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W3C Publishes "Current Patent Practices"

jdaly writes "Given the interest Slashdot readers have shown in W3C's Patent Policy, I would like to provide an update and pointer to the most recent document published by W3C on Patent Issues. The W3C has published Current Patent Practice as a W3C Note. Reviewed by the W3C Advisory Board, the Note represents the current state of W3C patent practice as implemented by the Team for W3C Recommendations. "

From the document: This current practice has evolved in order to satisfy the goal held by a number of W3C Members and significant parts of the larger Web community: that W3C Recommendations should be, as far as possible, implementable on a Royalty-Free basis [AC]. The current practice described here seeks to

  • establish Royalty-Free implementation as a goal for Recommendations produced by new and re-chartered Working Groups;
  • encourage maximum disclosure of patents that might prevent a W3C Recommendation from being implemented on a Royalty-Free basis;
  • provide a process for addressing situations in which the goal of Royalty-Free implementation may not be attainable.
It serves as a guide for W3C Activities between now and when the policy developed by the Patent Policy Working Group is finalized. The policy is currently a Working Draft. Comments are welcome on the _publicly_ archived mailing list www-patentpolicy-comment@w3.org.

1 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Cop-out time by Mark+Shewmaker · · Score: 2, Informative
    "In patent-land, I could do the same with my invention, put it in the public domain and let others use it freely, as long as they conform to some license agreement such as the GPL."

    That idea is more or less the sort of thing I want the Open Patent License in progress at openpatents.org to do.