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EU Parliament to Vote on New Patent Rules

peter_sd writes "The Register has an article discussing the implications to the open source community and small software businesses of the new software patent law to be voted on tomorrow by the EU parliament. According to the article, it is very likely the new patent law will be accepted despite its grave consequences."

7 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. What we need... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    People to get software patents and license them ONLY for use in GPL'd software. It would be similar to making copyright into copyleft.

  2. If Free software is outlawed... by chill · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...only outlaws will have Free software.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  3. Vote postponed, time to get organised by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Great News
    The vote has been postponed until September 1st.
    All info at:
    http://swpat.ffii.org/news/03/plen0626/index.en.ht ml

    This means we must have their attention.

    Please contact your national FreeSoftware or digital-freedom group to organise an Adopt-an-MEP campaign. If the vote did take place tomorrow, we would lose but with the help of a few concerned citizens, we will win.

    Ciaran O'Riordan

  4. The Register Proves again: apathy sucks by Travoltus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Register said (at http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/31472.html) :
    It is politicians who make the law, and it is politicians who need to be persuaded if the law is to move in the direction that you desire it to. But while they are a peculiar and varied breed, there are three things you can be fairly certain will not hold much sway with them:

    1. Ideological argument. Politicians are nothing if not pragmatic. Their very survival is based on seeing which way the wind is blowing and adjusting accordingly

    2. Little-man defence. Politicians will not risk upsetting rich and powerful people and companies unless there is a principle at stake: that principle being that the government ultimately decides. Therefore arguing a point on the basis that it will restrict or impair a powerful body is counterproductive

    3. Criticism. Politicians do not respond well to criticism. In fact, the more they get, the more stubborn they become. Flattery is the surest route to their heart, and this means making them feel important. Wining and dining, listening, applauding their insight and then putting your point across

    1) That means profits over politics. The Open Source movement should have found some weapon to blackmail politicians into not allowing these new patent law changes to pass. For instance: "If you pass these laws these particular (thousands of) businesses will flee Europe and go elsewhere and take hundreds of thousands of jobs with them."

    2) Tyranny of the few is still as true now as it has ever been. Hello, feudalism! Er, welcome back. Er, feudalism never really left!

    3) Long live sycophantry!

    We need less 'irony'ism and apathy, and more hard core fanaticism in this society.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  5. Re:Help from the other side of the pond? by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wow. Thanks for your international interest JBN.

    It would be very helpful if you could send emails or faxes to MEPs. Your non-EU citizenship can be used as a positive, i.e.:
    "As an American, I see first hand how software patents hurt innovation and competition in a software industry. Start ups find it hard to enter the market when they can be threatened with costly patent lawsuits and investors are nervous about giving funding to a company when they know that a deeper bank account will likely draw the attention of Intellectual Propertly law firms"

    There is a listing of all EU MEPs at:
    http://wwwdb.europarl.eu.int/ep5/owa/p_meps2.repar tition?ipid=0&ilg=EN&iorig=home&imsg=

    Good arguments for talking to non-techs can be found at:
    (RMS and Nick Hill, longish)
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4683640,00. html
    (and a short one from me:)
    http://www.electronicsweekly.com/issue/inview.asp? vpath=/articles/2003/05/28/view02.htm

    If you only speak english, stick with the UK and Ireland. Many EU citizens are already talking with their MEPs, your emails or faxes would be a great reinforcement.

    Ciaran O'Riordan

  6. Vote was postponed to September by Balaitous · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is known since Thursday 26 June that the vote will not occur on 30 June. Despite pressure from the pro-patent UK labour rapporteur Arlene McCarthy, the conference of group presidents in the Parliament has decided that the vote in plenary will occur only in September.
    A little more time to convince Members of the European Parliament of all parties of the the common sense decision: rejecting patents for software ideas and information processing methods.

  7. Easy solution by Ath · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I am sure this is not an original idea, but why do open source developers just make a minor change in their license. Basically that under no circumstances can a patented software application make use of any functions built into the open source software.

    This would simply use a software licensing term to send a clear message. Want to patent your software? Fine, but you won't get to use it with any open source software.

    Everyone is trying to put their damn finger in the dike regarding this stuff. I say we pull our fingers out of the holes and let the place flood. Then we will see how companies like it when they want to use everyone else's work to their financial benefit while not sharing.

    You think Amazon and it's "one-click" crap doesn't use open source software to actually implement the idea?