EU Moves Towards Single European Patent Standard 234
theodp writes "A European Parliament committee Tuesday moved toward setting the first pan-European standard for software patents, but outlawed the U.S. practice of patenting business methods, such as Amazon's one-click Internet shopping. 'The European law sets the right benchmark rather than the looser U.S. system,' said the director of public policy for Europe at the Business Software Alliance, which represents 20 software companies including Microsoft and Apple. Amazon representatives in Brussels declined to comment on the new European legislation."
One 'o' tooo many (Score:5, Funny)
He meant, "the European law sets the right benchmark rather than the loser U.S. system."
(Yeah, I know. I have no plans to quit my day job.)
At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:5, Interesting)
patent system has made.
Under the European law, software companies would obtain
exclusive rights only for programs that demonstrate novelty in
their "technical contribution."
Their reasoning: "We don't want to arrive at a model where
in the U.S. everything under the sun can be patented,"
I think they are approaching this from a better angle. I still
disagree with the general notion of patenting algorithms as
such. I don't think algorithms are invented any more than
mathematical truths are invented, rather they are discovered.
IMO, there is a difference and a patent shouldn't be granted on
that. Although, I will admit there is room to disagree with
that position.
It looks like they will be avoiding the major abuses we are
experiencing though, since you can patent a novel approach to
hand writing recognition, but not hand writing recognition in
general.
Now, the question is how do we get the U.S. government to adopt
this standard? Will it be like the Metric system, where we are
too entrenched to switch to a better system? Let's hope not for
our sakes.
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:5, Insightful)
Considering that the patent office has turned into a revenue source for the government I'd say it's worse.
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:2)
Every government program is a revenue source, because every government program has the specific effect of expanding the cost, scope, and powers of government. If it wasn't a revenue source, they wouldn't be involved in the first place.
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:5, Insightful)
I entirely agree with this, but I'm not sure if this is the right question to be asking. The question is, is there a benefit to the public to award a time-limited monopoly (aka a patent) for those who bother to go out and discover these things, or isn't there one? If it benefits us, we should do it. If not, we shouldn't. Whether it was a process of invention or discovery is moot if we can somehow encourage addition invention or discovery. But I'm skeptical as to whether the benefits are real, or more substantial than the problems that also ensue...
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:2)
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:2)
Well the key qustion is, is an awarded monopoly (patent) the only possible benefit you get from discovering things, or are there others too?
The answer here is easy. I say of course there are a dozend others. Solving a problem, market benefit, social credit, lower costs,
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't think the right combination of iron parts that make up a ship is invented, rather it is discovered.
And so on, in all eternity...
By your logic, nothing is ever invented, but merely discovered. And you are right.
I agree that they are only discovered, but I also want the person/company who discovers them to benefit from that discovery for a while.
After all, it probably cost a lot of mone
Then why should machines be patentable? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm no fan of the lovely US patent system, but I don't know about algorightms being a "mathematical truth" any more than a functioning machine is a "physical truth." One is an implementation of logic, one of physics. Yet no one would fight a patent on a new machine t
Re:Then why should machines be patentable? (Score:3, Insightful)
Changing Patent law is only part of the solution (Score:2, Insightful)
Now I believe that the current patent system is badly broken and in need of a massive overhaul, but how much
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:2)
So any patent on software is equal to a patent on math.
Any programmer is perfectly capable of mentally "runni
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:3, Insightful)
Thats an interesting argument, imagine if Newton had been able to patent the use of the formulas he discovered ?. At the same time in today's competitive money focused world Newton may not have been able to claim credit for discovery without the patent system.
No - there is NOTHING sane about this! (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a wide-open door through which even the most rediculously obvious software patents could (and therefore will) slip.
Please please please don't let yourselves think that this is anything other than the EU getting a patent system open to virtually all of the abuses demonstrated in the US.
I just sent the following to my MEP, find your MEP's email address and contact them NOW before it is too late (people in the UK can find their members here [keele.ac.uk])!:
Re:No - there is NOTHING sane about this! (Score:3, Informative)
there is more MEP info here [europarl.org.uk] for people in the UK, and search the same website for rest of europe. i cant believe this proposal passed parliament...
Re:No - there is NOTHING sane about this! (Score:2)
Re:No - there is NOTHING sane about this! (Score:2)
i also sent emails to my home (norn-irish) MEPs as well... id be surprised if they even had the brains to click the power button on their computers, let alone check their email...
All evidence to the contrary (Score:2, Interesting)
This is clearly hyperbolae. The parade of horribles didn't happen in the U.S., it is unlikely to happen in the E.U. The U.S. patent office finally rejects hundreds of applications in software arts every day, and will continue to do so.
Nothing in the EU proposal permits (and the law actually precludes) the allowance of a patent claim, where the differences betweeen the claim and th
Re:All evidence to the contrary (Score:3, Interesting)
You are trolling right? If not, WAKE UP!! There are US patents on virtually every trivial aspect of software development, to the extent that IBM can (and has) gone to companies and essentially said "you are probably violating one of our patents - pay up!". See here [base.com] for so
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:5, Insightful)
No, we haven't learned from your mistakes, I'm afraid. Before EU started gathering together the directive, some countries, including Finland where I live, had no software patents at all.
UK also thinks it's a bad idea (Score:3, Informative)
Phillip.
What *is* invented? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, every invention is just a 'discovery' in some sense. I mean, take for example child-proof caps for medicine. Someone 'discovered' there was a way to make a cap that wouldn't open unless pushed. Someone 'discovered' that making a tire in a certain shape would pull water off the ground and make driving safer. Someone 'discovered' that you could setup transistors in a certain way to make double data rate DRAM. All of these are discoveries as much as something like realizing that you could delete audio information that would be filtered out by the brain as a way to save space.
The important thing in my mind is to filter out the 'obvious' things from the truly innovative. It's 'obvious' to use base-64 encoding in DNS for international domain names. 1-click shopping is 'obvious', etc.
No sanity, only malice (Score:2, Interesting)
All the juri rapporteur and the European commission have done is to cloud the issue in confusion.
At the heart of the proposal lies a text that makes
The effect of the cloud of confusion is to make people think that actually the EU has a more restrictive system than the US, but patent lawyers will know better.
'technical contribution' is completely undefined and the clea
Re:At least sanity still prevails in some places (Score:2)
Something Freudian about the U.S. Patents Office (Score:5, Funny)
I like it! (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps the EU parliament (or whatever) isn't as useless after all. Though what will become out of this pan-European system in a few years? Let's keep our fingers crossed..
Re:I like it! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I like it! (Score:2)
Its a sad day for free software.
The law is not much different in practice from the current American system.
1.0 is never perfect (Score:4, Interesting)
I just wish our government was less like those people that claim engine design peaked in the early 70s. (there are lots of them in the south)
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:4, Insightful)
Laws are not like software. Software gets better with time, Laws and regulations often go the other direction.
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:3, Insightful)
yup! but you could also say that the second version of anything is never the best version. The third version is!! er, wait.. the fourth is!
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:5, Informative)
The following is (c) wikipedia, GNU Free Documentation License.
Patents originated in England with the Statute of Monopolies 1693 under King James I of England. Prior to this time, the King could issue letters patent providing any person with a monopoly to produce particular goods or provide particular services. This power was widely abused; thus Parliament restricted it through the Statute of Monopolies so that the King could only issue them to the inventors of original inventions for a fixed number of years. Section 6 of the Statute refers to "manner[s] of new manufacture...[by] inventors", and this section remains the foundation for patent law in England and Australia. The Statute of Monopolies was latter developed by the courts to produce modern patent law; this innovation was soon copied by other countries.
You know, there already were laws prior to the Declaration of Independence and the drafting of the Constitution..
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:5, Informative)
But the concept of patent appeared about 500 B.C. in the Greek colony of Sybaris. The Sybarites, who enjoyed living in luxury, made a law that if any confectioner or cook should invent any peculiar and excellent dish, no other artist was allowed to make this dish for one year. He who invented it was entitled to all the profit to be derived from the manufacture of it for that time.
On a side note, the earliest English letter patent known is dated April 3, 1449. It was granted to John of Utynam for his art of making colored glass.
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:2)
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:2)
Patent History, USA and Europe [about.com]
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, you got it.
Re:1.0 is never perfect (Score:2)
Global Patent Jurisdiction (Score:2, Interesting)
Does a patent on a web technology apply to where the server is operating, who owns it or who's using it?
software patents in the EU (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:software patents in the EU (Score:2)
thank god for europeans (Score:2, Funny)
Re:thank god for europeans (Score:2)
Re:thank god for europeans (Score:2)
Re:thank god for europeans (Score:2)
Don't kid yourself. Even if the US wanted to (and they do, believe you me), with todays global political climate, they would never be able to be old fashioned colonial lords.
But, that's not saying they're not trying. Their faux pas, new colonialism du jour, is catching on with americans in general. It's economocial colonialism in all it's glory.
not all good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:not all good (Score:2)
They do reply, too. I got a personal response from one of my MEPs to an email within half an hour. Not all of them are this clued-up (I'm sure not all of them even have e-mail addresses), but some of them will be.
But you don't have to email them - you can write to them, too.
If you don't know who your MEPs are, or how to contact them, go here [upmystreet.com] and enter your postcode. Look for the "Your Representives" section, and click on the "More information and contact details" link.
Re:not all good (Score:5, Interesting)
Although the European Patent Convention (EPC) says that "programs for computers" are not patentable whereas the (draft) Directive explicitly says that "computer-implemented inventions" are (art. 52), there is actually no difference:
The EPC was never meant to prevent patents on computer-implemented inventions; the clause that prevents patent on "computer programmes" simply has no effect -- patent lawyers agree that they are either "technical" (and patentable) or "non-technical" (and not patentable). Unlike the US patent system, the European patent system only protects "technical" inventions.
Patents on "technical" computer programmes are not that bad -- after all, they are technical inventions that just happen to be implemented with computers.
The real problem is that patent offices tend to view all computer software as "technical" because a computer is technical. This results in patents on algorithms, business methods, etc. that just happen to be implemented with computers.
The draft EU Directive does a lot to clarify this: It says several times that computer programmes are not technical just because they run on a computer. It also says that algorithms are not patentable and that a patent on a technical invention that uses an algorithm does not cover the algorithm itself (yeah, the Yahoo editor obviously did not read the documents [eu.int]; s/he even got the date wrong: 2003-06-16 was Monday, not Tuesday).
The rationale clearly says that they don't want algorithms and business models to be convered.
These clarifications will actually result in less software patents because all the bogous software patents that are not patents on computer-implemented technical inventions but on computer-implemented algorithms, business models, etc., are now so clearly outlawed by the explicit text of the Directive that every patent officer should get it.
Re:not all good (Score:2)
The EPC was never meant to prevent patents on computer-implemented inventions; the clause that prevents patent on "computer programmes" simply has no effect -- patent lawyers agree that they are either "technical" (and patentable) or "non-technical" (and not patentable).
Not
Disastrous result, say Green Party (Score:2)
Bruxelles/Brussel, 17 June 2003,
Patent vote fails Europe's software programmers
Unlimited patents will be disastrous for the European software industry and SMEs
The Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament today adopted a report that allows for the unlimited patenting of software which will, in one swoop, entrench the market dominance of multinational companies, force small software firms out of business and bring to an end the
McCarthy won on all points (Score:3, Informative)
* From: Hartmut Pilch <phm@xxxxxx>
* To: news@xxxxxxxx, <patents@xxxxxxxx>
* Subject: McCarthy wins in JURI
* Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2003 13:04:55 +0200 (CEST)
The JURI vote was delayed by 2 hours. Our little conference was thereby made impossible. Around 13.00 the voting was pushed through in 20 minutes, and McCarthy won a majority on all points, which means
- introduction of program claims
- refusal of interoperability p
One of the amendments which fell (Score:2)
The Culture and Industry committees were well aware of the possible economic and cultural dangers of software patents, and took care to flag them up by proposing the following recital, amendment ITRE-3.
(As well as the main legal articles, European directives contain "recitals", which outline the broad policy goals, are can be used by courts for guidance on how to interpret the articles).
McCarthy specifically recommended, and got, a vote against the amendment.
Also, contact the newspapers. (Score:2)
So, when you mail your MEP, send a cc to the Sun (talkback@the-sun.co.uk) or other newspaper. Make sure that a layman can understand what you're saying. Having a journalist stand in front of them asking difficult questions will have more effect than simply recieving an email or two.
Re:non-loony? (Score:2)
(OK, so big wads of cash are the best way to get messages through to politicians, but failing the that...)
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
That giant sucking sound... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:2, Insightful)
The giant sucking sound is air rushing into the vacuum that is your skull. Your post is complete nonsense.
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember why businesses exist in the first place (subtle hint as you're probably american, it's NOT to make a profit)
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:4, Insightful)
"You should be in business to improve the lives of those around you" - John Paul Getty.
I like that. I've studied him and he really did think like that - business for him was for improving the lives of family, friends, employees and business partners. He was damn good at it too.
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:2)
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:3, Insightful)
Can you give some sources for that? Sorry, never heard of these laws.
all employees can only work 35 hours weeks.
That's a French law, AFAIK all EU countries have different laws. Besides, I think 35 hours/week is a good idea. Creates jobs, employees more productive, employees have more free time, which means they have more occasion to spend money and make economy run.
35 hour/weeks and Severence breeds unemployment (Score:2)
Having someone work 1 hour overtime is equally painful, let alone having someone come in Sunday evening to fix a Mission Critical System being used in other parts of the world.
I don't have anything against a 35 hour/week. Hell, I'm working a 30 hour/week, 4 days/week and I love it, but I would hate to see if g
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:2)
There's nothing magical about either system, there are just different ways of doing things. A good business adapts to its environment be it the market or local labor laws. A bad business is one that can't adapt and "needs" more government-mandated "pro-business" legislation like the US habitually gives out.
Maybe not (Score:3, Interesting)
but...
Software development is a global business. Changes in one market affects development everywhere, not just developers that happen to live in that market.
Tor
Oh please (Score:2)
No, that's actually the sound of U.S. software jobs going to places where coders go for $9/hr.
Anyway, your comment doesn't really make all that much sense. Software patents would be beneficial commercial software companies that produce things that haven't been thought of before, but could cause problems for open-source re-implementation.
Re:That giant sucking sound... (Score:2, Insightful)
If software patents evaporated tomorrow, what motivation would software companies have to release stuff quickly? We'll only see incremental changes and big design changes will be kept under wraps for years until they're fully mature, long enough so that no competitor could justify the effort to reproduce the functionality to enter the market. This will ensure even bigger mon
A distinction without a difference (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A distinction without a difference (Score:2)
But then the distinct lack of decent patent examiners is what got us into this mess in the first place.
Re:A distinction without a difference (Score:2)
And then he/she will approve it anyway.
A patent on a business method will be approved if some technical considerations or a technical effect is involved in the invention.
See http://www.iusmentis.com/patents/businessmethods/ e poexamples/ [iusmentis.com] for examples.
Unlike some national patent offices, the EPO has no outright bar on computer-implemented business methods. This directive will force its interpretation on the rest of Europ
BIG Mistake (Score:5, Insightful)
We had the most innovative time when there were no patents and lockins. Now the software market is dead, because the OS vendor locks the market down. Giving them more lock down tools in the form of patents is death for applications software.
No applications are developed, nothing new is in the market and it has nothing to do with patents, and everything to do with market lock.
A better system the in the US.... (Score:3, Funny)
Amen. (Score:2, Insightful)
Not good (Score:5, Informative)
On the sorta-plus side, in the long term, the very concept of I.P. might be pushed closer to collapsing under its own weight. The USA and now the EU are deluding themselves if they think that China will continue to honour Western I.P. laws for ever. To echo a post on
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Business methods ARE patentable (Score:3, Informative)
In the future, european businesses will compete, not on programming, but on paying patent lawyers. Remember: just because you wrote a program yourself doesn't mean you'll be allowed to distribute it. The result? Punishing innovation. [ffii.org]
Re:Business methods ARE patentable (Score:2)
Well, you seem to have found the problem. But you obviously have not read the report from the Parl. Committee [eu.int] [PDF].
That report says so often that a computer programme shall not be patentable just because it runs on a computer that you could call it paranoid
Re:Business methods ARE patentable (Score:2)
Very misleading article (Score:5, Informative)
The European Commission has proposed to override the current clear and uniform European patentability rules (Art 52 EPC: "mathematical methods, schemes and rules for mental activity, methods of doing business and programs for computers are not patentable inventions") and replace them by a confusing set of nationally implementable rules which authorise patenting of algorithms and business methods, as it has been practised at the European Patent Office (EPO), openly since 1998 and more or less covertly since 1986.
The "European Parliament committee" cited in the article is the European Parliament's Commission on Legal Affairs and the Internal Market (JURI). Some members of this comittee submitted amendments to the European Commission's software patent directive proposal. While some Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) are asking to bring the directive in line with Art 52 EPC so as to clearly restate that programs for computers are not patentable inventions, another group of MEPs is endorsing the EPO's recent practice of unlimited patentability, shrouded in more or less euphemistic wordings.
What happened Tuesday is the vote of some pro-software-patenting amendements by the JURI. Theese amendments will now be presented to the plenary of the European Perliament for decision during the first week of either july or september.
It's definitely VERY BAD news.
This site [ffii.org] summarizes the situation and the efforts from all around Europe to fight software patenting.
Toasting to the end of free software (Score:2)
After all, when patents claiming all automatized medical diagnosis [ffii.org] got through the old system (when illegal), how would you defend yourself against lawsuits now that every idea somehow involving a computer is explicitly patentable? [ffii.org]
Not to mention that all commercial developers will have to pay IBM et.al. to avoid million-dollar-lawsuits. No wonder that innovation dwindles [ffii.org]
Some information on patents (Score:5, Informative)
In Europe, the patents can be issued for the entire union from the central office. This is much more expensive than in the US, primarily because everything has to get professional, technical transaltions into three langauges. However, even though the patents are issued for the entire EU, they are actually enforced locally in each country. Different European countries have different criteria and standards, the same patent may very well be ruled to apply in one country but not in another. I think the article deals with some guidlines regarding software and business methods; I don't believe it will change the overall picture and it should be seen in that context.
Some quick points about software and business methods in the US. In general, for these to be patentable, they must fulfill the following (these are some of the important conditions in lay mans terms):
-It must be new, in other words no records that anyone has ever done it before
-It must provide a tangible benefit - pure mathematics or very abstract and general algorithms do not work
-It cannot be obvious, even to professionals in the field
-The inventor must demonstrate that he or she actually knows how to implement it (preferably by doing so)
- The patent is only valid for the implementation that the inventor describes
These are actually quite reasonable conditions, wouldn't you say? I have not read the infamous one-click shopping patent, but note that generally speaking it is not possible to patent "shopping by only one click", you have to describe how you do it, and the patent is only valid for that implementation. Of course, sometimes it is possible to be quite general in the description, such as "save the customer's info in a memory, recognize customer by a cookie, initiate transaction based on saved data when customer clicks shopping button". On top of that the one-click patent is questionable from the obviousness criterium.
I wish to point out, however, that the set of patents that get discussed on Slashdot are the examples of extreme outliers when it comes to obviousness and generality. Frequently they are also misunderstood and exagerated, either by the original magazine, the story submitter or both.
For example, a few weeks ago there was a story on Amazon patenting selling used items next to new ones. A dozen people got 5, insightful ratings for pointing out how crazy this was. In fact, the patent only covered a specific technique of soliciting new sellers (or something similar).
Tor
Re:Some information on patents (Score:2)
Re:Some information on patents (Score:3, Informative)
Here is the one-click patent [uspto.gov]. It's pretty broad:
1. A method of placing an order for an item comprising:
under control of a client system,
displaying information identifying the item; and
in response to onl
Re:Some information on patents (Score:2)
Here is the one-click patent. It's pretty broad:
1. A method of placing an order for an item comprising:
under control of a client system,
displaying information identifying the item; and in response to only a single action being performed, sending a request to order the item along with an identifier of a purchaser of the item to a server system;
under control of a single-action ordering component of the server system, receiving the request;
retrieving additional information previously stored for the purc
Applying in EU for patents already issued in US? (Score:2, Interesting)
Will companies be able to apply for these patents as soon as software patents are allowed in the EU? Wouldn't that technically be considered prior art in the EU?
Re:Applying in EU for patents already issued in US (Score:2)
Filing an application on a patent already issued in europe after its issue date wont work in the US.
Oh no (Score:3, Funny)
Chilling effects for Europe. This must be bad indeed. They have no sense of personal freedom. They are drones. They have no sacred to God constitution like ourselves.
Poor bastards.
Typo... (Score:2)
'The European law sets the right benchmark rather than the loser U.S. system,'
MadCow.
Well good (Score:2)
European-developer-HOWTO (Score:4, Insightful)
"Use of hyperlinks in a computer program for an automation application and programmed computer for such an application" [espacenet.com]
"Method and system including a server, client-terminal, computer and computer program, delivering sound data" [espacenet.com]
"A computer system and a program install method thereof" [espacenet.com]
2) When you've found the 100 or so patents your program-to-be infringes, get a deal with all the inventors. (If some of them are slippery, you can probably "invent around" their claim in a couple of months)
3) Pay IBM for not starting a lawsuit you can't afford
4) (Minor step) Write your program
5) Sell it (hoping you won't be victim of a submarine patent)
6) PROFIT!!! (for your lawyer)
Nahhh, on the other hand, just drop developing, and become lawyer yourself (or take advantage of our generous social system, if being a "productive member of the society" is not your cup of tea)
The Committee ignored the call of key scientists (Score:2, Interesting)
The message is in Catalan, but contains the full text of the petition in English with list of signatories. The petition explicitly warns against claims that only patents with "technical contribution" will be granted, when the practice of the patent office has opened the door to anything being considered technical.
Re:looser? (Score:2)
Re:looser? (Score:2)
Medical products (Score:2)
How do you propose to deal with that without patents? I would be surprised indeed if an open drugs community would be able to surpass large corporations in this matter. Upgrading a kernel is one thing, alpha-testing a drug is not quite the same thing...
Re:Medical products (Score:4, Insightful)
I see the drug companies as similar to the bread making companies. Both have a recepie, both make money out of baking and selling the outcome. One does this without the need for patents. In fact, asprin tablet makers still manage to make lots money and stay in business despite there no longer (or even ever) being patents on asprin. So, in the end I think that the "drugs companies" issue is a bogus arguement. I also notice that the drug manufacturers are amongst the biggest an most monopolistic of companies. We end up paying huge premiums as a result of this either to health insurance companies or in taxes to our health services.
If the FDA wanted to level the playing field they could do this by ensuring that any new *brand* of drug has to go through trials and test, just like the original.
Sorry to bore you all, come on give me another flamebait (idiot moderator!).
Re:Medical products (Score:2)
Do you think the drug companies have a book somewhere with all the drug recipies in it and every now and then someone thinks 'I wonder if there is a recipie for a drug that enhances erections' and pick out viagra and says 'I saw it first so i'll make this one' to all the other drug companies and they say 'ok, fair enough, i wonder what else is in the book that i can make, say a recipie for an anti cancer drug, yeah that'd be good'
I
Re:Medical products (Score:2)
Re:Poor economics (Score:2)
Just look at what gene patenting is threatening to do to innnovation in that field. Look at how it is
Re:Amazon (Score:4, Informative)
FFFII has the real story [ffii.org]. Nice Quotes from HÃ¥kon Wium Lie, CTO of Opera Inc, Richard Clark, CEO of Elysium Co Ldt and chief editor for the JPEG standardisation committee, Bernd Runge of SAP AG, Bernhard Kaindl of SuSE GmbH, Dr. Karl-Friedrich Lenz, professor of Public Law and European Law, Aoyama Gakuin Daigaku, Tokyo, Jozef Halbersztadt, patent examiner at the Polish Patent Office and others.
Re:Who is responsible for ? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/story
McCarthy about GPL: "which moreover is not "free", but is actually a different form of monopoly by imposing a copyright licence system on users."
More general information from FFII:
http://swpat.ffii.org/akteure/mccarthy/ind