Act Now To Sidestep A W3C Patent Pitfall 210
Here is what the Free Software Foundation says on its front page about this bug:
"The W3C 'Royalty-Free' patent policy proposal does not protect the rights of the Free Software community to full participation in the implementation and extension of web standards. Please read more on this issue and send a comment to the W3C."
Part of the effort that moved the W3C to its present position was a furious outpouring of comments in opposition to the original proposal of the Englobulators:
- www.w3.org/2001/ppwg
- www.w3.org/2001/10/patent-response
- lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-patentpolicy-comment
- lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-patentpolicy-comment/2001Oct/thread.html
The fix needed right now is a small fix. But the W3C must again be reminded with what jealous vigor we guard our right to build our Web the way we have built it down to this day, using free software. The bug appears in Item 3 of Section 3, titled 'W3C Royalty-Free (RF) Licensing Requirements,' of the present proposal.
This Item allows for a supposedly free grant to use a patent to be so restricted that a piece of Web infrastructure software might be encumbered if used for some non-Web use. Since the GPL does not allow such encumbrancing, GPL-ed Web software re-purposed for non-Web use could not be legally freely redistributed. Please read the Free Software Foundation's page on this bug.
Here is the official Last Call for Comments.
If you write a comment in your own words, for repair of the bug, it will help. I shall write in, and I shall argue against adoption of the buggy sub-section. I shall also suggest an extension of the deadline for comments.
Let me get this straight... (Score:2, Interesting)
If the FSF wants all software free, great! But, let's not waste everyone's time fighting in the wrong forums.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:5, Informative)
If the patent owners don't want to release their IP, then the patented technology shouldn't be part of the standard. Period.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
If the "standards" become too obnoxious, then the obvious solution is to fork. You don't use the "standards", but rather create you own standards. Now this is a lot of work, a lot of bother, and creates a situation rife with incompatible protocols. But that's the choice. If the "standards" are incompatible with the GPL, then out hand is forced. We must then ignore their standards. This isn't good for anyone, so the W3C has been negotiating, and has even accepted a couple of community members.
Now Bruce says that Eben says that this deal is useable. It requires a cumbersome work around, where you link via intermediate code that is licensed under, e.g., the MIT license. But it is possible to use.
My feeling about this is: These "standards" (notstandards) are probably "sort of good enough to use as a stop-gap". Anything that is licensed under this kind of pseudo-standard
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't it suck to have to pay out royalties for technologies like SOAP because HTTP had patent encumberences that were only ignorable when dealing with the web?
The Internet is not the Interweb, and though the W3C is a "web" pseudo-standards body, they need to realize that their recommendations tend to extend well beyond the web and need to plan accordingly. A standard that's deliberately crippled so as not to be extensible is generally a bad standard.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
If I understand correctly, and I may not, it's worse than that. Imagine a new patented standard, STDML. The patent holders say, "You may use my patents, but only on the web."
Now it is against the GPL to use that standard at all, since there is a restriction on the reuse of the code. No GPLed software would be able to use the standard in any form, on the web or otherwise.
This isn't just a problem with philosophy. It's a very practical problem. Many Free Software folks are not of the RMS opinion that everything can and must be GPLed. We just want them to be able to play on the same field as proprietary and "Open Source" folks. This locks them out.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
The other thing to remember is that "web standards" tend to be widespread, and get used in other things. Take HTTP, for example. Or HTML, or XHTML. Or URLs. Or Javascript. (See Mozilla) There's lots of places where "web standards" were found to be more universally useful than just browsers.
And, completely independant of the GPL issues, this stands to block that, restricting the scope of patented standards to web browsers. This excludes any sort of automation, or even web servers!
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
Also, W3C needs to be a bit careful, as it does run the risk of getting run over by the big patent-holders. Those have a lot of power in the market place. Probably, we should be happy with what we've achieved, W3C is currently pretty much the only big industry consortium that doesn't have a RAND policy. For off-web applications, it seems Linus' position of ignoring the patents is the only viable route.
And, BTW, just to make sure people hear this: W3C is not a standards body. It is an industry consortium and has never claimed to be a standards body.
BTW2, it has been posted before [slashdot.org] but has apparently now been made worthy of the front page.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, web software which uses patented techniques simply can't be free software; its code cannot be redistributed without restriction. I think the thing the FSF is most afraid of is that people will implement patented techniques in GPLed web software and Not Worry About It. That would be bad. One scenario I can imagine is this: A developer sues a GNU/Linux vendor for royalties on his patent-encumbered web software, because the GPL can't be applied to patent-encumbered software, and hence the vendor is redistributing it without a license. Technically, the developer is correct.
It seems you don't care much whether free software is available; fair enough. I like having free software, though, and so the situation where (a) technology X is a widely-used standard (web or otherwise), and (b) it is illegal to write free software which implements technology X, seems as odious to me as it does to the FSF.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
Hmm what is the Web anyway? If I have a 127.0.0.1 loopback on my computer am I a network of 1? If I am using a web browser and my link goes down can I still use the "patented technology" while I am not connected to the Internet?
Can I use the technology to do things using cell phones or PDA's which may not actually be connected to the Web sometimes or always?
Considering how transparent most network access is, I don't see how to draw a line between Web and non-Web software since the same piece of software could easily be used in both situations.
Reducto Ad Absurdum: Your k3wl browser with that neato (applet/script/program) running in it has to constantly check to make sure the Internet connection is up, and if the connection drops, it forces the (applet/script/program) to stop running for no other reason than it stopped being a "Web app"? OTOH, if it still is a "Web app" that can use this abstract thought patent, can I just hook my computer up to the Internet once then disconnect it forever and declare that all programs are "Web apps" and therefore ignore any Web-only restrictions on these abstract thought patents? How long does a "Web app" keep being protected after the connection drops?
If you put it like that... (Score:2)
Internet standards published by the W3C are meant for everybody in the world to adhere to and use; that's the point of having Internet standards. Now, what good are those standards if some people can't adhere to them because the standard requires the use of royalty-encumbered patented concepts? If you want everybody in the world to adopt your idea as a standard, you have to give them access to it...
Badly needed background... (Score:3, Informative)
Also of note:
Working Draft, W3C Patent Policy [w3.org]...
Abstract:
2001 Oct thread link (Score:5, Funny)
And those are taken from just the top 22 posts in the list...
Oy Slashdot! (Score:5, Interesting)
Considering you intentionally block the W3C validator [w3.org]
I can't help but think that's about the stupidest thing /. has ever done (though I may be wrong). I mean, what's the point? Lame jokes about the crappy output of your Perl scripts got you down? How about fixing it instead??
Re:Oy Slashdot! (Score:5, Informative)
Bruce
Typo alert (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:Oy Slashdot! (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not too concerned with whether or not it's the best deal we could get. I'm concerned with whether it's a good enough deal. If it isn't good enough, being the best we could get doesn't help. If it is good enough, then isn't that all we need, and anything better than that is just gravy.
I do tend to be quite skeptical of the W3C. They have done many worthwhile things, but most of the representatives represent large corporations, and the structure of the committee means that anyone else is on the outside looking in. And some of their recent proposals
Still, in the past they have done much that was worthwhile, and it would be both expensive and a great bother to need to construct a parallel organization. But what's the case THIS time?
Re:Oy Slashdot! (Score:4, Informative)
Regarding W3C, if you think they are insensitive, try IETF's attitude on intellectual property. It mostly comes from these working groups consisting of employees of too many big companies. They are all cross-licensed with another, and don't give a hoot if their standards can't be implemented by any merely medium-sized enterprise.
But we fixed that at W3C. We got a compromise. The community isn't used to compromise.
Bruce
Don't acceed to corporate blackmail (Score:2)
Compromise is sensible and reasonable when creating technical specifications, but to knowingly open the door to an entire class of future patent claims is not, and to acceed to their "we'll leave" blackmail is entirely unacceptable.
Don't be pushed down that road, Bruce.
Re:Don't acceed to corporate blackmail (Score:2)
So, in summary, I think the problem's worse than you realize. And I have spent a long time working on it.
Thanks
Bruce
Re:Oy Slashdot! (Score:2)
IETF is obviously next in line for the RF treatment. All we need is a clear cut issue, that is, we need many eyeballs watching for a patent-encumbered RFC to make it most of the way through the pipeline. I wonder how often this happens? Not often I suppose, but the next time it does, things should get interesting.
Re:Oy Slashdot! (Score:2)
Editors, if the rest of the Slashdot crowd gets behind me, please replace this story with an explanation of what happened. Comments should be left intact.
Re:Oy Slashdot! (Score:2)
Bruce
More coherent comments (Score:3, Interesting)
To All Members of the Free Software and Open Source Community,
For the past two years, I've been working on the W3C patent policy on
your behalf, to make it safe for Free Software to implement W3C standards.
Now, I'm worried that we could lose that fight, not because of the patent
holders, but because of our own community.
There's a long discussion below. I'm asking you to do something once you
read that discussion: Please write to
and tell them something like this (please elaborate - everyone discounts
rubber-stamp comments):
To: www-patentpolicy-comment@w3.org
Subject: Approve of draft policy - disapprove of software patenting.
I request that W3C approve the draft patent policy, because it's a
compromise that protects the right of Open Source / Free Software
programmers to implement W3C standards.
And you may want to add this:
I object to software patents, and support efforts to eliminate them
at the legislative level.
Now, to the discussion.
Three representatives of the Free Software / Open Source community:
myself, Larry Rosen of the Open Source Initiative, and Eben Moglen of
the Free Software Foundation, worked on the W3C patent policy for two
years. We spent between 1/8 and 1/4 of our time on the project for all
of that time, participating in many face-to-face meetings and conference
calls. Across the table were some companies that, I feel, wanted to
"farm" their own patents in W3C standards and would have erected
lucrative "toll-booths" to collect royalties from every implementor of
web standards. If they had their way, we would have been locked
out.
We got you the best deal we could get. It's not everything we want,
and it can't be. The draft policy is at
http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/WD-patent-policy-20
The proposed W3C patent policy grants a royalty-free right for everyone
to practice patents that are embedded in the standard by W3C members who
own those patents. It prevents "patent farming", the biggest problem
that faced us. The problem is that the patent grant is limited - it only
applies to code that actually implements the standard. This is called a
"field-of-use" limitation. The problem this creates for the Free Software
community is that other uses of the same patent in our code, for anything
but implementing the standard, could be covered by royalties.
I object to software patents entirely, and many of you do as well. Why,
then, did I (on your behalf) approve of a policy containing that
limitation, and why am I asking you to support it?
The answer is simple. Patent holders won't continue their membership
in W3C if that membership forces them to give up their patent rights
for non-standards-related applications. They will instead move their
standards-making activities to other organizations that allow them to
charge patent royalties on the standards. And we will have lost.
It comes down to what we can compel people to do, and what they won't
stand for. The patent holders want the W3C brand on their standards,
and will give up something for that. If we ask them to give up more,
they'll do without the W3C brand, and we have no way to control what
standards organization they move to. If we wish to fight software patents
outside of standards, I think our only choice is to do so at the legislative
level.
The field-of-use limitation presents special problems regarding the GPL,
because the GPL disallows a field-of-use-limited patent license. There is a
work-around for this. The code that makes use of the patented principle
must be under the MIT license, which allows a scope-limited patent
license. That may be linked into GPL code and distributed. I'm less than
comfortable with this, but my discomfort arises from the basic injustice
of software patents. A work-around is the best we can do in this case.
FSF, by its tenets, was bound to protest the field-of-use-limitation.
I respect that protest, as it is rooted an a belief that I share - that
software patents are fundamentally wrong. However, if the Free Software
Open Source community comes out against the W3C patent policy, and the
patent holders who want unlimited rights to charge royalties come out
against it, just who will speak for it? The result will be that W3C
will fail to give final approval to the policy, and we will not even have
the limited protection from software patents that we've won. Thus, I
have to ask you _not_ to do what FSF asks this time. Of course, this
disagreement does not diminish my respect of FSF, and I will continue
to work with them as I have on many projects for years.
Thus, I'd like you to write that email now. It's very important that W3C
see support for the draft policy, or we'll be back to the old, bad policy
again. Thanks!
As always, please feel free to call me to discuss this at 510-526-1165
(California time) or write me at bruce@perens.com
Thanks
Bruce Perens
Re:More coherent comments (Score:2)
Patent holders won't continue their membership in W3C if that membership forces them to give up their patent rights for non-standards-related applications.
What patent rights is anyone looking to give up at this point? Do we today have patented technologies that make up any part of the W3C recommendation? If not, then this can only be about providing a means for inserting patented technologies as royalty free for the web, with a backside charge for any use not directly involving a web browser.
I'm not seeing how this is a win for Free software.
They will instead move their standards-making activities to other organizations that allow them to charge patent royalties on the standards. And we will have lost.
Who are "they" here? Only companies I can think of that could pull this kind of weight in the W3C is Microsoft or AOL. Purely an assumption based on the notion that these two folks pretty much own the two primary means for viewing web pages out there. I'm sorry, but this sounds like nothing more than an attempt to strong arm their way into essentially owning what up until now has been an open environment for anyone to play in. Even so much as a foothold by either of these companies is a frightening prospect, no matter how much work when into compromise.
The patent holders want the W3C brand on their standards, and will give up something for that.
If anyone complies with the W3C recommendations wouldn't they by default be able to brand their products as such? That being the idea behind having standards that no one company owns. It would even allow a company to brand a patented technology as being compliant with a standard. How does introducing patents into the standards themselves make this better for anyone?
I also take issue with the notion that any patent holder is "giving" something up. Tying a patented technology with a limited use royalty agreement is nothing more than a marketing tactic. Not all that different then Netscape and Microsoft giving away their browsers to gain market share. These are business decisions, not generosity.
Thus, I'd like you to write that email now. It's very important that W3C see support for the draft policy, or we'll be back to the old, bad policy again.
Perhaps. As much as you may wish and pray for software patents to suddenly disappear, we all know that this isn't going to happen in our lifetimes no matter how loud we yell at any government. The only thing we can reasonably expect in the way of keeping the Internet open and free is to insure that the basic infrastructure remains as such. Given the choice between the US government and the W3C to deal with this, the W3C is our only real chance.
Then again, the really scary part is that you may be right. This may be the only compromise possible between the various members. It's like watching the oncoming Microsoft train approach the Internet strapped to the tracks.
I think people didn't get it yet (Score:4, Informative)
Here's a detailed step-by-step example that shows how this problem could play out:
Programmer P downloads the Konqueror web browser, receiving it under terms of GPL.
P learns of a new web standard that requires exercising a technique for parsing URLs that is patented by Corporation C. C has licensed the patent under an RF, non-exclusive license, but with a "field of use" restriction that says the license can be used to "implement the standard". The standard, as it turns out, covers only what browsers must do with URLs, and says nothing about the server side or clients that aren't user browsers.
P implements this technique in Konqueror, and seeks to redistribute the modified version on his website so that other users can benefit from Konqueror now complying with the standard. If he does, he is bound by the GPL under copyright law, because he is redistributing a modified version.
However, he knows full well of a condition on that code that contradicts the GPL (violating Section 7) -- namely, he knows that C's patent license prohibits folks from taking his URL parsing code and putting it into, say, a search engine. Therefore, under GPL Section 7, he is prohibited from redistribution.
You might think that he can simply assign his copyright to the existing copyright holder of Konqueror let distribution happen from that source. They could distribute under GPL, but they would be granting a self-contradicting license. Nothing (to my knowledge, but IANAL) prohibits someone from distributing copyrighted works under licenses that make no sense and are self-contradictory. However, it is certainly true that those who receive distribution of the works are stuck and can't undertake further distribution or modification themselves.
The way I understand it is that it can create a weird situation. Suppose I write code to parse Yahoo pages to extract information from them. Suppose that Yahoo uses some technology licensed in this way on their site. Now they can stop me because it's not a web browser.
Re:I think people didn't get it yet (Score:2)
It's a little bizzare that even if there's a large community who could use the software without restriction (if the patent didn't apply in some countries, for instance) I can't redistribute even just to them if use anywhere by anyone is restricted. I suppose there are a few loopholes that closes, though.
This would prevent any Open Source implementation (Score:2)
For example the Open Source Definiton says:
Re:This would prevent any Open Source implementati (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:This would prevent any Open Source implementati (Score:2)
If you're trying to establish which software provides certain freedoms then whether it's the author or someone else who has restricted those freedoms is irrelevant. What's the point of being able to identify something as being "open source software" if potentially none of the freedoms that are supposedly the characteristics of open source software are in fact present?
I reject the notion that some third party can make your software non-OSD-compliant by filing for a patent. If we let that happen, there'd be no Open Source software at all.
I don't care whether or not it's "OSD-compliant" I care whether I have the freedoms that that implies.
You seem to be trying to apply the definition in such a way as to ignore whether it achieves anything (and yes I know who wrote the definition).
Re:This would prevent any Open Source implementati (Score:3, Informative)
Now, let's get to the matter of whether a license is OSD-compliant or not. In Open Source licensing, a copyright holder conveys rights to others. The OSD specifies what rights that copyright holder must convey for their license to be considered Open Source. The copyright holder doesn't have any control regarding the patent rights of third parties. Thus, I don't see any point in requiring the copyright holder to first obtain a non-scope-limited license, applying to everyone in the world, to every patent that the software might infringe upon. I dare you to even find out what patents those would be for any non-trivial program. Patent searches are never provably exhaustive. Thus, I could contend, following your rationale, that no software is Open Source, because all non-trivial software submitted as Open Source is potentially infringing of an issued patent. So, my contention is that the OSD would indeed not achieve anything if your rationale was followed.
Now, there is a potential pernicious case in which the copyright holder has a license that the community doesn't, and thus can make use of community-submitted code that others can not. If the copyright holder uses that license to their advantage, by working in collusion with the patent holder to deny commercial use of the code to others, I would contend that the copyright holder does have at least partial control and that the software in question might well not be considered Open Source. I don't yet know what to do about this.
Thanks
Bruce
case for change (Score:3, Insightful)
The point he is trying to make, in my case, is that companies may, under the current policy, use the said clause to specifically sabotage a GPLed piece of software that is trying to implement a standard.
An example of this would be if a commercial corporation (call it company X) comes up with a new piece of technology (call it WWW++ for here), which instantly becomes a hit. So, there is a big push for WWW++ to become a web standard, and company X agrees that they have the write to us WWW++, but only in terms of web development. However, since this is incompatible with the GPL, what this would mean is that anything trying to implement WWW++ cannot be licensed under the GPL. Therefore, singlehandedly by making a popular web standard, a company can say that this web standard cannot be used under certain licenses. We all know companies which would like to do this.
What is being proposed instead, would take away that clause. It would not harm commercial implementations of the standard at all. In fact, commercial implementations would even benifit from the removal of the clause because it would give them more freedom of action. What the removal of the clause would do is ultimately give developers more freedom to work with the next generation web standards, to foster the kind of innovativeness on the part of the developers without having to constantly looking for patent violations, and to continue the tradition of the free web as much as possible.
Re:case for change (Score:2)
If we don't let the patent holders charge for things unrelated to the standard, they will just walk off of W3C and we will have lost, because they will be making their standards in an organization that lets them do whatever they want as far as royalties are concerned.
Bruce
Re:case for change (Score:3, Interesting)
I understand your concern, and agree with it, but that isn't the battle being fought here.
Here's the abstract for the "Royalty-Free Patent Policy" (note the name change from simply "Patent Policy"):
"Abstract:
The W3C Royalty-Free Patent Policy governs the handling of patents in the process of producing Web standards. The goal of this policy is to assure that Recommendations produced under this policy can be implemented on a royalty-free basis."
The policy manages what it sets out to do. Specifically allowing GPL or allowing the use of a patented technique outside in something other than a web application (both worth striving for) are not within the scope of this document.
There is certainly room to urge the W3C Patent Policy Working Group to draft a policy that says web standards should not be contrained by potentially restrictive patents. Such a draft would effectively obsolete this policy, but in the meantime, this policy is useful for what it does.
Consider this a mark along the way toward a more difficult goal. This represents progress. We can agree it is not enough progress, that there is still another important mark to reach, but it is still worth having.
It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:5, Informative)
This Item allows for a supposedly free grant to use a patent to be so restricted that a piece of Web infrastructure software might be encumbered if used for some non-Web use.
The issue for me as an architect (I have written IETF, W3C and OASIS standards) is that I don't necessarily own all the IP that I need to address a problem. If I need to get an IP owner to donate their property for the common good my job is easiest if I have to ask for as little as is necessary for the particular purpose.
Equally when I hold the IP I see little point in giving away more than I need to for the purpose of the Web specification even though my company does not regard patent licensing as a revenue stream. The point is that I might need some IP held by a party that deals in the non-Internet world. I will have an easier time negotiating a license for Internet use if I have some bargaining chips.
The FSF reading on the situation is 100% about their ideology and has nothing to do with real needs as far as I am concerned. Open Source software is not imune to the patent system. If you modify any open source software sufficiently you will run into a patent infringement.
If you apply the FSF "logic" you would have to stop distributing gzip because someone could modify it so that it infringed the Unisys LZ patents.
The W3C does not have a monopoly on standards making and in fact is already seeing a lot of the standards work migrating from to OASIS. Dealing with the cumbersome W3C process and formatting conventions is bad enough without additional IP roadblocks being errected.
At the end of the day the IP policy is utterly irrelevant since nobody is going to use the specification unless the IP terms are acceptable and they are going to determine what is acceptable, not Tim and certainly not RMS. To date that has generally meant 'free as in beer' however there are many applications where that is simply not achievable, if you want to do voice browsing you will run into IP issues and your choice will be do something encumbered or don't do it at all.
Don't do it at all may be the FSF answer, but he does not pay $57,500 a year for W3C membership dues. The point that Tim has missed is that the W3C membership is already annoyed on the value for money front, W3C is way more expensive to join than OASIS where we pay $10K. We are also far from happy on the bogus process front, it took me almost a year to get a W3C working group started. I am not happy with a set of document publication rules that are 'standards based' but turn out to mean that you can only edit standards with one editor.
The last thing W3C needs to do at this stage is to reopen the IP issue with the membership.
Jay, you're wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
Nor does it make it impossible for GPL software to make use of the patents. If you want to use a patent in GPL software, put that routine under the MIT license, which does not have the GPL's language regarding patents, and can link with GPL work. This work-around was suggested by Eben Moglen.
This doesn't mean I support software patents. I think they should be eliminated. But we can't eliminate software patents through W3C - only through legislatures.
I'll end this with a plea to Jay Sulzberger. Jay, you are working to destroy two years of work by myself, Eben Moglen, and Larry Rosen. You didn't participate in the patent policy working group. I didn't see you volunteer. You don't sufficiently understand the issues yet. Please help us get the current W3C policy accepted, so that things will get better instead of worse.
Bruce
Re:Jay, you're wrong. (Score:2)
I must admit that I'm barely comfortable with any patented software, but if it is usable with GPL software (via the suggested intermediate MIT licensed code), then that's "sort of acceptable". I still feel that any code relying on such a workaround should be immediately marked deprecated (but no replacement available). It feels like intentionally contracting head lice. But head lice aren't usually fatal. Perhaps sometimes you need to take the risk. Perhaps.
I can't really write to them applauding their choice. But I guess that it should be supported as best one can in good conscience. Even if that just means not flaming them. It does cause me to wish that Open Source folk were more interested in writing standards (but it doesn't increase my interest in doing so).
I'm afraid that to me any "standard" that is encumbered with patents will always have quotes around it. Likewise any "standard" that can only be published and distributed by one group. (Can you say Fortran?) I don't consider such things to be genuine standards. Specs, perhaps, but standard implies that this is the approved way of doing things, and if you use some legal monopoly to prevent this spec from being distributed or used, then it isn't a standard. This remains true no matter how many PR agents the "standard" bodies hire.
N.B.: Legal monopoly: here I'm intentionally referring to both copyright and patents. But also to any other similar scheme that creates a legal monopoly.
Re:Jay, you're wrong. (Score:2)
A not widely or well understood fact about the MIT license is that it contains an implicit patent grant, something that I was unaware of until recently. (So what I had been nervous about with MIT/Berkeley licensed code for years turns out *NOT* to be true; we do have things reasonably covered.)
Scott Peterson, HP's intellectual property expert on open source licenses who is also on the W3C working group with Bruce clarified this to me a few months ago, something I had not understood despite being one of the people who helped write the MIT license.
An MIT license does allow a company this flexibility: this flexibility is not a bad thing, if it results in our ability to distribute code that would otherwise be unavailable to us.
What is more, there is good case law about how far afield you can go in taking this implied grant of patent into other areas. Nearby uses are fine, but if you go far afield, you don't get use.
Let me give a concrete example: I know of an algorithm that HP holds patents on that we may want to use for window system use, also used in our printers. (This is more than a hypothetical
case, though it looks like technology may advance to where we don't need to bother). I think it likely if we need to use that algorithm we'll be able to write an implementation and use it in X under an MIT license, but it is extremely unlikely that HP could/would/should choose to allow it to be used for arbitrary purposes. The very nature of the MIT license along with the case law in this case would work in our favor to have access to that technology (if we need it; not yet clear);
but I guarantee it would never be available under a GPL.
We need a situation, as Bruce says, which allows companies to cooperate in areas we care about without them going to other, much less benign standards venues. And many of them *will* go elsewhere, if this gets pushed too far.
So I believe that not only is this result good, but better than we could have hoped for even a year or two ago.
- Jim Gettys
Re:Jay, you're wrong. (Score:2)
If a consequence of joining is that any and all of their patents that are used in a standard will become free for any use whatsoever, they will not join,
The patent only becomes free for any type of use if it is submitted as a standard. It only becomes a standard if accepted by the primary body recognized as responsible for making standards. Today this is the W3C.
If a company is concerned with IP protections, the technology should not be submitted as a standard in the first place. They should take their patent and produce a product to compete in an open playing field with other patented technologies. Establishing an artificial monopoly with a major standards body backing it is by its very nature an unfair advantage being handed out by the W3C. This goes beyond simply conflicting with the GPL.
and they will instead make their standards in an organization that lets them charge royalties for use within the standard. We will have lost.
A company looking to try to establish patented technologies to some other paid for standards body isn't relevant. It's only relevant when accepted by the primary standards body. Once wedged into the recognized standard, oh boy does it every become relevant.
Once patented technologies are adopted as standards, we really will have lost.
Re:Mod parent up (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:Jay, you're wrong. (Score:2)
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:2)
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:4, Informative)
Bruce
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:2)
The problem with the GPL is that the GPL text prohibits use of a patent license that is limited to certain fields of use. So, the problem is really in the GPL rather than the W3C draft policy. However, the GPL is the way it is because we don't like software patents! So, I'm not really blaming the GPL. However, I don't believe we can get the patent holders to give up quite so much as the FSF would like. Instead, they would move to a standards organization that would let them charge royalties on standards.
Bruce
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:2)
If that is the case (I doubt it is) the solution is for the FSF to rev the GPL so that it works in a sane manner or for folk to choose a license that does not have that effect.
What we are talking about is open, royalty free Web standards. If the FSF can't live with an open royalty free web standard that uses technology that is encumbered for other purposes then that is their funeral.
Bruce is completely correct about the politics here, the W3C has already tried people's patience on many fronts, they simply cannot throw the IP policy into confusion yet again.
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, bloody well good for you. Might I suggest that the standards process should be designed for the good of users and developers and not to make the architect's job easy?
Okay, let's dispense with this "IP" business. What you're saying, in terms of modern technology realpolitik, is that company X tricked the USPTO into granting them a patent on some technique that any half-smart grad student would have come up with in fifteen minutes, and it's causing you grief because the same technique would be useful in the web standard you're drafting. The process of begging X for permission to encode multibyte characters in ASCII [delphion.com] will go more smoothly if you can avoid impacting X's revenue stream of lawyering productive technology companies to death, and you really don't give a shit about any of this GPL stuff.
So you cut your deal with the "owner" of the "IP," and come up with a web standard which is impossible to implement in GPLed software. I have to confess, I'm mystified as to why the FSF would be upset about any part of this process, much less your part in it.
Bear with me: One of the terms of the GPL is that code licensed under it has to be freely redistributable -- you can't take GPLed code, modify it, and sell it to someone else under "GPL plus Bob's license" terms, where Bob's license allows him to come over and root through your fridge whenever you redistribute the software. In order for the GPL to have any meaning, there can't be any extra restrictions placed atop it -- and, as you point out, free software is indeed subject to patent restrictions like everything else. Hence, patented code has extra restrictions -- hence it's incompatible with the GPL unless it's completely royalty-free. In fact, this is exactly why it's not okay to sling around copies of gzip which include LZW (even if you've gotten special permission from Unisys to do just that) -- patent law forbids free-use rights to the recipients, but you have to grant those rights by the GPL, so you can't distribute the modified gzip at all.
So why would you, as a celebrated author of standards for the veritable trifecta of IETF, W3C, and OASIS, even consider including patent-encumbered technologies in a standard? Obviously people are going to use the patent-encumbered standard -- witness the popularity of mp3s -- and the only people who are going to be upset are those goddamned hippies who use Leenox. Which brings us, approximately, to where things actually stand.
I heartily agree. "If it's wrong, leave it wrong," I always say.
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:2)
Who do you think decides which body to send the specification to?
There is a buyers market for standards groups. If I can't get what I want from one group I will take my work to another, if there is no group that is acceptable I'll start another.
What I am looking for from a standards group is an open process with as little overhead as possible that produces a competent, interoperable and widely supported standard. In most cases that is going to mean 'unencumbered'.
Your description of the software IP problem is simply cluless. Yes there are garbage patents out there, but those are simple if you know the prior art. The problematic patents are the ones where there might be a valid claim.
The software patent lunacy has got to the point where people object to any clever stuff in my designs, not because there is a patent it infringes but because there might be an application in, so by default do everything a stupid as possible. It gets worse, there are people who read my designs and then file a perjured patent application claiming they invented them.
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:2)
If that is the case, then we certainly do not want voice browsing as a standard. And companies who might stand to gain something from it because of their expertise or proprietary software in that field, will instead gain nothing because they chose not to give up the right to enforce their patents in this area, causing nothing to be standardized.
In other words, if they want to make their bed that way, then they can lie in it... alone.
Re:It is not a small issue and not a bug (Score:2)
Then the problem isn't addressed.
The notion of patents hasn't slowed down Macromedia from making Flash a defacto standard on the web. It addresses a number of problems without being a W3C standard or recommendation.
The issue isn't whether or not patented technologies get used, or even permitted under a limited royalty system. We're talking about whether or not these technologies are allowed to be included into what is agreed industry wide to be the standard for web technology. This is what is at issue here.
If a company owns a patent they wish to exercise at some later time, great! They spent the money for the R&D and the patent process. They should most certainly be allowed to benefit from this effort if the USPO approved it. That does not mean that it should be allowed in as an industry standard which inhibits a truly open playing field.
If you apply the FSF "logic" you would have to stop distributing gzip because someone could modify it so that it infringed the Unisys LZ patents.
No. If you apply FSF logic here, you would have to stop distributing gzip if someone did infringe on the Unisys patents.
I would think that the history of LZ within GIF would be a pretty good indicator of where this patent business is heading with the W3C members so concerned about it.
Jay Sulzberger is the one on the right with the be (Score:3, Interesting)
http://forums.fark.com/cgi/fark/comments.pl?IDLin
Re:Jay Sulzberger is the one on the right with the (Score:2)
Re:Jay Sulzberger is the one on the right with the (Score:2)
What problem? (Score:2)
Even if it weren't that way, the worst case scenario is you'd need a different "free" license than the GPL for the code which was patent encumbered. Folks, the GPL is not holy doctrine. Its a convenient way to gift code with more of an ability to force your morals on the recipient than public domain offers. Its nothing more.
the GPL should be modified (Score:2)
Can't comment due to bug in w3c message submit (Score:2)
I got back an automated response saying the message had been accepted, then a seperate message saying that I would have to visit here [w3.org] to give permission to post the message to the mailing list and store it. However, trying out that link gives me the message:
Error: There is no message with id: 3a9041e823e02419d0f7ddd1223cf918b8a3e226. Please make sure you have cut and pasted the URI correctly.
So, good luck to those trying to remove the offending wording if those opposed can't even submit persistent comments!
can't approve my comment! BROKEN MAILING LIST? (Score:2)
Currently, the last comment I see is three days old: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-patentpoli cy-comment/2002Dec/ [w3.org]
I hope Slashdot's last-minute comments aren't headed into the bitbucket.
An Example in Plain English (Score:2)
From the FSF's Position on Proposed W3 Consortium "Royalty-Free" Patent Policy [fsf.org]:
This is all based on a bad assumption. (Score:2)
If the clause would lead to a situation where you can't release standard-compliant software under the GPL...
Don't use the GPL for the software.
Problem solved.
Am I the only one who thinks accomodating a particular software license is pretty low on the list of considerations when writing a standard?
The FSF "Everything must work with the GPL or else" is a very... Seatle Corporation perspective.
Re:This is all based on a bad assumption. (Score:2)
If you don't think that W3C standards should be used by Linux, you don't have a problem. If you do, then you need some way to make it work. Using the MIT license as an intermediate is... acceptable for peripherally significant items. Sort of.
You write your code and choose your license. Other people decide whether or not to use it. The same applies to standards. I think that the W3C has earned a "Dubious...perhaps D+" rating. "standards" with these characteristics are to be avoided, if at all convenient. If not, then they are to be replaced by something else as quickly as feasible.
The W3C doesn't want patents either (Score:2, Informative)
So the question becomes, how do we survive, and how does the Web survive, and move forward, in a world with software patents?
Part of that involves negotiation with the large companies who hold the largest patent portfolios: it would be almost useless trying to publish a patent policy document if the holders of most of the patents didn't agree to it. So there are some pretty complex constraints.
Simply writing to say, software patents are bad, isn't going to help much. But if you have solid constructive ideas on how to change things, or on how to come to consensus and agreement both with GPL implementations of specifications and with the need that large organizations have stated they have, to keep patents for "deefensive use", I think that would be very helpful.
Of course, just writing to say you like the current draft patent policy, or that you want to see some specific change, or that you don't like it and why, is also helpful, although it does add work for W3C staff, who are obliged to reply to every comment!
If you really want to make a difference, write to your political representative - congressperson, member of european parliament, MP, etc. - and say that software patents are bad for business, are bad for research, are bad for the future of the world, and will cause Orcs to attack Helm's Deep.
Well, maybe Helm's Deep isn't about patents, and not everyone agrees patents (or orcs!) are bad, But if you want software patents to go away you need to be heard. The DMCA had approx. 300 public comments; writing really does make a difference.
Disclaimer: I am XML Activity Lead at W3C.
Jealous vigor? (Score:2)
Have a great new year, Tim!
Who cares? (Score:2)
I don't care what w3c does and the sooner they shoot themselves in the foot (or head) in order to suck up to any sort of funding they can find, the sooner the real world will totally ignore them and I can stop explaining to comsci newbies why these people are doing evil but ignorable things.
Maybe the best thing to do is..... (Score:3, Insightful)
Standards are what the majority agree upon, not what some committee decides the majority should be forced to use.
The only power they have is what people give them.
If they screw up........ Then thyey aren't the standard....
What the backup plan? In case they do sell out..
Not worth rejecting W3C - write to support them! (Score:2)
It seems to me, however, that Bruce Perens, in the many posts you see above, is right. That is, these standards are as good as it gets.
So -- write saying you support them, to counterbalance all the previous trigger-happy or (IMO) zealous individuals.
patents have no place in a standard (Score:2)
The current proposal offers to admit patented techniques into the
W3 standards if a special grant is made allowing the technique
to be used with the web.
This is wrong-headed for two reasons.
First, it would not be fair to a patent holder if the W3C, in the
future, extended the definition of "web infrastructure" to include
new technologies and techniques which may not now be considered
part of the web infrastructure. The W3C therefore would not be
allowed to extend and build on the current standards in the future.
It is crucial that the W3C be permitted to build on its current
standards, and so this barrier to innovation and progress must
be cast aside. Thus there is an unresolvable conflict between
the interests of the patent holder and the future interests of
the web community, and as a result, patent restricted techniques
have no place in the standards of the W3C.
Second, it limits the development of web infrastructure. For it
is by outside innovation and creativity that the infrastructure
of the web has been constructed: much of it passed to the W3C
from outside hands. Successful and innovative techniques have
been widely adopted and subsequently standardized. Almost all
of the core standards of the W3C were derived thus.
By limiting development to approved "web infrastructures" only
this leading edge of creativity will be blunted: no innovation
will occur ahead of the standards curve, for that work shall
be considered not a part of the "web infrastructure" and
therefore subject to the restrictive patent.
In order that the W3C members and general public receive the
benefit of outside innovation it is critical that innovators
be permitted to extend and experiment with W3C technologies
in any way they like--pushing out the definition and scope
of "web infrastrcuture" as they go, in unforseen ways.
The current policy is therefore shortsighted and may even
ultimately doom the W3C to irrelevance, as creativivity and
innovation is directed elsewhere, and innovation on the web
infrastructure itself withers away.
The current policy is therefore shortsighted, unhelpeful,
suicidal, and unfair. It ought to be abandoned: patented
techniques may enrich their innovators justly, but ought
not to be considered for inclusion in a W3C standard.
Justin Chen-Wells
My email APPROVING of the proposal (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2)
So you've got to ensure that commercial entities can incorporate the standards in their software, yes (I don't think anyone was suggesting the contrary; perhaps the LGPL, designed for libraries with just the sort of get-out clauses you seem to suggets by implication). But you also have to provide a strong incentive for people who extend the protocls to ensure compatability, and where it becomes necessary, to open the new standards they are creating.
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2, Interesting)
GPL-ing the standards document doesn't "infect" software that implements what that document describes unless you cut & paste the text of the document verbatim into that software's source code. (And, NO, saying something like, "/* This next bit of code implements part 3 of the whatsihoosit compliance document */" doesn't count as "including" that document in the code.
Offtopic?? What? (Score:3, Interesting)
Is someone moderating posts at random here?
Blah! (Score:3, Informative)
You can't GPL a specification, that doesn't make any sense. You can GPL a document which contains a specification, but to protect the specification itself, you would have to patent it.
The GPL has nothing to do with patents, it has to do with copyright. If patents try to assert control over copy-rights, then the GPL has something to say.
If that is it, I suppose an illustration of the implementation and the problem, would be that if GIFs were part of the standard, then we could read them from the web, and generate them for the web, but using the software for non-web purposes would be restricted?
I think what they're saying here is that people could patent use of software outside the domain of the web, and use the patented technology as part of the web standard... crippling implementations of free software in such a way that they cannot evolve beyond the web. Could intranets be a problem?
I don't really get it, as a patent is a patent is a patent. There are plenty of things free software can't do now just because of patents. This may actually be to our bennefit as patent-encumbured technologies would have to shed control if they wanted to be incorporated into the web...
Insert obligatory "patents are stupid" comment here.
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:5, Interesting)
I hate being Mr-RMS-protector and GPL-Anti-Basher, but the amount of bad "information" and people throwing completely unrelated things around infuriates me.
As some others have tried to say, this has nothing to do with the GPL putting the idea in some sort of "forced distribution" form as the author of the original comment would have you believe.
The GPL doesn't put restrictions on the distribution of ideas, only their implementations.
Here's an analogy as I see it:
Say I'd patented the idea of drawing pictures on a computer screen, and up until now the web (and computers in general) were only text base. Yes I'm stretching, but go with me for a second. I want to put pictures in a W3C standard, but I don't want to give up my right to charge money for my one-handed picture-viewing slideshow program. I submit it to the W3C standard and say "It's okay for people to use my patented idea for free for web applications." Now someone goes and makes a graphics-enabled web browser and distributes it under the GPL. Someone else then takes that GPL code and turns it into a GPL'd one-handed slideshow program -- a right the GPL affords them. Suddenly they are in violation of my patent. But the original author of the graphical web browser didn't break my patent, and the person who modified it into the slideshow program didn't disobey the license on the web browser..
And that's the problem being addressed as I see it. Note how it has nothing to do with the GPL "virally infecting" the patented idea?
Next time, read the article (and perhaps the GPL) before getting on your little pedastal. Thank you, please drive thru.
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2)
Quite simply, nothing in the article or the submission said anything about GPLing the W3C standard. It just pointed out a legal inconsistency between the new W3C patent requirements and the ABILITY to write your own GPLed implementation of future W3C standards.
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2)
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2)
Seriously, you have no clue what you're talking about. This has nothing to do with GPLing the standard (if that were even possible).
It's about allowing the standard to be implemented using GPL'd software. That's it. Nothing about limiting non-GPL implementations.
Note that most (all?) common web protocols can and are implemented in both GPL'd and commercial software. These guys are just trying to make sure that this continues to be true.
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:3, Informative)
Bzzt -- there's no such thing as a specification that's GPLed, or at least I've never seen such a beast. Your post isn't very clear, but it seems you believe that the FSF is trying to promote standards that permit only GPLed implementations -- which isn't even close to what's going on.
The W3C has adopted a limp-wristed patent policy which would allow a patented technology X into web standards, so long as it was licensed for free use within the context of the relevant web technologies -- but no one, not even commercial entities, would be able to write software which imitated X outside the realm of the WWW. That's bad for everybody except the lawyers.
The only thing this even has to do with the GPL is that the GPL can't be applied to software which is restricted by patents in this way.
Re:Moderation on ``GPL is the bug.'' (Score:3, Informative)
The GPL is not an unrestricted license.
True, the GPL does not remove all restrictions which copyright law imposes. How is that relevant to the matter at hand? The matter at hand (I think) is whether we should ensure that standards are implementable by free/Libre software.
I would tend to oppose the use of a standard in which the specification is GPL'd ...
The GPL doesn't really make sense when we're talking about something like a document. That's why the FSF folks came up with their free document license. Again, there seems to be no connection to the matter at hand. Now look at the next paragraph:
If the author of a GPL'd work wishes to submit the protocol involved as a standard, then let him submit it as FREE. He can keep the code GPL'd, but the standard must be free for use -- even by commercial entities.
This seems to confirm the confusion that the earlier lines hinted at. This talks about restrictions on the text of standards, rather than restrictions on the use of standards.
This post seems to me to be off-topic. It is tangentially related, perhaps, but it definitely doesn't advance the discussion.
It might be considered inflammatory, and it almost seems to be deliberately confused, as if it were intended to provoke impassioned responses. In short, it has a smell of troll, or simple ignorance. Now, look at the moderation:
Moderation Totals: Insightful=3, Informative=1, Overrated=1, Total=5.
Three insightfuls and an informative? Moderators, if you don't know, don't moderate. Somebody with some mod points should tack on a couple more Overrated's, too.
Re:Moderation on ``GPL is the bug.'' (Score:2)
Remember the admonition do moderators: focus on moderating up, not down. Moderation wars generally strike me as silly. I try to walk away from them.
A copyright licence is NOT a patent licence! (Score:5, Insightful)
But if Ford has a patent required for making *any* car (e.g. a component or standard required by law), Toyota is screwed.
This is about patents in internet standards which would prevent any GPL implementation. I don't understand what you're trying to say. Is ISS illegal because Apache exists? NO. But would Apache be illegal if Microsoft/ISS had a patent on HTTP? YES!
Kjella
-1 Overrated (Score:2)
The GPL does not in any way restrict standards.
It is patents appearing in standards that restricts the use of standards.
-
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2)
I repeat:
I think you didn't read and/or fully understand the issue.
This is not about GPL, any specific license, etc. This is about standards that have been defined by W3C being patentable in non-web use.
A simple example, as I understand would be
- W3C adopts a method for special content delivery patented by company A as a standard
- W3C policy states that this standard is now freely implementable by anyone for use via web (item 3) only
- W3C isn't involved in non-web delivery;
- Hence, company A is free to claim its patent rights for implementation and distribution of its patented delivery method via e-mail, file sharing client, instant messenger, etc.
Now, you may agree or disagree with the submitter or the FSF, but taking a shot at GPL isn't warranted because that's not what is at stake. You have completely missed the point.
Re:GPL is the bug. (Score:2)
It wouldn't allow anyone not paying royalties to the patent owner to implement the functionality for non-web use, whether the license is GPL, BSD, or any of your own proprietary licenses.
Therefor the GPL zealots want these patents to be released for use in any application.
Ahh, from now on, stylesheets are patented by company A, Javascript is patented by company B, DHTML is patented by company C. You can't write e-mails using any of those unless you pay a royalty of 2 cents per line of code per message to each company, plus their annual fee of $5,000.
It is true that GPL deals with patents in a certain way; but, this is irrelevant, since the issue affects all software implementing patented functionality, no matter under which license.
In summary, The FSF has a problem with their own licence, the GPL, blocking them from using technologies that are being made freely available for use on the web.
Finally, your point seems to be - yay, trash GPL! - yay, trash GPL! Instead of discussing and arguing for or against the argument made in the original story.
Not GPLing the standard (Re:GPL is the bug.) (Score:2)
In the other direction, we could end up with patented capabilities that are required (or just popular) on servers, but suddenly only allowed on clients or middleware made by the mega-corp that owns the patent.
The horrid implications that the bug in this clause could cause for everybody (except for the patent owners) is only spotlighted by it's obvious conflict with the GPL. If this clause is made GPL-compatible, it will create freedom for all developers and users.
How is that insightful? (Score:4, Insightful)
>as bad in the hands of OSS developers
>as it would be in the hands of Microsoft.
How? Tell me how that would be worse... If OSS dominated the web, you would be able to use any OS to access the web, and not have to pay for it. People would be able to not worry about strange patent limitations and being sued for single-click patents. The GPL places no restrictions on content created on the web, so anything on the web would be on the web in such a scenario. Any company that wanted to make a closed source application would not be prohibited, or secretly (or blatently, as the case may be) shut out of the standards committee.
So tell me how the web would be worse if it were dominated by the OSS instead of MS. Or shut up.
Re:How is that insightful? (Score:2)
Er... any OS can be written to connect to the web, has nothing to do with open source. It still costs money to connect to the web even when using OSS - bandwidth isn't free, even if the software is. And OSS can still get patented - hell, Amazon works on a version of Apache and they still have patents.
In short, stop bullshitting.
Re:How is that insightful? (Score:2)
He wasn't saying it did. He was suggesting that open source usually facilitates ports to many operating systems.
It still costs money to connect to the web even when using OSS - bandwidth isn't free, even if the software is.
We're not discussing whether a Free model is good for connectivity, we're talking about whether a Free Software model would make a bad monopoly.
And OSS can still get patented - hell, Amazon works on a version of Apache and they still have patents.
While Amazon's software is written USING OSS software, Amazon's software is NOT OSS. Any other examples?
His, "So Shut up" comment was stupid, but you're "Stop Bullshitting" coupled with your irrelivant points was a lot worse.
Re:How is that insightful? (Score:2)
{blinking} {jaw agape}
What Internet do you use? The very fact that ANY operating system can connect to the Internet has EVERYTHING to do with open source. If the Internet was based on proprietary closed source technologies you'd still be dialing your modem into a 1990's Compuserve at $5/hour.
Patent free technologies built on open source software is the very reason you're able to post your comment to this web site in the first place.
And OSS can still get patented - hell, Amazon works on a version of Apache and they still have patents.
Okay, time to bring out the clue-by-4 on this one. First off, I'm sure the entirety of the Slashdot community would love to see one of these OSS patents you're referring to.
As to the Amazon patents, they involve a business practice. What web server they happen to be using at the time has absolutely no impact on this. They didn't patent a web server, the patented a methodology for making a purchase.
Oh God, I just caught myself feeding a troll. Ack!
Re:Rationale for NOT submitting a comment: (Score:2)
Look at MP3s. MP3s have patent encumbrances that make them fundamentally incompatible with the GPL. Thus a company like Red Hat cannot legally use and distribute MP3 player software under the GPL without getting sued (unless they pay license fees to Thompson or whoever it is that has the MP3 patents). The proliferation of Free Software (and other free-as-in-herpes tools) for using MP3s are the primary reason that MP3 has become such a widely adopted standard. The Free Software community helped make profits for a company that obfuscated what their patents claims until their standards caught on, then tried to rape money from everyone who touched it.
Quite simply, nobody needs patents on things like SVG, HTML and so on to compete as a commercial company. If they tell you they do, they are lying. On the other hand, Free Software (at least GPLed software, and that's one of the most common Free Software licenses out there) CANNOT EXIST if standards are patent-encumbered under the current proposal. Realistically, your proposal that patent-free standards would give a monopoly to OSS developers is outrageous and unbelievable on the face of it.
Why can't the companies compete on the merits of their products, and if they want a proprietary, patented format for something, let them have it, but there's no need for the W3C to codify it as a standard and thereby endorse it. If they need proprietary intellectual property, let them patent supporting technologies that somehow complement the standard, not the technology that forms part of the standard itself.
Re:Rationale for NOT submitting a comment: (Score:5, Interesting)
Bruce
Re:Rationale for NOT submitting a comment: (Score:2)
Like I said, I'm willing to accept the terms of the current agreement on patent licensing policy by the W3C, but I still think it's worth noting the potential problems created by this policy and I appreciate the fact that somebody brings them up. And I don't see how making a stink with the government will help - while I agree that software patents are generally a bad thing, I don't see why the only way to keep patents out of the standards process is to ban software patents entirely (not going to happen in the US anytime soon).
Making a stink with the government (Score:4, Interesting)
I could write more, but you get the picture.
Bruce
Re:Making a stink with the government (Score:2)
The 20-year term is too long for the software industry, in that there is no quid-pro-quo for the public - a patent is no longer useful by the time it enters the public domain.
Right on target Bruce! I think that the same applies to a lot of the problematic genome patents. Someone sequences a gene, on that basis they patent the invention of using the gene for a standard collection of 200 odd uses. They don't know what the gene does or even what part of the body it affects but they will claim the 'invention' of using the gene to cure everything from HIV to halitosis. It is a completely sterile act devoid of any inventive step.
Several of the software patents have the same basic approach. Intertrust filed a piece of garbage with 2000 claims. About the best that can be said for the patent is that they are effectively preventing the use of DRM technology through their grasping licensing policies.
Re:Making a stink with the government (Score:2, Interesting)
Not to get too far off topic here, but I think that there are two key points here to consider:
I think your main claim is correct though -- these problems arise from the status of the W3C, and if a body with some more pull (like a branch of the government) were to step in, these problems could be cleared up.
Regards,
FM
Re:Making a stink with the government (Score:2)
Nice argument, Farley, but I think you led yourself astray at one point. Aren't the things that are being patented algorithms? I suppose that and (to a much lesser extent) data-structures.
In addition, I would think that the form of an algorithm for solving a particular problem is an extremely close relative of the mathematical model of the problem.
Thanks
Bruce
A sense of foreboding (Score:2)
With regard to the W3C issue, I'm just worried that bending to the patent wishes of the corporates here actually enshrines even further the current patent malaise.
I get a very bad sense of foreboding. One day they will come back after some patent issue blows up and tell you that "You endorsed it."
Re:A sense of foreboding (Score:2)
Well, certainly people here will give me a hassle about that. But the folks on the patent-holder side can't give me much of a problem because I've made it clear at every step of the way that I oppose software patents entirely. If I find the compromise doesn't work for us, I'll be able to come back to the topic.
Bruce
Re:Making a stink with the government (Score:2)
To this point and the others mentioned you run into a single monstrous problem. In order to invalidate these silly patents that have been granted they need to be challenged. Challenging these individually, or even in bite size groups, would be impossibly costly for even the US Government itself to foot the legal bill. It just ain't gonna happen.
I'm not about to hold my breath waiting for legislative action to deal with this either. Consider the audience. The issue is extremely complex in nature involving an in depth understanding of both the technology and the law. This does not describe the electorate at large. It does describe the companies making the noticeable campaign contributions that enable these politicians to run for office in the first place.
Nobody is going to sue the situation into a fix. No group of politicians are going to weaken financial interestes. The only thing left to us is to make it abundantly clear to those filing for the silly patents that their efforts will not return a profit. The only way this can be accomplished in this matter is to not allow a patented technology roam free within the realms of established standards being endorsed by the W3C.
To do otherwise hoping that the poor application of patent law just corrects itself will open the door for companies like Microsoft to do what they have been waiting for years to get. The ability to buy the Internet.
Re:Rationale for NOT submitting a comment: (Score:2)
Joe: Hey Hank, watch my service compress voice traffic using mpeg technology!
Hank: No, no, Joe! Don't do that!
(Richard Stallman bursts through the wall of the office, ten feet tall and snarling viciously)
Stallman: Who did it? Who's the dirty cur who's putting patented technologies into web services on my internet?
Err... yes, that's it, I see... if we let free software implement web standards legally, then the OSS "faction" will... seize control, or
Re:WWW and the GNU GPL (Score:5, Informative)
That is not quite right, we never relased any code under the GPL. We released the libwww code as public domain, it is not GPL, it is not BSD, it is public domain.
When GPL was being discussed it was in the context of 'make it free', the GPL was rejected because it did not make the cern code free in the ways we wanted it to be free. We explicitly wanted browsers to be included with computers as a cost free part of the basic operating system. Remember that at the time (91) Mosaic had not even appeared, let alone Netscape. The point is that Tim never wanted the viral aspect and dropped the GNU angle as soon as it was explained to him.
In the end the public domain route was in large part dictated by political expediency. Explaining GPL or BSD to cern management would have taken a lot more time and led to more opportunity for confusion. Putting the code in the public domain was something they could understand - it had already been done with much of the CERN libraries.
The mistake that was made was public domain rather than BSD. If we had gone BSD then Mosaic would have been required to state that it used CERN code (60% of the Mosaic code was code from CERN used without attribution). That in turn would have meant that IE would have a credit. As it was the mainstream media did not recognize Tim as the true father of the Web until about 1996, and then only as a result of a major PR campaign led by MIT.
I would certainly advise researchers to use the BSD license in their code. I would strongly advise against the GPL if you want your ideas to be taken up by industry.
Re:WWW and the GNU GPL (Score:2)
The original poster never said the code was released under GPL or BSD. In fact, he said it was released as public domain. If you can't read a simple Slashdot post and respond intelligently, how can you expect me to take you seriously?
FFII (Score:2, Informative)
http://swpat.ffii.org
and even more important there is a very successful petition against software patents:
http://www.noepatents.org
Re:Patent lawsuits are stupid, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
If freedom is a lack of government (aka, anarchy), just remember that this whole debate is about patents, which are a product of the government. Thus, by your logic, they represent a loss of freedom, and so your whole rant becomes meaningless.