NoSoftwarePatents.com Industry Campaign Launches 65
Halo1 writes "The NoSoftwarePatents.com campaign has officially launched today. It has industry support from 1&1, Red Hat and MySQL AB. The website is already available in 12 EU languages (more to be added soon), and contains a ton of information about the dangers of software patents, including the myths that surround them. Hopefully, more large companies will join this campaign in the future."
Main Page (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Main Page (Score:3, Funny)
The History of Software Patents (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.bitlaw.com/software-patent/history.html
It has some great information hope you enjoy it and find it to be a help in supporting the need for software patents
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
Hopefully the Supreme Court today realizes the ramafications of the decision they rendered over twenty years ago. Here's an excerpt of the courts opinion:
Although their process employs a well-known mathematical equation, they
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
Huh? I don't think you're understanding the history.
The court's ruling was that patent claims for algorithms could not be categorically rejected as non-statutory subject matter - i.e., as non-patentable inventions. In addition to all of the other tests of patentability (novelty, utility, non-obviousness, etc.), the algorithm also had to have at lea
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
supporting the need for software patents
Buahahaha. I don't think there is anything in there supporting software patents. It merely documents how the 5 member majority on the Supreme Court screwed up in Diamond v Diehr when they ordered the US patent office to issue an invalid patent. The entire case was about the patent office rejecting it as invalid.
If you actually read Diamond v Diehr, the 5 member majority supporting such a patent discussed at grea
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
If either form of protection should get canned, it's copyright. A functional set of instructions, or a work of art - which better describes software? In which context is it overwhelmingly applied?
I'll give you two other reasons for software patents over software copyright:
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
So long as software patents exist I would not oppose you if you want to fight for exempting software from copyright. It's a dumb idea, it would be seriously broken, but it would be an improvement and less broken than the US's current broken double coverage.
which would you, as its inventor
Since when have mathemetians and programmers called themselves "inventors"? As a programmer I am a software author. Every programmer I know of considers t
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
I'll take that compromise. Double coverage is nothing but a fencepost perch.
Since when have mathemetians and programmers called themselves "inventors"?
I doubt that the creators of engineering schematics would prefer the term "inventor" to "author." Nevertheless, a schematic is a strictly functional document - certainly some aesthetic concepts might be taken into account, but its primar
Re: The History of Software Patents (Score:2)
Trolls? TROLLS! (Score:4, Funny)
As an occasional troll ( Think of it as a hobby ), I am insulted. >:(
Re:Money (Score:3, Interesting)
It's only far-fetched for IP-attorneys that don't think that the economy [typepad.com] should be taken into account [typepad.com] when deciding about patent policy.
Most software patents are not owned by software developers, but by hardware developers (they got patents in the past for their hardware, so they simply continue that tradition). Anyway, several la
Re:Money (Score:1)
The economy is exactly why software patents should exist. Not all large companies may favor software patents (particularly those who have not invested heavily in IP protection); but lots of money has gone into developing software *because* of software patents. It is good for startups too, who can protect an idea and attract capital from investors. Investors like property r
Re:Money (Score:2)
Then why do you think those IP-lawyer organisations state that you should not take into account the economy? It's quite simple: because software patents do not help the economy and innovation at all [ugent.be].
There is a world of a difference between the catch-all "IP protection" and software patents. Particularly companies who use ot
Re:Money (Score:1)
Respectfully, I am not sure what organizations you are referring to. It sounds strange, since the whole concept of IP is based on economic incentive.
'but lots of money has gone into developing software *because* of software patents. '
Prove it. Almost all studies I've seen claim that the incentives to innovate in software is competition
Actually, I was talking about investment incentive, not ince
Re:Money (Score:3, Insightful)
I posted links in my original reply to you. For clarity's sake:
That's the theory, yes. In practice, not all types of IP are able to meet that goal. There is no economic law that says "more and stronger exclusion rights per definition result in a healthier economy". And there's al
Re:Money (Score:2, Insightful)
AIPLA believes that Congress, and not the PTO or the courts, is the proper authority to consider economic theory and competition policy-oriented principles. For the reasons discussed below, the PTO and the courts should not inject these theories a
Re:Money (Score:2)
I initially cited them while saying "It [having no software patents]'s only far-fetched for IP-attorneys that don't think that the economy [typepad.com] should be taken into account [typepad.com] when deciding about patent policy." Afterwards, I indeed inferred the above in your reply.
Re:Money (Score:2)
Unfortunately, that patent is quite realistic (a
Re:Money (Score:2)
Re:Money (Score:2)
Correct. But that is today. Software development in twenty years will likely look very different.
Consider: None of these arguments is, well, novel - they have thirty years of dust on them. They were all made regarding biotech, too. Thirty years ago, the instigators of the uproar over biotech patents said that:
Re:Money (Score:2)
Will it? It doesn't look that different today than it did 20 years ago. There are some new concepts (OOP, AOP, etc), we have RAD's, but in the end it's still programmers and designers thinking of new algorithms, debugging stuff, and integrating everything into a stable and usable whole.
question Re:Money (Score:2)
Go Software Patents! (Score:4, Funny)
+ is
- is
* is
/ is 1.00$ per use
mod() is 10$ per use
sqrt() is
We acknologe that these mathematics are the only ones you can use, and all derivatibe works are subject to this cost times amount of operations done. EG: Limits are infinite +, so you are incessantly in the hole.... (enter lawyer BS)
Re:Go Software Patents! (Score:2)
+ is
- is
* is
/ is 1.00$ per use
mod() is 10$ per use
sqrt() is
Now I'm boned, I keep writing infinite loops...
Re:Go Software Patents! (Score:1)
Re:Go Software Patents! (Score:1)
Cheap Ass Mod Operation... (Score:2, Funny)
+ is .0002$ per use .0002$ per use .001$ per use
- is
* is
/ is 1.00$ per use
mod() is 10$ per use
$10 for mod? Bah!
Total cost = 1 division, 1 multiplication, 1 subtraction = $1.0012.
Re:Cheap Ass Mod Operation... (Score:1)
Re:Cheap Ass Mod Operation... (Score:1)
Hmm, what about getting savings on the
division and multiplication too?
1 mult =
1 add =
so if you're multiplying by less than 5,
you might as well use addition instead.
detection, you'd lose the savings...
what about patenting the if statement?
patenting howver-many-million color
variations on 1 pixel?
patenting "on" and "off"? ^^
"in conjunction with a computational device".
-evilme
Sanity (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll be if we required software makers to publish the source code of any project containing patented code, that software patents would die a quick and decisive death.
Can we get a US effort like this started? (Score:3, Interesting)
GJC
Re:Can we get a US effort like this started? (Score:2)
Re:Can we get a US effort like this started? (Score:2)
B
Re:Can we get a US effort like this started? (Score:1)
Software patents not inherently evil (Score:4, Insightful)
They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
If they're to protect only an implementation of an idea, as they say they are, then copyright already offers perfectly good protection.
And if they're protecting more than that, then they shouldn't be!
Either way, they're unnecessary. And given the sort of flagrant abuses we're seeing so often, what reason is there for keeping them?
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
Because the kind of hard work and knowledge and investigation and thought that goes into devising a solution to a difficult problem in matter-space is exactly the kind that goes into devising a solution to a difficult problem in information-space. One type of problem solving shouldn't be protected more than the other simply because you need bolts and motors and lubricant to implement it.
If they're to protect only an implementation of an idea, as they say they are
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:3)
It has indeed nothing to do with implementation. It has everything to do with the economic effects:
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
The IT sector as a whole? Probably not, but that's like asking whether patents are necessary to get enough investments in manufacturing. The point is that there may be particular endeavors in IT whose value may be dependent on being able to be the sole supplier of the technology for a while after it is developed.
In software, the description is the implementation (since software is nothing but a description of something).
I strongly disag
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
Patent law is not just about the value that some monopoly has, but also whether the positive effects of granting such monopolies actually stimulates the sector in which they are granted, consid
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:1)
When was the last time an otherwise-valid patent was rejected because the economic sector to which it pertained was doing just fine at the moment and didn't need any further stimulation?
The effort to create working code is also protected by copyright (and not in
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
You do not decide this patent per patent, but over a whole class of subject matter. If something is not patentable subject matter, you cannot have "an otherwise-valid patent" on it. It's true that patentable subject matter has been extended in the US to include software-described algorithms and business methods, but in
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
And if not, there's nothing patentable or inventive in the simple and obvious step of using an ordinary com
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
1) You unjustifiably trivialize the complexity, novelty, and non-obviousness of some valuable computer algorithms by referring to them as "calculations". Even if technically correct, it is somewhat misleading to give the impression that we are talking about a mere linear sequence of arithmetic operations, like computing the tax on a restaurant bill.
2)I don't accept your premise that the terms "calculation" and "invention" are mutually
Re:They're unnecessary and dangerous (Score:2)
No I don't. I freely acknowledge that math can be quite complex, quite non-obvious, and entirely novel.
The entire world, and the US up until the 5-4 Supreme Court goof, consistantly and properly agreed that math and calculations and mental steps were not inventions and were not patentable. It was well established, and with good reason. Any attempt to say that thoughts are against the law is just
Skeptical (Score:3, Interesting)
Since it's precisely large companies that are most benefiting from the abuse of the patent system to obtain frivolous software patents, I doubt this will happen. It won't gain much corporate support outside of open source firms.
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Well, the international community has been able to hold on to some sense of reality with patents/copyright far better than the US.
Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway, the argument, as presented [nosoftwarepatents.com]:
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:1)
With the GIF format, there was a problem in that the patent was not obvious. The article that described the LZW technique did not mention the patent. In the USA, it is possible to publish a technique and then patent the technique no later than 12 months aftewards [cloanto.com]. Another problem with the GIF situation was how the patented technique became frozen into an image format which was meant to be open. Due to backwards compatibility, it was not possible to substitute a nonpatented technique afterwards.
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:2)
All you have to do is look back before we instituted this absurd system of granting software patents. It happened in the 1980's in a hotly disputed 5-4 Supreme Court decision, Diamond v Diehr. That ruling was a goof that squeaked through by a single vote.
Prior to that the US patent office, and essentially every other patent office in the world, consistantly and properly rejected all attempts to patent software. Specificly the USPO reje
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:2)
You're not talking about running software mentally. You're talking about thinking about what software does mentally. Try running mathematica mentally sometime. It won't just be slow, I think it would be thousands of years before you could complete some fairly straightforward operations through mentally manipulating the binary code.
Your post is complete BS.
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:2)
The answer is that many of the "mentally fastest" software patents can in fact be carried out in a matter of minutes or less.
I merely need to find a single patent I find suitable. When I do carry out that supposedly valid patent mentally you are faced with the fact that
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:1)
Re:Best anti-patent argument I've read (Score:2)
Can we stop making fun of gentoo people for once!