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Second Round of EU Patent Fight, Coming Up

An anonymous reader writes "Seems that last fall's victory over EU patent regulations was just round one. The current draft rejects all clarifying amendments made by the European Parliament, allowing direct patentability of computer programs. A net-wide protest is being organized on April 14."

188 comments

  1. I don't understand Nokia by mindless4210 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From this link:

    Nokia's Patent Department is collecting signatures from CTOs for this letter in support the "working document" of the EU Council "Working Party on Intellectual Property", a group of patent administrators who run the European Patent Office. The letter portrays this document as a "balanced compromise" which "takes the Parliament's concerns into account" and says that this is needed in order to assure that electric household applicances, medical technology etc do not become unpatentable. Thereby the letter drafters deceive both their signatories (CTOs who usually do not read the directive proposals) as well as their readers.

    It disturbs me to see Nokia taking taking the role that they have been. Their statements seem to be quite misleading, and it is clear that they will have significant gain from software patents. With all the heat they've been getting lately, you would think that they might try to take it easy on such controversial issues. Either way, I am fully against software patents.

    --
    Wireless News www.DailyWireless
    1. Re:I don't understand Nokia by iminplaya · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Look at the bright side. Now we have a new group of leeches.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:I don't understand Nokia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have an opinion of Nokia (as I do). Maybe you should write to their technical department and complain, their CTO is likely take note if their developers page is slashdotted.

      http://www.forum.nokia.com/main.html

      Have a chat, have a bout

    3. Re:I don't understand Nokia by sxpert · · Score: 1

      the idea here is to boycott nokia and tell them that you are, weather by email or snail mail.
      More power to you if you can hit them more thoroughly than with a cell phone, such as if you can recommand against nokia hardware for things like firewalls and the like.

  2. Need to keep hammering by flossie · · Score: 4, Insightful
    After the stunning victory in round 1, we just need to make sure our parliamentarians stand firm. I am sure they will not appreciate this attempt to trample over their amendments. Time to get writing again ...

    1. Re:Need to keep hammering by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 1

      "After the stunning victory in round 1, we just need to make sure our parliamentarians stand firm"

      The ministers involved don't even know the difference between copyrights and patents, so don't hold your breath.

      To misuse a phrase, we'll have no need to attribute their actions to malice.

    2. Re:Need to keep hammering by flossie · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The ministers involved don't even know the difference between copyrights and patents, so don't hold your breath.

      Lawyers are disproportionately represented in parliament and the cabinet (in the UK, at least). I don't doubt for a minute that they are generally aware of the differences between copyrights and patents. Of course, they may sometimes find it convenient to blur the issues by referring to "intellectual property", but that doesn't mean they don't understand themselves.

    3. Re:Need to keep hammering by unsinged+int · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Whenever I read articles like this I get very upset, but it's difficult to do anything about it. Why? Because try stopping a dozen random people and asking them what their position is on software patents. It's not like abortion or gun control or taxation, stuff people hear about all the time. And even if you could communicate to them what it is, you still can't show them the negative effects. Sure, you can describe the effects, but not at a this-will-affect-you level where you can say "this will take $$$ out of your wallet" or "this will cause somebody physical harm."

      Incidently, most people I've asked who do know what a software patent is have told me that they just pretend they don't exist.

    4. Re:Need to keep hammering by flossie · · Score: 4, Informative

      It may be true that the majority of people don't have an opinion on software patents, but that also means that it is a fair bet that they are not writing to their representatives about the issue. Therefore, it is up to those of us that do care to make enough noise.

    5. Re:Need to keep hammering by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 1

      Q: "Please don't vote for software patents, they'd inhibit free software such as linux"

      A: "Linux has survived despite the existance of copyrights"

    6. Re:Need to keep hammering by flossie · · Score: 1
      Q: "Please don't vote for software patents, they'd inhibit free software such as linux"
      A: "Linux has survived despite the existance of copyrights"

      If your MP really says that, take the opportunity to educate them!

      Unfortunately, mine isn't interested until the issue comes before the Westminster parliament (by which time it will be _far_ too late).

  3. As has been said before. by Tsian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you would really like to promote change, please take the time to write or call officials. This will almost certainly have a larger impact than any protest restricted to the net.

    I mean, obviously these people do not get technology in the way most of us do, otherwise they would not be suggesting such ludicrous laws. As such, take the battle to them on terms they understand.

    1. Re:As has been said before. by flossie · · Score: 5, Informative
      If you would really like to promote change, please take the time to write or call officials.

      e-mail works fine. Most of the ones I write to (we have 8 Scottish MEPs) are generally happy to receive and reply to e-mails.

    2. Re:As has been said before. by Tsian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, I think most will now respond to and read e-mail. However, I still think there is a large psychological difference between a full inbox and a large crate of letters.

      I would argue that the letters (or large amount of calls) seem more 'real' as they take up quantifiable amounts of time and space.

    3. Re:As has been said before. by Delirium+Tremens · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Excuse me, but how are you supposed to write or call your Prime Minister?
      It's not simply the Parliament and its elected MEPs that we are talking about here.

    4. Re:As has been said before. by Tsian · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, by either:

      a) Calling the office of the Prime Minister

      or

      b) Writing the office of the Prime Minister.

      Much as you would contact a regular MP.

    5. Re:As has been said before. by flossie · · Score: 2, Informative
      Excuse me, but how are you supposed to write or call your Prime Minister?

      If you write to ministers directly, you will rarely receive a reply; even if you do, it will be a standard civil service reply. The correct way to contact ministers (in the UK at least) is to write to your MP and ask them to pass your concerns on to the minister responsible. They will then forward your letter/e-mail to the minister and (eventually) send you back the reply.

      If you have a really good MP, you may be able to get them to take an interest and raise the issue themselves, in parliament.

    6. Re:As has been said before. by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Tony Blair doesn't read every letter sent to him, but he does get a summary of the letters he receives by subject and position. I imagine it's similar for most PMs.

    7. Re:As has been said before. by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Karma-whoring...

      Brits can find the name of their MP from the Common's list of members by constituency, or can use faxyourmp.com. They can find names and contact details for their MEPs from the UK Office of the European Parliament. I'm sure similar sites exist for other countries.

    8. Re:As has been said before. by csteinle · · Score: 1

      Unless of course you live in Sedgefield. Then you can write to Tony as much as you want. I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader as to whether the constutients in Sedgefield have a really good MP.

      (Tony Blair is the "Honourable Member for Sedgefield" for those who don't know.)

    9. Re:As has been said before. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Writing the office of the Prime Minister.

      On what?

      Oh, you meant writing to the office of the Prime Minister?

    10. Re:As has been said before. by ShadowRage · · Score: 1

      yeah, a large crate takes a long time to burn whilst an inbox can be cleared in a few seconds.

  4. isn't this the same as by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    this http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/04/10/16 27239&mode=thread&tid=117&tid=155&tid= 99 ?

  5. The one good thing by The_Mystic_For_Real · · Score: 5, Funny

    The one good thing about this is that now the US won't fall behind Europe in the software field.

    --

    _____

    Thank you.

    1. Re:The one good thing by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Funny

      But it appears the EU will surpass the USA in the bad law field very quickly...

    2. Re:The one good thing by FrYGuY101 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Between the DMCA and the USA PATRIOT act, the US has Europe beaten there for the foreseeable future as well...

      --
      "If we let things terrify us, life will not be worth living."

      - Seneca
    3. Re:The one good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the EC completely un-accountable to the electorate - you are guaranteed to surpass the USA.

  6. moo by sleepnmojo · · Score: 5, Funny

    If the sites don't go down in protest, we'll slashdot them

    1. Re:moo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is very much on topic, many sites are choosing to 'shut down' / 'go down' on purpose to protest these patents.

      MOD PARENT UP as FUNNY or INSIGHTFUL

  7. Software patents are good.. in general by Sexual+Ass+Gerbil · · Score: 0, Troll

    While there is some abuse of patents in the software industry, you have to give them some credit for building an industry. Take a look at Europe, where software patents are uninforceable. Exactly how big is the software industry in Europe? I'm not talking about open source me-too clones of commercial products. I'm talking about software that's revolutionary enough that you'd actually be willing to put down a few dollars to buy. It's true that MP3 compression technology was developed by a German company, but without U.S. patents on the technology, Fraunhofer would be long dead. Except for a few videogames, Europe isn't exactly the hotbed of new software technology.

    1. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by fluffybacon · · Score: 3, Funny
      Take a look at Europe, where software patents are uninforceable ....... I'm talking about software that's revolutionary enough that you'd actually be willing to put down a few dollars to buy.
      Indeed if only the europeans could come up with something revolutionary like Linux instead of all the Microsoft rubbish they keep forcefeeding us
      --
      It's not big, but it's clever!
    2. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Zocalo · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Except for a few videogames, Europe isn't exactly the hotbed of new software technology.

      Oh, it's not as bad as that. Quite a lot of R&D for software happens in Europe - a lot of Microsoft's UI research is done in Cambridge (England, not Mass.) for example, KDE has a European origin, and Linux itself is from Finland. And there is the small matter of CERN inventing HTTP, the web browser and all... So, technically, for all those people who think that the WWW *is* the Internet, it was actually invented in Europe. ;)

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    3. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's true that MP3 compression technology was developed by a German company, but without U.S. patents on the technology, Fraunhofer would be long dead.

      Nice talk, too bad you shoot yourself in the foot at the end. Fraunhofer is a huge german institute for research, and mp3 compression is just a very small part of the thing. I don't think they rely solely on royalties on the mp3 format :)

    4. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Sexual+Ass+Gerbil · · Score: 0, Troll

      Linux was started in Finland. However, Linus now lives in the U.S. where he makes money in the software industry and still has time for Linux. I don't see how having a successful software industry undermines open source developers. Europe, on the other hand, has mainly open source developers and very little industry. That means programmers have to make their living doing something else other than what they love, such as a boring job working at the local petrol station.

    5. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Europe lags behind because the US had all the good pioneers like Babbage and Turing. Oh wait ...

    6. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Like SAP? They certainly seem to be in the poor house.

    7. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure SAP locks up their IP with something far stronger than patents: NDAs and other nasty contracts. SAP also has a lot of software patents. They are lobbying for software patents in the EU. Their PR department is painting the scenario with words you want to hear. SAP says they only want software patents legalized for defense purposes, but you and I both know better.

    8. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More specifically, in Great Britain.

      I hate it when people refer to "Europe" as a country. It's not, and I'd rather die before it is.

    9. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Alsee · · Score: 1

      WWW *is* the Internet, it was actually invented in Europe

      Wow, I didn't know Al Gore was European!
      Heay, wait a minute! How did he run for president??

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    10. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this a troll? It's perfectly correct. Let me guess though: someone thinks that pointing out that Linux is not a US invention is tantamount to treason or something.

    11. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      More specifically, in Great Britain.


      Not true. It was invented in Switzerland by a Brit called Tim Berners-Lee.
    12. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe he invented the internet during a trip to Europe?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    13. Re:Software patents are good.. in general by linoleo · · Score: 1

      Oh dear - utter rubbish from front to back. Let's see:

      you have to give [software patents] some credit for building an industry

      Software patents didn't exist when the US software industry was built.

      open source me-too clones of commercial products

      You got it backwards - the majority of today's commercial software was cloned from early open-source (often research) projects.

      software that's revolutionary

      Off the top of my head: the Web, Linux, MUDs, Bayesian spam filtering, etc. not revolutionary enough for you? All of European provenance.

      Fraunhofer would be long dead

      Fraunhofer *is* long dead, and for the Fraunhofer Society mp3 royalties are a nice windfall, nothing more. It's a large state-owned contract research organization fer chrissakes.

      --
      Be faithful to your obsessions. Identify them and be faithful to them, let them guide you like a sleepwalker. JG Ballard
  8. Protest in your living room. by normal_guy · · Score: 5, Funny
    A net-wide protest is being organized on April 14.

    And we know that influential lawmakers frequent Slashdot, Fark, Plastic, and Sourceforge.

    --

    Linux: Free if your time is worthless.
    1. Re:Protest in your living room. by flossie · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What we really need is to get sites like google involved. That would have an impact.

    2. Re:Protest in your living room. by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      But the big guys, that they'd notice, want this because they stand to profit from patents.

      It'd be like expecting Universal Studios to protest the DeCSS case(s).

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    3. Re:Protest in your living room. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      If you want to have an impact, get the sites they see involved.

      So exactly which porn sites do the EU Parlament frequent?

    4. Re:Protest in your living room. by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      But Google has software patents, doesn't it?

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    5. Re:Protest in your living room. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But Google has software patents, doesn't it?

      So do Red Hat, or they're planning to at any rate.

      It's called "defensive patents". The USA's broken patent system means you have to patent everything you write to stop someone else coming along, patenting it themselves, and suing you.

      It's like a gun, really. In an ideal world, nobody would need a gun in their house (except for sport). In the real world, if you live in an area where most people have guns you'd better have one too, because anyone who breaks into your house is going to come armed. But just as not everyone who owns a gun is a gun nut, so not everyone who patents software wants software to be patentable.

    6. Re:Protest in your living room. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      One Banana, Two Banana, Three Banana, Four, Slashdot, Fark, Plastic, and Forge.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  9. Letter Template Explaining it all to Lawmakers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some interesting parts from a letter you can send to people, hopefully law makers who can make a difference:

    http://slashdot.org/~Sanity/journal/60471

    --

    Patents are well suited to fields where new innovations require years of research and large amounts of capital, however this is not the case with software. Every new innovation in software builds on a multitude of previous innovations, and even a single software engineer might solve hundreds of small problems in a single day of programming. Against this backdrop, the notion of the programmer seeking a 20 year patent on each of those small solutions is clearly ridiculous.

    Worse still, imagine now that this programmer is forced to ensure that every small innovation they might want to build upon is not covered by someone else's patent. The programmer might need to conduct hundreds of patent searches in a single day of programming, and even then they would have no guarantee that they aren't violating a patent! Clearly this situation would be ridiculous, yet this is exactly the situation that programmers in the US and Japan now find themselves, and is exactly the situation that current UK government policy will impose on European Software developers!

    Even large companies are not invulnerable to such parasitic practices. In the US, Microsoft is currently fighting against a small company called Eolas who have acquired a patent on an obvious technique fundamental to the operation of any web browser. This company, if successful, will be able to extort a tax on every company and individual in the United States that uses the Internet! It is worth noting that this company's only purpose is to generate revenue through extortion using this patent, they have never written a line of computer code, nor do they have any intention of doing so.

    1. Re:Letter Template Explaining it all to Lawmakers by Saeger · · Score: 1
      the notion of the programmer seeking a 20 year patent on each of those small solutions is clearly ridiculous.

      Software patents don't seem ridiculous to those born with the Excessive-Greed gene! (patented, too, btw :)

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    2. Re:Letter Template Explaining it all to Lawmakers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to have 3 major points:
      1) Software patents do not require big amounts of investment
      2) Doing research if your code is/has been already patented is inconvenient
      3) Predatory patent lawsuits

      Well,
      1) Ask IBM or SAP or Oracle how much is their R&D budget for software. You spend 100 mil, you get 5 patents and 1 product; the product makes 50 mil, each patent is then worth 10 mil. You license it over a period of 20 years and you make some 100-200 mil in royalties.
      What's the problem with that? Maybe protection could be shorter (say, 5 or 10 years) but no protection whatsoever...

      2) This complaint is technical - searching or verifying code against current/pending patents can be easily automated (I believe it already is, internally, but major corporations)

      3) Predatory patent lawsuits
      So what? They do it because they can! They have the right. That's freedom of speech - you can't restict one's right to sue others.
      Besides, these lawsuits aren't limited to software - companies sue each other over IPR ever day - Sony sued Kodak last week, someone sued Toshiba this week.. So what?

      Your self-proclaimed concern for software is caused by selfishness. On the national (European) level, it's caused by inferiority complex because European companies lag in software development behind the US. And then there are losers of all colors who for this or that reason don't like to see companies make money on non-GPL-ed software and/or patents so they hate anything that's not GPL.

      Get a life, man...

    3. Re:Letter Template Explaining it all to Lawmakers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1) Ask IBM or SAP or Oracle how much is their R&D budget for software. You spend 100 mil, you get 5 patents and 1 product; the product makes 50 mil, each patent is then worth 10 mil. You license it over a period of 20 years and you make some 100-200 mil in royalties. What's the problem with that? Maybe protection could be shorter (say, 5 or 10 years) but no protection whatsoever...
      The problem with that is that most of the patents IBM has are on obvious techniques that they didn't invent, yet they still have the ability to use them to extort money from true innovators. That might be good for IBM, but it is bad for everyone else.
      2) This complaint is technical - searching or verifying code against current/pending patents can be easily automated (I believe it already is, internally, but major corporations)
      You are kidding right? Most patents are deliberately written to obfuscate what is covered by the patent. I have seen patents on techniques where even when even the inventor of that technique (who wasn't the holder of the patent, couldn't initially tell that the patent covered his invention. Given that, how the hell is some automated system supposed to do this?
      Predatory patent lawsuits So what? They do it because they can! They have the right. That's freedom of speech - you can't restict one's right to sue others.
      Wow - what a stunningly stupid statement, in fact, its so stupid it isn't even worth my time to explain why.
  10. Will anyone give a fuck about a "net-wide protest" by stratjakt · · Score: 1, Funny

    To most people, the 'net is not a part of the real world.

    A mountain of handwritten (not boilerplate) letters, or an angry mob chanting cheesy slogans "hey ho thin and fat uns - we dont want no software patents" would be more effective.

    Either way, I dont care.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  11. When first you don't succeed... by maynard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't it amazing how these guys just keep re-introducing the same (or worse) legislation over and over again without regard to the voiced desire of the citizenry? How many times must we mail letters to our representatives again and again on the same issue? How many times will companies and those affiliated with the WTO continue to introduce the same legislation, maybe hidden as a rider here, maybe out in the open there, each time with the hope that citizens will tire of voicing their opposition over the same issue again and again. Un-fuck'n-believable. Except it's just one of the many ways they game the system.... --M

    1. Re:When first you don't succeed... by abandonment · · Score: 2, Insightful

      that's just it though. if the latest 'big brother' bill doesn't make it through into law, they try to (usually successfully) sneek through the majority of the provisions as some hidden amendment to a 'child protection act' or other bill. the policitians know this game very well, and the corporate backers behind them know it even better - they will continue to try this and similar things forever. one step forward, two steps back. can't believe i just quoted paula abdul...shudder...but it's true. good quote from the environmental movement (which is plagued by the very same kind of shady legal issues that currently plague the IT/tech industry): "every victory for the environmental movement is temporary. every loss is permanent." meaning that these laws, once passed, are very hard to get rid of. luckily we have the net to help spread the word about these types of things. and yes people WILL give a shit about a net protest if only because it spreads the word about the situation, potentially to people that DO have a say or some kind of influence over the situation. law-makers and politicians don't just sit in their offices smokin crack all day after all, the net is becoming more and more important to their daily activities....

    2. Re:When first you don't succeed... by Famatra · · Score: 4, Insightful

      maynard said:
      "How many times must we mail letters to our representatives again and again on the same issue? How many times will companies and those affiliated with the WTO continue to introduce the same legislation, maybe hidden as a rider here, maybe out in the open there, each time with the hope that citizens will tire of voicing their opposition over the same issue again and again. Un-fuck'n-believable. "

      The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.
      -- Thomas Jefferson

    3. Re:When first you don't succeed... by mikers · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Isn't it amazing how these guys just keep re-introducing the same (or worse) legislation over and over again without regard to the voiced desire of the citizenry?

      I've noticed this too... Isn't it about time for direct democracy?

      Representatives are 'central' as are federal governments... Hence a big slow-moving target with a lust for lobbying perks. Of course the EU is as central and federal and big as it gets. The more centralized, the easier to lobby. Open to abuse.

      If only ignorance was less common, more people cared and more people were informed. Then maybe direct democracy would work, but they wouldn't be the unwashed masses. Alas the silent majority will remain forever silent... As peasant rebellions went in ancient times: they only rebel when they have nothing left to lose.

      Till then, I guess its pitting 'concerned citizen' letter writing, faxing and calling vs. big corporations with deep pockets paying lobbists large sums to pursue big governments... Who will win this race? My money is on the big companies. Don't agree? Look at the US.

      M

    4. Re:When first you don't succeed... by skifreak87 · · Score: 1

      It's very simple. Some corporations with power want it, so legislators see a reason to introduce it. The few people technologically educated enough to see how ridiculous it is don't have very much power/are not particularly visible to law enforcement. That's why it keeps coming up again, it's something people who donate money want and most citizens don't care/know enough about to really oppose.

      Imagine how different things would be if laws regarding niche areas (considering software patents niche is a bit of a stretch but you get the idea) weren't brought up until people in that area (not just large corporations) were actually consulted on it. Basically is every lawmaker who proposed a technological law came and consulted slashdot to get an opinion on it.

      But that's not how things are done. Just like how the USPTO only uses other patent applications to determine prior art, politicians don't appear to have any desire to educate themselves as to whether or not a law helps the people, only as to whether or not their constituents want it (requires them to care about it first) or sadly often more importantly whether or not their campaign contributors want it.

    5. Re:When first you don't succeed... by Audacious · · Score: 1

      The only way to stop the madness is to make it illegal, immorally wrong, or have a penalty which would, in effect, kill (or imprison) whoever tried to change things. Since times change, attitudes change, and people change - the above isn't likely to happen. Further, whenever there is money to be made by both good as well as bad people - you have a direct conflict of interest with hampering these people from doing whatever it is they want to do.

      Some things which people want to do (such as rape, robbery, and murder) is easily decided upon by the vast majority of people. In other words - you can't do it. Or rather - you can do it but there are severe repercussions if you are found out. (And I mean normally and not those people/companies/governments which do get away with it.) Others are not so easily decided upon. Especially when mega-corporations put their force behind the passage of rules and regulations which tend to harm or stiffle competition.

      The whole idea behind the passage of new laws is, simply put, control. Who will control what everyone else can do? The price of gas goes up not because there is any real crisis. It is because someone somewhere is controlling the availability of the gas. This might be because of the availability of trucks to carry it, ships to transport it, or barrels of crude oil available.

      With software patents - the same outlook is being applied. That someone somewhere wants to control what you can or can not do on a computer. Like a bratty little child, that person is trying to have it all and allow no one else to use what they perceive as theirs. The truth is that only those people who designed the first computers have any right to any kind of a Patent. All other Patents simply build upon those which would have already expired and thus are not enforceable. Further, the Patent Office is ill equipped to handle whether or not any given application is truly unique. What the program does or controls might be unique - but the underlying software is not. Were this not so, then FLEX and YACC would never have come into existence.

      We have come to a time when fair play, fair use, and common sense (the basis of OSS) is being pitted against the robber barons who want it all and will take it if allowed to do so. Why do you think the Magna Carta came into being? Why the U.S. broke away from England? Why India fought in its own way for freedom? Why there are so many wars all over the world now? Because the haves are abusing the have nots. They do it by passing what we call laws. They pass laws because they know that what they do is illegal and so they try to legitimize their actions by passing laws to fit how they want the world to be.

      So am I saying we should rise up? Yes. We should rise up and write our leaders. You may be thrown in jail (especially if you threaten someone - so don't!), you may gain ire from your friends, you may have a terrible time of it. But it is better to go through that than to not say anything at all. Silence means you agree with the controllers and hopefully - you don't.

      Later.

      --
      Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
    6. Re:When first you don't succeed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've noticed this too... Isn't it about time for direct democracy?

      Bad idea. Democracy is two lions and one lamb voting on what's for dinner. Bad idea. Think again.

    7. Re:When first you don't succeed... by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 1

      It's not being reintroduced. As in most legislative bodies, the EU has two assemblies that deal with legislation - the Council of Ministers, whose members represent national governments and which is advised by the Commission, and the Parliament, whose members are directly elected. Directives must be passed back and forth between these two several times before being passed into law. The Parliament did not reject the directive outright last time, but amended it so that it really would rule out software patents. The Council/Commission undid most of this. Now it's the Parliament's second turn. See the Rules of Procedure of the Parliament for a detailed explanation of the stages.

    8. Re:When first you don't succeed... by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Also known as mob rule.

      No thanks. Not that the current systems are working as intended but stupid masses sure won't be any better. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to be anything that solves the problems, yet.

  12. Nokia vs. Opera by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Nokia's position is a bit on the extreme side, which makes it all the more curious since most of the stuff they use is being written by Opera. From the article:

    "Nokia doesn't seem to be counting Opera among the European innovators", comments Håkon Wium Lie, CTO of Opera Software Inc, an innovation leader in the web browser market and producer of much of the software used in Nokia's mobile phones.

    One almost gets the impression that Nokia may be looking to do a bit of "embracing and extending", and then relying on the slow pace of the courts to kill off competition?

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    1. Re:Nokia vs. Opera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, if it worked for MS, it might work for the NEW MICROSOFT -- also known as NOKIA =:-O

      The theory of superpower convergence said that as the USA and the USSR competed, with a push here and a reply there and a fight over there, they became more and more alike. Brezhnev and Reagan were key to the process.

      Enter a new player in the theory of superpower convergence: Jorma Ollila !

    2. Re:Nokia vs. Opera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting since Nokia was paid bucketloads of US cash to help build systems to spy on the Commies. Makes me wonder if they might have been getting funding from both sides.

    3. Re:Nokia vs. Opera by petsku75 · · Score: 1

      That paragraph in the article was totally misleading. Opera is just one of the hundreds components that are part of the Series x0 platforms.

  13. Have I got this right? by Slashdot+Hivemind · · Score: 1

    Lobbying by nearly all corporations is bad and evil.

    Lobbying by Redhat, Mandrake et al is good and in no way interferes with the democratic process?

    1. Re:Have I got this right? by Welsh+Dwarf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Lobbying by judicial entities is evil, be they Microsoft, SCO, IBM, Novel, Mandrake or Red Hat.

      The only people who should be able to lobby a parliament are the citizens who voted said parliament

      --
      Ask 8 slackers a question, get 10 awnsers (a citation, but I can't remember from who)
    2. Re:Have I got this right? by Slashdot+Hivemind · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I long for the days of English devolution

    3. Re:Have I got this right? by oogoliegoogolie · · Score: 2

      You have to understand one difference here. Most of these pro-patent companies are trying to take something away from you, that is your freedom to write programs, functions, subroutines, algorithms, design websites, etc. without worry of legal reprisal. Redhat and Mandrake are trying to defend your freedom to do that.

    4. Re:Have I got this right? by Almost-Retired · · Score: 1

      The The only people who should be able to lobby a parliament are the citizens who voted said parliament into office.

      I like that, its the best idea I've heard promulgated here in at least a coons age.

      Now how do we get such a lobbying limitation to pass when every lobbiest in the world will draw a bead on that puppy? Take it to the bank that you'll never get it passed short of a citizen revolt in the form of petitions with enough signatures on them to get it setup as a constitutional amendment voted on in the next general election in all 50 states.

      I don't think the average Joe Sixpack is too dumb to understand what it is he is voting on either.
      Its a hell of an idea, lets go for it! But put enough teeth in the enforcement that its continuation just isn't palatable to the lobbiest type. He can go back to ambulance chasing for a living IMO. I hear thats pretty good where the limits on malpractice haven't been lowered to the point of contingency fees not really buying the groceries...

      Cheers, Gene

  14. The important lesson: they never give up. by David+Hume · · Score: 4, Insightful

    After the stunning victory in round 1, we just need to make sure our parliamentarians stand firm. I am sure they will not appreciate this attempt to trample over their amendments. Time to get writing again ...


    There is an imporant lesson here. That lesson is that these issues are never finally resolved. Just because objectionable legislation has been defeated once does not mean that it will not be re-introduced. The membership of legislative bodies changes over time. Lobybing continues. Contributions are made. If the financial incentive is great enough, business will never give up.

    Eternal vigilance is required. Perhaps the time you are most vulnerable is when you think you have *finally* won.

    1. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by __aagctu1952 · · Score: 1

      One could also percieve the lesson as "there's no use trying".

    2. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gotcha. Can't win, don't try.

    3. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about "there is an exponential decay function in a lot of systems"
      Not quite as negative a spin now, is it?
      Acknowledges the fact that true passion (love or hate) only dims, never dies.

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    4. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by flossie · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There is an imporant lesson here. That lesson is that these issues are never finally resolved.

      The first round victory was just the first reading of the directive in parliament. However, if (and it is a big if) we can ultimately get the directive passed in the form approved by the parliament, that will effectively put an end to the possibility of software patents in Europe for the foreseeable future.

      It will be a long fight, but it is not a hopeless one. If the good version of the directive gets passed, all EU member states will have to enact legislation preventing software from being patented. At the speed that European legislation gets enacted, it would be a very long time before anyone got a chance to alter this.

    5. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by doc+modulo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Eternal vigilance is required. Perhaps the time you are most vulnerable is when you think you have *finally* won.

      If you watch naruto's battles, you already know this to be true.

      Eternal vigilance IS required, only the level of vigilance is up to you.

      --
      - -- Truth addict for life.
    6. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, the way the legal system is crafted now at the start of the 21st Century everything is an ongoing battle. So as you say, eternal vigilance...

      Would it be any better with an axiom like that applied to murder trials, once you lose (or win) you
      cannot retry the same thing.

      Probably not. Plenty of odious and injust cases would win and become cast in stone.

      What is needed is for legislative institutions to question the motive and scope of appeals, ie you can't just appeal/ammend because you lost the first time around, you have to show (new evidence) a new reason why we should entartain your case again.

    7. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ``if (and it is a big if) we can ultimately get the directive passed in the form approved by the parliament, that will effectively put an end to the possibility of software patents in Europe for the foreseeable future.''

      I believe that is incorrect. AFAIK, current legislation does not allow for software to be patented. However, some software patents had been granted, and the directive is an attempt to legalize that. This means that, if the directive is accepted, we can expect more patents to be granted, BUT there is a good chance they will be in accordance with the directive, which used to have various provisions to protect rights like reverse-esgineering to achieve interoperability.

      What's happening now is an attempt to get those protections scrapped, which means that software patents would completely restrict the rights of third parties. Whether this is a Good Thing or a Bad Thing is debatable.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    8. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by flossie · · Score: 3, Informative
      current legislation does not allow for software to be patented. However, some software patents had been granted, and the directive is an attempt to legalize that. This means that, if the directive is accepted, we can expect more patents to be granted, BUT there is a good chance they will be in accordance with the directive, which used to have various provisions to protect rights like reverse-esgineering to achieve interoperability.

      The original intent of the directive was to legalize the patenting of software. The commission introduced the directive with the stated aim of harmonising and clarifying patent law in Europe. The actual aim was to codify current practice of the European Patent Office which has recently been issuing software patents despite Article 52(2) of the European Patent Convention which states that computer programs are not patentable inventions. The original fight, therefore, was an attempt to prevent a change in the law which would make software patentable. Although patents have been granted by the EPO, we have not yet seen many adverse effects because the patent holders would risk having their patents invalidated by the courts if they tried to enforce them - hence the desire (by the pro-patent lobby) to introduce the directive.

      However, the European Parliament significantly amended the text of the directive. The most important change was that they explicitly reinforced Article 52(2) and insisted that software not be patentable. This is the reason that the European Commission threatened to withdraw the directive entirely rather than allow it to pass in its amended form. The directive was originally a Bad Thing, but in its form as last seen by the parliament it is definitely a Good Thing.

    9. Re:The important lesson: they never give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another importatnt lesson:

      It works in reverse. If business wins today, it can still lose all it gained. A different group of legislators, a few contributions in the right place, and it all goes away.

      Keep in mind that not all business perceives the issue the same way - some see something to be gained from software patentability, but some see something to lose from the same thing.

  15. time for me to once again... by cribb · · Score: 4, Informative
    put up a link to

    http://petition.eurolinux.org/

    on my webpage. also it looks like they'll be

    organizing a demonstration on 14th of april

    in brussels.

    --
    Hostes alienigieni me abduxerunt. Qui annus est?
  16. Re:Will anyone give a fuck about a "net-wide prote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very good point. People on slashdot tend to get pretty myopic and lose all perspective of how the net fits into everyday people's lives (peripherally, at best). It shouldn't be necessary to point out that people who think the 'net is not a part of the real world are exactly right.

    Too bad most mods really have no clue what "Troll" is supposed to mean. Or generally, how to moderate.

    "I'll probably get modded down for this..."

  17. Bull by unsinged+int · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hey buddy, what are you in for?

    I wrote a program that used an illegal data structure.

    Woah. Dude. Stay away from me!

    1. Re:Bull by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      Hey buddy, what are you in for?

      I wrote a program that used an illegal data structure.


      And the meanest, ugliest, nastiest one, the meanest
      father raper of them all, was coming over to me and he was mean 'n' ugly
      'n' nasty 'n' horrible and all kind of things and he sat down next to me
      and said, "Kid, whad'ya get?" I said, "I didn't get nothing, I had to pay
      $50 and clean up the code." He said, "What were you arrested for, kid?"
      And I said, "Using an illegal data structure." And they all moved away from me on the bench
      there, and the hairy eyeball and all kinds of mean nasty things, till I
      said, "And pirating illegal MP3s." And they all came back, shook my hand,
      and we had a great time on the bench, talkin about crime, mother stabbing,
      father raping, all kinds of groovy things that we was talking about on the
      bench.

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    2. Re:Bull by Alsee · · Score: 1

      and they took twenty seven eight-by-ten color glossy jpegs with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one explaining what each one was to be used as evidence against us.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  18. Slashdot entry-page. by lewiz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It would certainly raise a lot of awareness if Slashdot went ahead and put up an entry-page or banner.

    I know this won't happen (such action would set a precedence -- all petitioners would expect the limelight) for obvious reasons but it would sure be interesting if it did.

    1. Re:Slashdot entry-page. by Vaevictis666 · · Score: 1

      It'd be better if (say) google were do put up a splash page once per IP or some such.

  19. Software patents are bad for your economy by doc+modulo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Software patents are bad for the economy of the country which allows them.

    Imagine this future scenario:
    Say, America has software patents and Europe doesn't. Now the American companies can't use the software recipies of their competitors (you lose your patent if you don't enforce it if I remember correctly) and so their software is not as good as it could have been without the laws. The European developers can program without the cost of researching their source code or the cost of buying permission of using patented source and can use the best solutions for their software designs.

    European software will, slowly but surely, become better and cheaper than American software and American companies won't be able to sell their software successfully in Europe unless they make a special "High quality European version". Because software is mostly used to streamline business processes. Business in America won't run as smoothly as business in Europe because european business' are using more, and higher quality accounting/production/etc. programs. American economy takes a hit.

    Private software user in America won't buy software from US companies because it's inferiour to the software they can (illegally) get from Europe. They pirate either the software made in Europe or the "European version" which they can't legally buy or they import the "illegal in US" Open Source programs. US software sales and services are down because of software patents, American economy takes another hit.

    Small companies make up more than 80% of all businesses in any given country. In the US, small software companies will die because of software patents, only a few big ones will survive. Software companies will abuse their positions to increase their profits at the cost of their consumers, American business'. American business' won't be able to buy as much software as they like or will have higher operating costs because of it. The few American companies that sell software won't bring in as much economic activity and taxes as a lot of small software companies + big companies. American economy takes another hit.

    Other countries like China which present billions of dollars of potential income for the US won't buy American, they'll buy EU or build their own software. Even less economic activity for the US software industry. American economy takes another hit.

    The worst thing the European politicians can do for their countries is to allow software patents in Europe. Europe will lose it's competitive advantage over the US software industry. Even worse, their position will be much weaker than that of the US. Because software patenting has been going on for a while in the US, US companies have the most, and the most important patents on software. US companies will be able to kill off most EU software companies using their patent portfolio's and that would be a bad thing for the EU citizens. I think that an EU politician that votes in favor of software patents is either incompetent or influenced by big US software companies. Their job is to act in the best interest of the EU countries and I think the pro-patent politicians are doing the opposite, vote them off before they can profit! Who's got a list?

    Software patents are only good for a few big US software companies, bad for everyone else in their country. And even that's doubtful because they're reducing their own market if my scenario above holds water.

    Software patents are bad for the economy of the country which allows them.

    --
    - -- Truth addict for life.
    1. Re:Software patents are bad for your economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you lose your patent if you don't enforce it if I remember correctly


      Ummmm, NO. You are thinking of trademarks. Patents are always applicable, whether you enforce them or not. Anyone who uses patented technology without a license is simply gambling that they will not be sued.

    2. Re:Software patents are bad for your economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Do what the corporations do.....

      Pay the $150 to incorporate in some nice European country (or the Bahamas), and then "outsource" the programming work to *yourself* in the US.

      This'll just mean that the millions of independant programmers in the US will simply have to become CEOs of very very tiny Bahamanian corporations =), and then continue on with bussiness as usual.

      The fact that yopu won't be able to SELL your programs within the US will have little to no affect, because all corporate programming will have been outsourced to India by then, so you can just sell the programs to the Indian subsidiaries.

      Now, individuals living in the US might have a problem getting your programs... but who cares, all the people who live in the US will all be working for $4 an hour at Wallmart by that time, so they couldn't afford to buy what you make anyway.

      ~Anonymous Coward
      CEO of Bahamanian Bussiness Machines, Ltd.

  20. Re:Will anyone give a fuck about a "net-wide prote by Three+Headed+Man · · Score: 2, Informative

    Thousands of concerned Internet users in "turning its web pages black" in protest of President Clinton's signing the unconstitutional "Communications Decency Act" in 1995. People paid attention then.

    --
    I'm probably at the karma cap. Mod up a funny troll instead, it lightens the mood :)
  21. Get Attention - An Effective Protest by blunte · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This will fall under the label of civil disobediance perhaps, but a really good way to get attention to the anti-patent cause would be for those with technical power to shut down as much as was safely possible (not power stations, etc.) in protest.

    When 2/3 of the net is suddenly gone, that might gain some attention. And then a suitable argument for doing such a drastic thing would be, "imagine if TCP/IP was patented, this is the internet you'd have; or imagine if BT had won its hyperlink coup; or ..."

    Singly we have little power other than to perhaps get ourselves fired. But collectively we have the ability to put a grinding halt on e-commerce and more.

    --
    .sigs are for post^Hers.
    1. Re:Get Attention - An Effective Protest by flossie · · Score: 1
      This will fall under the label of civil disobediance perhaps, but a really good way to get attention to the anti-patent cause would be for those with technical power to shut down as much as was safely possible (not power stations, etc.) in protest.

      I am strongly opposed to software patents. I have written to my MP and MEPs on numerous occasions. I protest on my own web page about the issue. But doing something to my employer's site against my employers wishes is definitely a step too far.

    2. Re:Get Attention - An Effective Protest by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 1

      And then a suitable argument for doing such a drastic thing would be, "imagine if TCP/IP was patented, this is the internet you'd have"

      And you can be sure that the corollary argument being made by the big pigopolist software companies will be, "Imagine if TCP/IP was patented by you, it is the Internet that you would have." (Yeah, I know, TCP/IP wouldn't have become so pervasive if it was proprietary, but that wouldn't stop sleazeball corporations from making that argument to politicians as they stuff the campaign coffers.)

      --
      Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
  22. Reject and Repeal by Simple-Simmian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is a bummer that the non elected members who run the EU have rejected what looked to be a better compromise. My take is that we reject all software patents in the EU and repeal them in the US and Canada.

    Software patents are stupid it's like patenting an alphabet or individual words.

    --
    If you don't like what I write don't be a CS and mod it down. Refute it.
    Yea I can't spell. So what is your point?
  23. This calls for a boycot by Pivot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There's no point in supporting a company that eventually wants to take away freedom from open source developers.

    My next phone will not be a Nokia phone..

    1. Re:This calls for a boycot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My next phone will not be a Nokia phone..

      So what will you get instead? A Motorola? A Sony Ericsson?
      Are there any mobile phone companies which don't support software patents?

  24. EU Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given that there are almost no successful commercial software companies in the EU region does it really matter how they regulate this type of intellectual property? What's next, coverage of the Afghan health minister's position on stem cell research?

  25. Software patents are fair and just. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Software corporations spend BILLIONS of dollars and employ thousands and thousands of programmers to create patentable IP. If you guys had your way, all of this money would be thrown away and the world of software would be thrown back into the stone ages. Face it, guys, the time for patenting software is NOW.

    1. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by Almost-Retired · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Software corporations spend BILLIONS of dollars and employ thousands and thousands of programmers to create patentable IP. If you guys had your way, all of this money would be thrown away and the world of software would be thrown back into the stone ages. Face it, guys, the time for patenting software is NOW

      You are missing the entire point of this discussion! Do you think that all this software is written solely to the patentable aspect of it?

      Sorry, good software is written to do the job at hand, and if you do it good enough while working for a commercial corp like M$, then the reward will be sales beyond your wildest dreams and a handy raise for you.

      But to prevent, by patents, some person from writing, in a clean room environment, never having seen your commercial code, a program that runs as well, or better than yours, is downright immoral. The instruction set for the cpu is essentialy public domain, and must remain so in order to entice coders to code for that particular cpu.

      Having the ability to say that a certain sequence of these instructions is patentable, when the instructions themselves are freely available, absolutely boggles the mind.

      We have proved prior art for almost any patent that exists only to enrich the corporate coffers of some group of leechs (and that is the right word) who exist not to write more patentable code, which they will never do because they don't know how, but exist only to extort others with their legal dept because they bought this quoted patent.

      With that kind of restrictions, no more code can ever be written except in darkened rooms and distributed by clandestin means.

      If M$ wants to dominate the world, then let them write better code instead of virus and worm magnets. Free, or commercial, the code should stand on its own merits.

      Now go warsh yur mouth out with a bar of Grandma's Lie soap, and no, thats not miss-spelled...

      Cheers, Gene

    2. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by achurch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But to prevent, by patents, some person from writing, in a clean room environment, never having seen your commercial code, a program that runs as well, or better than yours, is downright immoral.

      So is it also "downright immoral" to prevent, by patents, some person from designing, in a clean room environment, never having seen your commercial mousetrap, a mousetrap that traps as well as, or better than, yours?

      Not trolling, just honestly wondering . . .

    3. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by Almost-Retired · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This "clean room" is the key issue I think. If the guy saw your mousetrap, and then expanded upon the same basic idea, or even just plain copied it, then yes, thats a violation.

      But if he set out to make a better mousetrap without ever seeing yours, then there can be no taint of copying involved even if the basic design is similar since he's looked at mousetraps in the stores for 40 years already. Kind of like calling a copy machine a Xerox or vice versa. But he, knowing there were production shortcuts in most such devices, decided to put ball bearings in the pan and bail pivots? I don't think thats a violation because he clearly did think it out and attempt to make that "better mousetrap".

      To software:
      Because the actual code to add 2 numbers together is, at the machine level:

      LDA register 1, number 1's location in memory
      LDA register 2, number 2's location in memory
      ADD register 1,2 (assuming the result goes back into register 1 here, often the case)
      STA register 1, result location in memory

      To allow the patenting of that sequence is totally assinine because its already been used historically speaking, since back in the 50's when all that was actually done with relays and/or 12AU7's and the output went to punched tape, which in turn went to the printer. The basic algorythm hasn't changed in 50+ years, and if some patent office dweeb thought that was patentable, there are at least 50 billion lines of code demonstrating prior art written since then.

      Under those conditions, the only one making a paycheck will be the attorney who finally convinces said dweeb to withdraw the patent. But in lots of cases the time elapsed to clear the thing measures in years, instead of the two weeks that make the difference between a good time to market and sales success, and 2 weeks later somebody else has his foot in that same markets door.

      I'm reminded of a situation in my field, broadcasting, where the FCC and other agencies got together and mandated a new public notification method whereby the pair of tones that used to tell you an alert or test was being broadcast, and which is now those rather raucous digital streams you hear. That noise contains the whole message!

      Some jerk overheard a conversation about it in a restaurant, copied it all down on a napkin, and went running to the patent office with it, and got it! There was enough prior art in that to sink the staten island ferry if it was all put on paper and loaded into the hold. We, as broadcasters, ignored the legal firms letters while screaming bloody murder to the various agencies and our senators and reps. Our attitude was, and rightly so IMO, that we were damned if we were gonna pay anybody any patent royalties on equipment and methods that were mandated to us by the feds. If anybody paid, it should be the feds for not investigating it fully and makeing sure it was un-emcumbered. Just the equipment and training to make the new system work cost each and every one of us in excess of $5,000, and is an ongoing nominal expense for paper and other supplies. The hoorah has now gone away just like the company that was trying to sue us, but I've no idea if in their infinite wisdom, the patent was actually withdrawn by the USTPO.

      First, we kill all the lawyers. (William Shakespear)

      Then maybe we'ed have some common sense in this world, something thats damned uncommon now it seems.

      Cheers, Gene

    4. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by mpaque · · Score: 1
      Do you think that all this software is written solely to the patentable aspect of it? Sorry, good software is written to do the job at hand...

      Yes, but...

      If I spend years developing something really unique for a company a bit smaller than Microsoft, then the last thing I and my employers want to see is Microsoft announcing the same unique software and mechanism for their product, based on, oh, seeing it at a trade show and reverse engineering the beta release, a day or two before we deliver the software. (Please note, we are delivering, they are announcing, and may not have an implementation yet.)

      Patents allow me to profit (horrors! evil profit!) from my years of work without needing to be quite so concerned about being ripped off. Design patents allow me to protect the appearance, or 'look and feel' of the software, and invention patents allow me to profit from, well, busting my ass for years to develop what in hindsight looks like a reasonably obvious algorithm.

    5. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by Almost-Retired · · Score: 1

      While I can feel for you in that situation, to me, that is exactly why we have copyrights. Albeit the copyright situation has gotten absolutely out of hand with the latest Bono extensions, to the point where the much of the public in general, now feels no real reason to honor musical copyrights in particular. We know whats fair and whats not, and if we are treated fairly, the the copyright holder will also profit. Heck for software, even the original period of (IIRC) 7 years is too long. The entire field moves so fast, that the ideal software copyright should not be in excess of 3 or 4 years, at which point all or nearly all of the profit will have been milked out of it anyway so it should become public domain, free for the decompilers to take a look and maybe further the art of writing code. Each succeeding generation of code should be built on the experience of the last generation. Any attempts to code around a patent will invariably result in poorer, less stable code unless the patented code is clearly flawed. That can be the case by the way.

      Comp sci profs should be free to go teach a class and throw a 30 line snippet of such code on the screen and say, this is one way to do it, can you do it even better? Only by making such information public domain at the end of a reasonable copyright period, to be used as learning tools by all concerned, can the art itself be improved with each generation of the typical program.

      Cheers, Gene

    6. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by fcw · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Software corporations spend BILLIONS of dollars and employ thousands and thousands of programmers to create patentable IP.

      Yeah, right.

      The vast majority of innovation in the computer business takes place in small companies. Small software companies out-invent and out-innovate big companies every day of the week, and twice on Sunday.

      In fact, most fields are like this; patents only really pay their way where significant up-front investment is required to bring an invention to market, such as in the pharmaceutical business, where the science is not understood well enough to be predictable, and the regulatory framework for new products is punishingly expensive. Some other heavily industrialised fields with big start-up costs can also benefit.

      By contrast, software has a cost of invention dominated by staff salaries rather than plant or infrastructure, and has an incremental cost of manufacture of zero, which unprecented in economic history. These features, plus a historically lax regulatory framework for software, means it's pretty much the opposite of everything that makes the economic argument for patents justifiable.

      Your big hero software companies see patents as a weapon to use in negotiations with the other corporate bruisers, and as a means to impede entry to markets they want to defend, not as a means to bring new things to consumers.

      If you don't think that's true, please find evidence of a single significant software invention that would not have happened without patents to make it economically viable.

      If you guys had your way, all of this money would be thrown away and the world of software would be thrown back into the stone ages.

      Rubbish. Having to deal with patents for software is where you'd be throwing your money away, and I'd much rather spend it on development than on due diligence and legal insurance.

      Pretty much the entire history of the software business is patent-free, and yet we got from the so-called "stone ages" to here pretty quickly, didn't we? This is the QED that patents are not required to promote progress in the software business, because massive progress happened without them, and no-one with any economic education can make a plausible case that we'd have got to where we are quicker, better or cheaper with them. Serious studies by actual economists (not accountants or executives) show that the pace of innovation has reduced, and costs to bring products to market have risen, since people have been able to get patents on software.

      Face it, guys, the time for patenting software is NOW.

      Only if you're a patent attorney, a narrow-minded corporate executive, or otherwise sadly misinformed. For everyone else, they're an obvious and unnecessary burden on progress, which is precisely the opposite of what they're supposed to be.

      For the record, I've been inventing software related things for decades, make my living at it, and hold software-related patents. And I'd love to see them all torn up.

    7. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by mpaque · · Score: 1
      While I can feel for you in that situation, to me, that is exactly why we have copyrights.


      This turns out not to be the case. Copyright law applies to the copying of a specific exact work. If a Microsoft implementation of the software I described eventually appears, and it is an exact copy of the preexisting implementation at the instruction level, then a copyright infringement could be demonstrated. If, however, the implementations were for differing machine architectures, for example, then a strict copyright infringement case is extremely difficult to prove.


      Similarly, copyright protection for the 'look and feel' of a program fails unless the artwork (bitmaps and such) can be shown to be exact copied of the originals. In the 1992 ruling of Judge Walker in Apple vs Microsoft, the court found that the appropriate standard to apply was whether the two GUI presentations were "virtually identical," whereas Apple had argued that the appropriate standard was "substantial similarity." The decision of the lower court was upheld by the 9th Circuit in 1994.


      Copyright protection for computer programs derives from the treatment of source code as a literary work. For purposes of copyright law, the object code is not a reproduction of the source code, even though it is derived from the source code. Object code such as is found in ROM is often formally registered for copyright, as a measure for use in piracy or illegal copying cases. Even recompiling source code for a different architecture results in a different 'work' of object code for copyright law purposes.


      I'll stick with patents to protect my inventions, thank you.

    8. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by Znork · · Score: 1

      "Patents allow me to profit (horrors! evil profit!) from my years of work without needing to be quite so concerned about being ripped off."

      You mistake software patents for other patents.

      The way software patents work is that when you've finished with your years of work you'll first get sued by several dozens of IP holding companies as your several years of work happens to include several hundred 'ten minute brainstorm' patents.

      Then, when you're at the tradeshow, still reeling, the Microsoft representative comes over and says "Heard about your recent legal troubles (tee-hee). Not to rain on your parade, but I see your product has clickable buttons. We have a patent on clickable buttons. I also see you use the color 'grey'. We have a patent on using the color 'grey' in GUI's. Now, sign over your company to us, and we'll give you a donut for your trouble. Or we'll see you in court. For the rest of your remaining life."

      You see, the kind of company you're describing is _exactly_ the kind that will be hurt the most.

      The ones who gain from software patents are small lawsuit companies who never have any intention of developing anything (or they could be countersued, and would have to cross-license). They'll just buy, or make up, junk patents to generate a minefield and then go fish.

      And the other kind of companies who gain from software patents are giants who want to kill off competition in yet another way. They can also generate minefield type junk patents, and then drag any potential small competitor into court and kill them off by a war of legal attrition.

      Software patents dont protect you from getting ripped off. They guarantee you will get a new orifice ripped for you, and then you'll get ripped off anyway.

    9. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by cozziewozzie · · Score: 1

      Software corporations spend BILLIONS of dollars and employ thousands and thousands of programmers to create patentable IP. If you guys had your way, all of this money would be thrown away and the world of software would be thrown back into the stone ages. Face it, guys, the time for patenting software is NOW.

      What software patents will ultimately do, is make it illegal for small guys to write software. Right now, all you need is a computer and a good book to start programming, and this is what ultimately gave us GNU, Linux, Apache, and many other goodies. When software is patentable, then any line of code you write might become illegal.

      Your analysis is actually spot on - it's about huge software corporations with billions of dollars. Only such companies can afford to create software in a patent-crazy world, because they have a large enough portfolio to defend themselves against litigation. It's about creating a barrier to entry for new competitors and dividing the software market between the big players, without ever having to produce anything innovative at all. Patents are actually counter-productive in this regard.

    10. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by cozziewozzie · · Score: 1

      But if he set out to make a better mousetrap without ever seeing yours, then there can be no taint of copying involved even if the basic design is similar since he's looked at mousetraps in the stores for 40 years already. Kind of like calling a copy machine a Xerox or vice versa. But he, knowing there were production shortcuts in most such devices, decided to put ball bearings in the pan and bail pivots? I don't think thats a violation because he clearly did think it out and attempt to make that "better mousetrap".

      That would be a clear patent violation. Patents cover ideas, even if you come up with these ideas completely independently. If I came up with a formula for a famous patented antibiotic in my dream, making it would still violate a patent. If I figured out arithmetic coding algorithm, without ever hearing about it, implementing it would still violate the patent. That's the main problem with patents -- they monopolise ideas.

      It does make sense in the pharmaceutical industry, where you spend years and millions developing a formula, have to spend years and millions testing a new medicine and getting it approved, and then only have a few years to make back all that money while your patent still lasts. It makes less sense in a field where a programmer sits down one day, thinks up a clever algorithm, and this algorithm then is forbidden for anyone for the next 20 years.

    11. Re:Software patents are fair and just. by Almost-Retired · · Score: 1

      All of which is presently true, but in the end, I believe we are preaching to the same choir.

      Basicly, because the field moves so fast, the ability to patent, particularly when it applies to a 10 line snippet of src code as a method, locking that up for however long patents run today (is it still 17 years?) becomes an intolerable drag on the writing of new software.

      TBH, it will restrict writing software to only M$ because they will be the only ones able to pay for the patent research, which they probably won't do because they will be the only bull left in this china shop. This will also cause the price of new software to be 100x what it is now even if the research isn't done based on that excuse. Do you want to pay $69,995 for a copy of Windows 2010?

      I think not. If BG thinks he has a piracy problem now, "why, you ain't seen nuthin yet".

      But he'll have these dreams of grandure at the thought of obtaining that tight a monopoly on writing software. Bet the farm on that. You can't lose.

      Cheers, Gene

  26. Slashdot's Role by TeachingMachines · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I'm using a Debian Linux box with the Mozilla browser to write this. I built it myself, and with the help of Slashdot, the web site that introduced me to free software, open source software, and widened my eyes over the years to the complicated logistics and truly revolutionary nature of collaborative development. I recommend that Slashdot and its editors take the lead once more and join in the demonstration against software patents in Europe. Slashdot itself is in the crosshairs of this legislation, and high profile action may be necessary.
    Let's fight these bastards.

    Steve Scherer

    --

    The Death Penalty: Killing people to show others that killing people is wrong.
  27. Bang dat by Conor+Collins+Troll · · Score: 0

    Fuck you Conor Collins!

  28. reference please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    for sake of completeness of information, could
    someone please post a link to the official position
    of the Council of the European Union on this
    issue?

    This would allow people to see in detail which
    parts of the European Parliament's amendments
    to the Commission proposal's were rejected and
    on what grounds.

    1. Re:reference please by Halo1 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      for sake of completeness of information, could someone please post a link to the official position of the Council of the European Union on this issue?
      Here you are. The Parliament's version can be found here
      This would allow people to see in detail which parts of the European Parliament's amendments to the Commission proposal's were rejected and on what grounds.
      The big and important differences are articles 2, 3, 5, 6(a) and 7 (note that the numbering changed quite a bit between the original proposal and the currently published Parliament version). Unfortunately, you can't see on what grounds anything is rejected, because publicising this information is considered to potentially harm the internal Council negotiations...
      --
      Donate free food here
    2. Re:reference please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, you can't see on what grounds anything is rejected, because publicising this information is considered to potentially harm the internal Council negotiations...

      Yeah, well, all the bribery going on being exposed would be pretty harmful indeed.

  29. Damn straight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of Jefferson's quotes repeated to cliché-dom, but in this context quite appropriate. Fine retort. --M

  30. Not surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    Irish politicians will do anything to kiss-up to corporations so it's no surprise.

    Response from Irish Dept. of Enterprise received re software patents concern at the end of last year included below.

    Tries to pass off a fundamental change in the law as 'harmonisation' and 'clarification'.

    Also, could anyone tell me if the pseudo-legal threat at the end of the email has any real significance? This from a Government that claims it is a champion of freedom of information.

    Dear Mr.

    The Tanaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Ms. Mary
    Harney, T.D. has asked me to refer to your recent e-mail regarding software
    patents in Europe.

    Computer programs "as such" are excluded from patentability by EU Member
    States' patent laws and Article 52 (2) of the European Patent Convention
    (EPC).

    While the statutory provisions setting out the conditions for granting such
    patents are similar, their application in the case law and the
    administrative practices of Member States is divergent. In addition, there
    are differences, in particular, between the case law of the Boards of
    Appeal of the European Patent Office and the courts of Member States.
    Thus, a computer-implemented invention may be protected in one Member State
    but not in another one, which has direct and negative effects on the proper
    functioning of the internal market.

    The Commission's present proposal for a Directive is aimed at
    rectifying the position and making the conditions of patentability more
    transparent. Under the proposal, in order to be patentable, a
    computer-implemented invention would have to be new, involve an inventive
    step and be susceptible of industrial application. It would be a condition
    for involving an inventive step that a computer-implemented invention makes
    a technical contribution. Thus, computer programs "as such" will continue
    to be excluded from patentability.

    The Competitiveness Council reached a common political approach on the
    Commission's proposal in November 2002. In September, 2003, the European
    Parliament adopted a resolution proposing a number of amendments to the
    proposal, some of which run counter to the common approach reached by the
    Competitiveness Council. The European Parliament amendments are currently
    being considered by a Council Working Party on Intellectual Property (made
    up of officials from the Member States).

    Ireland's basic position is that we do not want to see the common political
    approach undermined and this is the approach we will be adopting in
    relation to the European Parliament amendments. The effect of some of the
    European Parliament amendments would be to deny patent protection to
    inventions that are currently patentable. Such a reversal would not be in
    the best interests of industry seeking to protect their R&D investments in
    computer ?implemented inventions. However, I should point out that Article
    6 of the proposed Directive provides that the rights conferred by patents
    granted for inventions within the scope of the Directive shall not affect
    acts permitted under Directive 91/250/EEC on the legal protection of
    computer programs by copyright, in particular under the provisions thereof
    in respect of decompilation and interoperability. This is an important
    safeguard for software developers as it will ensure that such developers
    can continue to engage in the same acts to achieve interoperability as are
    currently allowed under the Copyright Directive.

    Yours sincerely,

    Bridget Flynn
    Private Secretary

    The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity
    to which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged material. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or other use of,
    or taking of any action in reliance upon this information by persons or entities, other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you receive

  31. For buyers and sellers by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    of IP, This can only be a good thing. Who are we to deny them a living?

    --
    What?
    1. Re:For buyers and sellers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not braindead consumers who for once give a damn?

  32. Possibility by blunte · · Score: 0

    Talk to your employer. I know in most cases this would be futile or even dangerous to your job, but some employers would probably agree to a 1 day shutdown of internet-related services.

    Yes it would be a significant interruption to normal business, but some employers would be able to grasp the significance of legally-forced shutdowns in some patent-nightmare future scenario.

    Lastly, many of us are not easily replaceable. Of course, it's only a useful "strike" if a lot of people do it. And convincing everyone to do it would be nigh impossible, since everyone would be fearful that they would be the only ones to take the job-endangering action.

    --
    .sigs are for post^Hers.
  33. Do software patents cause any good? by MrWyrm · · Score: 1

    Software patents make the patenting country produce more expensive, inferior software than a country that doesn't have patents. All source code should be free and shared, patent should be eliminated from all countries.

    Patents serve virtually no beneficial purpose save to give credit to the people who have done something. Patents can be useful in other industries, such as automobiles, home appliances, etc.. But software is quicker to produce, and with no patents, would become faster yet. Free source code would help produce cheaper, more efficient programs. Without patents slowing businesses down, computer software would advance even faster than it already does.

    Why should software patents that serve no practical purpose be allowed? What beneficial purpose do they serve that outweighs the bonuses of outlawing them?

    Many people dream of a utopian world, free of poverty, war, and crime. Source code sharing helps eliminate petty competetion and strife, thereby furthering the (perhaps not completely achievable) goal of a perfect world. This world may be exist only in dreams, but people should always chase after their dreams. If people did not dream where would we be now? We would never have evolved past primitive stone tools, hunting to survive. We must all dream to succeed, ambition is undeniably an important part of human life.

    1. Re:Do software patents cause any good? by Halo1 · · Score: 1
      Software patents make the patenting country produce more expensive, inferior software than a country that doesn't have patents. All source code should be free and shared, patent should be eliminated from all countries.
      You are completely mixing copyright and patents. FFII and pretty much all other opponents are not asking that all source code should be free and shared. In fact, they argue that (the free) trade secret is one of the ways that people can protect their software innovations without having to resort to (expensive) patents.

      Together with copyright, lead time advantages, licensing, NDA's etc, they have a whole arsenal of means to protect their own creations, without hampering any other person's independent creation (unlike with software patents, where many other independent creations are hampered by one person's patent)

      --
      Donate free food here
  34. All patents are bad--like slavery. by Thinkit4 · · Score: 1
    Saying "software patents are bad" is taking the compromisers position--that other patents should stay. Artificial scarcity is never good.

    What if you argued that no new slaves should be imported--but those here should remain property?

    --
    -I am an elective eunuch.
  35. Re:Will anyone give a fuck about a "net-wide prote by misof · · Score: 1

    there is a real demonstration being organised in Brusel on April 14th. The main goal of the protests on the net is to spread knowledge about the bad things happening (and also about this demonstration). Nobody believes that you can change the world by a demonstration on the net (yet). But it still helps, if more people become aware of the problem and some of them can and will help the cause.

  36. unless they ignore the emails by bodrell · · Score: 1
    I'm sure I'm not the only one who remembers reading in The Register about the crap the British government tried to pull last year, regarding the public's opinion on national ID cards. Most of the response was negative, so Blair et. al. decided that the emails (which were more negative than the snail mails, I suppose) did not count. So email at your own risk.

    As a disclaimer, the main bureaucrat behind this email scandal was David Blunkett, who is arguably the Ashcroft of the UK.

    --
    Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    1. Re:unless they ignore the emails by flossie · · Score: 1
      I think that comparing Blunkett to Ashcroft is rather unfair. Ashcroft is nowhere near that right wing and has much more respect for human rights than Blunkett does. Still, come the revolution, at least Blunkett won't need a blindfold.

      The ignored e-mails were part of a public consultation. The civil service will always find some way to manipulate a consultation to match their desired view. However, the aim when writing to MPs is not the same. Whereas consultations are really non-binding referendums, where votes in favour and against are tallied, letters/e-mails to MPs are a means of communicating with an individual. Constituency MPs are less likely to ignore e-mails than the government. I get the feeling that they actually appreciate thte dialogue with their constituents. Certainly, they are always very, very happy to point out where they agree with you.

  37. The Toll Road Ahead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Here is one Linux consultant's take on what Microsoft may really be planning. The EU patent issue is key. This in depth article discusses MCPP and the potential impact on Free and Open Source software. MCPP is what Sun just cross-licensed with MS. What is MCPP? Here's a quote from the article (link below)
    "Microsoft's Communications Protocol Program makes available for license by others more than 100 proprietary protocols that were not previously available. These protocols can be used, in accordance with the terms of the program's license agreements, to develop a broad range of server software products that use the protocols solely to provide services to Windows desktop client operating systems or other compatible server or client software."

    If you care about the future viability of FOSS for business use, you might want to read this: h++p://www.penguinpros.com/Viewpoints/TollRoadAhea d.html

    1. Re:The Toll Road Ahead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, does this mean that we have to say goodbye to Opensource? This does not look good at all :(

  38. It's a fight worth fighting... by kcbrown · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Even if it's a fight that we probably can't win.

    The European parliaments are almost as bought and paid for as members of the U.S. congress and senate. So while it's more likely that this fight can be won in Europe than the U.S., it's not that much more likely.

    But the defeat of software patents is such a worthwhile goal that it's worth fighting for no matter the odds.

    --
    Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    1. Re:It's a fight worth fighting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The members of parliament are much more accessible than US senators or congressmen. But the EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT CAN'T PROPOSE LAWS!

      The European Commission is the source of European legislation. The Commission is not voted for directly by the people. It's not even voted for indirectly, through the parliament!

    2. Re:It's a fight worth fighting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's unfair to claim that the Commission is not voted indirectly, since the members are chosen by national governments and generally represent the political outlooks of the member states. Of course, this doesn't mean that the Commission has anything to fear from the electorate -- all they have to do is to keep the member states happy.

    3. Re:It's a fight worth fighting... by Halo1 · · Score: 1
      The members of parliament are much more accessible than US senators or congressmen. But the EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT CAN'T PROPOSE LAWS!
      Afaik this will change once the European Union constitution is approved (but I'm not certain).
      --
      Donate free food here
  39. We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We're fighting the wrong thing. It's not software patents that are bad, it's *bad* patents in general.

    Think of this: if I developed an algorithm to encode images, without a patent I would have to keep the implementation secret to be able to make any money. With software patents, I can patent the algorithm, and release source code for the world to use.

    While the submarine-enforcement of the MP3 patent is bad, the actual patent is perfectly valid. Why shouldn't Fraunhofer IIS get royalties for the technology they paid for and developed.

    If you can patent an improved screw head ("Torx(R) Plus"), why not an algorithm? If you developed a new compression technology or a new encryption technology, why is that any less of an invention than an improved screw head?

    What we really need to fight are bad patents. Amazon's "one click" patent is one. Patents are *bad* when they are to broad or don't cover a real invention. But bad patents are a problem with the review system.

    This is so fitting with the Slashdot mentality that "software should be free" and that "copyright is bad". Copyright and patent law serves a valuable and important purpose: allowing inventors and (in this case) programmers to decide how their work is distributed. Copyright law has become problematic - we need to go back to the original 14-year copyrights. Patent law has become problematic - we need to stop "inventors" from patenting trivial concepts. But these are problems with the system, not with the concepts of copyright and patent law.

    I end with this:

    If you invented a new concept in software, such as a better compression algorithm or a better voice recognition algorithm or a more efficent protocol to transmit data, why is your invention any less of an invention than if you had invented a better screw head?

    If you inveted a new compression system, which is better for the community: a patent which forces disclosure of the algorithm and eventually expires, or a trade secret which requires that the algorithm be kept secret and closed and may never expire?

    1. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Halo1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While the submarine-enforcement of the MP3 patent is bad, the actual patent is perfectly valid. Why shouldn't Fraunhofer IIS get royalties for the technology they paid for and developed.

      There is no single MP3-patent, it's covered by a lot of patents. The basic one covers iterating *any* mathematical function over a sound sample until you can represent it in a desired number of bits. That's it. You can find the claim (in German) at the EPO, here's the English translation:

      Digital coding process for transmitting and/or storing acoustic signals, specifically music signals, comprising the following steps.

      • N samples of the acoustic signal are converted into M spectral coefficients;
      • said M spectral coefficients are subjected to quantisation at a first level;
      • after coding by means of an entropic encoder the number of bits required to represent all the quantized spectral coefficients is checked;
      • when the required number of bits does not correspond to a specified number of bits quantization and coding are repeated in subsequent steps, each at a modified quantization level, until the number of bits required for representation reaches the specified number of bits, and
      • additionally to the data bits the required quantization level is transmitted and/or stored.

      And that is the basic problem with software patents: there is no way you can put in the law that they can't be as abstract as this one. Even if you have some innovation in abstract reasoning that is such an achievement one could think about granting its discoverer a temporary monopoly, the resulting monopoly is way too large compared what was discovered.

      If you can patent an improved screw head ("Torx(R) Plus"), why not an algorithm? If you developed a new compression technology or a new encryption technology, why is that any less of an invention than an improved screw head?

      You are asking the wrong question. The correct one is "Will granting patents on new compression algorithms make sure that more and better compression algorithms will be developed?". All empirical studies carried out until now answer that question with either a "We don't know" or "NO!" (Bessen&Hunt, FTC study, European Commission Directorate General on Research study, ...).

      What we really need to fight are bad patents. Amazon's "one click" patent is one. Patents are *bad* when they are to broad or don't cover a real invention. But bad patents are a problem with the review system.

      It's not just a problem with the review system, but with the patent system as a whole being unfit for monopolising advances in abstract reasoning. See this discussion between a programmer and the Deputy director of the UK patent office. The latter concludes with:

      However, they [patent examiners who are also programmers] might express the communication problem the other way around - it's very difficult to persuade programmers that just because an invention is "easy", does not make it any less patentable.

      Patents were never intended to sort out brilliant inventions from stupid ones. The "non-obvious" condition is simply not fit for that purpose.

      This is so fitting with the Slashdot mentality that "software should be free" and that "copyright is bad".

      I don't know about the rest of slashdot, but in case of software patents, the opponents are actually great proponents of copyright. The problem is that software patents completely undermine copyright. What good does it do that you have the right to sell you self-written program if even its publication is prohibited because someone own a software patent it infringes on?

      --
      Donate free food here
    2. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      Very insightful post, it's good that some people actually think about matters instead of going with the crowds and booing at patents.

      I have followed reasoning similar to yours, and likewise concluded that the difference between sofnware patents and other patents is not that essential. However, rather than accepting all patents, I have come to reject them all.

      Consider this. R&D Department X invents a better way to compress images. They patent their invention, and are granted exclusive rights to it for some years. Later, another party invents the same mechanism, independently (this is not unlikely - the laws of physics are the same for both teams). They have made the same achievement, but just because someone else did it before, they are denied the same award.

      They may or may not have been able to find out their invention had already been done by searching patent libraries and other literature, but this is an increasingly costly process, incurring its own problems. If the didn't find out, they might go ahead and use their invention, later to be sued by X for patent infringement. Now, suppose that they had found the invention in the literature, they want to use it, but they cannot agree with X on the terms. They might spend a lot of effort researching an alternative way to achieve their goal - effort that could have been spent more usefully.

      I hope you're getting a feeling for why I oppose patents. I think there are better alternatives, for example, pooling funds and doing public research (results open for anyone to use).

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    3. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Alsee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not software patents that are bad, it's *bad* patents in general.

      No, software patents themselves are absurd.

      I am a programmer. All software is in fact a feild of mathematics, not a feild of technology. Every program is in fact a pure mathematical function. Every program can be broken down into a pure sequence of addition subtraction and multiplication. It may be a tremendously long combinations of additions subtractions and multiplications, but that is ALL that it is. Pure math.

      You can connect a keyboard to a computer. A keyboard can be patented. You can connect a monitor to a computer. A monitor can be patented. You can connect a printer to a computer. A printer can be patented.

      The only thing a computer can do is calculate math. The only thing a computer can implement is a mathematical equation.

      If you are using a word processor - you type letters on a keyboard and that keyboard send numbers to the computer. Those numbers are fed into a mathematical equation - a math equation calculated by the computer. The result of that calculation is nothing but another number or sequence of numbers. Those numbers then go out to be displayed on the monitor or printed by the printer.

      The only thing a computer can do is calculate math. The only thing a computer can implement is a mathematical equation.

      Any physical thing a computer supposedly does is actually done by a patentable object connected to a computer. No one involved is arguing against such patents. The argument is only over patenting pure software - patenting a pure math function.

      As far as I know every patent office on earth has recognized that you cannot patent math. Even the US patent office recognized it. At least they did up until a few years ago when they reversed the rules. The EU patent office still has a rule explicitly forbiding such patents.

      The US is extorting other countries to force them to change their rules. For example this treaty term:

      Jordan shall take all steps necessary to clarify that the exclusion from patent protection of "mathematical methods" in Article 4B of Jordan's Patent Law does not include such "methods" as business methods or computer-related inventions.

      There would be no need for that treaty term unless software is in fact "mathematical methods".

      Countries that do not submit to US demands potentially face punitive 100% tariff rates- economic warfare. Ukraine had been hit with such tariffs. Note that "pirate media" is a dysphemism (antonym of euphemism) for the manufacture of ordinary blank CDs without a tracking number burned into them. The Ukraine's big sin to provoke punitive trade war is that they didn't feel like making it a crime to manufacture ordinary CDs without tracking codes on them. Oooo, Eeeeevil.

      [sarcasm alert:] Manufacturing blank 8-tracks and vinyl records and tape cassettes and 5.25 floppy disks and 3.5 crunchies without tracking numbers has always been criminal, so the US is perfectly justified in attacking Ukraine for not passing such a law for CDs. [end sarcasm]

      The US is strong-arming countries all over the globe to pass rediculous laws and to create absurd crimes. And it's generally doing so under the flag of "free trade" agreements. Any country that balks at such terms faces the imposition of punitive trade barriers. So much for advocating free trade.

      And don't think I'm anti-American. I *am* American. I'm appalled at my own country's behavior.

      "copyright is bad"

      BAH! Straw man argument!
      Current US copyright laws are an abomination, but if you repeal the crap passed since 1975 or so then we'd have pretty good copyright law. Note that every copyright law since 1975 has literally been written by lawyers employed by the publishing industry. Copyright is a *good* thing as long as you don't pass bad laws under the bann

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    4. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Halo1 · · Score: 1
      Actually, a more recent (and more rigourous) empirical study concluded just the opposite:

      The myth of the software patent thicket

      Good. Then hopefully finally the real discussion can start, instead of endless moaning about computer programs as such, technical effects and personal desires to get rich.

      Unfortunately, I won't have time to read it until the weekend :/

      --
      Donate free food here
    5. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All software is in fact a feild of mathematics, not a feild of technology.

      Any picture can be scanned in, at which point it is simply a large number. Music can be recorded, at which point it is a large number. Books can be typed in, at which point they are large numbers.

      Once you go down the "if it's mathematics it doesn't count" road, you have to throw away the concept of copyright for anything digitisable. After all, it's stupid to copyright a number, isn't it?

      The problem with your argument is that you don't recognise the difference between a novel way of arranging algorithms to achieve a certain effect, and simply implementing an algorithm from a math textbook.

      Sure, mathematics should not be patentable. But you are reaching in your argument in the same way that you would be reaching if you stated that books shouldn't be copyrightable because they are simply an arrangement of words, and words shouldn't be copyrightable.

    6. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Very insightful post, it's good that some people actually think about matters instead of going with the crowds and booing at patents."

      Of course, it never occurs to you that there are people who think about things and then boo at patents. Your openeing sentence is nothing but flamebait.

    7. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're mixing up copyright and patents (a quite common phenomenon, unfortunately).

      Say, I find a proof of the Riemann hypothesis, and I write a paper about it. Then I definitely do own the copyright on that paper (the fact that it's all math doesn't have any effect here), but I cannot patent it, i.e. if some of the methods used in the proof are also useful somewhere else, anyone can use them.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    8. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're mixing up copyright and patents

      No, I'm certainly aware of the differences between them. But they share a common theme, and it's a lot easier to come up with copyright examples than patent examples.

      If you want me to frame the reductio ad absurdum in terms of patents alone, consider this: a patented physical invention, such as an engine, is simply a collection of atoms that are arranged in a certain pattern. Obviously patenting atoms is stupid, so patenting collections of them is equally stupid.

      Substitute "algorithms" for "atoms", and "software" for "engine".

    9. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You're mixing up copyright and patents

      No. The US is issuing patents on pure software. And they are pressuring other coutries to issue patents on pure software. And the EU is currently fighting over the issue of patents on pure software. And thus on pure math.

      Typical examples of the patents math algoithm patents:
      Pure compression algorithms. You input one number sequence and it is a pure math function that (hopefully) outputs a shorter number sequence.
      RSA public key encryption: You input one number and preform an exponetiation with a composite number. That outputs another number - the encrypted number. You can then input the 'encrypted' number and the factors to get back the original number.

      Amazon.com's "one-click" patent falls into this same catagory as well. It just says that some of the numbers going into the math function happen to represent dollar values, and other numbers represent mouse clicks.

      The supposed "inventions" are purely a calculations to preform on information (a.k.a. numbers). You cannot invent or patents a sequence of thoughts for processing information. You can only invent and patent physical objects and physical processes. Trying to patent "infromation processes" (a.k.a. math) is absurd.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    10. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Essentially every country on earth recognizes patents on the novel non-obvious and usefull harnessing of the physical forces of nature. Essentially every country on earth has clearly stated that there is no such thing as a math "invention".

      If you honestly want to argue to eliminate all patents, well fine, go ahead. I'm arguing that the US is totally brain-damaged for attempting to force the entire world to REVERSE the simple and bloody obvious definitions of invention and patent.

      The US is still trying to claim that it does not permit patents on math. It's a self contradictory claim because they are granting patents on math, they are just playing word games self-denial that that's exactly what they are doing.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    11. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Essentially every country on earth recognizes patents on the novel non-obvious and usefull harnessing of the physical forces of nature. Essentially every country on earth has clearly stated that there is no such thing as a math "invention".

      Yes, I agree here. What I don't agree with is the hypothesis that just because something is built upon a foundation of mathematics, that it is clearly unpatentable, in the same way that I don't believe just because something is build upon a foundation of "useful harnessing of the physical forces of nature" it is clearly unpatentable.

      If you honestly want to argue to eliminate all patents

      No, I never said that. I am saying that that is a logical consequence of your argument, and therefore your argument is flawed. This is a standard debating tactic known as reductio ad absurdum.

      Having an invention that is built upon mathematics is no different to having an invention that is built upon the forces of nature. In both cases, it doesn't matter that the basic elements aren't patentable, what matters is that they are arranged in a novel way.

    12. Re:We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Then you're arguing that calculus, trigonometry, algebra, square roots, division, multiplication, even addition, that all of it should have been patentable. At one time they were all novel. And there's plenty of novel math being "invented" today, entire feilds.

      Hell, the number zero should have been patentable. The number zero was one of the greatest "inventions" of math was the number zero around 300BC.

      The big promlem with patenting math/calculations/software is that you are patenting a sequence of thoughts. Any software can be "run" purely by thinking the sequence of thoghts/calculations of that program. It's a common debugging technique programmers use - they "run" the software purely mentally to see what's happening and what's going wrong. Given enough time and effort any program can be run by pure thought.

      You can "imagine" a cotton gin, and you can "imagine" it running and processing cotton, but no matter how much you think about it you can never process any cotton.

      Any software can actually run purely mentally. And I reject the notion that you can patent a sequence of thoughts. You cannot imprison or sue me for sitting motionless and thinking. I submit that it's unconstituional to even try. I admit the constituion says nothing about "freedom to think", but I submit that a freedom to think is an implicit prerequisit for a freedom of speech.

      And just to pile on yet another absurdity, the holes you punch in the paper roll for a player piano - that is software for that player piano machine. That arrangement and sequence of of holes is instructions for the machine to run. Any song is a program. If you can patent software then you can patent a novel song.

      There is a fundamental difference between inventing an object and "inventing" information. Objects get patented, information gets copyrighted.

      Why should software be the only thing on earth that gets DOUBLE protection? Both patents and copyrights? Patents and copyrights are different things with different rules. They are each carefully balanced systems. By giving double protection you get broken and unbalanced results.

      If you really want patents for software then I say we remove copyright protection from software, LOL. It would be a stupid and horribly broken system, but it would still be better than doubling up.
      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  40. Explain it to people this way.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you find that most folks do not know, or even care about software patents, explain it to them like this. Software is like kitchen recipes for tasty meals. Allowing software patents will be alike allowing patents on recipes such that someone's particular recipie for chicken soup will not only be copyrightable for it's exact list of ingredients and preparation instructions, but also now someone would be able to obtain a patent for the *concept* of chicken soup. Prior art be damned... from that point onwards whoever successfully grabs the patent for the concept of chicken soup will now be able sue anyone who makes any form of soup containing any chicken unless they pay extortion for the permission to make chicken soup of *any form or flavour* again. All chefs, cooks and homemakers who've freely been making their own favorite chicken soup up to that point in time are now screwed, they can no longer legally do so without buying permission from the new patent owner. And it's all because somebody felt they weren't making enough money from selling their brand of chicken soup and were able to convince the government to grant them exclusive rights to suddenly seize and "own" all chicken soup recipies, even those recipies that haven't yet been been writen by others.

    Laypersons who do not understand software programming will say this argument is silly nonsense, but you need to explain to them that from the perspective of a software writer, the concept of software patents are equally as silly, but are about to be enacted into law because some greedy people think the general populace is gullible and stupid enough to allow bought-and-paid-for elected respresentatives to do such.

  41. What good do software patents bring? by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So software patents are back on the agenda, and influential politicians are pushing for them. It makes me think there MUST be something good to them, and it's just my severe tiredness that makes me fail to see it.

    The strongest argument pro-patent people have used that I can recall right now is that they provide (financial) rewards for innovation. So, supoosedly, the idea is that we want innovation, so we want patents. I think this kind of thinking is kind of narrow; there are other ways to innovate. If we so badly want innovation, we can pool some funds and pay for R&D, right? We can pay researchers to cooperate, rather than compete, and invent new things rather than other ways to do the same thing (which would have to be found because the competition patented their ways).

    So, there are alternatives to patents, and I think it's worth investigating them. Patents are always unfair in a sense, in that the first one who is assigned the patent blocks out all the rest, even though they may have worked just as hard to come up with the invention. In current systems, obtaining patents is costly, which favors already wealthy corporations over smaller ones, which can lead to consolidation of the market in the hands of the big guys and harm the consumer - which I think is a Bad Thing.

    Practical limitations make it very hard to encertian that a technology is not (or rather, cannot be seen as) infringing on some patent, which puts even those who try to play nice at risk of being sued - which is harmful no matter if they win, lose or settle the suit.

    Software patents in particular seem to have had the effect of stifling rather than boosting innovation.

    All in all, I am tempted to conclude htat patents in general and software patents in particular do more harm than good. Obviously, some politicians and some corporations hope to gain from them, though.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    1. Re:What good do software patents bring? by huima · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One of the best (worst) aspects of software patents (depending on your viewpoint) is that one may infringe them accidentally too easily. As has been noted many times before, software patents, for various reasons, tend to be overly abstract and generic. This means that the probability that you genuinely invent a solution to a problem, and that the said solution then infringes a third-party owned patent, is notable.

      This is the reason why Big Corporations push software patents heavily. If you have a big collection of patents, any randomly chosen software company with a high propability infringes at least some of them. This opens an avenue for ligitation. Therefore, patents turn into abstract warfare, and it is then the number and extent of patents which counts.

      Because a Big Corporation can acquire a larger number of patents than a small enterprise, Big Corporations win the arms race. Therefore, it is logical for Big Corporations to be proponents of software patents; and for individual software engineers and small enterprises to be against them.

      In the same way as medieval kings and modern countries must have armies, so must software companies nowadays and in the future have patents. The king with bigger army wins. The corporation with larger patent portfolio wins. So, software patents bring [not-any-more-so-much] a change in the rules of the game, and it depends on your position, whether the change is for good or for bad.

    2. Re:What good do software patents bring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes me think there MUST be something good to them, and it's just my severe tiredness that makes me fail to see it.

      Well, there's lots of bribe, er, lobbying money to be made here.

      Good thing for the almost starving influential politicians, no?

  42. Simple Answer by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    There IS a simple, permanent answer -- ban lobbying and campaign contributions. In fact, ban the mere possibility of impropriety; politicians shouldn't be allowed to accept any gift of any kind from anyone. Harsh, yes. But power must only come along with responsibility and accountability.

    Once political power isn't for sale, businesses will have no more leverage with politicians. Voting will mean something again. TRUE representative democracy can take hold.

  43. Unless... by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    Unless you've got a cheque in your hand, don't bother. Refer to sig.

    1. Re:Unless... by Tsian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't know, I disagree. I know one local Canadian Alliance MP who was willing to buck the party line simply because of:

      a) The views he held

      b) His constituents responses

      (Specifically, he stated he would vote for Bill C-250 which added "sexual orientation" to the protected classes of hate crime legistlation...)

  44. Actually patents can be worse than slavery by argoff · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Back in the 1850's the plantation masters said that they had no incentive to grow cotton without slaves on the plantation. Now people say that they have no incentive to create pharmacuticals unless they can lock out 10 million africans dying of AIDS from getting generics. You tell me which is morally better. I wander, how many people are going to die this time?

    Back then they would say things like "don't you believe in free markets, we paid for those slaves dammit. We went thru the troubble of importing them. Look at the prosperous plantation system - it's proof that we're right and that slavery is good for America. If you don't like salvery you're free not to own slaves"

    Today they say "don't you believe in free markets, we paid to create those patents dammit. We went thru the troubble of inventing them. Look at the prosperous technology industry - it's proof that we're right and that patents are good for America. If you don't like patents you're free to create your own inventions and not patent them"

    Of course, back then, it totally ignored the fact that slavery was based off of controll over peoples free will rather than natural limits in supply and demand. How ironic, patent information has no natural limits in supply and demand either, only artifical controll over the way people use them.....

  45. I wonder what Einstien would have thought? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's some truth in that, but your argument assumes that all parties have equal access to the patent system. Companies backed by millions of dollars and whos sole business is to aquire and exploit patents will always game the system to unfair advantage over more innovative individuals and small companies regardless of whether the patent has real merit or not.

    Thats where patent law falls down in its idealism.

    Solutions: (?) All patent applications must be:

    1) Free
    2) Trivial to file
    3) Must be commercialy exploited by the holder or they will lose it to the public domain.
    4) Non transferable/saleable as assets

    I believe the master of relativity once worked in the patent office himself and was sceptical of Mans arrogant claim to 'own' knowledge.

    1. Re:I wonder what Einstien would have thought? by Wolfier · · Score: 1

      May I add:

      5) If a prior art is discovered after the patent is granted, the applicant will lose the patent as well as pay a small fine, which increases linearly for repeated offenders.

  46. Hi argoff... by Thinkit4 · · Score: 1

    I still remember your eloquent criticism of both patents and copyrights.

    --
    -I am an elective eunuch.
    1. Re:Hi argoff... by argoff · · Score: 1

      I still remember your eloquent criticism of both patents and copyrights.

      I renember you too. Especially how you could sum things up in one or two brilliantly deep sentences - the same things that it might take me years and countless thousands of words to express. People don't understand, I used to believe deeply in copyrights and patnets. Being truthfull enough to myself to see them for the evil they were was not easy and a very lonely unpopular path. It's nice to have friends along that path. Thanks.

  47. Time to run? by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

    What about alternatives? How are things in, say, Canada or New Zealand?

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  48. Democrazy by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ``I've noticed this too... Isn't it about time for direct democracy?''

    I don't think that's a good idea either. I for one wouldn't trust the majority to have the knowledge or even dedication to take the right decissions in many of the specialized issues that come up in politics. It's very easy to influence public opinion, as has been shown at various occasions in history, and hardly always for the better.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    1. Re:Democrazy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Direct democracy, or democracy, is as you say unworkable. Representative democracy is a nice compromise but unfortunately for us the representatives represent nobody but themselves and the lobbiests with the deepest pockets.

  49. Bad patents in the US tainting the world? by StateOfTheUnion · · Score: 2, Funny

    Does anyone else get the impression that bad patents in the US are causing other countries to amend their patent laws to allow their companies to participate in what they see as a "land grab" for patentable technology. Patents are useful, but unfortunately bad patents in the US are spoiling the game for everyone . . . and I'm afraid that the the EU is just trying to sink lower than the US because their afraid that if they don't, then they're going to miss out on the "land grab" for software, business processes and other non-tangible idea patents.

  50. Guns and Patents by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

    ``But just as not everyone who owns a gun is a gun nut, so not everyone who patents software wants software to be patentable.''

    Aye, but both abundance of guns and abundance of patents increase the risk for abuse. You could lose control in a moment of fear or anger and use your gun, and a company could use patents in an effort to save itself, or a new management might use formerly defensive patents as weapons.

    Finally (it's striking how well the anology holds), having guns or patents for defense is not going to save you. You say someone sneaks into your house with a gun, well, since they have the surprise element on their side, they'll shoot you before you reach yours when it comes to it. With patents, you can countersue, but the question is if your patents will be effective against the company that sues you, and, anyway, both suits are already going to cost and run counter to productivity.

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  51. It's more like... by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

    Patenting songs and artwork. If you need to draw an analogy for the layman, there's one they can identify with:
    I'm sorry, but if your art class wants to paint that bowl of fruit, you'll have to pay us 699 Euro for each painter's fruit bowl painting patent license.

    I think the large companies are jumping at an opportunity to lock out small players and the random genious that upset the industry every so often. It doesn't greatly effect the large companies, because they have the resources to cross license between themselves. It makes reasonable defensive business sense, but is completely lacking any real foresight and growth vision. Sounds like something an MBA would dream up.

    --
    Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
  52. Patents should not exist at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even a great contribution to the knowledge pool should not be rewarded with the capacity to rob
    the public. Many things should not be owned.
    Knowledge, what is seen and heard, should be among
    them along with water, food, medicine.

  53. Nasty Patents. by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1
    For people talking to parlimentarians, It might be worthwhile to put together a list of some of the most agregious software patents out there (like the domain name patent, and the plugin patent). Please put your list here.

    What are some of your (least) favorite bad software patents, and what are their (forseeable) effects?

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    1. Re:Nasty Patents. by flossie · · Score: 1
      It might be worthwhile to put together a list of some of the most agregious software patents out there

      It might be good to start with a look at the European Software Patent Horror Gallery which is being assembled by the FFII.

  54. OOH! OOOH! by ShadowRage · · Score: 1

    I get dibs on the letter F!

    1. Re:OOH! OOOH! by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      I call dibs on the numeric digits 6 and 9. The porn industry will pay me millions...

  55. Laches by tepples · · Score: 1

    Not necessarily. The use it or lose it doctrine isn't as strong with patents and copyrights as it is with trademarks, but it's still there, in the form of the doctrine of laches. If a monopoly holder harms an alleged infringer by delaying legal action, the monopoly holder can't collect damages for infringements that occurred prior to the receipt of a cease and desist letter.

  56. So harmonise THIS way by tepples · · Score: 1

    Then ask the minister to "harmonise" the situation to one that either 1. applies the narrowest possible judgment to the "inventive step", 2. reduces the term of patents on computer-implemented inventions, or 3. both.

  57. Why can't I patent my movie? by Christian+Engstrom · · Score: 1
    Patenting songs and artwork. If you need to draw an analogy for the layman, there's one they can identify with:
    I'm sorry, but if your art class wants to paint that bowl of fruit, you'll have to pay us 699 Euro for each painter's fruit bowl painting patent license.
    The European Patent Convention explicitly prohibits patents on aesthetic creations in Article 52, which just happens to be the same Article where it says that computer programs are not patentable either.

    But the European Patent Office allows software patents anyway, using an argument centered on the phrase "as such", which appears in Article 52. So if they wanted to allow patents on artwork, music or films, they have already opened the door for doing so.

    I've written a slightly humorous article on the subject called "Why Can't I Patent My Movie?" that you may find interesting.

    --
    Christian Engström, Former Member of the European Parliament 2009-2014 for The Pirate Party, Sweden
  58. We're Fighting The Wrong Thing by harriet+nyborg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    All empirical studies carried out until now answer that question with either a "We don't know" or "NO!" (Bessen&Hunt, FTC study, European Commission Directorate General on Research study, ...).

    Actually, a more recent (and more rigourous) empirical study concluded just the opposite:

    The myth of the software patent thicket

    Enjoy.

  59. EU Patriots! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Europeans should just shut up and loose all their freedoms just like people in the USA!

    In Soviet Russia, Software Patents Fight YOU!

    (More and More it seems like the Soviets had more freedom than people caught up in the 'New World Order')

  60. Vote in June by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Election to the European Parlament is held in June.
    There ought to be information somewhere to what party supports/does not support software patents.

    I didnt plan to vote, but if any party is clearly against software patents it might be worth the effort.

    1. Re:Vote in June by ReinoutS · · Score: 2, Insightful
      A table showing the result of lat years' vote, by EP fraction, is here: http://swpat.ffii.org/papers/eubsa-swpat0202/plen0 309/vote/analysis.html

      The numbers correspond to amendments. In general you can say, the more green boxes a MEP has, the better.

  61. Good clarification by maynard · · Score: 1

    In this situation your retort nullifies my argument, but not in the general case. In the US congress we see this sort of political gamesmanship regularly; I assume EU parliaments throughout the various member states are little different. BTW: thanks for your factual reply. --M

  62. Liars, liars... by Halo1 · · Score: 1
    However, I should point out that Article 6 of the proposed Directive provides that the rights conferred by patents granted for inventions within the scope of the Directive shall not affect acts permitted under Directive 91/250/EEC on the legal protection of computer programs by copyright, in particular under the provisions thereof in respect of decompilation and interoperability. This is an important safeguard for software developers as it will ensure that such developers can continue to engage in the same acts to achieve interoperability as are currently allowed under the Copyright Directive.
    This is so much spindoctoring it isn't funny anymore. The provisions of the Directive 91/250/EEC state indeed that you are allowed to reverse engineer a computer program for e.g. interoparability.

    However, what they're not telling you is that reverse engineering/decompilation could never be prohibited by a patent in the first place! A patent prohibits you to use or exploit what is patented, not observing or analysing it. So they're including a provision in the software patent directive that gives you a right that you already had and which they can't take away.

    As I said, a patent can be used to prohibit the use of a patented technique. So if you after all your reverse engineering work finally discover how to make your program interoperable with the other one, you can't actually implement this: after all, that would boil down to using the patented technique, which is not allowed by the Council/Commission version. So there is no interoperability guarantee whatsoever.

    The European Parliament however explicitly stated that this should be allowed (with 393 against 35 votes, no less). Needless to say, the Council wants to remove this amendment.

    --
    Donate free food here
  63. Fight AU-US FTA IP Chapter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chapter 17 of the AU-US "Free Trade Agreement" contains nasty things that lock Australia into software patents!

    Help fight these nasties:

    http://www.linux.org.au/fta/

  64. P.S. OOPS! by Alsee · · Score: 1

    Oops, I thought your reply was directed to me. I didn't see the Anonymous Coward post at score 0. My reply above is therefore a ::wee-bit:: missdirected :D

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  65. I'm with you! by Thinkit4 · · Score: 1

    There's some others--plus the moderation is getting less corporate-conservative. I do like your essays--but the ultraviolent or sexual analogies might be a turnoff for some. Well, just a thought. But I am against both copyrights and patents--so I'm with ya!

    --
    -I am an elective eunuch.