Ubuntu Founder Says Microsoft Not A Big Threat
Golygydd Max writes "Who says that Microsoft and open source developers are enemies? It's not Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth. He says that Microsoft is not the patent threat Linux and open source developers should be worried about, and that the software giant will itself be fighting against the software patents system within a few years. 'He said the most dangerous litigants are companies not themselves in the software business, small ventures or holding companies that get their principal revenue from patent licensing. He singled out former Microsoft CTO Nathan Myhrvold and his company Intellectual Ventures, which is stockpiling patents at a rate that alarms large companies such as IBM and HP, as an example of such a potentially dangerous company.'"
Why not just (common sense)reform the patent system, thus crushing this holding companies?
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Nah, once big software companies feel threatened rather than empowered by patents, lobbyists will make sure that laws gets passed to protect them. One onerous requirement might be for a patent holder to maintain a credible product in commercial production in order to sue others for royalties. This will be phrased to stop patent-only law firms that skim companies without innovation themselves, but will take care of open source authors quite nicely.
from Wikipedia: In other words, it's a contextual view of humanity as being constituted of relationships. We are the relationships we have.
If there's one thing I won't stand for, it's intolerance.
I still think patents should apply only to tangible inventions or objects (i.e. say a new motherboard system bus design) and copyright should apply to software.
What you say?
Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
I believe OSDL has a patent pool. Can we expand it?
There are lots and lots of creative folks that work with GNU, Linux, *BSD, and who read Slashdot. It would be great if there was an open invention process whereby one could take an idea, do the basic stuff, then submit it to the OSDL (or another reputable group) who would get the patent in your name, but assigned to them.
Such a process would reduce the barrier to entry for getting patents on truly new ideas. (I would have a dozen or more if my employers had filed for patents on some of my ideas.) It would also allow you to have your name on a patent which looks great on a resume (finally something that is actually worth something to the inventor). But, most importantly it would expand the pool of patents available for open source and remove additional ideas, concepts, and inventions further out of the reaches of the patent-only law firms.
This should be a call to action!
Each form of intellectual property is claimed and purported to be created in order to benefit the creator, designer or author of whatever intellectual property item may exist. (Trademarks may be a mild exception when a trademarked word, phrase or icon when it is sold to an entity by a creator, designer or author though it can only be sold once.) So if reform were to occur with focus on the fact that the concept of IP was created to benefit the author, designer or creator, then it makes no sense that anyone or any entity should be allowed to sell or re-sell said IP as that is removed from the [original] intent of IP's concept. (I don't think it should be necessary that I recite the intent of patents and copyrights... that they are created to allow the creator benefit of said works and to inspire them to create more, etc...)
This means, that IP should be useless to those who do not create or otherwise use their inventions. IP should be useless to those who do not benefit from the arts created. If this sort of reform were to happen, we'd see an end to patent trolls because they would have to actually MAKE something that uses the patents in question, not simply license or sell the patents to other parties. (Licensing is okay, but the ownership of a patent should never be salable.) Song writers and musicians should never be allowed to sell their copyrights, but instead force the recording and media companies to bargain with them for each item they wish to distribute. This would force fair prices and values to be paid to the artists out there and prevent them from essentially being enslaved by the labels out there.
IP should have its value, but it should never be salable. And because it's salable, we have this ridiculous, abusive and litigious condition we have today. All of humanity would be the better if we could get rid of the salability of IP. The benefits of everything from life-saving drugs to works of art would eventually fall upon humanity and would give direct and arguably more bountiful benefit to the ACTUAL creators of IP.
Oh yeah... and reduce the limits on IP back to their original terms or less... This lifetime+70 years and 100 years for a corporation is simply ridiculous.
sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jre sun-java6-plugin sun-java6-fonts
sudo update-java-alternatives -s java-6-sun
sudo -b gedit
(add "/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun" before the other entries, no quotes)
Then you get a Java that isn't unusably slow. It'd sure be nice if Ubuntu did this by default, or at least provided a n00b-friendly (ie, no command line) way of doing it.
If you're using Eclipse and would like for it to not take 30 seconds to display code completion, do this:
sudo -b gedit
(add "/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun" before the other entries, no quotes)
"The Federal Reserve is a fraudulent system."--Lew Rockwell
End The FED. -
An absolute *MUST* read by anyone talking about patents and freedom of speech in software.
Too bad the guy is dead now, he could have helped us all out a great deal !
http://www.philsalin.com/patents.html
We (the FFII) are organising a series of conferences to discuss the European patent system, and Mark Shuttleworth was our keynote speaker last week. (The conference had over thirty speakers and panelists, including Bill Kovacic, the US Federal Trade Commissioner...)
Mark spoke for 30 minutes, and his keynote is available here. He provided this very elegant argument against patents on business methods and most software: patents are society's gift to inventors in exchange for disclosure. When an invention is self-disclosing, i.e. you understand it when you use it, society has no interest in granting a patent for it, indeed is penalised by doing so, and therefore should not grant it.
More on the conference here.
My blog
p>What is the #2 result? A patent on how to find and protect intellectual property (aka patents).
So, this company already has a patent on patenting patents. So all you slashdotters with the Step 1, Step2, .... Profit jokes owe them money.
I thought it means "I can't configure debian".
meh