Germany to Vote Against Software Patents in the EU 617
YKW writes "According to Ars Technica, Germany has decided to vote against all changes to current European patent laws. In a statement given to demonstrators in Germany, Federal Department of Justice Minsterial Director Elmar Hucko read the riot act to the EC: 'Under no circumstances do we want American procedures in Europe, Hucko vowed with regard to the US patent process. A patent must be "a fair reward for a bona fide invention and not abused as a strategy to bludgeon competitors.' With the largest EU member against software patents and French IT leaders lobbying their goverment to vote against them too, Europe might be saved from software patents. At least for a while. An older Slashdot article about software patents in Europe is here."
Foreign competitors (Score:5, Interesting)
Will Microsoft be able to prevent Windows clones from being sold in the US by US patents, even though they may be legal in Europe?
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Insightful)
Eventually, the EU is going to stomp all over US software firms. This will happen after a few years of unrestricted development.
If this pans out well, I'll be looking for citizenship in the EU in the next few years. What's so great about the US nowadays? We've demonstrated that our voting system has failed, that our leadership hates gays, muslims, and does nothing to protect middle america's jobs while all the fatcats get fatter by outsourcing anything and everything they can because they lost their sense of nationalism over a few dollars.
The way I see it, the US has had leadership without any real vision of tomorrow. This has resulted in a world of nations against it. The repair will require a lot more than a democrat in office, too. It will require people actually caring, and that is not going to happen anytime soon. Hell, look how well 9/11 "brought us together". All it brought together were the straight, old white people out in the boonies, and that's only because they all bought the same stickers, t-shirts, and other random 9/11 merchandise at the local gas station. For the rest of us, all we see is a nation filled with hate and sensless, highly reactionary, law making.
Geeks, get your passports ready.. EU or bust!
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Insightful)
And that vision is that the future should be controlled by big corporations with no mediation from the government or anyone else.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if the Bush administration will apply political pressure on the french and the germans to accept these patents? Charles Krauthammer (another republican editor from US news and world report) once called for parking an US aircraft carrier off the coast of france to intimidate them. It will be interesting to see if something like that happens.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:4, Insightful)
And it certainly wouldn't increase the chance of the EU to do Americas bidding, quite the opposite...
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, we are importing less from the US than we are exporting to the US. So it's quite the opposite.
Sebastian
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Insightful)
Do I buy an american products when i buy IBM or Coca cola ? The answer is far from simple when you think about it.
Don't forget that for examples Coca Cola exports very little. They use local factories to produce the soft drink. Same thing for IBM, they have factories all over Europe.
So when you buy an american product, you are not just giving money to the US, but also to those european countries who host those factories.
Nothing is as simple as black and white.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Insightful)
And are apparently unaware that France alone has nuclear weaponry capable of doing serious catastrophic damage to the USA?
I don't know where the US gets its absurd image of France, but France is a large first-world nuclear power with global reach.
The US parking an aircraft carrier off France wouldn't intimidate them particularly. Not when the French could take out washington tomorrow.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:4, Interesting)
My goodness. That'd certainly be a sight worth seeing! Brief, but worth seeing.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Insightful)
My goodness. That'd certainly be a sight worth seeing! Brief, but worth seeing.
Brief? Sorry, no. I'm not one of those knee-jerk "America will kick your ass!" type of Americans but... no. And to the moderators, no it's not insightful. Interesting? Yes.
Your link mentions that it managed to heavily damage a frigate. There's a world of difference between a frigate and an aircraft carrier. From my tour of duty on submarines I can tell you that a frigate of that sort is considered to be a one-torpedo target; one torpedo will literally crack a frigate right in half. Battleships and aircraft carriers nominally need at least 2-3. And that's assuming you even get in range: 65 km? ROFLMAO.
An aircraft carrier is never alone. It is almost always accompanied by at least 2 attack subs and several surface ships ranging 150+ km. around the carrier. No surface ship is getting within even 200 km. of that carrier let alone 65 km. And submarines wouldn't have an easy time of it either. At best it would be a suicide mission (since once they fire, they'll have 2 fast-attacks, a swarm of P-3's, and an ASW cruiser on their ass) and they'd be likely to cause more damage if they simply use their torpedos, or better yet ram it at full speed.
Or, as other posters have pointed out, use nukes. A tomahawk [wikipedia.org] with a tactical nuke and its 1100 km. range would do the trick, assuming the French have them
Don't get caught up with this idea that just because the U.S. is behaving like a bunch of idiots in Iraq, and that guerilla tactics work against a modern army when it's the occupying force among an increasingly hostile populace that that translates to the ocean. Since the break-up of the USSR there is no one (or not even everyone together) who can challenge the U.S. on the seas. Period. That's why the Navy has turned into nothing more than a troop and munitions delivery service: A victim of its own success.
-chris
Doesn't matter at all. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Interesting)
If the USA applies pressure on France it will be certain that they vote the other way.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Informative)
once called for parking an US aircraft carrier off the coast of france to intimidate them.
It would be funny indeed, esp. when they send their Charles de Gaulle [defense.gouv.fr] carrier in vicinity of NYC.
Just in case you've forgot, France is a nuclear power too. They'll be the last to be intimidated by such bullying.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether one is for or against the policy of Iraq, the lack of disclosure from this administration is baffling. Any argument one can use against the Clinton administration (lack of disclosure, too much rhetoric) can be multiplied 10x with this administration.
But more to the point...Europe's economy is proving powerful (and increasingly united) against US policy, and we can either oblige their requests or become victim of their policies. We can force Microsoft to start operating fairly or ignore their practices until their business will be fined into financial hell in Europe and some German company takes over the desktop share (with a Linux/FreeBSD distro).
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Insightful)
Look at the top 100 "donators" [opensecrets.org] for the period 1998-2004. Just the top 100 have bribed our politicians with $1,156,273,938! You can see why in our "represented" democracy, the average American is not represented. With billions USD going around in bribes, it is hard for even legit politicans to do thier jobs.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Troll)
Mod the Parent UP!
Campaign Finance Reform should come in the following solutions.
Only Real Persons who are "Qualified Electors" in the district of an election should be allowed to give to campaigns.
All Contrabutions of any size should be disclosed.
Citizens should be allowed to bring charges for violations and have them prosecuted.
Heavy fines for those giving and those knowingly receiving violations should occur. If in office, IMMEDIATE REMOVAL should also apply and the prosecution here should be total
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:5, Interesting)
We've demonstrated that our voting system has failed
No, you've demonstrated that Florida's electoral system has failed. Thanks to the electoral college, Florida can choose to select their representatives however the hell they want. Regardless how much you whine about it, approximately 50% of voters voted for Bush. It's not like he won with 10% of the vote and a military coup. Gore might have had the popular vote, but the electoral college is there for a reason; whether that reason is valid, of course, is up for debate.
that our leadership hates gays
Look, I'm not saying that Bush is right to attempt to amend the constitution, but not allowing gays to vote is not necessarily hatred. Some would argue that marriage is designed solely for procreation, and includes certain incentives to facilitate that. Personally, I don't see marriage as having anything to do with love (certainly love can exist outside marriage); why do people need the state to acknowledge their love for each other?
that our leadership hates
Half the time people insinuate that Bush is in bed with the Saudis (see Fahrenheit 911) and the other half of the time they insinuate that he hates the Muslims. If your leadership really hated Muslims, why would they attempt to stabilise the middle east. I'm sure you think that the Iraqi war is all about oil, and to some it probably is; however, if the administration really hated Muslims, why would they have waged the most humane war in modern history? Furthermore, if they hated Muslims so much, why don't they just invest a whole lot of money in alternative energy sources? Imagine what would happen to the OPEC countries if the US stopped buying their oil...
and does nothing to protect middle america's jobs while all the fatcats get fatter by outsourcing anything and everything they can because they lost their sense of nationalism over a few dollars.
So, now we're accusing Bush of not being nationalist enough? Outsourcing is not a clear cut issue. I'm not saying that I support it, but there are viable arguments on both sides of the fence. If you really wanted to stop outsourcing, you should stop buying items that where produced through outsourcing.
Look, I'm tired of all the anti-American sentiment. As an European, I'd like to point out that Europe and the whole world would have been a lot more fucked up if it wasn't for the Americans. If you want to point out some dubious action undertaken by the US during the cold war, I'd like to point out (as someone who used to live very close to the Soviets) that had the US not fought the Cold war, the world would have been far worse off. Anyways, the people really responsible for the Cold War were those who were so terrified of the US being the only superpower, that they deemed it fit to give the Soviet Union the nuke, but that's for another post.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Insightful)
Three words: Making his point. (Score:5, Insightful)
Free unfettered speech. The kind that will offend my neighbor, my government, anyway.
See, America has this great freedom in theory (First Amendment etc.) but in practice you had McCarthyism, trying to choke anti-war movement regarding Vietnam and the latest anti-terrorist/muslim/arab selfcensorship.
Ever noticed the uproar over a few coffins? Imagine showing their bloody bullet-ridden corpses lying in Iraq. Or how many think the tortured Iraqis "deserved what they got" in the US prisons?
The only place where we're more conservative than the US is when it comes to racism, which I think is your error in judgement, not ours. Think of it as class action libel/slander, which isn't legal neither here nor there.
We may not have that many great quotes, being spread over dozens of constitutions, some that say little about it at all. But I think you will find your freedom of speech is greater than in the US, whether you want to talk about drugs, abortion, religion, nudity, pornography, war or pretty much any other controversial topic.
Kjella
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Troll)
I am not being trite when I say read the US Bill of Rights. This is not to say that the EU is not substantially improved from the past, nor to disrespect their current condition. It is also not ignorant of the Domestic Disregard given to the Bill of Rights.
To be painfully accurate there are some areas the EU may actually be paving the way and US Citizens should not be to arrogant. However; the USA has substantial advantages in the Ownership of Property, rights to political dissent and the rights to defen
Political culture (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Informative)
The only entities in USA that have significantly better rights of ownership are corporations -- they are not considered first-class entities (as citizens are) in most european countries. But as to "defend ones rights", I assume you refer to gun ownership. Most europeans would consider these dubious "rights" indeed; not something that add to general well-being, or ov
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Insightful)
Considering the general subject here is software patents, are you are you reffering to Ownership (??capitalized??) of "Intellectual Property"?
Yeah, the US has absolutely mindboggling "advantages" in the Ownership of Intellectual Property. The US issues patents on software, granting Ownership of math. (My) Dumbass government.
-
bullshit - there is already a patent law in europe (Score:3, Informative)
The current law is more like an analogy to the copyright of written books. So it is currently NOT possible to simply copy a software programm, and it is NOT possibly to infringe a patented mechanism!
Remember that one of the most important patents - the mpeg layer 3 better known as mp3 - is from Germany, from the Frauenhofer Institute. And they were already able to protect their discovery with an european patent.
So all people who compare europe
Re:bullshit - there is already a patent law in eur (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with these European software patents is that they are currently in general not enforceable in a court. The reason is that the European Patent Convention forbids software patents. The European Patent Office is an independent institution however, which gets its funding from granting patents, so it creatively reinterpreted that convention. That does not change the law nor the opinion of the courts, however (except for the UK).
You're right however that we have strong copyright laws, and that simply copying other people's code is not allowed (unless they agree, like in case of GPL'd code), not even if it's just a few lines.
Re:Foreign competitors (Score:3, Funny)
Please mod parent down offtopic. This is not the right place for KDE bashing.
First Post! (Score:5, Insightful)
If the WIPO can get a standard software patent system across both sides (US and Euro), preferrably like the Europeans, we might not be reading Slashdot headlines every morning that read "Apple Patents the English Language!", etc. The US Patent system is dated, and needs change, especially when such patents can be made and there is such a high backlog of patents...Time shall tell, but this may be the first step in getting software/IP patents sorted out
Re:First Post! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:First Post! (Score:4, Insightful)
You Sir, are a despicable bottomfeeding greedmonkey who believes that if he cannot get ahead of everybody else in something, then that something is communist, evil and a work of Satan. If you like the US style medical system so greatly, do not let the door hit on your way down South.
Also for your information, Canada has many research facilities and I am personally involved with companies manufacturing unique pharmaceutical products which are being exported to the USA. There is great profit to be made since the drugs sell at insane prices down there. So much for looting. The only one who wants to loot things here is you. You, in your abysmal arrogance, believe that you are special and will be forever able to earn enough income to guarantee yourself superior medical care. All of it possible only because generations of Canadians through their common effort have built a place for you to piss about in. Yet you, like any right-wing asshole out there, will certainly take exclusive credit for everything good that happens to you claiming that its a result of your hard work. That is why you consider capitalism a religion. Never you mind that Canada is as capitalist as it is reasonable to be. The purpose of the entire excercise is to make life for all Canadians better and not just to make a few whiney jerks into millionaires at the expense of everybody else.
Well, my wish for you is that you go to the USA, denounce Canadian citizenship (because we are the communist paradise), get in an accident, be unable to work and your medical costs exceed 10 times your insurance coverage. I hear dying of a curable illness because you cannot afford the cure sucks. Have fun. That is what you deserve.
Re:private systems are not always the best solutio (Score:3, Insightful)
Fairly obvious really, considering that private companies have as their primary objective the extraction of the largest possible profit margin.
How that goal leads to healthy people I simply don't know!
Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
People of the world. Get your shit together.
Do not buy american products.
Do not go to american movies.
Do not listen to american music.
Do not wear american clothing.
People in the US laugh at you every time they see a protestor wearing a pepsi shirt or eating a mcdonalds.
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:4, Insightful)
I think this is the perfect picture showing the "You are either with us or against us","The world hates us"-attitude
Maybe they fail to remember that, very likely, the very same people demonstrating went to American embassies to express their condolences.
Maybe those people fail to realise that those protestors are against a certain administration representing a certain policy.
Maybe they are plain too dumb to understand that those demonstrators simply want to demonstrate their dissatifaction with the US administration policies but don't want the US economy to go down into a slump and see them be unemployed.
And what would the reaction of those American people be when the world would boycott their products? Wouldn't it even enstrengthen the "World hates us"-feeling?
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't the US have a hugedforeign trade deficit? I.e. they actually import much more than they export? So in a sense you could say that the rest of the world already did.
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
In fact that's been the case for most of my life, I think. However, I have a personal theory that the U.S. exports something a bit more ephemeral than products:
Our appetites and whims. Yes, you read that right. I truly think that the immense *hunger* of the U.S. consumer (pun intended) translates into a power over the world market whic
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
The world protests American foreign policies. If they were to boycott American Everything, it would be much easier to call them Anti-American. They're not Anti-American. They love the American Way of Life, American Freedom and everything. They just wished the US would live it's own dream, instead of participating in the historic experiment "Why Rome coll
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:3, Informative)
If
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
EU GDP: 11.50 trillion Pop: 454,900,000
US GDP: 10.40 trillion Pop: 290,343,000
Sure a trillion more is a lot in absolute terms, but it's only 10%.
Anyways in this case it might be more relavant to define a "software GDP," and for now I think the US would be #1 in that dept.
If the EU does resist software patents, it should be interesting to watch: will monetizing every little idea create more value for US companies and keep them in the lead, or will the increased freedom in the EU lead to products that integrate all the best features, leading to EU dominance? And does Microsoft even care, since they can easily buy any company with patents they want? Stay tuned...
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
10 new countries joined the EU on May 1. I remember hearing on the news back then that this made the EU economy bigger than that of the USA. I think your numbers are pre-expansion.
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Or if you like $7.1 Trillion.
http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdpenny.ht
Dunno what the EU National debt is but I don't think we run a $500 Billion trade deficit and the Euro isn't a reserve currency and you can't buy oil directly with Euros (yet).
Once you see the Euro as a reserve and oil currency you can kiss the US economy goodbye.
All that American debt testifies to the USA's free ticket to creating dollars out of thin air. As long as they aren't spent in the USA they can effectively pay interest in dollars on the dollars it borrows from Asia, Russia, Europe, China and the Middle East.
Once the rest of the world wakes up and starts trying to get out of the dollar for whatever reason (oil peak, war, terror attacks), allllll that cash will flow back to the USA and cause hyperinflation.
Yes, the USA is heading for complete financial collapse taking most of the world with it leaving the EU to emerge as the dominant economic world power.
If you look at history currency systems have only ever lasted about 30 years so we are long overdue for a complete crash since the USA stopped backing the dollar with gold in the 1970s.
It's been a fun last 50 years but the party is almost over !
Oh yeah and getting back to the topic, no software patents in Europe could be an incentive for companies to base in Europe only furtherering the USA's economic decline.
"Software GDP" (Score:3, Insightful)
Software is not a tangible product and it has zero value. Only the service of producing and maintaining it has value. The EU is on the verge of acknowledging this; apparently, Americans are the only ones stupid enough to be duped by companies "monetizing every little idea," as you so succinctly put it.
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
The mysterious process that would cause the US economy to collapse is the change in exchange rates. While US dollars are the reserve currency in which oil is traded, all nations need to ensure that they have a fistful of dollars in reserve with which they can buy oil. This means that the US treasury can print and spend dollars and can get goods in return while being confident that most of these dollars are safely tied up in foreign national banks and will not be "cashed in" against the US reserves. In effect the US has literally been able to print money since the gold standard was abolished.
If Euros become the new reserve currency, all of a sudden there will be a whole lot of dollars used to pay off any trade balances with the US. Instead of getting goods in return for paper, the US will start to get paper in return for goods. The final effect will be massive inflation in the US and a plummeting dollar on the international exchange markets.
If you want a slightly more coherent and well thought out explanation of this, I suggest you read Will Hutton's The state we're in [amazon.co.uk].
Re:Hm, interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
If Europe blocks the new patent
Re:Doesn't Europe have software patents already? (Score:3, Informative)
Article 52(1) and (2) of the European Patent Convention [european-p...office.org]:
A good first step (Score:5, Interesting)
The entities putting pressure on the French govt. include the head of MandrakeSoft, who has pretty heavy pull over in France. In fact, IIRC, a lot of French govt. agencies use Mandrake Linux.
Italy too? (Score:5, Informative)
Italian Minister for Technological Innovation [innovazione.gov.it], that is not entitled to vote ( DOH! ), has strongly recommended [repubblica.it] his collegues partecipating to vote against as well
strategy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:strategy (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:strategy (Score:3, Funny)
Patents work. (Score:5, Insightful)
Patent This (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Patents work. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Patents work. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Patents work. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Patents work. (Score:5, Interesting)
Nonetheless, requiring fabrication is a burden that places most patents in a class that only wealthy businesses can pursue.
Finding a private backer isn't all that easy, especially when you can't reveal your invention because you haven't patented it. Saving money can either take time or be beyond the realm of possibility. Patents were made for the small man, NOT for the mega-corporation. That's changed significantly in the years between.
My great grandfather, in his lifetime, twice invented something that could revolutionize the automotive industry. The first time, he could not find a private backer, nor would his wife let him put their house at risk to get the money to patent it himself. He took a gamble on the good will of the men in Detroit, and lost. Terribly. His invention was stolen.
The second time he came up with something far more amazing. This time, he was able to get the money to pursue patenting it. He couldn't get a patent, though, because his prototype was deemed inadequate. He fully intended to pursue marketing it to a company which could make use of it, but he didn't, because he couldn't protect it.
I've personally designed several things that could be quite impactful, but I'm unable to pursue marketing them to companies that could make use of them because I lack the very sophisticated and expensive resources necessary to begin down the path required by the present system. Though I prefer ideas be in the public domain, I know that, generally speaking, to bring an invention or improvement to a wide market so that it will be useful, it must be protected by a patent so a company will consider using it. What can I do? Nothing, presently. It's really killed my passion for invention.
Genuine innovation, and the pursuit of marketing that innovation, is indeed possible without the resources for fabrication. It's happened a lot over the years, but most people aren't able to do anything with it, because the present system is classist.
Re:Patents work. (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I hate to say it, but that was his mistake. Perhaps he should have gotten some advice from a lawyer or a businessman first. As another poster alluded, your great grandfather should have had a contract written up which would have prevented the automotive companies from stealing his idea (ie, allowing him to retain rights to any resultant patents). If it was as revolutionary as you claim, I'm sure
Re:Patents work. (Score:3, Interesting)
There is no point in allowing people to just patent an idea without any prototype. What would stop a person or groups of people from just thinking up all kinds of crap all day long and patenting everthing then can? That person or persons are bound to come up with some ideas that will be p
Re:Patents work. (Score:4, Informative)
I thought that was called "copyright". The whole idea with patents is to monopolize ideas, not specific products which is copyright's domain.
Re:Patents work. (Score:5, Insightful)
For software (aswell for music and movies, btw), however, copyright law already regulates ownership. Allowing patents on software is like allowing patents on sequences of tunes or on sequences of images. It's absurd.
With copyright governing in the software world, you can be sure that whatever you write yourself from scratch is yours. With Patents allowed you may infringe on existing patents without your knowledge. That is the big difference.
I don't know our friends in the music industry would react if patents on sequences of tunes or images would suddenly be allowed.
When it's all said and done... (Score:3)
Re:When it's all said and done... (Score:4, Insightful)
I've said this before here. What is going to happen when the huge backlog of trivial and unworthy patents are invalidated en masse? The stupid companies that spent money on them are going to lose them all outright. That would add up to billions of asset capital wiped off in an instant.
These big corporations may feel smug and clever at grabbing patents on swinging sideways and one click whatever, but who will be laughing when they are told they are worth nothing and the money has gone. Not the shareholders that's for sure.
Shareholders should act against companies making weak IP claims because they are just flushing money down the pan for the future.
If you think that Europe is not 'cooperating' with the (ridiculous) American way of thinking about these things wait until you hear what the rest of the world thinks about it. You think the Indians and Chinese are going to repect twisted patents?
Think again.
Amen (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Amen (Score:3, Insightful)
Because it is worth several billion dollars to have a patent (monopoly) on it.
Re:Amen (Score:4, Insightful)
Somethings got to give here. I wish I knew what it would be.
Well (Score:2, Insightful)
The WIPO as an agency of the UN, can aim to standardise patent laws worldwide but of course, international law isn't binding and Germany has all the right in the world to choose not to recognise law outside of their domestic jurisdiction.
Ultimately, if Germany doesn'
WIPO/TRIPS actually FORBID software patents! (Score:5, Informative)
First of all, as member of the EU, Germany has to comply with EU directives that are passed. Next, WIPO does not only not require software patents, it even forbids them (just like TRIPS).
The excuse used by software patent proponents regarding TRIPs, is article 27:
This text however explicitly uses terms which are defined nowhere else in the treaty (like "invention", "field of technology" and "inventive step"), so that signing members can define these terms themselves in such a way that they fit best in their existing laws.
According to article 52 of the the European Patent Convention, a computer program can never constitute an invention. And in the Parliament proposal of the directive, "field of technology" is defined in such a way that computer programs, maths, business methods etc do cannot belong to one (even if they're executed on a computer).
And on top of that, there's articles 7 TRIPs which is interpreted by the WTO as that the measures as implemented must ...
Most evidence points to the contrary as far as software patents are concerned.
So TRIPs does not require software patents, how does it forbid them?
Article 10 of the TRIPs treaty states:
As opposed to what a first reading would suggest, namely that this simply means that copyright protection must be available for computer programs, this article goes further. The WTO states on its website [wto.org] regarding article 10.1:
Since patent protection is unavailable for literary works, it can't be available for computer programs either according to TRIPs. Proponents of software patents often counter this using their interpretation of "computer program as such", which turns "computer programs with a further technical effect" into "computer-implemented inventions", which in turn would supposedly not be affected by this exclusion.
This interpretation is however invalid due to article 4 of the EU Software Copyright directive from 1991. This article states that a computer program as literary work includes the following (emphasis mine):
The WIPO Copyright Treaty also contains applicable clauses (article 10 [wipo.int]):
I also wonder... (Score:3, Interesting)
Who wins there? I would think local law would trump any treaties, but am I wrong?
Re:I also wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I also wonder... (Score:5, Informative)
With copyright, (the Berne convention) once it's written, it's automatically copyrighted in all Berne nations (which is most of them). Registering is still a good idea if you're expecting someone else to claim ownership on the same or very similar work. Licensing said works though, still has to be done via national bodies, which is one reason itunes hasn't come to europe yet.
With patents, you need to register in every country you want patent protection in. The patent rules are not universal, and at least between the EU countries and the US, there's no treaty recognising each others patents. However, I believe it is possible to use patents from other nations to demonstrate prior art, and if you have a patent in one country, it can speed up the prior art examination in another.
As far as software goes, there is a specific exemption in EU patent law that disallows pure software patents. This is what the big companies are lobbying to remove, under the guise of 'tidying up' the law. This is because the EPO has been granting 'computer implemented inventions' on the basis that if it needs hardware to run, or is part of a hardware system, the whole thing can be patented. Of course, these patents are of very questionable legitimacy, so the patent holders have not been sueing for infringement in europe as the end result would probably be they'd lose the patent.
If they can change the law to legitimise their current patents though, and allow more, big US patent holders will be able to shut down large swathes of the EU software development houses (the EU has a huge number of small and medium companies, rather than the few big ones in the US, thus vulnerable to long winded patent ligitation)
Note, the European Patent Office allows you to register your patent with them, and ask for it to be as valid in as many of the EPC signing nations as you want to pay for. The EPC is a patent convention, harmonising patent law between the signing nations, which includes some nations outside the EU itself. Definitely not the US tho!
And my own position; patents on maths, ideas or business methods should remain illegal. We already have a method for protecting specific implementations of inventions in software, it's called copyright. Patents should be the process of protecting specific physical inventions, i.e. a specific mousetrap spring design, not the idea of 'a device that traps mammals'. Imagine if people started patenting plot ideas in novels or TV shows!
heh (Score:4, Funny)
"OH Bush likes it? Dirty Texans, we shall do the opposite."
Re:heh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:heh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:heh (Score:3, Interesting)
The new countries will now make a hard a time! Just think what the unionation of germany ment for west germany. They still aren't ove
I guess I shouldn't get my hopes up (Score:3, Insightful)
I fully expect the United States to exert effort at the request of $LARGE_COMPANY on Germany to "harmonize" with US law.
Then when/if US intellectual property law comes up for debate, the US will say "we can't have different laws than Europe, we must harmonize!"
Who knows.. I'm not optimistic.
Re:I guess I shouldn't get my hopes up (Score:5, Insightful)
So the war in iraq isn't *just* sapping millions of dollars a day from the US, you are also losing prestige. Furthermore, your prestige is also going to take a *huge* blow if you pull out of iraq and let it become a hellhole/puppetdemocracy/iran2/whatever. People will say, "look that 'superpower' can't even conquer a tiny country properly - we have nothing to fear".
So there are interesting days ahead, I for one used to believe in america as an ideal - dislike most of the people yes, but the ideal was there. You were my kin, I would have considered dying defending your shores were you under mortal threat (just as the french fought by you at your birth)... but now, I am indifferent, because not only do I dislike most americans now, but I think the american ideal has changed drastically. It is not something worth defending. Your legislators have wiped their asses on the constitution so many times you cannot read the print for the shit. And your populance has stood by and let this happen.
Now the american ideal is the american cautionary tale for how not to let your democracy fail. Some will learn from it, others will not. Life will continue.
America has left a mark on history, and it is still up for grabs as to what that mark exactly is. But right now, it's looking like a stain.
Dear America, (Score:3, Insightful)
Sincerly,
The rest of the world.
Dear Rest of the World (Score:4, Funny)
Europe and USA (Score:3, Interesting)
Economic Advantage (Score:4, Insightful)
Think on it: Within the EU software ideas will run wild, everyone having access to nuance inventions in their software, whilst over here in the US you won't be allowed to measure the length of a click, run an application within another, nor make an entire window transparent without getting permission from someone else (possibly paying for it).
I wonder how long it will be before free Elvis albums won't be the only product of Europe States-side corporations will try to block.
--
Up through college in the US, everything else anywhere else.
[meta] time for an EU icon? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just a suggestion: might it not be wise to create a topic and icon for matters pertaining to EU law, in parallel to the Stars and Stripes icon often seen on YRO stories pertaining to US law? I for one am finding the many "earlier Slashdot stories" referenced in the text of every EU software patent story one reads nowadays to be a tedious method of threading.
And before I get modded down by the Europe bashers, let me disclose that I'm an American who finds it edifying to keep up with events across the pond, and have no interest in the "Is Slashdot too Americentric" debate.
Pretty easy (Score:4, Insightful)
If the german government choses to not vote in favor of this, then only because they're sure their vote is not needed in order to have this passed.
Elections for european parliament are coming up. That's why. Don't be fooled for one minute by the german government: they voted against the iraq war even though they probably wanted it - to win elections. They don't critize the US for what happened in iraq recently, but are killing themselves to tell everyone how aweful the beheading of one US citizen was - to get a permanent seat in the UN security council.
Don't trust them. They WANT this law. They fought for it for years. They're just opportunistic, that's all.
Re:Pretty easy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pretty easy (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes. And, I mean, everybody knows that software patents is a hotly debated topic where the average german/european voter is emotionally very attached to, right? Right.
they voted against the iraq war even though they probably wanted it - to win elections.
I don't have any reason to believe that the german government really wanted the war. And knowing the political history of the current ruling parties in Germany, doubly so.
Belgium will vote against as well! (Score:3, Informative)
Ok, so that's a small country, but still.. there is some political momentum to vote against. If we can convince one mor member state to vote against, the vote will be dismissed.
mod me Un-insightful (Score:3, Insightful)
(With respect to patent-abuse, anything can and will be abused. The question is always whether such negative side-effects can be suppressed enough to net a clear benefit.)
I assume /. has addressed these questions earlier, but I couldn't find succinct answers...
Re:Meanwhile, in France... (Score:5, Insightful)
Whereas you americans.... The french helped you fight us off, the french bled and died fighting for your freedom. That makes any jibe by an american toward them (ala the republicans not long ago) a spew of filth.
Disgrace. The french not supporting (i.e. verbal) your quite questionable war equates to treachery? How about remembering the guys who died for you, and died for an ideal.
fuck you, you stinking fucks. this is where anti-americanism stems from. right here, from your stinking ignorance and disrespect.
Re:Meanwhile, in France... (Score:3, Informative)
The U.S. didn't enter into that war until 1941.
Until the end 1943 the official U.S. policy was to appease the Vichy German puppet regime.
It was only Churchill that managed to get the U.S. to reluctantly support the free French.
WW2 and WW1 (Score:3, Interesting)
Now let us see another fact : WW2. US Also ONLY came into the war when Pearl Harbour occured , a FUL
I think it's the double standards (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the main reason is: you set a lot of rules, then refuse to follow them yourself.
Examples: nuclear weapons pact, bioweapons pacts, chemical weapons pacts. You use your power position in the UN wrongly. You request following the Geneva treaty for people who have been imprisoned by your enemies, yet you set up concentration camps to Guantanamo and beat people to death in the Iraqi prison you control. Then you cry foul when a citizen is dramatically killed (Berg). And don't even think all of this started with 9/11. No, no.. it had been going on for a longer time. You have to go back to the beginning of the previous century to see all the details and find the reasons.
Whenever something happens to you, you cry foul, although there's a good chance you have already done something similar to some other country.
I think such double standards are the main reason of dislike towards USA. Using the power position to set rules for other, and then ruthlessly exploiting and ignoring them.
And remember, most people hate the country, and what it represents, and especially the government, but have no quarrels with the ordinary citizen.
I am posting this anonymously because it will draw a lot of flak from people who do not read this post with thought and consider this a flamebait. It's not. You can think yourself if the opinions in this post are correct or not and could this be the answer to your question.
Disgraceful (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes. And quite rightly so. A beheading is not a 'crying foul' matter, nor is it an excuse to score anti-US points on a tech bulletin board (provided to you, of course, by the people you seem to hate so much, the Americans). Total revulsion is surely the only acceptable reaction - two wrongs don't make a right. Accordingly, I have to regard your cheap shot as despicably low.
I'm not American and am drastically against many recent changes in the US, but please - a sense of perspective. I have many American friends, I have even more American friendly acquaintences (online forums, work etc). - it is not an evil nation. It shouts about itself rather too much and its current leadership are, at least in my opinion, somewhere between here and Alpha Centauri in terms of their grasp on reality but you're forgetting the people themselves. They'll correct it eventually, don't worry.
Cheers,
Ian (British)
Re:Doesn't anybody love us anymore? (Score:4, Insightful)
"Under no circumstances do we want to repeat the mistakes the Americans made with their procedures, in Europe."
Saying the Americans got something wrong is not being anti-American, you will notice that US gun-control laws are virtually unique in the world and that has nothing to do with Iraq.
Don't panic, or at least don't be overly sensitive on an issue like this.
Re:Wakeup Call (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Wakeup Call (Score:5, Informative)
Quoting:
Last Wednesday Elmar Hucko, head of a government department in the Ministry of Justice, announced at an event in Berlin that the Federal Government would vote against the controversial software patent directive of the Council of Ministers of the European Union
Re:EU vs Great Britain or US? (Score:3, Informative)
Both are big pushers. The UK Patent Office inside the EU, the US as their backup. If we can get the decision postponed on Tuesday, it's possible that we could finally start making things change for the good in the UK as well. Some people are finally getting past the UKPTO civil servants and through to the politicians themselves.
Re:Ireland is to vote against it too (Score:3, Insightful)
Nevertheless, actions like that can create press attention and that is very important. Politicians must realise this is an issue "the people
Re:one more step... (Score:3, Insightful)
Such a region is failing to pass the US.
Our economy is booming. They are laggards.
We are actively debating freedoms and liberties, with the Patriot Act and the backlash against it; there is little resistance against the onslaught of PC speech codes.
We make the barriers to business small, i.e. some states makes it very easy.
It only is getting harder in the EU where, where regulators are having an unopposed field day.
So, in terms of advancing technology, quality of life, wealth