EU Parliament Approves Software Patents 678
AnteTempore writes "The voting has just ended. Few good and several bad amendments were accepted. The directive proposal was accepted: 361 for, 135 against, 28 abstentions. The precise numbers and results for each amendment will be available on
europarl.eu.int tomorrow." Reader swentel submits this report on the vote (French) with slightly different numbers (364 voting yes, 153 No, 33 abstaining) but just as bad. Watch this story for updates. Update: 09/24 15:44 GMT by T : Dr.Seltsam writes to say that the early reports are "not quite correct. The German publisher Heise states in this article,
that the vote concerned strong changes on the directive." In particular, "pure software patents will not be allowed." Google's translation engine does a decent job with the German.
Well Well... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well Well... (Score:3, Funny)
it was a major win, damn it. (Score:5, Informative)
FFII News -- For Immediate Release -- Please Redistribute
See
http://swpat.ffii.org/#news
Now we will have to see whether the European Commission is committed to
"harmonisation and clarification" or only to patent owner interests.
Yesterday's threats uttered by Bolkestein against the European Parliament
suggest the latter.
The detailed results are available on our site
http://swpat.ffii.org/news/03/plen0923/
It will now be our job to help the European Parliament assert itself against
attempts by Bolkestein and patent lawyers wearing the hat of national
governments to crush the directive project.
The current text has some remaining contraditions in it, but basically the
thrust has been turned around. It has become our directive which we
must help the European Parliament to defend. This is also a question of
the European Parliament's role in an emerging democratic Europe. On the
whole this is very good news for the EU.
--
Hartmut Pilch, FFII & Eurolinux Alliance
Re:Well Well... (Score:4, Informative)
Nah. Stupidity ain't the problem. Corruption is. EU lawmakers are simply just as easily bought as US lawmakers. Maybe even easier.
ObNitpick: EU != Europe.
Lawmakers = Lawyers (Score:4, Insightful)
Wrong Info, please update story *sigh* (Score:3, Informative)
Hey editors, please change the story so that not everybody claims we european get a US-like patent law system, this is (not yet) the case!
Re:Well Well... (Score:3, Interesting)
If we were successful, however, then the greedy whores would probably just sick thier puppet governments on us to eliminate the threat. ( Ohh, they've got butter knives! WMD! WMD! )
I know this all sounds extreme, but moving out is becoming a simpler choice t
Re:Well Well... (Score:5, Interesting)
I hope it doesn't come to that, but perhaps we need to start thinking about hosting open source software in a software patent free location. I would hate to see a great open source application disappear from Sourceforge because it "violated" some stupid software patent.
Our whole current "IP" scheme makes me sick. We are tying our hands with software patents, many of our Elderly (at least here in the good 'ole USA) cannot afford their medicine due to Pharma charging them out the Wazoo, we have the RIAA sueing 12 year olds and 71 year olds instead of changing with the times, and I could go on and on. I still hope that there will eventually be a popular uprising against what is going on, but I am not going to hold my breath. On second thought, perhaps a corporate-free techno-utopia is our only hope...
Re:Well Well... (Score:3, Informative)
As a matter of fact, This SourceForge project [sourceforge.net] was shut down for exactly this reason.
The incredibly innovative software programming marvel that is covered by the patent?
SCREEN SCRAPING A FRIGGIN TEXT FILE!
Sorry for the yelling. This subject really pisses me off.
Re:Well Well... (Score:3, Interesting)
"The only justification for a system of private ownership of culture (intellectual property), is the fostering of more and better creativity. Commerce is only a mechanism toward that end, not the end goal. When abusive patent, trademark, and copyright, stand in the way of advancement, it's time to change the system."
And the petition itself:
Re:Well Well... (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't hold your breath, though. We've had the technology to create cars that run on water for years now. Ironically, cost and the existing oil cartel are two major reasons why we aren't driving them yet. What about electric cars?
We pollute the atmosphere bec
Don't preempt (Score:5, Informative)
This is only one step in a complex "codecision" process.
The European Parliament get a say in this, but are not the final authority. Software patents are not yet EU law, and still have more stages of debate/voting to go through before they hit the lawbooks.
I think the final decision rests with the European Council of Ministers under the process in use (those Ministers not being directly elected, but being appointed by the national governments) but I'm sure someone will correct me on that if I've lost the plot.
Re:Well Well... (Score:3, Insightful)
Bleh. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Bleh. (Score:4, Insightful)
The way things are going now everyone in a profession other than lawyer, will be being sued by one.
Re:Bleh. (Score:2, Interesting)
Ok, so I did (just a few months and I am a patent attorney in The Netherlands). But what's wrong with writing a software patent? IMO It's not the one who writes the patent who's to blame, but the one who enforces the patent in a way that bars all competition and development.
A lot of software development costs large amounts of money and not every company is in the position to make far too much money on a crappy OS to support development of other softwa
Re:Bleh. (Score:5, Insightful)
The real problems is the broadness of the patent law. The people giving out the patents have no idea what makes the patent novel. Patents should be revolutionary, not evolutionary. Crap is getting let through and then it is off to the races with attorneys. Then who wins?
Would you really like that? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, I prefer IE to exist, as long as I can also have lynx and opera and konquerer.
Competition, even agains MS lets the better products surface instead of getting us stuck with patent protected monopoly, inferior products.
Your gun manufacturer analogy is right on the money, patents can be used defensibly as can guns, but are essentially a destructive tool.
Plus, EU software patents can only harm EU competiveness, EU companies could always register their software patents in the US while ignoring US software patents in the EU. Now US companies will rush to register their patents in the EU.
Patents may have a place, but today's systems are really out of control.
Re:Bleh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Patents do nothing but slow down an industry and promote laziness....
1) Ford, which is considered the model on how to build cars and do processes HAD to get around patents so that he could build a car that EVERYONE can afford.
2) Windsurfer which invented the windsurfing board had a patent, which they only enforced two years before the end of the patent. Until five years before the end of the patent there was no Wind surfing industry. Windsurfer then cashed in and forced bankruptcy of major windsurfers. Where is Windsurfer today? Sitting on money doing nothing.
3) Laser had a patent which caused nobody to do anything with lasers. Once the patent expired we ended up with laser pointers, last light shows, etc, etc..
4) Patents CANNOT be bought and defended by "small" people. Patents cost about 40,000 EUROS a pop and this is not money for the "small" company. This is money for the large company.
Now about your reference to MS and Internet Explorer. Say what you will, but Netscape was no better than Microsoft. I was around in the Netscape days and they were bastards. Once I represented a company who wanted to purchase five thousand licenses to Netscape. Netscape ignored the company because it was too small and companies like Deutsche Telekom were more important.
Microsoft might clone ideas, just like all of the other companies do as well in the industry. The software industry is like writing, we all clone!
The problem in software are the contracts. For example why do I have to buy Windows 5 times for a single computer?
Sir, I would have wished that you would have used your lawyer abilities to reign in the contracts instead of going for the easy cash in Patents. Remember you are going to be responsible for a mess that *I* have to live in.
Re:Bleh. (Score:3, Informative)
So why give patents? The assumption is that what society gets in return for this monopoly (the working of this patented invention, and the fact that the innovator gets a reward for his work will encourage more innovation) weighs up against this negative effect.
The big proble
Im sorry... (Score:5, Funny)
My name's Darl McBride and I'm a CEO
Switch (Score:3, Funny)
My name's Darl McBride and I'm a CEO
Zut Alors! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Zut Alors! (Score:2, Funny)
A quick translation... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A quick translation... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, if I write a dataprocessing program that can be used by another piece of software to do something new....then I can patent it...or the other bit of software...or neither...
The text of origin was considered to be "fuzzy" and "ambiguous"
Looks like they did a good job clearing it up...
Re:A quick translation... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A quick translation... (Score:3, Interesting)
No changes to current policy (Score:3, Interesting)
With respect to patenting, probably not very much will change, departing from this press release. It looks much like the policy of the European Patent Office (!= EU, Switzerland and Monaco are Contracting States as well).
I wonder what will be done with this one:
Another amendment specifies that the use of a patented technique is not regarded as a counterfeit [an infringing product] if it is necessary to ensure the communication between various systems or data-processing netw
Screw this! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Screw this! (Score:2)
Re:Screw this! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Screw this! (Score:2)
Count me in. I have actually been considering that for a long time. Damn, I should have patented that idea a long time ago.
Re:Screw this! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Screw this! (Score:2)
Out of curiosity, do you need a programmer for your new civilization?
Depressing. (Score:4, Insightful)
The most positivt thought I can have is that "maybe things must go to worse before they can get better".
<sigh>
Re:Depressing. (Score:4, Insightful)
But people just don't learn from history.
Example: my dad is born 1930, thus lived through the decade of Hitler's regime, and luckily survived the bomb raids on Cologne as well as nearly being shot because his father told him not to go to the HJ.
Yet he does not see that today our freedom is taken away again, not by a dictator. But by the system itself.
Capitalism as we face it today is a holocaust in itself (and was since the beginning of industrialisation).
The system tries to assimilate everything and everyone, erasing everything that's different (nature being one example).
It makes us part of a machine: no choice, no freedom in the end. Just food for the money printers. Synchronized, automatized living - great.
Of course, there are few people that take advantage of it. The low percentage of people that despite economic depression gets richer everyday. But they themselves don't understand that they are only part of a giantic world machine.
Panem et circenses.
I wish there was still a free, sane place on this planet.
Re:Depressing. (Score:4, Insightful)
New Job for Me (Score:2)
Re:New Job for Me (Score:2)
That should read 'this seals the deal'
Guess I won't be a professional slashdotter.
Indicative (Score:5, Interesting)
---rhad
Re:Indicative (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, I find it hard to believe that it is impossible or even difficult to make a profit without these software patents laws, but this is the logic that is used to make decisions such as these and cast them as being in
Re:Indicative (Score:5, Insightful)
That is a disturbing statement. It reminds me of the quote by General Motor's President Charles Wilson: "What's good for the country is good for General Motors, and vice versa." This is flawed logic. Corporations may employ people, but their only interest is profit. Time and time again we see that the interest of the people is NOT the interest of corporations. Read some books, google Monsanato's milk hormone problems, Exxon's complete disregard for people in Alaska afer Valdez, car manufacturer's intentional ignoring of safety studies in the 60s, big pharmaceutical companies that cover up defects etc. It goes on and on. Corporations do serve a purpose in employing people, but that purpose is moot if they then go about eroding centuries of work to place the will and health of the people above any other entity. You have a good point too, but it is rendered dangerous and defeatist upon investigation: working solely for the corporate interest is courting disaster without appropriate regulation, or better yet, true accountablity.
--rhad
Flashpoint (Score:4, Interesting)
Then the shit's hitting the fan. It'll make 9/11 look like a fender-bender.
Re:Flashpoint (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sorry. You've violated 86,732 sections of PATRIOT, PATRIOT II, and DMCA.
Please stay where you are. Your exectioner will be along shortly. It does not matter if you are outside the U.S. There is no outside the U.S. anymore.
Re:Indicative (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah, but the politicians are representing national interests in this case... or at least they think they are.
I know Bolkenstein, the man who drafted the original Directive, from when he was active in national politics. His line of thinking is 'good for corporations = good for the economy = good for the people'. He fails to see how this equation is false in many cases, including the case at hand. Because of this line of reasoning, he will give more weight to the opinion of large corporations, whose impact on the economy is largest. Smaller companies carry less weight, and the least weight of all is given to the voice of an individual person.
Another issue with Bolkenstein and many, many, many other politicians is that they believe that most issues are way too complex for the common people to understand. That is why they think they act in our interests even if they go against our express wishes'. And it's not just the majority of the common people, but all of them: professors and garbage collectors are all equally ignored. In true spirit of the Dutch 'poldermodel', the only groups that have this politician's ear are corporations, unions, and other politicians.
Re:Indicative (Score:3)
Re:Indicative (Score:3, Interesting)
Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:5, Informative)
This is a massive success, due to a level of lobbying unprecedented at this stage of a technical European measure.
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:5, Informative)
Article 2 = Fundamental definition of "technical": what is patentable and what is not. OUR DEFINITION ACCEPTED.
Article 3 = All software by definition patentable. KILLED.
Article 4 = Detailed conditions for deciding patentability. AMENDED. Will now be re-negotiated between the Parliament, Commission and Member States.
Article 5 = Program Claims. KILLED.
Article 6a = Right to use of patented techniques, without authorisation or royalty, if needed solely to achieve software interoperability. UPHELD.
This was achieved against massive counter-lobbying from the BSA and other industry giants.
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:2)
Can someone explain Article 6a? (Score:3, Interesting)
Does this imply that, for example, Linux MP3 encoders are now legal in the EU, without royalty or authorization [or will be]?
Re:Can someone explain Article 6a? (Score:3, Informative)
Article 6a, which the parliament voted for today, reads:
HOLY FUCKING SHIT (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow. The closest US equivalent (a clause in the DMCA) only applies to legitimate copy control bypassing, and only applies to interhost network protocol interoperation.
This is *incredible*, and could have a sweeping impact on patents. It's a *huge* lever.
Re:Can someone explain Article 6a? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, suppose we would get software patents, then this article would allow you to use an mp3 decoder to connect some audio aparatus to another one which only outputs sound in MP3 format. It will not allow encoders, unless they are only used for encoding sound which is then fed into something which can accept only mp3 encoded audio. So it also won't allow plain mp3 players (I don't think that the argument "I want to make my MP3's interoperable with my earbuds" would hold).
It really is a restriction to make sure that a company with a dominant market position cannot exclude everyone else by making all of the interfaces of its machine depend on patented technology and thus doing a vender lock-in (since compatitors cannot make any compatible devices). Jonas
Thank you Halo1 and JPMH (Score:2)
Which were the ones we lost?
Mods: please reserve your points for the reply, do not squander it on my post. Thanks.
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:3, Insightful)
Next time a MS rep, hints that "they owe the patents" to a SAMBA maintainer, now they can not only smile as a response, but plain laugh aloud!
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:5, Interesting)
Judging by the average post so far on this story, most readers are seeing this as a very black and white situation.
Passing bad, not passing good.
Re:Massive victory for Open Source campaign (Score:2)
The Reuters translation post [slashdot.org] said that the laws specifies that simply implementing something in software that previously existed outside of software isn't patentable, which sounds tremendously good to me. Anything else that's good?
What happens to the world.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Even foreign governments.
Intellectual property in all of its various forms is being abused by the corporate world - both friends and foes of Linux and otherwise. The madness is the laws supporting this behavior continue to pass, bypassing the individual and wholeheartedly supporting the corporation.
Isn't the government supposed to be working for us? Aren't our rights supposed to be first and foremost in their minds? There is a balance to be maintained, and our rights are not unlimited, but more and more across the entire globe the individual is lost.
Not to be funny but has anyone considered the implications of all these recent intellectual property rights and how it seems more and more that we're being pushed into the draconian future of Johnny Mnemonic and Shadowrun? The only way you get information is to steal it. The only way for another corporation to get information is to hire you to steal it.
I grow more and more distressed at the world my son will grow up in, the conditions he will consider normal, the laws he will break just by trying to think.
Talonius
Re:What happens to the world.. (Score:5, Insightful)
--rhad
Re:What happens to the world.. (Score:3, Interesting)
It's like farmaceutical industry (a total fuckup too by now) who need pattents to make sure they get return of investment over a period of several years. Unfortunate as it is, a lot of indistrial & technological progress would not have been made if pattents didn't exist. But I do agree wholeheartedly that this construction, which was ing
Re:What happens to the world.. (Score:2)
Sure I can deny it. How about you give us an example?
Re:What happens to the world.. (Score:2)
Hey, I thought of that first.
Seriously though, a lot of this is a holdover from the burgeoning corporate structure. Patents originally were geared towards protecting people's ideas _from_ companies that had the available cash to sell products based on those ideas. Now they're just a method for companies to beat other companies.
For one thing, I don't agree with corporates being given the rights and priveleges of individuals without also having to ad
Re:What happens to the world.. (Score:2)
If anything, the future looks something like Neuromancer. I sure am ready for it..
Re:What happens to the world.. (Score:2)
Is there (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is there (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, and it's called prior art. You can't patent something that has already been invented (even if you didn't know about its invention).
Why Not? (Score:2)
Re:Is there (Score:2)
The massive amount of money required to do it.
That's why this is a big coporate thing; they can make lots of patents and extort money out of those that can't afford to patent everything from a straight blade of grass to comfortable desk that helps you to be more productive.
I think I speak for all Europeans when I say (Score:5, Funny)
Hands up if you're surprised... (Score:2)
Cynical? Me? Nah, it's just that I keep seeing the same thing over and over and have given up expecting any better.
Oh, wait...
A truly sad day for us Europeans (Score:2, Informative)
Le parlement europeen etant colegislateur dans ce domaine qui releve du marche interieur, le texte doit maintenant etre examine par le Conseil des ministres, avant de revenir en seconde lecture a Strasbourg.
Freely translated: Because the European Parliament is a co-legislator in the domain that concerns the interior market, the text must now be examinated by the Counsel of Ministers, befor
Re:A truly sad day for us Europeans (Score:2)
James
It seems that (Score:4, Insightful)
I believe poeple don't want to live in an "American Europe".
Which goes to show... (Score:2, Insightful)
Unfortunate (Score:3, Interesting)
However, it is certainly a sad day for software freedom in the EU and around the world. What is it we are not communicating effectively? Why does this keep happening again and again?
Re:Unfortunate (Score:2)
"You started it"
Looking for another vocation (Score:3, Funny)
I never wanted to do this job in the first place!
I... I wanted to be... a chimney sweep!
Leaping from smoke stack to smoke stack,
as they belch out noxious yellow smoke.
And all we'd do is.. sweep and sweep..
On a totally unrelated note, Marry Poppins is hot and I wouldn't mind sweeping.. euhm....
It sounds not so bad (Score:2, Informative)
Distinguishing between a 'true invention' implemented on a computer and an existing invention that just happens to be implemented on a computer for the first time is a big one. It means that Joe Q Random can't patent his chopstick indexing program just because noone's ever indexed their chopsticks with a computer before.
(Provided, of course, someone's come up with a chopstick sorting system at all... Um.
Amendment Voting results - UNOFFICIAL (Score:3, Informative)
Carried - Approved amendments:
12 - 24 - 28 - 36/42/117 - 107 - 69 - 55/97/108 - 38/44/118 -15S - 16 Part 1 and 2 - 100 Part 1
57/99/110 - 70 - 17 - 60 - 102/111 - 72 - 103/119 - 104/120 Part 1 - 76 Part 1 - 71 Part 1
81 - 93 - 94 - 89 -1 - 88 - 31 - 32/112 - 84 Parts 1,2,3 - 114/125 - 34/115 - 85 - 86 Part 1
86 Part 3 -75
Rejected amendments:
29/41/59 - 116/126 - 37/39/43 - 127 - 46 - 48 - 82 - 100 Part 2 - 87 - 76 Part 2 - 106 - 71 Part 2
30 - 123 - 124
Falled ?
105 - 50 - 91/21/90
EU Patents (Score:2, Insightful)
what now? (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, from the french article, it appears that any program which simply copies a procedure that can be done by hand cannot be patented in the EU.
The loop hole, as far as I understand it, is that to be patentable, a program must show a significant technical innovation (go figure what significant means). More precisely, this is phrased in the negative: A program which merely allows a computer to do something is not patentable.
So if we write a program, and can prove that it merely performs a task by computer, which could be done by hand, it can't be patentable. So for example xcalc is not patentable in the EU.
There's got to be other loop holes like that. Why doesn't the Free Software Foundation develop a knowledge base specifically containing recipes for exploiting loop holes in patent legislation? I could be writing a program, and when it's finished, I could browse that knowledge base for tips on how to argue that what my program does could be done by a couple of trained people with a stack of papers and lots of pencils.
Story is complete misinformation (Score:5, Informative)
In general, pretty much all important amendments to the articles were incorporated. There is a lot of patch-up work to do and in its current form, the directive is a complete mess because of this, but the basic line has been completely turned around.
Yesterday, Commissioner Bolkestein was still complaining that we (the opponents) were trying to destroyt the directive and warned against voting against the directive, because it would not fix the current legal uncertainty (software patents are being granted but not enforceable before a court of law as they are illegal). Today, rumors are doing rounds that the Commission is considering retracting the directive, because it was so successfully amended by us.
Finally, I would like to say that our lobbyiong in general has absolutely nothing to do with open source or Free Software. We simply think software patents would be bad for all SME's, independent developers and innovation/society as a whole. Of course, there are a lot of free software in the independent developers category (and especially in the Free Software category, quite a few people concerned with society as well).
Being stamped"linux junkies that want everything to be free/gratis" corner is however the last thing we want (our opponents have tried that, and failed until now since they have no basis that supports their claims), and we having backing from several commercial closed source companies (such as Opera Software).
Re:Story is complete misinformation (Score:3, Interesting)
and i'm pretty much replying just to get this noticed among the +5 modded crap that's just bitching about moving to mars.
(actually slashdot would need a '+20 storybreaker' moderation or something)
Good, this law is much better! (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah!!!!
FFII: "This has become our directive" (Score:5, Interesting)
FFII News -- For Immediate Release -- Please Redistribute
See http://swpat.ffii.org/#news [ffii.org]
Now we will have to see whether the European Commission is committed to "harmonisation and clarification" or only to patent owner interests.
Yesterday's threats uttered by Bolkestein against the European Parliament suggest the latter.
The detailed results are available on our site
http://swpat.ffii.org/news/03/plen0923/ [ffii.org]
It will now be our job to help the European Parliament assert itself against attempts by Bolkestein and patent lawyers wearing the hat of national governments to crush the directive project.
The current text has some remaining contraditions in it, but basically the thrust has been turned around. It has become our directive which we must help the European Parliament to defend. This is also a question of the European Parliament's role in an emerging democratic Europe. On the whole this is very good news for the EU.
--
Hartmut Pilch, FFII & Eurolinux Alliance tel. +49-89-18979927
Protecting Innovation against Patent Inflation http://swpat.ffii.org/
270,000 votes 2000 firms against software patents http://noepatents.org/
Doesn't seem too bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Some points from the article (loosely translated):
1 and 2 seem to prevent most of the abuses of software patents. Taking a normal business practice and adding "over the Internet" (wait, that's old fashoned. Nowadays it's "using XML") would not be accepted.
With number 3, it would be useless to patent file formats or communication protocols (if they even are patentable), since anyone would be permitted to write their own implementation.
(But anyway, IANAL.)
The topic is wrong, patents are NOT APROVED (Score:5, Interesting)
Most or all points under discussion in the latest
There are no software patents, no business methods and no algorithms patentable.
Interoperability between software, even if parts belong to patented devices, is granted.
Again
angel'o'sphere
Hold your fire! (Score:3, Interesting)
I would advise you not to get on to the rocket to mars yet, but wait for a thorough analysis of the laws actually passed.
Just my 0.02,
Alex
I read the French article and.... (Score:3, Insightful)
which means :
Another amendment specifies that the utilisation of a patented technique is not considered law-breaking if it is necessary for communication between different systems or networks.
I don't know if anyone knows what that means but OSS software has nothing to worry about.
Re:Amended? (Score:2)
Takedown of blackboxvoting.org (Score:2, Informative)
Speaking of "to close websites and stiffle free speech", see this [theinquirer.net].
Re:So, now we have a DMCA equivalent (Score:4, Insightful)
1. There is no such thing as contributory patent infringement, I believe.
2. You are guaranteed the right to describe how a patented technology works. In fact, it must be adequately described in the patent claims for someone knowledgeable in the field to implement it. And patent claims are (I understand) freely republishable, as they are a matter of public record.
3. Providing somebody with (eg) software which violates a patent is not (necessarily) an offence, as they are permitted to use the patented technique for personal experimentation purposes.
So, no, I don't think this can be used to close websites and stifle free speech.
Re:Great joke! (Score:2)
I do not want to sound optimistic and I agree things are not looking good at all, but we can still be active and vocal about stuff.
I would like to see what the FFII recommends as action now.
Re:Just goes to show... (Score:2)
Re:Will IBM Defend OSS? (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry, I disagree.
IBM is corporation . That means its primary goal is profit
Linux is, for the moment, a source of profit for IBM, mainly for the hardware and the consulting arms of IBM.
If IBM managers think that Linux has ceased to b
The reason. (Score:5, Informative)
As I understand the issue, it's basically two-fold.
First, software patents are bad because the low threshhold for an idea to be considered novel results in things being patented which are immediately obvious to any expert in the field. And that's not the point of a patent. A patent, ideally, should provide protection for a truly new and original idea so that creative inventors can market their idea and make money licensing their idea during an initial period, while still making the inner workings of their invention publicly known. Then, after this period, everyone can benefit from knowing how this new device works. For example, you could patent the lightbulb when it first comes out, and make a few cents (in todays money) on every lightbulb sold for a controlled number of years, after which the idea becomes public domain.
Software patents typically seem to fail in that respect, and instead are used as a means of controlling and restricting access and interoperability. This does not carry the same benefit for society.
Secondly, software patents are unique in that the software world has such a short generation cycle, and conventional patent durations seem excessive in comparison. A patent on a new car engine design which lasts about 20 years might more appropriately correspond to a software patent which lasts around 5 years. But instead, software patents are often given "equal protection" of the same time length as conventional patents.
I'm sure others have their own reasons for questioning software patents.