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Patent Mess May Stifle Australian Software

gtoomey writes "Australian Open Source lawyer Brendan Scott is claiming the USA/Australia Free Trade Agreement (FTA) will damage all Australian software development. An article in the Sydney Morning Herald says that developers have probably built products which 'infringe' on U.S. software patents, while the FTA is forcing Australia to adopt DCMA laws."

48 of 231 comments (clear)

  1. Australia? by mikeleemm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This type of stuff has gotta affect everyone, not only in Australia.. Any thoughts on the matter?

    1. Re:Australia? by Soko · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well, for one, Dr. Andrew Tridgell is an Aussie. Several key OSS devs are as well. A major thorn in the side of Microsoft et. al. is that when they win in the US through buying laws, someone in another country does what those in the US no longer can.

      One can see that the Closed Source MegaCorps have realised that unless they get all lawmakers, not just those in the US, on thier side OSS will march on with out missing a beat. This could be the thin edge of the wedge, as it were.

      Soko

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
    2. Re:Australia? by acceber · · Score: 4, Informative
      It affects Australia because it's a US-Aus FTA. It is presently under hot debate in Parliament House in Canberra at the moment. I hear it on News Radio (630 AM) in Sydney almost every day.

      Currently, the opposition (Mark Latham and the Labor Government) are proposing their own amendments to cater for this issue which would undoubtedly affect developers in Australia and cripple the industry and the economy to a big extent. John Howard, the current Prime Minister of Australia (if you didn't know), says that he is ready to "have a look" at any proposals of amendments to this current dilemma because the national interests of Australia are far more important than any short-term political advantage when it comes to the US-Aus FTA.

      There is a reason why the US Senate passed the FTA first. The advantages towards one country seem to significantly outweigh the advantages the other country will receive. At this stage anyway.

    3. Re:Australia? by miyako · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think that was somewhat the point of the article, the shitty software patent system in the US is effecting everyone else i the world.
      The problem, at it's heart, I think, is the incongruence of technology and law. On the one hand, lawmakers don't understand technology well enough to write good laws, and on the other hand technology is such a broad topic and a fast moving target that even if there were a bunch of technologically savvy people in position to write technology laws, the way the system exists today by the time a law was written, passed and enacted the lawmakers would be 6 months behind on what needs to be done.
      I think one of the major factors to this is that people both in and out of industry don't really understand how blazingly fast technology moves. While 10 years might be reasonable for a phsical invention, having ANYTHING locked up in patents in software is going to stifle innovation horribly.
      I'm all for companies who invent new and great things in the world of software to be able to make money on it, they put in the work and they deserve it. But the reality is that software patents really don't seem to necessary. If I invent some super great algorithm and software based around it, and really do keep it a secret untill it's released in my product, by the time my competitors are able to churn out a competing product I already have mindshare and better damn well already be working on the next version of my software.
      Of course the corperations won't be happy without a patent, and in some sence it's even justifiable to say that they are right to want some insurance that nobody else can rip off their idea, but if the lawmakers are going to get paid off to allow software patents, I think it should be for a maximum of 1 year. This gives them a head start as a reward for their work, but still allows innovation.
      This all of course doesn't address the problem with junk patents, but at least it would go some way to minimizing the damage. I'd much rather we only have to wait for 1 year to be able to have applications which use double click or radio buttons than 10 years.

      --
      Famous Last Words: "hmm...wikipedia says it's edible"
    4. Re:Australia? by tonyr60 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Probably not. NZ is substantially an agricultural based exporter. The FTA between Aus and USA provides little benefit to the Aus agricultural exporters (and they are not happy).

      In addition successive governments in NZ have not shown a desire to effectively become a close partner with USA at all costs, unlike Aus. Examples of this stance are the long standing Nuclear Free Status which effectively locks out US warship visits and more recently NZs non commitment to the US aggression in Iraq (although we do support UN's involvement).

    5. Re:Australia? by Babbster · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Examples of this stance are the long standing Nuclear Free Status which effectively locks out US warship visits and more recently NZs non commitment to the US aggression in Iraq (although we do support UN's involvement).

      Because, as has been demonstrated, the UN always does a bang-up job...

    6. Re:Australia? by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Always? No. Nobody's perfect. But a less-than-perfectly implemented humanitarian effort to feed starving people is a hell of a lot better than going in with guns blazing for manufactured reasons with the intent of sorting it all out later.

  2. No it won't by fireman+sam · · Score: 5, Funny

    It won't damage Australian software development. Microsoft Australia, Sun Australia, Apple Australia will do just fine.

    For me personally, you can catch me at Elisabeth St intersection washing windscreens for the MS, Sun and Apple developers as they head of to work.

    --
    it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
  3. Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Outsource to Tasmania.

    1. Re:Obvious solution by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Speaking of outsourcing, do the popular outsourcing countries such as India and China have similar restrictions? Or has a loophole been created to allow multinationals to "infringe" with impunity?

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    2. Re:Obvious solution by dbIII · · Score: 2, Funny
      Outsource to Tasmania.
      The devil you say!
  4. DCMA laws? by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 3, Funny

    I mean, if you are willing to put your post in the queue, please try to at least sound like you know what you are talking about. It is the DMCA. Digital Millenium Copyright Act. Not DCMA, not YMCA.

    --
    Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
  5. Bandwidth by scowling · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One would think that the primary roadblock to software developemnt in Australia is the price of Net access and bandwidth. Isn't it ridiculously expensive there compared to North America?

    --
    www.kitchengeek.com -- Nosh for
    1. Re:Bandwidth by mcbridematt · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sending traffic across the road to the "Big 4" (Telstra, Optus, MCI/Ozemail, Telco NZ/AAPT) costs a fortune, since they refuse to peer with anybody else. In fact, bringing your own link from the U.S is cheaper than transit bandwidth from the Big 4, that is, if your in Sydney with lots of money. Only 6 ISP's actually have their own international links.

      Theres a big push in Australia to get ISP's to peer at peering exchanges like PIPE and WAIX in the capital cities. Most ISP's here (bar the "Big 4" except in one case) are connected to them, and some even offer quota free content for anything that goes through a peering exchange.

      Broadband speeds are rediculous here too. Telstra's ADSL wholesale network is limited to 1500/256k with the lowest being 256/64 (and everybody who upgrades from that to 512/128 says that 256/64 isn't broadband). Companies like Optus (and it's XYZed subsidiary), RequestDSL/PowerTel, iiNet (residential deployments, unlike the others), Internode (one DSLAM for a town which didn't have any. Tester said that once things got past 4000k downstream, speed didn't really increase.) and a few others around the country have been rolling out DSLAM's to overcome this limitation.
      There are only two major HFC networks, and they are in the captial cities (Optus, Telstra. Both have had an agreement not to lay any coax since 1997. Telstra will eventually replace HFC with FTTH, keep in mind that Telstra, unlike Optus doesn't use HFC for telephony). And some smaller regional deployments, like NCable and TransACT (who rolled out a VDSL network around Canberra using Fibre To The Curb, so every house is within 300m of a DSLAM. Why don't you US slobs think about that before saying 'only useful within 300m of an exchange').

      I still remember blowing out my 100mb bandwidth quota years ago on 56k. Didn't get reconnected until my parents got the point of me dialing STD to Melbourne to take advantage of the "free" ISP's that were around at the time.

    2. Re:Bandwidth by ColaMan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Hmmm... where are you?

      Check around the ISP's, sounds like your pricing's stuck a few years behind. Might I suggest whirlpool , if you haven't already seen it? Anywhere that Tel$tra's got a DSLAM, you can also get any other ISP in australia that sells ADSL.

      I'm in Mount Isa, and I get 512/128 from Internode at $59/mo. That's with 12GB download (capped at 40kb/s after that), a pile of quota-exempt mirrors (mmmm... gentoo rsync :-), a heap of free radio relays.. etc. If you don't like caps, you can get a "flat-rate" plan that does some prioritisation depending on your current download totals compared to everyone else currently using flatrate. But anyhoo, that's enough Internode fanboyism from me :-)

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    3. Re:Bandwidth by EvilCabbage · · Score: 2, Funny

      Jesus, there is no such word as REDICULOUS!

      I grind my teeth every time I read that.

      I'm starting to understand what my highschool english teacher was worried about.

  6. Help fix this problem by Marlor · · Score: 5, Informative

    I posted this information in the earlier (less specific) story about the FTA's impact on Australian software development, but we really need to take action to let the media and politicians know that this is a big issue.

    One of the best tactics is to send letters to newspapers. The FTA is a hot topic in the news right now, so there's a good chance that letters relating to it will be accepted. You can send letters to the editor at the following addresses:
    The Australian
    Sydney Morning Herald
    The Age

    You can also let your feeling be known to the shadow minister for the Arts, Sport and Information Technology (Senator Kate Lundy). Her contact details are here. Be sure to mention that this issue will affect your vote.

    The Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts have so far brushed off any suggestion that Australia's software industry will be harmed by the FTA, and really do not seem to understand the issues. However, you can contact them here, and the Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts here. Once again, be sure to mention that this will affect your vote.

    You can also find out which electorate you are in, if you don't already know, and send your local federal MP a message about how disappointed you are over the FTA's impact on the IT industry.

  7. This has me worried in a major way by inflex · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm a small software development company, a one person one in fact. While I don't have any concerns (yet) about the DMCA, I do worry about patent implications.

    Given the spate of trivial patents that are granted, it's somewhat inevitable that any piece of software more complex than perhaps "Hello world" is bount to infringe on something, somewhere.

    I'm seriously considering moving my operations base overseas. NewZealand would be nice but it's a tad too close, especially since I've heard that there's plans for greater unification between Au and NZ.

    I've contacted my state and local representitives about this matter, strangely all of them see to forsee it as something which "will" happen as apposed to something that the people of Australia even have the slightest choice in. Seems to me that "democratic" governments are far from being such anymore.

    PLD.

    1. Re:This has me worried in a major way by inflex · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, I have thought about this. At one point SouthAfrica was looking quite interesting, however their Telkom monopoly on communications will render your chance of good connectivity asunder. South African /government/ is still also suffering a lot of anti-white sentiment from the Aparthaide era, so that threatens to polarize things.

      Brazil is another option - they seem to be interested in moving ahead independently.

      PLD.

    2. Re:This has me worried in a major way by inflex · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't forget the coffee plantations! :-D

      We could work non-stop.

  8. Will New Zealand follow? by waynemcdougall · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Yes New Zealand will most likely jump on this band-wagon.

    It has already been raised by America as being a part of any free trade agreement (which supposedly New Zealand wants) and the only reason we don't have a free trade agreement now is our less than 100% support on wars in Afghanistan and Iraq - the ongoing nuclear-ship ban also hasn't helped.

    Of course New Zealand is most likely to give that bargaining chip away before negotiating any free-trade agreement. Our copyright and patent laws are alredy being revised to bring them more into line with a DMCA type approach. American forces in particular are bringing their weight to bear to re-outlaw parallel importing. And we're mostly likely to bring our commercial laws (including copyright, and DMCA type provisions) into line with Australia. Whenever that happens (eg food regulations) it is always new Zealand that changes to match Australia.

    Pretty much our only hope is a general anti-American sentiment by our leftish government. Two problems with that:
    a) we won't have a leftish government forever
    b) a leftish government is more likely to trade away copyright provisions (no votes there) in exchange (or compensation) for being able to slightly bad-mouth America in the political arena

    So we're doomed. But lobby anyway.

    --
    Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
    1. Re:Will New Zealand follow? by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, I have to agree with you.

      What bugs me is that I'm likely to vote for a National-ish goverment based on other non-software issues, despite knowing they'll sell out to the US on exactly these kinds of issues. And it wouldn't surprise me at all if the Labour-ish parties did as well, except they'd try to do it more quietly.

      I really hate politics, it's always about which party's policies (and politicians) you dislike the least.

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    2. Re:Will New Zealand follow? by Omega1045 · · Score: 4, Funny

      You don't want free trade with us. We suck. We make horrible trilogies like Star Wars 1, 2 & 3. In constrast, you make great trilogies like LOTR 1, 2 & 3.

      --

      Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein

    3. Re:Will New Zealand follow? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Never vote for any party that will get more than 5% support - they have sold out to popularism.

    4. Re:Will New Zealand follow? by SQL+Error · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Pretty much our only hope is a general anti-American sentiment by our leftish government.

      The real problem is that it's irrational anti-American sentiment. They don't dislike America for any specific reason; they dislike America because disliking America is what they do.

      If they had a rational agenda against - for example - foolish patent laws and the DMCA, then I might support them, but they don't. (Same with the left here in Australia, and in Europe, and in America itself.)

      But yes, wherever else your politicial leanings may take you, lobby against the DMCA as hard as you can. It's simply a lousy law.

    5. Re:Will New Zealand follow? by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The real problem is that it's irrational anti-American sentiment. They don't dislike America for any specific reason; they dislike America because disliking America is what they do.

      Strongly dissagree there. The reason our current government is "anti-American" (it isn't really) is because of issues like Iraq, envronmental issues, human rights etc.

      Unfortuantly copyright law etc. isn't one of the reasons. But there deffinitly are good reasons.

      Our current prime minister was a protester of the Vietnam war. I think that says alot.

    6. Re:Will New Zealand follow? by LinuxLuver · · Score: 2, Interesting

      NZ doesn't have a free trade agreement with the US because what NZ exports competes directly with several major vested interests in the US: dairy, meat, wood, fruit. The stuff about not having an FTA because we refused to believe Bush's lies about Iraq and whore the lives of NZ service men and women for an FTA (like Australia did).....is crap.

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
  9. We already have DMCA style provisions by Talez · · Score: 3, Informative

    Australian copyright law has anti-circumvention provisions and has had since 2001 IIRC.

    Australian copyright law is already completely anal. We don't have a concept of fair-use like the US copyright system. We're not legally allowed to tape shows off the TV.

    1. Re:We already have DMCA style provisions by EvilCabbage · · Score: 3, Interesting

      We're not legally allowed to tape shows off the TV.

      Unless the broadcast features the Queen of England, unless I'm mistaken.

      Australia - Stupid Laws 'R Us

    2. Re:We already have DMCA style provisions by dtfinch · · Score: 4, Funny

      Stupid Laws 'R Us

      That's "US".

  10. Just set up chop in Shanghai by cheekyboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Make a small ghost company under a diff name in Shanghai just to fake that it was developed there, and use that as an 'outsourced' source contract company.

    But the FTA is shortlived any way, the super uber great depression will happen after GWB gets re-elected, and then the US$ will freefall as everyone dumps it.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  11. Who needs 'em? by tryone · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just hypothetically, I wonder if the entire rest of the world could collectively survive a cessation of all trade with the USA? And could the USA survive it?

    Just in case too many countries ever get a bit tired of the US trying to make them their bitches.

  12. Hmm... Samba... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Aren't most of the Samba developers in Australia? If so, would this mean that MS could now go after the Samba developers for infringing on patents in SMB?

    Hmm...

  13. Offtopic: Won't happen but by panurge · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Yes, the rest of the world would survive. It survived WW2 and the Cold War, after all. In fact, as the US is a net importer of oil, the oil price would fall (collapse even). And the rest of the world would have a surplus of manufacturing capacity and food.

    Whether governments and economic systems would survive is another matter, as the stock markets would collapse, held up as they are by the belief that the US overseas debt will eventually be repaid. Some countries are likely to hold off anarchy better than others, and the core EU states might take over the US role eventually.

    As for the US, I guess the long term prospects might actually be beneficial. OK, there would need to be restrictions on oil use. The Bush family would lose influence without the Sa'udis to back them up, but other oil companies would gain power. The Government might have to put down a number of armed uprisings. The economy would go into depression until manufacturing could be restarted, but, let's face it, stuff is changed much too frequently and the skills are there to keep exisitng equipment going, just like the Cubans have to. People might even get healthier as a result of eating less. But there would be a huge one-off benefit from the writing off of US debt to the rest of the world. And the US would be militarily powerful enough to ensure no-one tried to collect on that debt.

    I guess the biggest problem would arise if the trade cessation was not associated with an end to military interventionism. If the military intervention stopped as well, the US would benefit financially from bringing the soldiers home. And the likes of Osama Bin Laden would no longer have a USP. OK, Osama, you got what you wanted. Now see how your countrymen, especially the rich ones who just lost their incomes, like it.

    Pity about Israel, Lebanon, Iraq and Syria, but eventually the fallout will decay, and at least no-one will be fighting over who owns the Jerusalem Crater.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
  14. Why do this by bm_luethke · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is something that has always irritated me. When people begin to discuss a "global market" inevitably these issues arise. If done correctly it can be a major benefit for everyone involved, if done badly it hurts all involved.

    For some reason I have yet to see it done correctly (well, I know the reason - short term monetary gains - in the long run this hurts everyone involved). In each instance that another countries laws are cited, or they are "merged (so to speak), they take the *most* restrictive parts of each and implement that.

    This isn't an "American vs Australian" issue (well, this particular battle is, but not the war). More than several of the laws passed in the US are done so because "some random country" does it. Even the DMCA was mostly an amalgam of the most restrictive parts of what other countries do. Once it was passed here other countries cite us. Eventually someone else will pass another DMCA amalgam (maybe the US, maybe not - others have done so just as regularly in the past) and we all "have" to follow along.

    It is like a feedback loop. Country A passes the same thing as country B - but just a bit stricter. country B adds those in - but just a bit more. Repeat cycle along with blame the other country. Never mind that neither one *has* to pass a shitty law because someone else did. As long as they can passably blame someone else and get thier money they do not care.

    I really wish a major country would stand up and say "screw you". I figure it will take a major economic or sociatal event to wake people up. As long as it doesn't impact them much few will care.

    --
    ------- Sorry about the spelling, I suffer from two problems. Dyslexia makes it difficult to spell well, lazy makes it
    1. Re:Why do this by GuyFawkes · · Score: 2, Interesting

      quote

      I really wish a major country would stand up and say "screw you". I figure it will take a major economic or sociatal event to wake people up. As long as it doesn't impact them much few will care.

      unquote

      Look to China.

      --
      http://slashdot.org/~GuyFawkes/journal
  15. OMG no guns no revolution! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    AND we don't have a bill of rights either...

    Funny that most people consider out democracy to be better than America's in terms of representing the people. Our gun crime rates are WAY lower per head, in fact I think all crime is way lower (probably because we have real welfare, health and education accessable to all). In fact, in many ways, before the neo-liberal reforms of the past few decades Australia was probably only suceeded by war-time britain in representing an ideal socialist state married with real democracy.

    But now we have compromised a bit towards market capitalism and our economy is one of the strongest in the world. However, our social amenities have also erroded. It's about striking a balance really.

    This is why so many aussies are worried about the FTA with the US. Not because we don't like you, it's just that american companies will use the FTA to change our local legislation re: culture, software, drug prices. So it's not a FTA, it's signing away some of our sovereignty, equalising with a society who's ideals we respect, but who's standard of living is below ours in so many ways.

    America is a ghetto compared to Australia. I recently had medical problems, and with no insurance I saw a doctor about 10 times, got xrays, blood tests etc. etc. Didn't hand over a dime, no waiting in line, it just all worked... for free. I don't think you americans understand this. Got my university degree via a government loan which I pay back with no interest once I start earning over a certain threshhold. So it was free too until I get a job with it that earns a reasonable amount. If I never get that job, I don't have to pay it back. And if I can't find a job I get a reasonable set of benefits, straight away none of this 6 months before benefits stuff you americans have. And on top of this our economy is arguably stronger than that of America's.

    WTF? you say. WTF indeed.

    The basis of good policy is to not argue about ideology it is to look at other societies do and learn from them. Case studies of other societies should inform the policy process, but in your myopic vision america cannot see that the standard of living we have is far greater than theirs even if you guys have a tad more GDP per head.

    This is why you should vote back in the democrats and get a real healthcare system. Your health, edcuation and welfare systems are the laughing stock of the western world. It was once said if you want to know the essence of a country you should look at how it treats it's poor.

    Oh mighty america, how you are powerless.

  16. Germany is not a good idea either by Poingggg · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sorry to rain on your parade, but here in Europe software patents threaten to become law here too. Although the European people were against them and the European Parliament (sp?) had them watered down in a way it would hardly effect the industry here, the European Commission (most probably bought by M$ and the likes) has decided to propose an even worse variation of the original proposal for law here. Most times if the EC proposes a law, it has become a hammer-piece.
    As a European (Dutch) i keep asking myself what part of the EU government is supposed to be democratic .

    --
    What person will donate an airborne act of love?
  17. The story overlooks one basic fact and more. by OzTech · · Score: 2, Informative

    In Australia, you cannot patent artistic creations, mathematical models, plans, schemes or other purely mental processes. This rules out software and half of the other get rick quick patents that US companies apply for. The only protection available for these things is Copyright and computer programs falls within this area, as do other things like double-clicking the left mouse button to make something to happen.

    The story also overlooks the basic principle whereby you need to register or file for a patent in each country you want it to be valid in. In short, if a US company has not filed for a patent in Australia, their US Patent isn't worth crap there. The same scenario exists for Australian companies who require patent protection in foreign lands.

    Patents are not global, they are local.

    If there were some magical retrospetive patent treaty which happened overnight,somehow I think there would be a much higher proportion of Australians lining up to sue US companies for Patent violations, than the other way around. It costs an absolute fortune to apply for a US patent from Australia. Most people and/or small busineses would not have the resources to do this. This means that once the patent application is lodged in Australia, it can be picked up and used by foreign companies without fear of retribution.

    1. Re:The story overlooks one basic fact and more. by Halo1 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      In Australia, you cannot patent artistic creations, mathematical models, plans, schemes or other purely mental processes. This rules out software and half of the other get rick quick patents that US companies apply for.
      Funny, the post above your claims exactly the reverse. Are you sure it isn"t a bit like in Europe? Here, those exclusions you mention are also in our patent law, and even computer programs themseves are explicitly excluded from patentabilty. And yet we have over 30,000 software patents already. How? Because a computer running a computer program is considered to be something different from a computer program/mathematical method/business mathod as such.
      The story also overlooks the basic principle whereby you need to register or file for a patent in each country you want it to be valid in. In short, if a US company has not filed for a patent in Australia, their US Patent isn't worth crap there.
      That's true, but large US multinationals probably have plenty of money to burn on AUS patents, just like they have for EU patents. 75% of the already granted (but as of yet largely unenforceable) EU software patents are owned by US and Japanese companies.
      --
      Donate free food here
  18. Musings on Patents, Copyrights and the FTA by femto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I ask myself what motivates the proponents of chapter 17 of the FTA. This is the chapter that seeks to extend the monopolies of patents and copyrights. By my understanding someone standing for free trade should be against increased regulation and monopoly and so against chapter 17. A paradox.

    The best explanation I have come up with is that proponents of chapter 17 are not for free trade but are for private ownership. They are typically against public property and against increased regulation of property, as they believe those weaken private ownership. In the case of patents and copyright they are for increased regulation as they believe it strengthens private ownership.

    Perhaps chapter 17 of the "Free Trade Agreement" is really a "Private Ownership Agreement"?

    Chapter 17 of the FTA allows abstract ideas to be claimed as private property. We shouldn't be talking about whether chapter 17 of the FTA is good for free trade but whether ideas are property to be privately owned.

    No idea is formed in isolation. Instead all ideas draw from those around and those who have gone before. It is impossible to have a non-social idea in that having ideas requires interaction with and inspiration by other people.

    Witness the emphasis the scientific research community places on publishing ideas and establishing networks of collaboration.

    Thomas Edison once said "Genius is one per cent inspiration, ninety-nine per cent perspiration." The existing patent and copyright system allows the 99% perspiration to be protected. Chapter 17 of the FTA extends the monopoly to include the 1% inspiration, thus hampering innovation.

  19. They hate our freedom by rollingcalf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That is what the US government says about the terrorists.

    But it would be more accurate to say that the US government hates other countries' freedoms. That's why they use military and economic muscle and deception to coerce other countries into passing legislation that removes freedoms from the citizens.

    --
    ---------
    There is inferior bacteria on the interior of your posterior.
  20. It's not US vs Australia VS Europe by argent · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's the intellectual property owners versus intellectual property creators.

    They've been working on toughening the laws worldwide in little steps, and then using international treaties to "level the playing field" so they can winch it up again in another corner. I don't know how long this has been going on, really... the Berne Convention, reasonable as it seems, may have been the trigger that started the whole process.

    I hate to put it in these terms, but we're going to need to look to the union movement to solve this. It's the owning class, this time the owneres and managers of big companies with patent and copyright portfolios, versus the people who are actually creating the wealth they're accumulating.

    1. Re:It's not US vs Australia VS Europe by cs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Dunno about unions, but the owner-vs-creator thing is right on the money. This is why, IMO, copyright (and likewise patents - any IP "right") should not be transferable from the creator. Let them license it any way they see fit (excepting perhaps a perpetual exclusive license, which is just ownership rephrased) but leave the ownership with the creator.

      --
      Cameron Simpson, DoD#743 cs@cskk.id.au http://www.cskk.ezoshosting.com/cs/
  21. Another inevitability... by 3seas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... to solve the software patent problems will require giving the patent greedy what they want to the point of it being obviously stagnating and of no use to them. While not allowing them any way out but to dump the whole thing.

    For that is what they can understand. It is apparenytly beyond them to understand any scientific proof to the contrary of what they want.

  22. evil corporations by drg55 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There is a deeper evil in US corporate behaviour that needs to be stopped. A small shoe company in Australia making generic sheep skin boots was taken over and first thing the US owners did is try to stop all others from making this style of boot, and only buy their expensive variety.

    See article for the "microsoft of shoes"
    http://bluemountains.yourguide.com.au/deta il.asp?c lass=news&subclass=local&category=general%20news&s tory_id=282021&y=2004&m=1

    Using bogus patents for Monopoly.

    This is the flip side to vigorous corporations or valid protection of genuine creativity.

  23. It's a crying shame by theolein · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think that John Howard's government has been one of the worst things that has ever happened to Australian sovreignty. Even senior former diplomats and military personel have signed a petition accusing him of selling out Australia's independence to the USA, something which he consistently denies, but which is plenty obvious to a lot of people both in and outside of Australia.

    First his undying support for the USA in Iraq against all advice, then his signing of the FTA, which will probably not improve Australia's economic position as much as it improves the USA's economic position, and which is one step of the way to making Australia economically dependent on the USA.

    I hope the little bastard gets his arse kicked in the coming elections, whereupon he can go visit his former cronies Bush and Blair and reminisce about their glorious pasts as nation builders and great leaders in an old age home for the mentally unstable.

  24. Nonsense... by zungu · · Score: 2, Informative

    First thing, the free trade agreement does not mean that US patents acquire legal force in Australia. All over the world you have to get a separate patent in each country to get patent rights in that particular country. Only way Australian software product can infringe on an American patent is when they export that software to America. Otherwise, American patents will have zero value in Australian courts, unless an Australian counterpart patent is also obtained earlier. Slashdot publishes bizarre patent news without verifying even the basics. This is as stupid as someone going to Sears to buy craftsman tools to write an assembly language program since it will have to be "assembled".