they should be called WaRP

        But I see now the W3C has started to believe the hype.

        I liked it better when the W3C just said, "We think these things are good enough to go try out in Real Life. Let us know how they work."

  • It's things like this that help sway the growing feeling that the corporations and lawyers will take over the world, and my life. Sure... it may still happen, this is just a drop in the ocean, but it's a little light of hope that I'm going to cling to all day, thank you :)
  • Bad idea. (Score:1, Interesting)

    by xconslash ( 521219 )
    IMO, the driving force behind innovation in the technology sector has been money, or the promise that you can make money for inventing something and then selling it. Yes open source developers have made tremendous innovations that proprietary has not, but most of these developers have either been paid by a company (ex: a Linux distro), or were doing this development while working for another company (hobby developer). If people start to remove money from the equation, what's left? I cannot beleive the entir
    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by KDan ( 90353 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:28AM (#6007558) Homepage
      Don't you think it's better if it develops more slowly but in the right direction (to bring people together in the greatest social revolution since the invention of writing) rather than really fast in the wrong direction (another method for people to make money)...?

      I mean, what's the big hurry?

      Daniel
    • Do you really think not getting exclusive patents on a standard precludes profit? I work for a company that has made money of XML and Java, they don't hold the profit off of either. There has been a great deal of money made off of technologies that the companies don't hold the patent for. You are just Trolling.
      • Re:Bad idea. (Score:1, Flamebait)

        by xconslash ( 521219 )
        But what you're doing with Java and XML is in itself innovative I'm sure. I'm not saying you can't make money without royalty patents, but I'm also saying getting rid of royalty patents would remove a different avenue of profit.
        • Re:Bad idea. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by bmongar ( 230600 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:36AM (#6007615)
          but I'm also saying getting rid of royalty patents would remove a different avenue of profit.

          Yes it would. But that's not what the WC3 is doing, they aren't ending software patents. They are saying that nothing that requires paying royalties on a patent to implement can be part of the standard. You can patent your cool new *ML generator but you can't require everyone who uses *ML to pay a fee. This will allow more people to inovate not stifel inovation.

          • By not allowing royalties on licensing a patent, you might as well be saying don't even bother patenting it. It stifles innovation for profit since there is no way to make money through licensing technology.
        • This will allow more people to inovate not stifel inovation.

          But what reason does someone have to innovate, if they can't make any money off it? What do you get in return for your work at inventing something?
          • Re:Bad idea. (Score:4, Insightful)

            by bmongar ( 230600 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:48AM (#6007712)
            I think you missed the point. The real innovation isn't in standards, it is in implementation of them. For instance TCP/IP, HTML, HTTP are all free to use. IF royalties were required to use these not near the money would have been made off of them. The money is generated by the tools and bodies needed to build around the standards. More money is made by having these standards be free because more people will use the standards and more people will need tools and contractors.
    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by greppling ( 601175 )
      Your point is taken, but the issue is that we are talking about infrastructure here. There will always be an economic need for infrastructure, and thus there will always be money to create it.

      But raising this money by collecting royalties from every user of that infrastructure is a bad idea. To exaggerate a little (yeah, just little), imagine where the economoy would be if everyone had to pay 0.01 cent to the inventor of the wheel for every turn of a wheel he is using...

      More to the point, a new web stan

    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Having patents is not required in order to make money.

      For example, SQL is a standard. Lots of database vendors make lots of money, yet none hold a patent on SQL, as far as I know.

      What going RF does is remove one potential source of a non-level playing field. Vendors large and small can provide implementations of W3C Recommendations without having to pay a royalty for the Recommendations themselves. This does not mean such firms can't make money, and the lack of a royalty opens the door to small firms atte
    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by torpor ( 458 )
      If people start to remove money from the equation, what's left?

      What are you, an insensitive imperialistic American pig dog!? (j/k)

      What's left, of course, is motivation for the spirit of doing it. For the fundamental human quality known as 'endeavour', 'fortitude', or 'curiosity'.

      There are plenty of things in life more valuable than money, greedo. And lots of the modern things you and I take for granted got that way in spite of it.
    • by Root Down ( 208740 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:41AM (#6007654) Homepage
      I agree that technological advances have been based largely on financially driven concepts. However, much of this was built on free underlying technologies: TCP/IP, HTML, HTTP, etc. Without these, it is doubtful that the technology we see today would even exist. It is the ways and means of strengthening and restructuring of the backbone that will either encourage or prohibit future growth.
    • by truthsearch ( 249536 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:42AM (#6007667) Homepage Journal
      You're confusing sales with service, the misconception that the factory model of software development is the same as the service model. At least 85 to 90% of developers do not work for companies that sell software for profit (factory model). They work for companies that need software written for their own purposes or to service others (developers in a service model). Removing all software companies will not remove much money from the equation. Most developers are paid for their service, not for their output, i.e. they're paid to get software written, not to sell bits. People pay to get software which gets the job done either by buying bits from companies with patents, which is the exception, or by buying services, which is the rule. Patents only work for the few selling bits such as Microsoft. Patents don't help most of the industry working as a service.
    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by gidds ( 56397 )

      If people start to remove money from the equation, what's left?

      Firstly, as other folks have said, `the equation' is a broad area, covering applications software, systems software, consumer hardware, infrastructure, services, and loads of other parts. This simply affects one part.

      And secondly, we're not starting to remove money from this part; we're simply ensuring it doesn't enter it! Think about it: almost all the standards for which the web etc. have become known are patent-free. Do you think the we

    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jgardn ( 539054 ) <jgardn@alumni.washington.edu> on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:52AM (#6007733) Homepage Journal
      Anyone else find it interesting that this post was made a few minutes ago and almost instantly got exactly 4 moderation points for being interesting?

      I'll tell you what's left when you remove royalties from the equation -- and it certainly isn't shills like you. It is innovation, freedom, and advancement for everyone. Why should I have to pay a guy a buck because he came up with the idea of a "shopping cart" on a website? Why can't I take the idea and move it forward? It is alright to patent machines and such, but patenting ideas is absurd. (And, on a lesser note, I wouldn't mind them patenting their code and only their code -- but what's the use of that?)

      And ask yourself this: did the internet grow by leaps and bounds because Microsoft came out with IIS or because a bunch of organizations decided to pool their efforts to make one solid web server that can be configured to do anything a web server should do? I personally think proprietary software is holding us back and costing us far more than the cost of licensing the software because we can't take their ideas and build on them.

      Then where do we get paid? Two ways: By implementing existing solutions in a way that people can use them, or by implementing entirely new solutions. For both instances, people are willing to pay money to have someone else do it. For both instances, it really doesn't matter whether the end result is Open Source or proprietary to them. We know that going the Open Source will allow us to satisfy more people with better products than the other case, because IT will constantly be evolving and building on the successes and failures of the past, rather than limiting the growth to one giant monopoly.
      • As an analyst in a company entirely dependent on spreadsheets and some half-ass implementations of Crystal Reports (which is a severly limitted package, in itself), I'd say that most of my time goes to coding (Bash, Perl, Mysql, all on Linux . . . you get the picture). No, IS doesn't support Linux, but my boss turned over a sony vaio laptop (department owned) a couple of years ago, so it doesn't really matter.

        Instead of running an excel filter, copying, pasting to another sheet so it can be summed, copyi

      • by Anonymous Coward
        "It is alright to patent machines and such, but patenting ideas is absurd."

        I'm curious as to the grounds on which we may claim that patents on machines are permissible, but that patents on software is impermissble.

        First consider the scenario in which we create a machine which processes raw cotton. We designed both the exterior and the internal workings of the machine, cast in iron.

        Now consider the scenario in which there exists a general purpose machine which could potentially be made to, amongst other t
        • Now, for what reason relevant to the principles at play here is it permissible to patent the internal workings of the machine implemented as hardware, while it is impermissible to patent the internal workings of the machine implemented as software.

          I don't know what such a reason might be.


          Why? Its simple. Show me the inner workings of your cotton gin.

          Thats easy, just open the hood.

          Now, show me the inner workings of Microsoft Word... you can do that right? No?

          So, in one case, its obvious and straight
        • I'm curious as to the grounds on which we may claim that patents on machines are permissible, but that patents on software is impermissble.

          Here's my thought: 1) mathematical expressions are not patentable (on the assumption that math exists "out there" somewhere and we just discover it).

          2) any program in a Turing complete language is identical to some other program in every other Turing complete language.

          3) Haskell is a Turing complete language.

          4) any program in Haskell is also an expression in the L

    • Re:Bad idea. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Sloppy ( 14984 ) * on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:56PM (#6008325) Homepage Journal
      This does not change things so that you can't make money by creating stuff. A month from now, I will have been making money by writing proprietary software, for 17 years. We never had to patent anything. We never had to tell a competitor: you're not allowed to interoperate with our system or read/write our data files without permission. If anything, interoperability has made customers happier and created more projects (opportunities for them to hire me).

      But one thing that has happened several times over the years, was that sometimes I couldn't easily/cheaply interface with or convert data from some other system. Customer gets my huge estimate, decides not to do it, and then I get nothing.

      And if I have to "invent" something, I do it for the purpose of getting money from my customers when they buy my products. Not having exclusivity on the "invention" (I put that in quotes, because, hey, look at the stuff that gets patented these days) isn't going to stop me from doing what I have to do, to get my customers' money. What's the worse that can happen? A competitor clones my "innovation" after it has already been deployed and I've been paid for it? Ooh, competition and free markets, I'm scared! Hold me!

      Not having to pay royalties means one less annoyance/complication to worry about, and fewer expenses to take away from the bottom line. This decision doesn't just help Free Software / Open Source guys. It helps everyone except monopolists.

  • by rumpledstiltskin ( 528544 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:24AM (#6007529) Homepage Journal
    This is only one small battle won on the front of silly patents. there's still nothing stopping the USPTO from handing out patents like candy. In fact, this could encourage people to file patents, submit to the w3c committees, and lobby in the future to have that "outmoded patent provision" removed. It's a constant struggle, and while this is a good first step, it's certainly not the last
  • billy (Score:5, Funny)

    by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:27AM (#6007549) Homepage Journal

    From: Bill Gates
    To:
    MS-Developers(all)

    Find out what these "standards" are that everyone speaks of
    and find a way to buy them out.
    Regards,

    Bill
    • Find out what these "standards" are that everyone speaks of and find a way to buy them out.

      Obligatory Simpsons reference...

      Bill Gates: Buy 'em out, boys!
      Homer: Hey, what the hell is going on?
      Bill Gates: Oh, Mr. Simpson, I didn't get rich by writing a lot of checks! Ahahaha!

  • this issue finally made me cough up the bucks and im damn glad i did

    should have done it long ago

    and i challenge anyone else who hasn't done so, to join now. its not a whole lot of money and they really need the support.

    very good news to hear it went our way this time

    • I joined fsf because of fear of patents
    • Also note that Danny Weitzner, who posted this story, and who is the W3C Technology and Society Domain Leader, is a very early member of the EFF, at least long before I heard about it. He headed the Washington DC office and was (is?) Deputy Policy Director.
    • this issue finally made me cough up the bucks and im damn glad i did

      should have done it long ago

      and i challenge anyone else who hasn't done so, to join now. its not a whole lot of money and they really need the support.

      very good news to hear it went our way this time


      While you're at it, could you please join the IETF as well (it's free, basically, you choose your working group, sign up for the mailing list, and you're in). The issue is: IETF does allow patented standards, and we want them to stop that.
  • Hah! (Score:2, Funny)

    This article makes me thing of a slightly strange formulation often seen in plays:

    Exuent Microsoft

    But then, it's probably too much to hope for. I can already see the blue-eyed look on the Softies' faces: "But ... but ... it *does* confirm to the standards. Well, almost. Well, okay, there are some things in there that will make an implementation than confirms with *only* W3C standards to crash, but that's hardly our fault. And look! We put some really neat new stuff in there to make up for it. We're on
  • Is it just me?? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by kaltekar ( 464545 )
    Or are alot of the Big wins latly going to the little man and screwing the big guy. Look at the last several legal victorys as of late. Rolayty free standards, grokster, etc. Is it possible that we are starting to finaly see the legal system work and not just be bought?
  • by elemur ( 7613 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:33AM (#6007598)
    So,

    What happens when a standard is produced in good faith by one or more parties, the W3 picks it up and ultimately generates a standard. Then everybody else picks it up and builds it into their browser, OS, application, tooth brush, and household pets.

    Then, a year later, SomeEvil Co (A leader in Evil Patents since 1899.) decides that there is infringement and sues everybody involved?

    The problem is two fold.. one is that there needs to be a process to search for applicable patents.. but the problem here is that too many patents are too broad. Secondly, if the search doesn't turn up any problems, whats to stop somebody from deciding that HTTP chunking infringes on their patent on, say, chunky peanut butter?

    Is there a process to find *potentially applicable patents* and going to those holders to ask for explicit approval of the use? Or would that just be begging for lawsuits anyway?
    • The biggest problem I see with the W3C's patent policy is that it encourages corporations to license their patents on a royalty free basis until the standard has gained such widespread adoption that developers have no alternative but to comply. Then, said corporations will be able to charge exorbitant licensing fees for such patents. Sure, the W3C could then exclude them from the next standard, but given that so many developers have to focus on backward compatibility with the already established user bas

      • I sincerely hope not. But, from the way I read the announcement, there is not a heck of a lot that can be done to prevent it. It needed, but didn't get, some kind of a codicil that warned anyone who had that in mind that if they did, their technologies presence in the standard was automaticly, and instantly, removed from the standard, with no further action required on the part of the W3C group.

        OTOH, the rambus thing has pretty well played itself out because it forced the R & D that brought other, pr
    • "SomeEvil Co (A leader in Evil Patents since 1899.)"

      Someevil CO, otherwise know as "SCO."

      You may carryon . . .

  • L33T uT0P14 (Score:1, Interesting)

    by MisterMo ( 237107 )
    Utopianism has never succeeded as a movement, because there is always at least one predatory member of society who becomes the bad apple.

    This policy will never hold, as it allows patent extortionists who are not members to snipe at the W3 with licensing demands. The process for "resolving" disputes is hopelessly optimistic: the group is apparently arrogant enough to believe that the sheer power of the ideals expressed in their policy will discourage profit-seeking behavior, and that the organization will

  • Aren't there patents/royalties on the GIF (or is it the LZW) algorithm? If so, does that mean GIF is finally doomed?

    If only Photoshop had better support for PNG optimization.
    • The gif patent expires June 19, 2003 so it won't matter either way in less than a month.
    • by kikta ( 200092 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:42PM (#6008181)
      Most likely it would mean that a given format would not be recommended in the next standard. A couple of things on that point though...

      1) Specific image types aren't really recommended one way or another: Graphics on the Web [w3.org]

      2) The <img> tag is possibly going away in XHTML 2.0 and would be replaced by <object>. This makes the point even more moot, as <object> is pretty damn broad.

      3) The real question is of browser support. I think we can all agree that Mozilla won't drop GIF support for quite awhile and IE probably never will. Hell, IE doesn't even support PNG properly.
  • Next stop... IETF (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dmiller ( 581 ) <djm AT mindrot DOT org> on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @11:52AM (#6007731) Homepage
    The IETF has been increasingly willing to standardise patented technologies. Examples involve Cisco's HSRP/VRRP patent and IPsec NAT traversal (with a semi-free waiver). I'm sure there are many more.

    It is wonderful that the w3c is willing to keep data formats and the higher protocol levels unencumbered (this is a real victory to all the people who made their opinions known), but the infrastructure is even more important.
    • The IETF has been increasingly willing to standardise patented technologies. Examples involve Cisco's HSRP/VRRP patent and IPsec NAT traversal (with a semi-free waiver). I'm sure there are many more.

      It is wonderful that the w3c is willing to keep data formats and the higher protocol levels unencumbered (this is a real victory to all the people who made their opinions known), but the infrastructure is even more important.


      Indeed. Personally, I've just been waiting for the W3C policy to become official bef
  • One more month... (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:06PM (#6007856)
    and LZW is free.

    Patent #4,558,302 expires on June 20, 2003.

    Joy!
    • What about backward compatibility of that rule?

      If GIF was a W3C standard and is not royalty free, then should they remove that from the standard and make every web page that use them non compliant...

      Then next month they can put it back into the standard... ???

      ---
      burn all .gif
    • Too bad it still sucks as a compression algorithm.
    • Damn, I wish you hadn't mentioned that.

      Mr. Murphy you see, is alive and well, and now Senator Dizzy will bring up an emergency bill to get that patent extended for another 75 years.

      Sometimes its better to just STFU.
  • Make it impossible to patent any software.

    It already works in this country .....


    Complicated idea:

    Give vendors of goods the right to refuse payment according to how they believe the money was obtained. As well as the obvious stolen money / drug dealing / prostitution / arms dealing profits, this may well come to be extened to things like gambling winnings and lawsuit money.

    Once people find their Pound Notes getting refused even despite having the Queen's head on them, these activities will cease to
    • Umm, a private vendor of goods (I assume you are not talking about government goods/services) should already have the right to refuse to enter into a contract of sale with anyone for any reason. Just because I decide to sell something to him doesn't mean I should be required to also sell something to you, no matter what my reasoning is. If I believe you to be an unsavory character and feel that your money is likely to be somehow "tainted" as you allude to, then I can certainly refuse to trade you my goods
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:27PM (#6008039)
    This is a great FIRST step. Basically, standards by W3C will now ensure that no one has to pay a royalty when trying to conform to the standard. Compuserve's GIF patent greed fiasco should hopefully not be repeated in future standards.

    However, I think we need to go further. Technologies built on top of W3C standards should not require royalties. Ack ... all you MBA and Law school folks grasp! You will kill innovation, you say! Well, if this means that Amazon.com will stop coming up with "innovations" like 1-click shopping and shopping carts, I think that is okay. These "innovations" were so ridiculously obvious that it insults any technical person's intelligence to classify them as innovations.

    Why do we need to do this?

    Intellectual Property lawyers are greedy greedy greedy. They don't give a crap about the technical merits of a patent or innovation. They care about how many hours they can bill you and making partner in the firm. Anyone heard of patent portfolios? I think 10-30% of why biotech is not showing the results everyone expected is that these fucking patent issues have KILLED innovation. Go Canada for rejecting the Harvard mouse patent! Biotech is out of juice and these bastards have set their eyes on tech now. We must nip this asap!

    Why is this justified?

    W3C commands a significant position in the evolution of the World Wide Web. If it was a for-profit organization, it could easily say ... any technology built on our technology is legally owned by us unless you licence an "innovator" contract ... for which we charge you 50% of all sales. The fact that the work of the W3C is given away for free, doesn't make it less valuable ... rather the opposite! As such, I feel that the W3C must setup a licence agreement to prevent technologies that are built on top of it to be royalty free.

    Iq
  • by David Leppik ( 158017 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @12:52PM (#6008288) Homepage
    Take a look at what W3C is working on. Most of it is XML formats and other categorizing of data. A few things (e.g. PNG) may contain novel algorithms, although in the case of PNG the format was invented to avoid the patent restrictions of GIF.

    It could be argued that W3C does its job best when it produces standards which are not novel, and are essentially what any person with the same mindset would produce on a good day. This is the exact opposite of the original, non-obvious nature required (though perhaps not enforced) by US patent law.

    W3C is mostly about communication standards, and it's all about interoperability. Describing stuff in XML is more of a categorization skill than an invention. Good librarians are as important as good engineers-- and patents are about as useful as bicycles for ducks.

    Finally, iteroperability only works if everyone can use it. XML and "semantic web" stuff is frequently going to be web services which are parsed by spiders and middleware servers (including web servers), where vendor or technology lock-in is anathema. Patents or threats of patents are at least as likely to slow adoption of standards as to speed it.
  • can be found at internetnews.com [internetnews.com]
  • by bani ( 467531 ) on Wednesday May 21, 2003 @02:18PM (#6009097)
    There's a loophole several light-years wide in this W3C policy.

    The patent holder can still charge you a one-time $100 million dollar _license fee_ if they want, yet still be compliant with the wording of the W3C policy of "no royalties".
  • How do we stop people like Bezos from patenting ideas and methods based on patent-free web standards like cookies and databases?
  • Is there a way to make the W3C standards work like the GPL, in that any standards that build on them cannot be royalty-based either? I'd love to see things like Amazon's retarded patenting rampage quelled, or at least prevent fees and litigation from such patents. I seem to remember that last year some company tried to assert patent rights to E-Commerce and Web-based credit card transactions...
  • While it is a very good thing that people who want to implement applications that follow the standards don't need to pay money for doing that, it is of course bad that they still may need to pay other things, for example freedom of license. The restrictions may be such that GPL'd applications are not allowed, for whatever reason. If MS or similar companies abuse this, then this may not be a good thing after all.

  • As I recall, being royalty-free is a step in the right direction but insufficient for the Free Software community to be able to continue to innovate. The FSF made their concerns [gnu.org] quite clear--if the W3C allows field-of-use restrictions to encumber standards, one is prevented from developing software that goes outside the prescribed activity.

    I didn't see any language in Tim Berners-Lee's statement that directly addressed this concern.

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