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Trend: More Software Patents 212

The number of software patents issued this year increased to 22500, while a new type of hardware predator has arisen: companies that increase their revenue by patent royalties. Indeed some companies focus on making patents on products they will never make, just to get IP-revenue. Neither is extortion out of the question ("Come here laddy, prove to me your not violating any of my 100 patents !"). Software engineers don't like it, and in one company had to be threatened to play the lawyers' game. Even though few companies currently use software patents offensively, at a $20,000 cost per patent, they could hurt Free Software badly, should they follow the hardware trend and do so.
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Trend: More Software Patents

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  • They do invent something and they develop it enough to demonstrate the idea, but they don't put in the level of investment needed to actually release it as a product. You can invent something without actually selling it to the public.
  • "Indeed some companies focus on making patents on products they will never make, just to get IP-revenue. "

    The validity or morality of software patents aside, I don't see what's wrong with patenting inventions that you'll never make. In fact, for independent inventors or even small companies, the sensible way to go about making money off your invention would be to license the patent to a larger company with the manufacturing capabilities -- it's called specialization or making the most of your comparative advantage. Furthermore, I don't see why a large company willing to devote the time and resources to research, but chooses not to manufacture the product itself shouldn't be able to license out its patents -- unless you're against the whole idea of patents.

  • Please, read the Constitution. Or, if that does not convince you, head on over to the United States Patent and Trademark Office here [uspto.gov]. I am interested in what the source of your information is.
  • Patents cost *lots* of money and the FSF dosen't have the same cash flow as M$.

    Did you mean 'hacker' or 'cracker'?
    Do you know the diffrence? I don't think you do.

  • They invest in R&D to get new products, which no-one else is selling.

    You'll see the pattern if you look at drugs where the patent has expired, for example Beta2 antagonists. The company which first created them has the largest marketshare with Salbutamol (sold as Ventalin), while other B2 antagonists and generic Salbutamol trail behind.

  • You flunk history.

    The industrial revolution started in about 1730 with the invention of the cotton mill in England. One of the most famous US inventions, the cotton gin was invented by Eli Whitney around 1790.

  • (You might want to avoid the irony of demanding increased Patent Office funding and lower taxes simultaneously, though)

    If increased Patent Office funding increases the GNP, then a lower tax rate might end up having a net increase in government revenue. no irony there. A secondary effect might also be that by spending a dollar at the Patent Office, they save two in court costs (judges salaries court room time etc.) A more efficient government doesn't need as many taxes.

  • The way patents are used in the late 90's is nothing like the way patents have been used over the previous 200 years. We are now facing patents on life forms, patents on business models, and patents on algorithms.

    Life forms in the form of plant patents have been around far longer than genetic engineeering. I don't know when the first plant patent was issued, but I bet it was in the 19th century to somebody like George Washington Carver.

    As far as setting license fees at levels just short of the costs of litigation, this is nothing remarkably new. It was certainly common practice 25 years ago when I entered private industry.

    And I think you overestimate the importance of patents in the technology business in the US. All of the current big software companies grew up in an environment where software patents didn't exist for practical purposes.

    I think that is patently nonsense. The software industry was able to do without because opportunities were so huge and nothing was established at the start. Other industries live and die on patents. Biotech startups don't get funding without a patent review. Large consortia like Unipol are formed for the sole purpose of exploiting patent positions. Huge companies like UOP exist based on one thing - selling patented technology that they develop.

    It isn't even anything like the patent system that we have had until the 90's.

    It only appears that way to people who haven't studied the history of technology.
  • For defensive uses, it's much cheaper, faster, and pretty much as effective to use disclosure.
  • Recently I managed to get my name taken off of a software patent application my company is paying for.

    It surprises me that you could this. A patent must list all the inventors to be valid.
  • The software industry was able to do without because opportunities were so huge and nothing was established at the start. Other industries live and die on patents. Biotech startups don't get funding without a patent review. Large consortia like Unipol are formed for the sole purpose of exploiting patent positions. Huge companies like UOP exist based on one thing - selling patented technology that they develop.

    So? The fact that patents support large consortia and oligopolies is not intrinsically an argument in their favor.

    In fact, many people would argue that patents lead to a concentration of power in large companies and consortia, and that that is, in fact, an overall undesirable outcome; to many it appears that a vibrant, innovative free market economy depends on the existence a large number of nimble, small players, not a few lumbering giants locked up in huge consortia.

    It's pretty obvious that in the presence of patents, rational economic agents will take advantage of them (and, hence, investors will require them). That says nothing about the economic or social desirability of patent protection.

    Life forms in the form of plant patents have been around far longer than genetic engineeering. I don't know when the first plant patent was issued, but I bet it was in the 19th century to somebody like George Washington Carver.

    The US Plant Patent Act was established in 1930 and had very limited scope (only asexual reproduction, among others); if you know of references to any earlier plant patent protection in the US, please let us know.

    It only appears that way to people who haven't studied the history of technology.

    If you are implying that you have, why don't you start to apply some of that knowledge and experience to this discussion?

  • About algorithms - in which countries you can patent algorithms? Or worse, can you patent protocols and fileformats in US?

    I don't know about other countries, but in Finland you can't patent these... Go and check yourself, all finnish laws and more [edita.fi]. You can even do searches there, patent is 'patentti' in finnish ;)

  • I just ran into a patent which basically puts the brakes on my work. For an upcoming networking product which will support Cisco's Fast EtherChannel it would be really nice to seamlessly interoperate through Cisco's simple PAgP (Port Aggregation Protocol). I found out that Cisco just got a patent on this simple protocol. I can't believe it. It's one of the stupidest patents I've seen. The result, however, is that Cisco can use it to continue to bolster their monopoly since they prevent anyone else from interoperating with them. They patented EIGRP as well, which is a popular routing protocol which is only supported by Cisco. Software patents should be for things that are truely revolutionary or very different. Software patents also should be subject to a different time limit, i.e. 5 years, since an Internet year is so much shorter.
  • Proof that the single most damaging aspect of humanity is greed.
  • IANAL either but If you win the patent case being pushed against you then you should be able to recoup the attorny fees from the company that brought the case against you.
    "We hope you find fun and laughter in the new millenium" - Top half of fastfood gamepiece
  • You can patent processes by just describing them in enough detail. Take an idea, develop it to the point where it can be described in enough detail to be patented and... presto! You can patent it without havng to actually build anything.

    This reminds me of Feynman's memoirs where he's describing how he pulled ideas out of his butt (like a nuclear powered airplane) and having them patented. He didn't have to get out a wrench and a pile of unranium to get the patent... just a fairly detailed idea is good enough. You think the guys who patented the centrifical birth assisting device that the Ig Noble awards folks recently gave an award actually built the damned thing? I hope not...

    This, of course, is what's causing the problem. The patent system is equating any old idea with ideas that are reached after years of painstaking research. The latter, I think, do at least deserve some sort of protection, to encourage spending on R&D. The former are the ones causing problems.
  • The problem with "spurious" patents is you'll need precedent in order to define what "spurious" really means.

    The other problem with this is I can still grab up stupid patents, as long as it's cheaper for companies to pay me a pitance rather than try to challenge it in court.

    Essentially what you're asking is for companies to take gambles that their huge court bills will be reimbursed when they win. This is a risky business at the very least. Who knows what a judge will think is logical and what isn't. Remember, most judges are not technologically savvy (my father is a Judge in Maricopa County, AZ (USA), and has little to no clue about computers/other technology).

    The problem with opening the patent process up to the public is that you are exposing your idea. It behooves everyone else out there to shout down your patent idea, then try to beat you to market.

    As to limiting the life of a patent, that's an interesting idea. It gives a company a chance to grab the market, while still allowing for competition down the road.

    drudd
  • by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:59AM (#1603931) Homepage Journal
    How about forming a nonprofit group whose sole purpose is to go through the patent portfolios of assorted companies that are filing for these nonsensical patents? This group would research prior art and anything else that could get each patent thrown out in court and post their findings on a web site that would serve as an information clearinghouse. Kind of like a discordian IBM patent database.

    It should be pretty easy to at least partially automate this process -- IBM is generously supplying the patents in electronic form and it should be possible to build a program that cross references the patent for relevant web pages. Just have your debunker check out a patent to work on and he gets a nice page of info already researched by the computer. Hopefully a group like this would also encourage the PTO to improve their own process of granting patents.

    Just a thought...

  • $20,000 is quoted as the cost of getting a patent. So, a $10,000 fine wouldn't change that much.
  • Is it [1]the source code? [2]The compiled objects? [3]The linked executables? [4]The algorithms? [5]The tasks performed by the software?

    It can't be[1], which is covered by copyright law. It can't be [2] or [3] because they are unpredictable in detail depending on the design of the compiler and its optimizers, the linker, etc. In fact, it seems to me that the top-level design is almost always impossible to deduce from the resultant binaries, particularly with OO languages. It can't be [4] because, as the department tag on the topic points out, algorithms are usually mathematical construct and as such is an inherent property of whatever mathematical system it falls out of, and is thus (I would think) unpatentable. It can't be [5] because that's just the purpose of the "invention," not the invention itself.

    Have I missed something?

    I get the feeling that what is needed here is a patent lawyer, with enough of a software background to understand what this is all about, challenging one or two of the more prominent software patents. If done with care, it could bring this whole evil legal edifice down on top of the corporations who built it.

  • I just ran into a patent which basically puts the brakes on my work. For an upcoming networking product which will support Cisco's Fast EtherChannel it would be really nice to seamlessly interoperate through Cisco's simple PAgP (Port Aggregation Protocol). I found out that Cisco just got a patent on this simple protocol. I can't believe it. It's one of the stupidest patents I've seen. The result, however, is that Cisco can use it to continue to bolster their monopoly since they prevent anyone else from interoperating with them. They patented EIGRP as well, which is a popular routing protocol which is only supported by Cisco.

    Software patents should be for things that are truely revolutionary or very different. Software patents also should be subject to a different time limit, i.e. 5 years, since an Internet year is so much shorter.
  • See what I mean? Patents cost MONEY. Money that people involved in OSS projects simply don't have to spend. So, what if some less-than-well-intentioned people with lots of money (say, around 100 billion for example :) ouch what a cheap shot...) start getting patents for things that are being developed as OSS projects? Can you even start to think about the ramifications of this? That's why software-patents-ARE-BAD(tm) and everyone should oppose them.

    What can we do to prevent this? There have been a few ideas about making lots of prior art, but I believe there are more direct way to fight this possibility. The bigest one being internationalization of open source projects. It gets a LOT more expenciive to sue people if there are people in multiple countries working on a project. Plus, Joe GNU who gets a cease and desist letter can always continue the project.. just giving the credit to someone else.

    Perhaps the EFF or some other somewhat international orginisation could host CVS servers in diffent countries. If a company harasses Joe then he just talks to the operator of a CVS server in a country which will make life difficult for the company and gets a numbered account with no ties to himself. We could also add a transport mechinism for CVS to allow you to connect to the CVS server WITHOUT it knowing where you were comming from. Now, the company needs a searh warent to see if the account login information is on his sytem and Joe can use a plausable deniability encryption System to make search warents useless (like SegFS). Hell, the patent ass wholes may stir up intrest in any project they attack, so there is NO WAY to prove that just because some anonymous person is contributing to the project means that Joe is.

    I think Slashdot should adopt a policy of posting mirroring and contribution information whenever OSS project is (specifically) attacked with software patents. They know they are not going to make any money off of the guy, but the though that hundreds of geeks would suddenly take an interest in the guys project is probable enough to kep the layers at bay. I would be curious to know how many people have contributed to the Console Game Simulators because there interest was pirked by Nintendo's legal mess. (This is probable one of the best solutions)

    Jeff
  • If a product is released closed-sourced, know one knows if they are violating any patents. However, as soon as the source is released, patent-hording companies can sue them into oblivion.
  • The responce to this is PUBLISH. If you know you can't affort to get the patent, PUBLISH your idea immediatly. Once you publish, any patent applied for after the publishing date is invalid.

    We need a OSS paper documention campaign to publish all the OSS ideas into a legal archival format.

  • What if some loon discovers the cure for AIDS and decides to patent the process? What kind of limits does one face when filing a patent?
  • Phuck off.
  • You can't mount a counterattack based on disclosure.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Don't forget the government can revoke a patent if there is a compelling public interest to do so. If someone patented the cure for AIDS and wanted to charge a million bucks a pop for it, the government would say that person is abusing a patent critical to the public good and therefore forfeits the rights to it.
  • First, this is all completely ridiculous. This doesn't really help anyone in the long run. Too bad it's the law.

    Second, everything in that graph past 1994 is an estimate. It might be accurate, and it looks like an upward trend, but I'm surprised it isn't worse, considering the hype.

    Finally, anyone who thinks they have something worth patenting, feel free. If you believe in free software, maybe you can GPL your patent. :)
  • About a month ago, all the engineers in my company were required to attent an "info" session on patents. Aside from appealing to our personal greed and fear (you get bonuses for patents, and trips to exotic locales for lots of 'em, and besides your evaluation is based on them) the lawyer there tried to morally justify patents. The main argument was, of course, "we need these defensively, for cross-licensing and counterattacks." Nothing new there.

    The ancillary arguments, though, were very revealing. First, there was "everyone else is doing it". They gave the example of M$, which had 5 patents as of 1992 and now has hundreds. "And that's happening all over" they continued, citing some more alarming growth figures. Of course, this is all an argument against the new philosophy of "patent everything that moves" - it casts it not as an established way of doing business but as an alarming new trend.

    Another argument they made is even more scary. The main body of my company is number 2 in its industry and slowly falling further and further behind number 1 (although my own division, soon to be spun off, is number 1 and pulling ahead.) The patent lawyer dropped a few asides about how patents were an asset "of growing importance", especially to our stock price. It definitely sounded to me as if the lawyer realized that, if all the rest of our business went south, well at least we could start suing people. In other words, DON'T BELIEVE THE BULL ABOUT PATENTS BEING DEFENSIVE. A growing company can afford to have such scruples; but when that large company starts to stagnate, and all the employees with imagination gradually leave, those scruples will fall by the wayside. Every last penny will be wrung out of patent "assets".
  • So the rest of you can get by with just the zeroes.
  • Are you a patent attorney, thad?

    I'm guessing that you are not.

    You make it sound as though no business is safe from patents and then further claim, based on your faulty premise, that open-source software is doomed.

    Why would you assume that you could implement research presented at a technical conference for your own monetary gain without checking?

    Sounds like your company made a big mistake. That does not lead one to conclude OSS is doomed. Rather it leads one to question your merits.
  • Somehow software development flourished without patents for years, even building silicon valley. Still if you really want to have software pattents don't you think they should at least resemble patents in other areas? If you patent an invention you must provide blueprints. If my invention works better there is no infringment.

    Provide source, if I can find a case that runs in fewer steps for my algorithm than yours then we have no infringement.

    But I guess in the Free Market I should have to cut your lazy butt a check if I want to send an .au file over the Internet.
  • This is so twisted. The patent system was not built to make people money off of royalties, it was built to protect the small inventor from larger companies. This country needs to seriously rethink it's patent, and copyright, system. They're out of touch with today's technical society.

    -----------

    "You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."

  • by ajs ( 35943 ) <{moc.sja} {ta} {sja}> on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:30AM (#1603952) Homepage Journal
    Just create a $10,000 fine for "spurious patents", and define spurious just
    as vaguely as the USPTO defines valid software patents. This will put
    the breaks on most companies (if, for example 1/3 of Microsoft's software
    patents were found to be invalid, that would probably be enough to
    cancel out profit from Office for a year!)

    The other way to go, that a lot of people cite is just limiting the life
    of a software patent to 3 years. I'd sign on to this, IF there were
    a reasonable way to speed up the approval process.

    One way to speed it up might be to open it up. Let everyone see every
    submitted patent that has been past the first "does it fit the
    required format, and did they pay up" pass. Do it over the Web, and
    allow a Slashdot-like feedback. Only patents that don't get a bozo-alert
    from the masses get sent on to the next stage (internal USPTO technical
    review). Thus the next 200 people to submit "talking online" and
    "window-shopping online" will be bounced in less time than it takes
    to Slashdot a personal web-server into the ground.
  • For anyone who has an interest in the subject:

    http://www.theonion.com/oni on3311/microsoftpatents.html [theonion.com]

    Once again, for those that don't already know, proof that The Onion is the font of all wisdom.

  • This is kinda like the tort reform that was floating around capitol hill last year ...

    Big companies can always manage to pay the fines, it's individuals and small groups who would find a 10K fine devistating. And there is no gaurentee that your patent application, no matter how well intended, won't get fined. And it's not like the patent process needs any help being totally inaccessable to the average individual.
  • Let everyone see every
    submitted patent that has been past the first "does it fit the
    required format, and did they pay up" pass.


    That won't work, because pending patent applications should be, and are kept secret by the PTO (unless the applicant chooses to reveal his invention to the public of course). There's a good reason for this, because even if the patent application fails, the applicant now has the option of keeping the product a trade secret i.e. it's a secret as long as you can keep it secret.

    Do it over the Web, and
    allow a Slashdot-like feedback. Only patents that don't get a bozo-alert
    from the masses get sent on to the next stage (internal USPTO technical
    review).


    I wouldn't trust the /. crowd to review patents. They're far too hostile towards patents to give applications a fair review, and less technologically knowledgeable than they would like to believe. But that's just my opinion.

  • Q: What's the difference between a hooker and a lawyer?

    A: A hooker stops screwing you after you're dead.

    --The Rainmaker


    --
  • Where do people get this stuff? Doesn't anyone have a clue as to how technology businesses in the US have operated for the past 200 years?

    Dammit, For many years companies like Texas Instruments and UOP have gotten more of their profits by developing technologies and licensing them to other companies. Giant conglomerates like Unipol exist primarily to take advantage of patents developed in large consortia.

    The idea that anything has changed in the hardware area over the past 20 years is ludicrous. The only thing that is different is that we have a new set of PHB's fresh out of Stanford Business School that need to be educated, and a bunch of impressionable journalists that have no education in this area.

    Software patents are another ballgame altogether. The patent office is being far to lenient when it grants these things.
  • Sure, in an ideal world, the system you describe works. Patents recoup money from R&D costs. But what about the patents on ideas? I certainly don't think you should be allowed to obtain a patent on e-commerce for example. This is just an abstract idea that didn't take any R&D dollars to come up with. We are running into problems with software patents because:

    a) people submit ideas, not designs
    b) people are trying to patent things that have been around for a long time

    Unfortunately, I really do think that there are legit software patents though. I think that having a shorter time, like you suggest, for the patent length would really help.

  • Please explain to me why the FSF, or any of a number of democratic open-source initiatives should not start patenting many of the advances made in the course of developing open source software. Any takers for starting up a new org to tackle this?
  • by Chris Johnson ( 580 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @12:13PM (#1603961) Homepage Journal
    Cellular [airwindows.com] is a fairly unimportant little cellular automata program.
    Staccato [airwindows.com] is a reminder program, which might have some ideas relating to intelligent input parsing somebody is trying to patent. It sets things up so entries in the info file are very easily done, with the 'API' extremely easy to master. I'm sure someone would try to patent that.
    Sitebot [airwindows.com] is a particular method of keeping data files as plain text with a couple of easily added headers, and 'compiling' that into a website which can then be uploaded. If anybody means to patent a narrowly defined method for writing plaintext and having it read and turned into a web site with the same structure as the plaintext files and folders, Sitebot is prior art.
    ROTSOS [airwindows.com] (Return of the Son of Spacewar) is the best yet, being a radically different approach to game engine design. It offers literally the ability to produce game 'maps' equivalent to data files billions of gigs in size, in fact the ability to have billions of worlds each with 'maps' (not all of which will be distinct, but for all practical purposes...). It requires that game map creation be an exploratory process rather than a creative process, a major innovation in map design IMHO as the person who came up with it after reading lots of stuff on AI and artificial life. Took some years to work out, and naturally I've had to produce flashy demos (mostly movies, others to come) to illustrate what's being done here.

    What do all these software products have in common, from the trivial to the actually innovative?
    They are _all_ Free Software under the GNU GPL. That is including ROTSOS, and I have every expectation that somebody else with ship a GPLed game before I can get one together. I understand that and approve of it. I also understand that I'm going to stay poor and won't get diddly from all this.

    Then why on earth am I doing it?
    Because I'm just another soldier in a different sort of war. This patent stuff is deadly serious, but it's not fought with guns (unless they are patentable ;) ). It's fought with ideas, and sacrifices have to be made. If intellectual property is not to be become a ball and chain, if people are to retain the ability to work with their minds and retain control over their own ideas and clever inventions, it seems the only safe haven anymore is the hardcore free (libre) software side- the determination to produce ideas and add them to the shared hoard. If these ideas are in use and known to be in existence, matching ideas cannot be patented. If the ideas are unsung and never seen by anybody, then lawyers will have a relatively easy time raising doubt that a matching idea came first. Publicity is the friend of free software, the handmaiden of 'prior art'.

    So.... STEAL MY SOFTWARE!!!! That's right- go grovel through its ugly depths for any ideas that might make your open source project take off! Grab anything you want! Be grateful or not, say nice things about what neat ideas I have or not- the only requirement is that it stay GPL. Take all the credit for stuff that I came up with, while releasing it as GPL! Because as long as somebody gets publicity for a GPLed idea or algorithm or program, as long as that idea is obviously prior art and not ripe for a patent, that means I get to keep using it. And if the ideas languish in obscurity, it's all the more likely that some clown will patent some broad notion, hire better lawyers and enjoin me from ever using the idea that was mine in the first place. I'm not kidding. Wittingly or not, this is war now.

    Write GPLed software (that being the most hardcore of the licenses)! Get glaring publicity! Anybody who can, _please_ make sure as many ideas (broad or specific) are within the camp of 'free software, prior art' as possible. Because it's a real problem, a serious danger, and these people trying to fight it by staking out defensive patents are only compounding the problem.

    Time to choose sides!
  • In an economic sense, bad patents are similar to pollution: they allow companies to impose costs on society ("externalities") for their own profit. The costs invalid patents impose are unnecessary litigation, unnecessary design work-arounds, and substandard competing products.

    The pollution analogy suggests that one effective way of curbing patents may be to let vendors know that you are on to them and prefer to buy from the least serious offender.

    For example, I consider Amazon's patent on one-click ordering a blatant attempt to increase the cost of doing business for other web merchants through a frivolous patent. I canceled my account, let them know about it, and will order elsewhere now.

    You probably prefer buying from companies that try to keep your environment clean. Try to apply the same standard to your intellectual environment and avoid companies that pollute the patent space as much as possible.

  • I t would be much more useful to maintain a list of what has been done. There really needs to be a better way of searching the prior art in software patents. Unfortunately, this is a young industry, and it is difficult to document what has been done before. Old papers barely scratch the surface, as a paper can relate a general method, and not understand the generality of the proposed method. SO, I think what needs to be done, especially for free software, is to gather a good searchable index of algorithms/pieces of software, and use that database as a defense.

    IBM has had a long policy of publishing everything (outside of what it patented) to screw the competition. After all, published information is not patentable. Better yet, if someone gets a patent, and doesn't do their "due dlligence" in searching for prior art (which IBM made easily available) tehn they are liable for triple damages. This sort of "openness" philosophy would be good to emulate.

    BTW, before anyone gets to set against patents, remember that teh alternative is copyright protection. That lasts 50 years, and no one gets to see what is copyrighted. That was Oracle's solutions, which everyone on this list thought was a great alternative view. IT IS NOT. It would be much worse for everyone if all software was completely proprietary for 50 years, and you didn't get to see it until that period was up. If someone patents something, you can see the patent and improve on it. Some food for thought
  • I hve to disagree. There are good reasons for a patent system--mainly disclosure and protection. Look at countries with limited patent protection (India, for one quick example) and you will see places with limited innovation (no drugs will be made there, because there aren't enough protections). If you can propose a better system, try, but I don't believe that the patent system is preferrable to a system which relies solely on trade secrets to operate. Such systems, historically, have failed.
  • Get your facts straight. Studies do not support Tryptophan and 5-HTP's efficacy (show one). FDA banned Tryptophan because a botched batch of the stuff can kill you (which is precisely what has occured). Btw, the FDA approval process is not yet up in the $500M range. It is in the $10 to 20 million range though (on up to $100M).

    Just think what M$ could do if it would donate its money to medical research.

    On second thought, that's not a very good idea.
  • 3.) The American Government sees strict Patents laws as a way to ensure that dominace of American firms on the world market. There are a reported cases, when obviously stolen patents of non american firms appeared to to be patented in America just before this firms themselves applied for the international patent. As the American goverment once stated openly, it sees industrial espionage as a legimate way to ensure American dominance for key technologies. So the American legislature has a good reason (for them) not to change this laws.

    This is very, very wrong. The US system is FIRST TO INVENT. So if you file here second, but invented earlier, you win. Let me repeat, the first inventor gets the patent.

    In Europe, the system is FIRST TO FILE, so if I invent something in the US, but someone files before me in europe, then I am screwed, and my patent gets NO protection.

    Get your facts straight.
  • The patent system was put in place to give people an incentive to invent new things. That's it.

    Software patents are ridiculuous. I know that in the 1980's software patents were not allowed. When did this change and why? Anybody know?
  • For a while, I've been saying that the only way to return the patent process to functionality is to open it to peer review. It would work in this way:

    • The applicant would submit the patent in the normal way, thus establishing.
    • The Patent Office publishes it for review in a "Patents Pending Gazette" and on a web site.
    • A period of public comment to inform the patent examiner of prior art, other relevant patents and additional reasonable objections ensues.
    • The examiner makes a decision to reject or grant the patent.

    Any truly novel idea will survive this review process, and it will eliminate the vast number of frivolous and redundant patents submitted every day. The appearance in the "Pending Gazette" will be enough to provide a legal basis to defend against theft and a firm rejection will establish that the idea was not original.

    The day is long past when a patent examiner could be an expert in every area. Let's allow real experts a crack at it.

  • So add something to the OSS license which requires any commercial co. (e.g., redhat, yellowdog, etc) which redistributes OSS in a physical form (i.e., a CD-ROM copy) to publish (once before shipment) the entire source of all OSS contained on the CD in a legal archival format. That is, if having the OSS source on the CD itself does not already constitute publishing to the legal standards of the U.S. patent office. Something like that...
  • Someone should set up a competition for the least valid patents of each year. Nominations could be made by anyone and would form the primary post of a slashdot-like discussion forum. Users could then contribute to the debate about each patents merits and then vote for which ever they thought was worst. You would probably have to have a final voting stage for the top 10 nominations to eliminate any timing bias. The competion would be called the Gore Awards in honour of the man who invented (and yet did not patent) the internet. I have of course thought about patenting this idea itself but this could lead to the it winning its own competition which would surely lead to charges of bias.

    Seriously though, I'm sure that such a competition would draw a fair bit of attention to the problem of obvious ideas being patented. If something like this already exists (the 'idea' is actually a 'memory') please post saying where it is. Otherwise how about some preliminary nominations?

    int independance; /* The Declaration of Independance */






  • Suppose open source licenses contained some additional language to make life more difficult for the patent parasites out there:

    (1) Prohibit analysis or reverse-engineering for the purpose of determining the applicability of a software patent, and

    (2) Prohibit use by any party who has, say, in the past two years demanded software patent royalties.

    A cause of action for infringement would automatically transfer to any company required to pay software parent royalties to a patent holder.

    Example: A year from now MonsterSoft demands patent royalties from LittleWare for the use of an "OK" button in a dialog box. LittleWare finds out that MonsterSoft uses open source software in some of its servers. LittleWare counterclaims for infringement of the revised open source license. MonsterSoft, suddenly seeing its own deep pockets put at risk, retreats.

  • In addition to the "math is not patentable exception," there are exceptions for "prior art" (you can't patent something that other people already know how to do) and obviousness (as in, "obvious to a practitioner of the art" or some wording like that.)

    So, without entering [yet] into the discussion of whether patents are a good idea (the system in general seems to mostly be working... I don't hear a lot of screaming about it in other industries, except drugs), in the case of a lot of software patents, it seems that the obviousness clause ought to be invoked.

    People get patents for things like "storing digitized voice in a file system" or "conducting e-commerce with cookies and aitch-tee-tee-pee". It's insane! This stuff is obvious to any programmer, but apparently mystifying to the rest of the world. I mean, if you are going to give a patent on voicemail, give it to the guy who invented A/D or filesystems, but not the idea of using both: it's obvious.

    In terms of some software patents, I don't know how to define it accurately, but public key encryption was a pretty good, non-obvious idea: seems as worthy of patent as anything. I think we need to keep going back to the basic question: does allowing the patent holder a temporary monopoly encourage more good in the world by stimulating more R/D? People often cite this as a reason, but citing it is not the same as showing that it's true.

    Ya know, patent intellectual property rights were not invented to stimulate R&D, in particular. Think back to manufacturing days: patenting was created to stimulate people sharing ideas. You, then and now, had the choice: invent a process and keep it a secret but have no protection against me-toos, or share the idea and be granted a temporary monopoly. The community as a whole wanted to stimulate more sharing because after the patent expired, then you'd see some extra innovation taking place. So, R&D stimulation was indirect, and not all for the reason of the monopoly rents (that's a fancy word for "real profit").

    Software does not have this "I can keep it a secret" nature like manufacturing does (unless it runs on your server...) so that sort of creates a bigger incentive to patent in this arena, and probably calls for a different set of rules.

  • Where I used to work, at Pacific Data Images, a computer graphics animation facility, we used to make 'The Making Of..." videos, showing how we did things. These were used as sales and marketing tools, and for ego-boosts to the people who worked on them. You've surely seen these.

    After we were approached by the University of Utah, though about a patent we had violated on free-form deformations, we decided to not do that anymore. It was a tough decision to make, because these videos were quite popular. Still, we couldn't risk our company's existence any longer, as we had no idea what patents we might be violating.

    This FFD patent was a complete and utter surprise. We had attended a technical conference (Siggraph) where Sederberg presented the research, and had assumed that we could just implement the ideas in the paper. There was no notice given (or necessary) that there was a patent application in the works.

    The worst thing is that there is absolutely no way to not get sandbagged by this. There is no way of knowing what patents are in process; and if you base your companies in-house development on things for which patents are later granted, you can be completely hosed.

    The situation for open-source software, is, of course, immensely worse; as you have no way of keeping how you did things secret.

    thad

  • How do you think the small inventor makes money from an invention? He/she licenses it to companies that are interested in using the patented invention. My Uncle is an inventor and that is exactly what he does with his inventions. If he invents a new widget for photocopy machines, he shops it around to the companies that make photocopy machines. He doesn't build his own factory to manufacture photocopy machines.
  • That means spending lots of money on R&D, and you don't want to make a discovery, get a product to market and then find that your largest competitor copying your work. That, i think, would cause the death of innovation in so many industries.

    What about the situation where you've spent a huge amount of money doing R&D, then discover that some other company thinks your spiffy new product violates an obscure claim of one of their patents? Personally, I think that if you can prove that you did all the R&D, you should be able to reap the benefits of that work regardless of whether some other bozo beat you to the patent office first.

    Actually, the controversial patents don't seem to be the ones costing billions of dollars in R&D - the ones that people get pissed off about are the ones where a dozen people with limited imaginations get together, brainstorm some totally obvious variations on existing technology, play "footsie" with the patent office to get them in the records, then try and make money by intimidating people into paying w/o any real intent to develop the idea themselves.

    Hmmm...there's an interesting idea. Maybe the viability of the patent could somehow be tied to the amount of documented resources that it took to put the patent together? On second thought, I'm sure that some companies would be able to figure out how to waste millions of dollars pursuing really obvious ideas.

  • Q: What's the difference between an honest lawyer and Santa Claus?

    A: At least we believe one exists.

  • konstant sez > By the same token though, if you do open your source, you'd better be damn sure you really aren't violating any proprietary code.

    Ok. How? How can you be sure that you are not violating patents? How can you even be 1% sure? How can you even pretend to be sure that you're not violating patents that are currently being processed?

    I suppose the only way would be to base all of your algorithms on old (> 20 years) papers and to contribute nothing original on your own. This would be the only way to be certain.

    Well, I suppose you could also go into space and nuke it from orbit, it's the only way to be sure

    thad

  • It's been almost 6 years since I followed an introductory course in business law. Now the syllabus is burried under a whole stack of paper in my father's basement, so I can't look it up easily.

    I vaguely remember one thing about patents: if you register one, you have to exploit it, or licence it to someone else to use/sell it for you. Otherwise, you lose the patent rights.

    This is one of the reasons why some ideas never get to the patent office: companies consider it more beneficial to guard the know-how as a trade secret. (And of course, trade secrets don't expire, while patents do.)

  • For the individual, rather than a company, the copyright "clock" does not start counting until the author's death. So, the copyright in everything I right is mine throughout my lifetime and belongs to my heirs for 50 (or 75) years after my death.

    Also copyright only protects the actual representation. So even though every program is copyrighted, the copyright, unlike patents, does not prevent anyone else from using the same method (only that they must not copy your code, image or words etc.)

  • Unless everyone who works on the infringing project is careful about attaching copyright notices to every CVS commit, attributing ownership of the work to the FSF, they will simply sue the individual whom they judge to have crossed the line between a non-infringing work and an infringing work. They have never denied that individuals can be sued. :(
  • This would put the EFF (or whoever) in a very sticky legal situation. The press would portray it as "helping hackers to steal Megasoft's intellectual property" - they would not see the distinction between this and a warez site.
  • I've spent quite a bit of time lately trying to get a patent (Don't kill me, its for hardware I designed), so I have a few thoughts on the whole process.

    The patent office as it stands right now is so heavily biased towards large corporations that the only solution I can see is to rebuild it from scratch. Origionally, the inventor would write up a patent, (with free help from a patent examiner!) and submit it. It would be evaluated and either rejected or accepted. It cost about a hundred bucks.

    Now, don't even THINK about trying to get a patent without a lawyer. Most likely, you'll get rejected, and if you manage to get accepted, you'll end up with a mostly worthless patent. If you're serious, and have a good, patentable idea, expect to pay about 3000 dollars for a decent patent.

    However, if you're a large company, and have a staff of good lawyers, you can get just about anything patented, no matter how ridiculous. And companies usually try to price their licenses so that its cheaper to just submit to extortion than to fight their patent (which is so expensive that an individual shouldn't even consider it).

    Large companies have their own patent portfolio, and if they need someone else's patent, they arrange a cross-licensing agreement, instead of paying fees, since they can most likely extort the other patent holders as well.

    The current system has been manipulated to stratify the status quo, and protect slow moving large companys from small innovators. Write your congresscritter, not that'll it'll do any good.
  • Please explain to me why the FSF, or any of a number of democratic open-source initiatives should not start patenting many of the advances made in the course of developing open source software.

    Because it's expensive?

    because it's a slimy lawyerly thing to do?

    because playing lawyer isn't fun?

    because it goes against the principles of openness which is the heart of what the GPL is trying to accomplish?

    because once an algorithm appears in an OSS package, it becomes published, meaning that one year later the algorithm will become truly free, according to the principles of our movement?

  • Software patents are relatively untested, and the patent office is "attempting" to issue patents on the basis of the way they are written in law... unfortnately they are failing in terms of practicality. The largest problem seems to be a lack of prior art searches, or rather insufficient ones. All lot of this e-commerce nonsense will begin to disappear once cases start going to court and the defense attorney pull of ten years of "e-commerce" business practices prior to the filing dates of the patent. Once companies start to realize that their frilivous patenting of software products ($20000-40000 US) is pointless because the patents are mostly worthless, they'll stop doing it. The courts in the past have through their ruling changed what is "patentable", and so until the courts establish better rules about patents the patent office will continue to dish out this nonsense.
  • Actually, there are already patents on DNA. The interesting bit is that the "owners" of the DNA are the biologists who took it, and not the humans who provided it. Last I checked (this could be expired info now), no-one had challenged the patent.
  • Nice catch :)

    -----------

    "You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."

  • ...how do you save a drowning lawyer?








    good.

    --
    grappler
  • The one problem with this argument is that If a product fails and a company sues another big one, they actually can get money out of it to cover any damages for the failure. It actually matters that they can get money out of it, and dicourage the other company from allowing that to happen again. Suing over patents is completely different, in that it's far more important to get rid of the other product and hold on to the monopoly than it is to actually get money from the violator. if they were to sue an OSS project over a patent, they wouldn't expect to actually get anything out of it. If it's over liability, however, they need to expect to get something out of suing.

    I really don't agree with this line of thinking, but it's a reality that someone's going to face eventually.
  • Writting your Congressperson won't do much good. It won't go past the staff. Drop by the local office. That way the staff knows that you are commited to the idea and will be far more likely to pass it on. Friday AM is a great time for this because you stand a good chance of catching the Represenative at the office preparing for some weekend campaining. Call the local office to find out if s/he is giving any speaches. This is the time of year they are doing grassworks to prepare for next years election. Use the right Buzz words, like "protecting the American Cyber-Revoulation" A secondary course of action is to write to companys using software pats as a weapon. Cirrus logic is looking for a 5% gain in revenues. Write them and inform them that you will not buy any product containing Cirrus logic chips if they continue. Write thier customers and inform them that you will not buy thier product if they use cirrus logic chips. Let them know they stand to lose more $ through lost sales than they will gain by IP warfare.
  • I see nothing wrong with patenting software per se. As several people have pointed out, the patent process originated not in the desire to keep large bags of cash in the hands of corporations, but to allow inovators the freedom to create and distribute their ideas while still putting food on the table, which tends to be a concern for most people. The problem seems to me to be not that patenting is wrong, but that the process that we have is not prepared to address the issues of software patenting. The patent process was origonally designed for steam engines, zippers, and light bulbs, not operating system code. The devices being registered have gotten more complex, and so has the patenting process. The process that the patent office has is not prepared to deal with the issues that software patenting raises. We can't just blaim the patent service for bowing to the will of large companies; the patent service is following the rules it has always had, but the situation has changed so as to make it only accesable to companies with serious resources($). The answer would be for Someone(what body is responsible for administering the patent office? Anyone know?) to start a very serious inquiry into patent law as it relates to software. In some cases, old precidents may be useful, but as with any growing field of the law, some times new precidents will need to be written. Law as related to computers, software, and the internet is still in its infancy; this issue is just one of many that are going to be addressed in the coming years.

  • The patent office's role has never been all that significant. You can squeeze just about anything through the office, making it stand up in court is an entirely different issue. This is by no means unique to software. Its a complex issue, I don't think there are any perfect answers. But certainly the patent office could use more competent reviewers to lower the number of bogus lawsuits.
  • by Chris Johnson ( 580 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @12:45PM (#1604006) Homepage Journal
    Patents are _already_ impossible to 'broke individuals' regardless of their capacity to innovate. Therefore the fine idea is pointless, as patents are already a completely un-level playing field that is used only as a way to suppress innovation and ensure that only large corporations can be allowed to own intellectual property.
    If I have an idea, I have three choices:
    • Sit on it until a big corp matches it and enjoins me from using it ever again
    • Use it and risk being taken to court when the big corp figures out it can win purely because it can challenge my right to the idea, and I can't pay to fight it
    • GPL the bugger, whereupon it's very unlikely that I personally can profit from the idea in the usual sense, but on the other hand it's very likely that the idea can't be taken away from me, ever, and _that_ might be worth something to me, independent of my desire to not let the corp own it.
    I go for option 3, unhesitatingly. How about you?
  • Don't do it. If you do, then you're no better than the lawyers you don't seem to like.
  • ajs> The problem with your angle, here, is that
    ajs> you assume that the goal of a patent is to
    ajs> inspire someone to innovate, but otherwise
    ajs> would not.

    That is indeed the assumption. From the Constitution of the United States:

    USC> Article I.
    USC> [...]
    USC> Section 8. The Congress shall have power
    USC> [...] To promote the progress of science and
    USC> useful arts, by securing for limited times to
    USC> authors and inventors the exclusive right to
    USC> their respective writings and discoveries;
  • The idea that if a pantent-based profit can't be made of research, it won't be done, is (ahem) patently absurd - it belies the centuries of scientific research that occurred without such institutions.

    It's a tragedy of the contemporary imagination that it cannot concieve of any motivation other than profit - that it has actually come to believe that monetary gain is the only effective motivator.

    A fairly clear debunking of this motivational claim is available here [fsf.org] on the FSF site. I also refer you to Maslow's heirarchy of needs - short version is that when one is no longer anxious about one's material well being, one persues more elevated "needs," such as the need for creativity and intellectual expression. (Those institutions which depend on our drive for material accumulation thrive by using media to artificially maintain our sense of material anxiety, by linking it to social anxiety - ie, we won't be happy and shall lack social credibility without a New Car, New Shoes, the Right Deoderant, a Bigger Car, a Bigger House, etc.)

    As less money is available to academic research environments, and our media culture continues to elevate the materially successful as heroes above the scientifically, culturally and intellectually successful, this whole "only profit will motivate people" line becomes a self fulfilling prophecy, unfortunately, and it's especially tragic to see it promulgated among those of us who a. have the least to fear as far as our material well-being is concerned and b. have the most to gain by valuing intellectual achievement for its own sake. The spiritual virus, our new sickness-unto-death, is among us.

  • First i wanted to add that contrary to popular belief here on /. patents werent invented to stop the shareng of ideas. They were invented to help sharing ideas.

    The reasoning behind this was (to my knowledge) to encourage a firm to patend their inventions by giving them the right to use them for themselves for a number of years. To do this they must make the idea or process public. This means they have to share it with everyone. This is IMHO a Good Thing. When the patent expires the knowledge is given to the public for free use.

    The Question here is why and when got the process of patents got twisted around and changed to something that is actually hindering progress and not helping it along.

    In my opinion this has the following reasons:

    1.) The whole patenting process is from a time when technical innovation was moving much slower. The timelines for patents are just to long these days and should be shortened. Or perhaps an evalution process should be used, so that patens will be given to the public domain after a firm made a decent return on investment from them. But this would perhaps lead to another insane buerocratic nightmare :-)

    2.) The American patent laws do not have a clause for mandatory licensing. As far as i know this is the case for some European patent Laws. Under this Laws a license must be issued to any firm that applys for one. So a firm can make money by licensing the innovations, but cannot hoard innovations by keeping them for themselves.

    3.) The American Government sees strict Patents laws as a way to ensure that dominace of American firms on the world market. There are a reported cases, when obviously stolen patents of non american firms appeared to to be patented in America just before this firms themselves applied for the international patent. As the American goverment once stated openly, it sees industrial espionage as a legimate way to ensure American dominance for key technologies. So the American legislature has a good reason (for them) not to change this laws.

    I think the system itself is not completely without reason. But the implementation lends itself to misuse. I'm not sure if the system could be fixed, so big firm cannot use it to stiffle Open Software or competitors. Perhaps it is inherently flawed and should be thrown away. But this would lead to a severe cut in the exchange of ideas beetween commercial operating buissinesses. I dont like patents but i'm not sure, if we wouldn't go from bad to worse by dumping them.

    At least there should be clear criteria what is allowed to patend and what not. Buying books with one click should not patentable, this only leads to misuse.

    Oh, before i forget. Patents are already hampering the implementation of Free Software in a major field, audio compression. To my knowledge there was once a project under way to specify a new free audio standard that could replace mp3. The project was cancelled because most of the key technologies needed for good, lossy audio compression were already patented und could not be used.

    Thomas

  • Currently I am working on for a DNA sequencing company that does similar things
    The company's primary focus is sequence a genome, find the function, if it's something 'commercially viable' than patent it and sell it to pharmacutical (I can't spell, i'm a programor) companies to develop cures and what not.
    I was initially opposed to this, but after thinking about it for a while I figured that it's employing a lot of people, and saving a lot of people.
    In most casees, ifthere is no commercial interest to do something, it will not get done (excluding Linux/OSS of course) -- that's the bottom line. If someone finds the cure for AIDS and patents it and does not grant licenses for the patent they will go under and wont afford the lawyer to enforce the patent rights anyway :)
    Biomedical research is quite expensive and typically requires commercial support
    Unfortunately as time goes on more and more patents are coming out -- instead of thinking, "hey there isn't an app that does xyz" we're being forced to think, "Hey -- is there a patent for xyz".
    Limits should be placed on what you can patent -- patenting the idea for something should not be allowed, patenting the method should be. If you actually come up with something specifically unique than it's yours -- bottom line. But you should never be allowed to patent concepts and general idea's. (Like One click shopping for instance, check the /. archives if you don't know what I'm talking about)
    Patents are a great thing and a bad thing -- which seems to mirror the majority of things about our economy.
    -= Making the world a better place =-
  • The problem with your angle, here, is that you assume that the goal of a patent is to inspire someone to innovate, but otherwise would not.

    This is very much not the case. In fact, the USPTO was founded to encourage companies to share ideas that they had ALREADY come up with. The thinking was (and it was valid at the time) that companies would get a bit of a lead on the industry (17 years), but then others would be allowed to use the new information, and the original company would be forced to continue innovating.

    Never was it the goal of the USPTO to encourage the kind of personal innovation that you describe. That's expected to happen as a result of individuals selling their ideas to companies, or developing their ideas by founding a company (the old, build-a-better-mousetrap scenario, for example, is supposed to end in your starting a successful mousetrap company). These are secondary (but IMPORTANT effects).
  • I've been working for about five years on a "human language learning exchange" project, which turned into software, which recently turned (partly) into a pending u.s. patent. The basic "method" claimed ain't rocket science, but it did take a lot of error and even more trial to come up with. And trust me, it's really *sucked* working on the chicken side of the egg. I'd prefer not to get screwed in the end. Still, there are so many reasons *not* to file internet software patents, especially as churn churns churn faster:

    * if the world wide web or linux were patented, who'd use 'em? free ideas are far more powerful.

    * patents perpetuate outdated economic models, imposing artificial scarcity [transaction.net] upon abundant bits.

    * the Internet is transforming human societies much faster than local laws or terrestrial governments can adapt.

    * (in fact, we might experience widespread institutional failure [chaordic.org] and soon.)

    * not all jurisdictions recognize the international patents, so they're difficult to enforce on the web.

    * it costs a fortune to file, prosecute manage and enforce patents in multiple the jursidictions of the world.

    * patent laws discriminate against the poor: those who can't pay up can't legally "protect" innovations. (this ain't a big deal today, but wait 10 years when bandwidth is 60,000 times more plentiful, tripling yearly its reach)

    * patent claims set a precedent, thus inviting future patents to attempt to monopolize derivative works.

    * patents perpetuate ideals of marketplace "dominance". "partnership [partnershipway.org]" may give rise much more valuable trade.

    * patent impose an outdated a "zero sum" game. Learning grows more valuable as more people share it.

    * trademarks are a far more "defense worthy", as they identify reputable brand (increasingly valuable as info gluts)


    so.. why'd i file? believe me, i been on the fence.. (and sick to the stomach) but finally decided a patent pending might buy some time and keep some options open.. (besides, the thing took forever to write, and *damned* dull it was.. (no wonder the patent office is overwhelmed.. (have you ever read a patent?)))

    Anyway, i'm 100% sure that, um.. "my" project should chaorganize [cascadepolicy.org] and go open source, and aim to host a license selection forum real soon, but here's my question now:

    there's been some talk of an Open Source Patent Pool to cross-license [linuxworld.com] w/ the closed stuff.. (are there any "open" patents in this pipeline yet? (any chance at "first post"8P?)).. Anyone have more info?

    [btw- IMO, open source patent pooling *might* be an effective "defensive" strategy, but remember the "enemy" has deeeep pockets. Better choose playing field wisely.. the way to outmaneuver *money* is increasingly to outsmart it..]

  • They are likely patenting [4] and [5] (algorithms and methods), which are inherent in [1] through [3]. Technically speaking, you aren't supposed to be able to patent an algorithm, but in practice it is done all the time (and such patents are held to be valid). Method patents ("I claims the method of performing steps X, Y and Z") have been around a long time (much longer than computers). A method patent effectively prohibits you from doing particular things.

    Inventions that can be patented are not simply the mechanical dohicky's that the public generally thinks of. In my view (and yes, I am a former patent attorney), this misunderstanding on the part of the public is the only thing that permits this obviously unjust system (the patent system) to continue.

    A lot of the bandwidth on discussions such as this one is dedicated to trying to differentiate the real, acceptable, patents from the spurious ones. I am convinced that no real line can be drawn between them. We accept patents on real inventions only because it has always (almost) been that way.

    I'll stop ranting now.

    -Steve

  • Just publish the damn thing, the sooner the better.

    Patents can be overturned if it can be shown that the core idea was published before the patent application was filed. If you have anything you want to share, publish it.

    This may allow someone in the future to site your work in order to overturn a patent.

  • The way patents are used in the late 90's is nothing like the way patents have been used over the previous 200 years. We are now facing patents on life forms, patents on business models, and patents on algorithms. Quite apart from the question whether such patents are within the scope of the current patent system or represent its intent, the economic effects of such patents are completely different from hardware patents, due to the different cost structures of those businesses.

    Patent law is also being used very differently. Patent law is being used to tie up small startups in knots and patent licensing fees are calculated to be just below the cost where it would be profitable for a competitor to actually defend themselves in court. And the amount of work and the cost related to writing and applying for patents has increased enormously.

    And I think you overestimate the importance of patents in the technology business in the US. All of the current big software companies grew up in an environment where software patents didn't exist for practical purposes. And even for hardware, most innovations weren't patented, and those that were often weren't enforced or enforcable (with a significant number of highly publicized exceptions, of course).

    Maybe the way patents are used in the 90's is defensible from an economic and policy point of view (although I have grave doubts). But one thing is clear: even if the letter of the law hasn't changed much, from a practical point of view, this is nothing like the patent system we have had for the past 200 years. It isn't even anything like the patent system that we have had until the 90's. So, past successes and failures are not a guide to whether this system will work.


  • In this case you are talking about two completely different forms of litigation:

    1. patent infringement
    2. liability

    First of, there's rarely anyone to sue ANYWHERE if something goes wrong even in commercial software....ever read those licensing agreements (EULAs and such)? They stop nothing short of saying "if you touch the floppy and it blows up in your face, we're not responsible".

    The argument companies make against OSS isn't a legal one - they themselves do everything they can not to be liable for their software. The argument is basically that "if joe newbie can't open his word processor, he can't call some 1-800 number where a friendly tech support rep. will be with him shortly"

    However, that's liability - who to sue if doggy dies. In this case, we're talking about patent infringement - you steal my idea, I sue you (as long as I paid tons of money to have it patented).

    AFAIK, companies are free to sue ANY entity that is believed to have infringed on their patents. I think this poses a HUGE HUGE HUGE (did I mention...HUGE?) threat to OSS.

    I'll say it again:

    A FUCKING HUGE ASS THREAT

    Why?

    Scenario 1:

    Ok, say IBM sues Intel for some patent infringement. Say that Intel actually came up with the idea themselves and that they would win if the case were taken to court. Intel has the resources to face such litigation...

    Scenario 2:

    IBM sues Joe GNU for some patent infringement. Joe GNU came up with the whole thing himself, after many hours of work, cases of Jolt Cola and packs of camel lights. Joe GNU however, can barely afford the rent of his crappy lower east side loft. What do you think will happen? He'll piss his pants at the first cease and desist letter that he gets from the legal dept. and promptly delete all of his code (well, at least remove it from public access - the ramifications of his code already being out there at one point is a whole different issue altogether).

    See what I mean? Patents cost MONEY. Money that people involved in OSS projects simply don't have to spend. So, what if some less-than-well-intentioned people with lots of money (say, around 100 billion for example :) ouch what a cheap shot...) start getting patents for things that are being developed as OSS projects? Can you even start to think about the ramifications of this? That's why software-patents-ARE-BAD(tm) and everyone should oppose them.

    peace,

    dr0ne
  • by jd ( 1658 ) <`imipak' `at' `yahoo.com'> on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:31AM (#1604043) Homepage Journal
    Ever read that children's story? Well, it applies here, too.

    The large software companies kep Free Software down, by pointing out that there's nobody to sue if something goes wrong.

    This puts them in a bit of a bind. If they sue over patent infringement, then (win or lose), they let the genie out the bottle. They show to their customers that, indeed, free software -can- be sued, and is therefore a liable source of software - something THEIR lawyers insist on.

    Do that, and they lose customers to OSS alternatives. BIG time. And there's no way in hell they are going to take that chance.

    On the other hand, if they don't sue, they risk wasting their cash, they risk losing their patents and they risk losing their image. Can you imagine what the press would make of it? "MegaCorp, Inc, handed their multi-trillion dollar patent file to Dweebs, Inc, a bunch of long-haired computer nerds who's only claim to fame is being any good at programming."

    The computer companies would get -SLAUGHTERED- by the press, AND their shareholders, if they simply bow down.

    So what can they do? Nothing. There is no answer, at least, not in the direction they're going. Whatever their response, if an OSS group infringe their patents, they are going to be cut to pieces. Their only hope is that we don't.

  • This ridiculous process of patenting 'business methods' is closely related (IMO) to the 'frivolous lawsuit' business method, which AFAIK remains unpatented. In both cases individuals or companies are trying to get money for nothing. The only difference is that in the cases of patenting, the applicant maintains a veneer of respectability, leaving people with the impression that s/he is an innovator.
    Take a totally implausible example: say a company patents the process by which books are ordered by employing a single click. This is doubtless handy for those of us who order books that way, but is it patentable? Obviously it is.
    Patents are in place to give individuals and companies the -- pardon me -- freedom to innovate, and patenting one-click widget ordering does nothing to help anyone except Amazon's shareholders.
    About seven years ago, I ordered a book with a single click (so to speak). I phoned the bookshop, got cut off and (here's the good bit) hit (or 'clicked') redial. I then ordered the book, had my credit card charged, and waited for the book to arrive. I'm willing to testify to this if Forbidden Planet want to sue Amazon.
  • by BAKup ( 40339 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:37AM (#1604054)
    ...When do we hang all the lawyers? I think it's now way past the time to. Things are way out of control.

    Q: What's the difference between a dead snake in the middle of the road, and a dead lawyer?

    A: There's skid marks in front of the snake.

    --Ben

    Error #134: Can not find intellegent .sig

  • I don't see any real possibility that MegaCorp. will come along and try to sue OSS out of existence. Take the biggest patent case the internet has seen, the infamous GIF format. When Unisys began to crack down on their patent, the OSS response was to start using the (free) PNG format instead. I look through my GTK themes and see nothing but PNG images, for example. I think it's safe to conclude that if a piece of OSS software finds itself in violation, the open nature will guarantee a fix in no time flat.

    Another thing to remember is the current OSS backers. IBM has invested heavily in Linux in their battle with Microsoft and isn't about to let their new hope fall under the hand of litigation. We can hope that if some greedy organization comes along with the hope of extortion, IBM's extensive patent array could be used in OSS's defense. Something along the lines of: "Linux is violating your patent Foo? Well, your software is in violation of our patents X, Y, Z, Q and Bar."

    But really, OSS doesn't have the massive money behind it to be extorted and the open nature of it helps it dodge patent problems quickly, IMHO.

  • by overshoot ( 39700 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @01:12PM (#1604067)
    Let's face it, folks -- there are two fundamental problems with software patents. One is that doing a search to avoid infringement is a horrible resource hog, and the other is that (a la Ted Sturgeon) 95% are junk.

    Both of these problems are solvable, though, in the same sense that "with enough eyes all bugs are shallow." A distributed project to review software patents would go a short way to index and cross-reference the pests, but it could go a long way toward pointing out how silly most of them are. Most of these toads got past the Patent Office because the PO doesn't review against unpatented prior art, and until recently none of the prior art was patented.

    So! The trick is to scan through the patent database for software patents. Sort them into categories. Apply an open review process which rates patents by impact (e.g., a patent on linked lists) and if possible identifies prior art.

    With enough ludicrous examples we might even be able to enlist some press to shame Congress into dealing with the problem.
  • by Devout Capitalist ( 94813 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @01:14PM (#1604069)
    There seems to much FUD floating around this topic, so I thought I'd toss in a few facts. I've filed for ten patents for my previous employer, and keep a close eye on the patent world.

    1. $25K/patent. Patents are not cheap. It costs about $10K-$15K to disclose, draft, file, and sheppard a patent to conclusion. Add to this another $10K of time for people in your group to disclose and review the patent. Now, some would view getting ten patents at $25K each better than one engineer at $250K (loaded). Some patent firms are much better than others; mail me for some recommendations.

    2. Don't patent it yourself.You can learn a lot from the Patent It Yourself [nolo.com] book, but you probably won't make a good patent. You can save money by preparing for the disclosure and by drawing your own diagrams. Never opt for the various 'individual inventor' reduced fees; the clauses bite and kill your patent. Also, there are a bunch of rip-off places that will sign any NDA and talk about 'marketting'.

    3. No patents = No Silicon Valley. Silicon valley exists because of patents. Otherwise, MS or Sun would keep a group of engineers on standby just to clone every interesting piece of software. Patents provide reasonable barriers to entry for small firms. Not everything is a matter of time to market.

    4. Silly Patents. There are many silly patents [ibm.com] out there, and more being filed all the time. The problem is the breakdown at the US Patent Office, mostly by the previous administrator. For a while, patent agents were being reviewed by how many patents they awarded, and so they awarded a lot of trash.

    5. Defense. In software, patents are defensive for the most part. Cisco, for example, has publically promised never to sue. Patents keep others from quickly ripping you off, and from others trying to enforce patents against you. Xerox is the notable exception; the idiots keep thinking they can raise money from their portfolio. Remember, nothing a law firm does can keep you from being sued; it can only keep you from losing.

    There's a lot more about patents. It's a religious issue, even among patent attorneys. Most feel that the patent office does an inconsistent job, and all patent attorneys I know of cheered when gene sequence patents were tossed.
  • Before everybody starts piling on the patent office as is usual whenever patents are mentioned, take into consideration that the patent office is currently so backlogged and overloaded with applications (think FCC during CB radio craze, when it had about one thousand employess total, including clerical staff)that the only way they can get any throughput working with the resources Congress gives them is to approve practically everything that isn't immediately obviously disallowable and transfer the burden of sorting it all out to the judicial system. If you want to scream at somebody about it, try Congress. (You might want to avoid the irony of demanding increased Patent Office funding and lower taxes simultaneously, though)

  • It takes a lot of money to get something throught the patent process. You can easily spend on the order of 10's of thousands on lawyers and research (have to ensure that on one else patented it before you).

    And it takes years to find out of you actually got the patent. And it could all be for nothing if someone else submitted the same thing a day before you did (you can't find out what patents are in the 2-3 year processing pipe, you can only find out about them after they're approved/rejected).

    So big companies can afford to "invest" in an agressive patent policy (i.e. getting patents for things just to keep competitors from making them, even though the patent holder will never create the patented stuff). Meanwhile, any person or group who isn't totally rich could get nailed to the wall if they develop some cool software without heavy VC backing.

    Does this mean that a future Carmack could have his Doom engine patented out from under him?
  • Oh, also there are some good critiques of intellectual property concepts from Linguistic/Marxist/Feminist perspectives on oppression, the the notion of intellectual property and that symbols such as TM and © are situated as oppressive constructs that are symbolically tied to oppression of women through notions of a master/slave (author/reader) dialectic.

    Some thoughts and a cite: Modest-Witness@Second-Millennium.FemaleMan-Meets-O ncoMouse : feminism and technoscience by Donna Haraway. This is a fascinating read if you are interested in science, technology, and critical theory (particularly Marxism and Feminism). Sean

  • Essentially what you're asking is for companies to take gambles that their huge court bills will be reimbursed when they win. This is a risky business at the very least.

    Why would you want other businesses to do it? It should be something that DoJ could spend some time researching. Perhaps they could even use the same site that I proposed for the USPTO, in order to figure out which ones were spurious before they became actual patents.

    This is, of course, a pipe-dream. I think the 2-year limit with essentially automatic approval, and much easier and cheaper elimination of patents shown to be bad would work out well. It's just in human nature to abuse this kind of group dynamic, and the only reasonable way to avoid it is to limit the overall usefulness of the system.

    Sigh.


  • I've seen 2 successful bio-tech startups first hand. They simply wouldn't happen without patent protection. And yes, they did take on the big boys. Yes, there are some serious issues with patent abuse by the bigger companies. But no, killing patents won't help socially, economically, or medically. Fixing the legal/patent system is important though.
  • Please explain to me why the FSF, or any of a number of democratic open-source initiatives should not start patenting many of the advances made in the course of developing open source software.

    Because it's expensive?

    Part of the .org's job would be to receive contributions through a foundation created for the purpose, to carry out this work.

    because it's a slimy lawyerly thing to do?

    No more slimy than a license, for example, the GPL. And a patent becomes slimy only if the process is abused. As a democratic organization answering to the open source community in general, we wouldn't abuse it, hopefully.

    because playing lawyer isn't fun?

    It is if you're a law student.

    because it goes against the principles of openness which is the heart of what the GPL is trying to accomplish?

    On the contrary, patents encourage openness. It's patents in the hands of those who would abuse them that could hurt the open source movement.

    because once an algorithm appears in an OSS package, it becomes published, meaning that one year later the algorithm will become truly free, according to the principles of our movement?

    In a perfect world that would be true. We do not live in a perfect world. In the world we live in, some bozo will patent the obvious extension of the idea, and next thing you know, you can't bring out version 2 without paying licence fees to said bozo, or finding yet another way to do it.
  • by Mr. Slippery ( 47854 ) <tms&infamous,net> on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:48AM (#1604114) Homepage
    Finally, anyone who thinks they have something worth patenting, feel free. If you believe in free software, maybe you can GPL your patent. :)
    I've had a few ideas that are, IMHO, at least as patentable as some of the more recent and well-publicized software patents. I'd love to patent one and GPL it, so I could a) have a patent on my resume, and b) be a more authoritative voice against software patents. But the cost! Hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars in patent office fees alone, plus the services of a good attorney.
  • by um... Lucas ( 13147 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:51AM (#1604115) Journal
    I think I'm pretty much for patents in most cases. The goal of most companies is to make money and keep a competitive edge. That means spending lots of money on R&D, and you don't want to make a discovery, get a product to market and then find that your largest competitor copying your work. That, i think, would cause the death of innovation in so many industries.

    I think that there should be different classifications on patents, if that would be at all feasible. For instance, computer-related patents should only be allowed to be enforceable for 5-7 years (the 3 year life of any given computer, plus a couple years just to be generous)... That'd be enough, I think that a company could come up with something trully ingenious and make their money from it, but they'ed also have to work their buts off on their next product rather than going "Okay, now we've got 20 years of revenues from licensees"...

    Patents on drugs are more difficult. We need drugs to live comfortably (and i'm not even talking about the recreational ones)... Should a company be allowed to patent it's discoveries? Yes. Should they be allowed to recoup their investments? Yes. If they couldn't, then they'ed all make the next diet drug, because those are a lot surer to bring back profits for the shareholders...

    Perhaps the gov't should contract with the Pharmaceutical companies to develop drugs they feel they need developed. They could say, we need a new AIDS drug, start your bidding. Then the gov't would pay all associated costs for 5 or 7 years to develop the drug, and give the company 15% of the income derived from the drug.

    That way, companies would still get their due, and consumers wouldn't get nearly as screwed as can be the case these days (ahem... UNISYS)
  • by konstant ( 63560 ) on Monday October 18, 1999 @11:52AM (#1604118)
    IANAL, but this article seems to be implying that the burden of proof rests upon the defendant in patent-violation cases. If this is the case, then it creates a curious set of conditions in relation to the openness of the product code base. Software that is open, and thus can be inspected freely, is far easier to defend against charges such as these than is the case with closed software. If the the code is kept proprietary, then the only means by which a developer can prove innocence is to allow a court-supervised inspection of the code. This causes all sorts of legal troubles, because typically the suing corporation has a vested interest in learning how the proprietary code works.

    You may remember Microsoft's tiptoeing with the Caldera case (I think it was Caldera). They had to explain at length to the judge that opening their Windows code as a defense exhibit would endanger their business model. The code could only be examined after much legal wrangling and numerous NDAs had been signed. No doubt this is pretty costly - legal work doesn't come cheap.

    By contrast, since the code of open-source projects is, by definition, open, we might expect fewer spurious suits of this kind levied against FSF/OSS products. Why press your luck suing somebody when you know quite plainly they have not violated your patent and that it would cost them nothing (apart from lawyer overhead) to demonstrate that fact. It's a financially losing proposition. The incentive to settle and let the patent pirate laugh its way to the bank is far smaller.

    By the same token though, if you do open your source, you'd better be damn sure you really aren't violating any proprietary code.


    -konstant

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