UN Bigwig: The Web Should Have Been Patented and Licensed
An anonymous reader writes "Cory Doctorow over at BoingBoing has unearthed an amazing video where the head of WIPO, the UN agency responsible for 'promoting' intellectual property, suggests that Tim Berners-Lee should have patented HTML and licensed it to all users. Amazingly this is done on camera and in front of the head of CERN and the Internet Society, who look on in disbelief."
Always 20/20, especially if you're a greed-focused farging bastage.
...voted for this guy?
(Yes, pedants, I'm aware we don't get to vote for them)
worldmobilenet.com -- World Prepaid Wireless Internet plans
what a ridiculous idea... it's not like anyone would try patenting ridiculous ideas such as 1 click purchases or pre existing stuff and sue others... it's been completely patent free haha
Never antropomorphize computers, they do not like that
It takes a monumental denial of reality to say something that stupid; anyone with even partial brain function is fully aware that if the underlying technologies of the web had been patented by Sir Tim (or similar) and licensed then we wouldn't be posting on Slashdot right now because nobody outside of large multinationals would even be *using* the web for anything.
...than to disclose how closed-minded they are by saying that one of the biggest and most successful innovations of the last 30 years should have been done differently.
I used to think the I in WIPO stands for Imaginary, not Idiot.
I pity the fool
n/c
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
He talks about the possibility that the burden of developing the web could have been shared by the users. Well, it was shared. The development of the web was as shared as it could have been. Hundreds or thousands of open source developers contributing pieces to it. Some commercial companies trying as well. All users paying for their share of the bandwidth. The web is a wonderful example for how sharing the burden can work without a traditional organization apportioning the shares. This guy simply doesn't get that. He may know something about the P in WIPO, but the I seems to be somewhat underdeveloped.
He should have patented the web and licensed it with a clause prohibiting the use of patented technologies unless they were likewise freely licensed to all users.
Francis Gurry's dad should have pulled out.
I worked at WIPO as a consultant for a year - a bigger collection of clueless f*ckwits would be hard to find.
This certainly might have prolonged Gopher's viability.
In other news, astrophysicists have announced that they now know what all that dark matter is: it's stupidity.
Here's the video; Gurry's talk starts at 0:49:50.
The video in question is a 240mb download. I'm sure the 49 minutes leading up to that part is interesting and all, but perhaps cutting straight to the few minutes relevant to the frigging article would have been nice.
A surgeon will recommend to operate. A lawyer to do legal work. A soldier to kill someone.
This guy is at WIPO, patents and such is what this guy does. You won't get creative commons out of him.
The problem is not even this guy, the problem is his opposition. There isn't one. As always, "Yes Prime Minister" has the example. Story: Hacker is given the task of coming up with a new transport policy involving road, rail and air. He soon learns that each sector is represented by a civil servant fighting not for the common good but for HIS sector.
This story alone does not cover it. In another story his chauffeur comments on a radio story and points out that all the decisions for public transport, public schools and public healthcare are made by people that go to private hospitals, send their kids to private schools and have chauffeur driven cars. Which Hacker sayed they need because else they would have to make public transport a lot more reliable...
The problem ain't sector reps fighting for their sector, the problem is the common man, the non-commercial, the non-status quo, has no such rep fighting for their cause.
People who are in ivory towers have plenty of sky bridges connecting them to other ivory towers. But never ever a connection to ground level. I have seen it myself, even if some newbie tries, the disconnect is already so great once they have enough power that any contact attempt is extremely uncomfortable so they soon learn not to do it again.
This is just how the system works, calling this guy an idiot only helps keep the system in place. Sadly getting a useful opposition in place is nearly impossible.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
The copy of copyright and patent supporters is to prevent systems like the internet from being founded. This is a great example: were the important protocols and general structure patented, what you know of as the internet would not have been delayed or more expensive, it would have never existed. It is quite obvious that the greater good is of no concern to IP supporters, only their own profits.
Yet these people are still given free rein of our legal system and allowed by the weak minded to claim that copyright and patent infringement is "theft," while the real theft is that of the copyright and patent holders from society as a whole. It's time that stop, before the next big innovation is prevented. End these archaic systems this decade, support the abolition of imaginary property.
Great Intellect...
Hey WIPO - never go full retard.
SGML is almost certainly prior art.
This complete denial of reality and disregarding of facts clearly shows the incompetence of WIPO.
Nothing more to say on that...
Its not the World Intellectual Freedom Organisation.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
I WIPO my *** with this guys opinion.
Luckily Tim Berners-Lee did have a vision about his idea and probably even knew about the lack of vision of those greedy bastards.
...is to keep people from resolving their differences at the point of a gun.
If you turn laws into something that people can no longer turn to for fairness, then what?
--
BMO
"In related news, Mr. Doctorow also emphasized his continued belief that the revolution should have been televised, and the buggy whip industry subsidized".
-- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
Here is The video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEWUAdlen6M
And he is absolutely right. If Internet was patented by the Universities, today we would have more money centered around basic research and development. We would still have businesses competing to create an alternative and perhaps yield a better standard than HTML. Ultimately the price level and innovation are correlated and depend on consumer demand.
The relevant quote:
Intellectual property is a very flexible instrument. So, for example, had the world wide web been able to be patented, and I think that is a question in itself, perhaps the amount of investment that has gone into or would be able to go into basic science would be different. If you had found a very flexible licensing model, in which the burden for the innovation of the world wide web had been shared across the whole user community in a very fair and reasonable manner, with a modest contribution for everyone for this wonderful innovation, it would have enabled enormous investment in turn in further basic research. And that is the sort of flexibility that is built into the intellectual property system. It is not a rigid system...
What he says is that *if* the web had been able to be patented, (which is not clear), and *if* you could find a flexible licensing model which is fair (which is certainly not clear to me, though he doesn't seem to make an opinion), then you could spend any money received from licensing on basic research.
He does not state that the web should have been patented. He even goes so far as to say that he's not sure it could have been patented. He's simply discussing how money received from licensing could be used. I don't really want to download a 240 meg video just to clear up this issue, but just looking at the wording it's clear that he's responding to something about licensing fees. My guess is that somebody commented that the purpose of patenting the web would be to get rich. I'd appreciate it if someone who's seen the video could comment.
Anyway, I'm rather rabidly anti-software patent. But this kind of bullshit "reporting" doesn't do us any good. Whipping up a frenzy over a non-issue just makes us look stupid.
The real problem lies elsewhere. It lies in a system in which a congress or a parliament or another national assembly is allowed to invent new laws. This system is only possible because the population believe that newly-invented laws can be legitimate. This is how (corrupt) politicians managed to invent intellectual property laws and impose them upon your hapless self. I am simply going back to the old stuff. The only person or thing allowed to create laws to restrict my freedom, is something which may not even exist (God). All other stuff is illegitimate; aka, the First Commandment. If a few hundred goat shepherds manage to make exactly that point, against an entire NATO military deployment, it can't be that hard a point to make, can it?
... the UN, through the ITU-T, already has its own set of protocols (X.400 et al) it can play around with, instead of giving bad advice to people inventing internet protocols and specifications. The internet does not need you, you are damage.
For some reason, we always succeed to plant clueless people in positions like this. If it wasn't so very dangerous it would be funny...
No, it's not a good point, because if the basic Internet was such encumbered, it would never have grown as fast, and that delay would would be a real cost on the REVOLUTION that instant global communication brought not only to "basic research and development", but the world.
We might have been ten years behind, with people still using dial-up while companies paid through the nose for the ability to email. The idea that a global system of levies would get pumped back into basic research is LAUGHABLE. There'd be HUGE overhead in collecting, and all the money would go right back to 'enforcement' and shit that has nothing to do with research or the betterment of human kind.
This is a joke. The whole idea is pure idiocy.
Belief is the currency of delusion.
What if the Koha community decided to patent Koha. The licencefee of WIPO could have been used to make library systems across the globe better...
http://www.wipo.int/cgi-bin/koha/opac-main.pl
It is just sad how disconnected from reality the patent maximizers are :(
The problem is not even this guy, the problem is his opposition. There isn't one. As always, "Yes Prime Minister" has the example. Story: Hacker is given the task of coming up with a new transport policy involving road, rail and air. He soon learns that each sector is represented by a civil servant fighting not for the common good but for HIS sector.
The people that are supposed to support the common good are... politicians, and that's why we have elections. And to some degree they might even do their job. But I'm not naive enough to think that a constant barrage of lobbyists & documents crafted by pro-IP industry groups will leave those politicians clear-headed (or do what their voters want).
Rules to say what lobbyist groups can or cannot do may help, but not enough. Big money & vested interests will find a way to distort reality for those politicians.
Therefore the only way is to stop putting money into the pockets of these industry groups. If you don't like what a business does, stop buying their products (if there's only evil to choose from, choose the least evil). Period. That will give said industry less money to work with, less means to manipulate public opinion & corrupt the system.
Now I'm also not naive enough to think that the general public will do so; most people simply don't give a shit about copyright / patent / trademark issues. Up to the point where it bites them in the ass, hard (at which point it will be too late). But still: voting with your wallet / feet (& red pencil) does make a difference, if enough people do it.
My daughter did think so as well. Now she is nearly 4 years old and knows about changing prerequisites.
cb
...no mod points today. That was insightful, I wish the poster would get a /. account.
Free Martian Whores!
For your basic corporate conservative, the only things that have value are those things that are owned by somebody. And that's a private owner, not a government.
So, for instance, breathable air is worthless under this philosophy. Worthless, that is, unless you can charge people to breathe it, maybe put it in cans. I wish this were a joke, but the corporations, with the World Bank practically forcing the government's hand, already tried to do the same thing to rainwater.
I am officially gone from
web might not have grown quite so popular
I expect that would be WIPO's goal. The idea that people give stuff away, particularly intellectual property, undermines their whole existence. That something could become a standard, ubiquitous and free is their worst nightmare and they probably feel that the web's success is their failure.
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
France had MiniTel (expensive, slow, clunky and hard to use). I think they turned it off a few years ago.
Europe had the ISO networking standards. These were intellectual train-wrecks written in ivory towers by architecture astronauts; too complex to implement or use, and by the time people starting implementing then, the "RFC" world had solidly taken over. (We're left with the awfulness of X.500, X.509 and so forth).
This guy isn't necessarily an idiot. But it's who we need to fight.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is insufficiently documented.
The job of Director of WIPO is still open for applications (closes 18 Oct): https://erecruit.wipo.int/public/hrd-cl-vac-view.asp?jobinfo_uid_c=25114&vaclng=en
And never forget that your government that you elect[ed] is in favour of all this crap. If you don't like it, the proper remedy is to take the matter up with your friendly local pubic representative.
I'm so tired of seeing this argument. Politically voting with your wallet almost never works, precisely because of what you have already noticed: not enough people will do it. Mostly because they don't care, but even if every single person bothered to become moral buyers 100% of the time, it still wouldn't work. You have a very limited amount of time to concern yourself with researching everything you buy, so while you're avoiding Sony products because of the PS3 Other OS debacle and Apple for their excessive and anticompetitive litigation, what about orange juice? Do you buy it from a company that pay their employees a decent salary? One that itself buys oranges from a farm that does not hire illegal immigrants so they won't be able to complain about work conditions? Do they use renewable energy if possible or just go with the cheapest? Are the oranges they use genetically modified and patented? Is the package fully recyclable, in practice? There' a plethora of things you should care about and if every purchase of every item requires interviewing and investigating eight or nine different companies, you'll quickly die of thirst before you're able to buy the damned orange juice before even finding out if the thing is actually made from real oranges.
And then there's the second highly impractical part of voting with your wallet: there aren't that many parties to choose from. The Onion puts it better than I do, with an article that's probably supposed to be funny but ended up being too truthful: "The nerve of you people. Treating a longtime patron with so little respect, like I'm just another walking dollar sign. If that's what passes for customer service around here, you sadly leave me with no choice but to have the exact same experience at another giant soulless multinational corporation somewhere else. Maybe one that knows how to rob its customers of a fraction less dignity." Here's the full article, if you want an excuse to start drinking early today: http://www.theonion.com/articles/well-i-guess-ill-just-take-my-business-to-another,21357/
More than once - they called it CompuServe, GEnie, and AOL. Remember them?
Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
M$ would've had the leverage needed to crush any WWW that was based around a profit making company.
By the late 1990's everyone would've been posting on MSN. Yahoo would have been gobbled up in short order and Google would never have existed at all. Apple would've carried on dying in the corner and never even finished OS X. ...
Don't hate the playa', hate the game.
An invention that has never been protected by patent, copyright or trademark has changed the present and future of humanity in a vast and previously unimaginable way forever. It has reformed societies and toppled tyrants, revolutionized old cultures and inspired new ones. This was twenty years ago: If it were protected by patent, it would only just now have entered the public domain - at the earliest.
Meanwhile, the small minds that preach the value of imaginary property invent nothing but combinations of buzzwords that bamboozle the patent office, and cannot conceive of the value of an idea that is not locked away, or of the profit humanity gains from it.
And who uses that now?
They see with eyes of greed so they see nothing.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
What he describes just sounds like the German predecessor to the WWW, the BTX network: http://www.daniel-rehbein.de/btx-bundespost.html
The BTX network was centralized (main server owned by the German postal service), you had to pay per page view, you couldn't run your own web server, you weren't allowed to use anything else than the standard modem...
When the WWW came around it quickly replaced BTX, simply because it was free as in freedom.
Screw the WIPO.
WTO, IMF (which I'm guessing you meant) and the World Bank are in no way part of the UN.
Check your facts before blindly blaming anything and everything on the UN. Same goes for the moderators.
(Yes, pedants, I'm aware we don't get to vote for them)
Which is reason enough that the folks in the UN should not be dictating Internet policy.
Where are the /.'s who said the UN should control internet governance a couple of weeks ago in an article regarding such governance? Maybe they will reconsider now.
For your basic corporate conservative, the only things that have value are those things that are owned by somebody. And that's a private owner, not a government.
This guy works for the UN, so while there may be definitions of "conservative" that apply to him, they bear no relationship with the definitions that are typically used in conversations on slashdot.
The relevant ideological perspective on this guy is that he is someone who believes that government is the answer to every problem (even problems that are caused by the government). So, the World Wide Web should have been patented because then someone would have control over it (at least theoretically). That someone could then be controlled by government. With the current model of the Web, it is very difficult for government to get its hands around it to control it. If every website had to license the patent, then government could keep track of who ran each and every website and regulate what they posted.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
It takes a monumental denial of reality to say something that stupid ...
Its the United Nations. The same U.N. that chose North Korea to head the U.N. Conference on Disarmament. The same U.N. that chose Gaddafi's Libya to chair the U.N. Human Rights Commission.
Indeed, i believe that patenting certain things and licensing them in a java-style agreement could have served the purpose. Something like "if you implement an extension of HTML then you must open the patents and the description so that everybody can implement it" could have served well at some points of the development.
Better still... he's an aussie who has references from the australian federal government from 2008! :) http://www.wipo.int/edocs/mdocs/govbody/en/wo_cc_58/wo_cc_58_13_au.pdf
Also it sounds like he's had a few beers on a saturday or sunday afternoon to be making statements like that.... Gurry mate. Pull your head in! :) or... if you would like it in a politically correct version " DR (dunno how you got that) Francis Gurry. Take a look at the apache project, Linux and Free open sourced software in general. To see what patents are preventing. Also at the same time with the correct patents and licenses (GPL etc etc) royalty free/open sourced software can thrive!
If the internet were patented, decent, free and reliably DNS services like freedns.afraid.org wouldnt exist (kudos josh) :)
And as the poster mentioned, sites wouldnt load unless you have the bullshit DRM (what flash was trying to be) browser problems etc etc...
DR GURRY. HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF "STANDARDS" ISO standards and the like.... there is a reason they exist... and there is a reason why the internet's technology's arent patented or copyrighted etc etc... well most of them i should say :) RFC's in the case of the internet... if RFC's didnt exist.... we would still be using ARPANET!!!!!!!!!!!!!! and i would have to go to uni or some other research organisation to post to slashdot! :) :)
Dr. Gurry has been in the thick of IP protection for nearly his entire career, and is currently also the head of the UPOV, which promotes IP protection for new plant varieties. His ilk are the sort wrote the Berne Convention on copyrights (most recently via the WIPO Copyright Treaty of 1996) which first "gave" us life+50 copyright terms.
As far as he and his peers are concerned, there is no true incentive to create without the promise of collecting long term rents... a concept provably false for products with low capital requirements, such as software development and fashion design.
Luke, help me take this mask off
DIAF
I am John Hurt.
The UN Must Fall for Freedom to Prevail!
You know what, If you're too fucking old to understand the modern world you need to shut the fuck up about technology. End of line.
The examples are countless: open standards gave us email, closed standards gave us SMS, EMS and MMS. Open standards gave us a packet-switched network where you can toss packets to the opposite side of the world just by paying the people who maintain the wires, while closed standards gave us ATM and the likes, where the service providers decide what services you can use or offer, and for which you pay depending on who you want to communicate with, on where he is, on what service you are requesting to use, on how long you'll be using it... Guess what model has more potential to generate more development?
...and ignore that the web might not have grown quite so popular if everybody had to pay for everything and stick to some individual's arbitrary rules.
Just ask Ted Nelson about Project Xanadu and keeping things to yourself:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Xanadu
Case in point: Hyper-G/Hyperwave. It was developed at about the same time as the WWW. It was technically pretty solid (renaming documents didn't break links, integrated search engine, powerful authoring tools) and even didn't use an abbreviation that took longer to pronounce the the full name.
AFAIR it soon moved out of the academia and was turned into a commercial product, so it basically did what the WIPO head suggested.
These days it doesn't even have an Wikipedia article anymore. According to its homepage, it found a niche for corporate intranets and now competes with SharePoint.
There are plenty of other early hypertext systems comparable to the WWW (going back to the 60ties). I seem to recall that Douglar Engelbart's NLS was heavily patented, though I cannot find a reference for this right now. (Though partially these systems certainly failed because of insufficient technology and lack of a target group. You can't blame everything on patents).
check your history, young 'un. for example, the The IMF, also known as the âoeFund,â was conceived at a United Nations conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, United States, July 1944.
The United Nations, and the global banks tied to it, are tools by the elite to usurp national sovereignty and wealth. They should all be destroyed.
oops, there's your link with the facts, from IMF itself: http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/glance.htm
By the way, the World Bank was created at the same conference.
I don't think this is accurate at all. A conservative believes in the freedom to do with your IP as you wish. Patent it or give it away, it's the individual's liberty that matters.
The minute anyone mentions any form of IP I know it's unrealistic to expect anything less than the accumulated readership to make an advanced case of rabies look calm, but I really think I'd rather live in a world where every month my ISP collects $0.01 per user to send to Berners-Lee, W3C, etc.
when the web was invented I don't think so...
If TBL patended his work and tried to squeeze the cow for a much milkmoney as possible then
a) It would not have paid off because the interest would have been limited
b) Someone else would ahve invented a free system that would have taken off just like the internet did
Example1: Gopher was invented wiht a closed model before the internet. Enyone see any Gopher sites anymore?
Example2: Teletext was invented WAY before HTTP. My dad used it for internet banking back in the eary 80's. Anyone see that being used anymore?
A model that is not being used will just be squeezed out b something that is used. Simple economics
The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
Years ago I had some serious back trouble that could have been addressed quickly with some painful surgery, or slowly with painful therapy. My surgeon (Dr. Charles Grado, and if you're reading this, thank you) was adamant that he wouldn't touch a scalpel until we'd exhausted all other possibilities. I thought that was weird and told him so. He told me that he took an oath to first do no harm, and that surgery stood in opposition to this. You can't claim you're "doing no harm" while you're cutting into flesh: you're clearly, obviously, doing harm. The only question is whether your actions are the least harmful way of restoring health. Doc Grado is one of the best doctors I've ever known.
My father and cousin are both judges. Despite their polar-opposite political views, they're agreed that any lawyer who starts off by saying, "well, let's file some legal papers" is an incompetent. A lawyer's job is to solve your problems, and jumping straight to court is a great way to multiply them instead.
My gunsmith is a career soldier who characterizes his experience in Vietnam as "99% boredom I don't mind remembering and 1% terror I'm trying to forget." Per him, only fools try to solve problems with firearms. You see, if you do that, they might try to solve you right on back with one, and you won't like that at all.
Finally, I'm an ivory-tower academic who left a Ph.D. program because I was convinced I could do better work, more meaningful work, in the private sector. My job nowadays involves taking cutting-edge research and integrating it into real-world production systems. So, "never" a connection to ground level? My own career says otherwise.
tl;dr version: Maslow said when all you have's a hammer the whole world looks like a nail. This is true only until you find nails that explode into shrapnel and maim you horribly when you hit them. Once you hit one of those nails, you get real careful before you swing that hammer again.
You do know the UN didn't exist in1944.
Actually, it was named in '42 by Roosevelt, and from '42-'45 the United Nations were working together to develop the charter, and then in '45 the nations ratified the charter. http://www.un.org/aboutun/history.htm
So yes, the IMF and world bank were created at one of the conferences where governments were meeting to develop the charter for the United Nations and the powers it has.
Fuck the MPAA, fuck WIPO, fuck the RIAA, support your local Pirate Party
Considering I wouldn't have my current career if this guy had his way, I would just like to say a hearty "fuck you" to Francis Gurry and all that agree with him on this issue.
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
The biggest mistake in reasoning with a lot of systems like this is that the cost of administrative infrastructure is greatly under estimated.
Cost as in time. Asking for permission, reading a license contacting a lawyer about what the legal boundries are.
Cost as in money. Productive people are instead bogged down in checking and gatekeeping. This loss is doubled, this person could have contributed but is now a burden on the system.
Cost as in enjoyment. When working on something as soon as you have a negative balance in work completing the goal and red tape. People get demotivated. Work progress gets slowed or not compleded at all.
He glosses over in one sentence saying "a sufficiently nice license". This license and the administrative system it requires can never be good enough. This system would be huge, imagine the amount of paper work alone.
A conservative believes in the freedom to do with your IP as you wish
That's the difference between a conservative and a Republican. The Republican would believe in your freedom to do as they wish.
I would not release anything I created into the public domain because you loose all rights. At a minimum, you can release it under an open source license: MIT/X11, BSD, Apache, MPL (Mozilla Public License), LGPL, GPL, etc.
Let's not forget Prodigy.
I suppose those crooks understand all IP issues way better than we do. Just like FED officials, who understand monetary system way better than anyone else and willfuly ignore harm it inflicts on everyone but their cronies from big banks.
What we are dealing with is a bunch of utterly corrupt crooks running WIPO contrary to its stated mission in order to secure warm chairs they sit on and corporate sponsorship they enjoy.
Some intellectual property lawyer from UC Berkeley has been quoted as saying that Berkeley should have patented TCP/IP. (Can anyone find this quote). UC Berkeley didn't either design TCP/IP or do the first TCP/IP implementation. They did the fourth or fifth. (BBN, Phil Karn, Dave Mills, and 3COM all had earlier implementations.) They didn't even have the first UNIX implementation; that was 3COM's UNET. What BSD had was government funding to give their implementation away. UNET was about $3K per machine.
I'm patenting air.
check your history, young 'un. for example, the The IMF, also known as the ÃoeFund,Ã was conceived at a United Nations conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, United States, July 1944.
Yes, I know that. This does not make it a UN agency - UN agencies aren't that through arcane family history, they're UN agencies if they are officially part of the UN.
If you want to hate a lot of international organizations and the UN then that's okay. That still doesn't make everything you hate an UN organization.
From what I gather, his point would be that not enough went into basic development of the web. To be honest, I'd be a bit inclined to agree with him as the adoption was massive but in the 1990s Netscape and Internet Explorer were making up proprietary tags by the dozen. Proprietary extensions like Java applets (1995), ActiveX (1996) and Flash (1996) was used to deliver many things the web couldn't deliver. Even now in 2011 we're still not anywhere near a standard <video> tag I can put on my website to show a clip. In an alternative timeline where the web was patented and an organization with funding were to develop it, perhaps we wouldn't have ended up in the mess where IE had 95% market share and almost nothing worked to a standard. Maybe there would be a proper licensing organization that'd ensure compliance and we wouldn't need Firefox to resurrect web standards from the dead.
The discussion reminds me a little of the BSD / LGPL / GPL / dual licensing debate. In that sense, the web was much like BSD, everyone could go off and make their own proprietary extensions and they did. Do you just trust the the pull will be strong enough that everybody wants to put things back into the standard? Or do you want it to be more like Java, if you want to call it Java you must support exactly these functions in this way or it's not Java. Yes, I know I'm mixing standards and implementations and possibly trademarks here, but many of the "do people contribute it back?" questions remain the same. There's no question that around IE5/6 the web was a "de facto" standard made by Microsoft, not whatever Tim-Berner Lee, W3C or a bunch of RFCs said.
Do you need a revenue stream? Well, maybe you don't but a lot of people need to make rent and put food on the table so no doubt it helps, even ideal organizations have paid workers. It's a little like dual licensing, of course if you go BSD or LGPL then people are free to make proprietary software, instantly that's of course a boost to the project. The question is, do those make up for the revenue you make on dual licensing to fund back into developing it? Or does it just slowly wither away while other proprietary products get better? Same with standards, they'd need to evolve otherwise companies would just ignore them or make their own. Honestly if it wasn't for open source software I think the open web standards would have died out in the early 2000s. Fortunately Firefox found their revenue stream...
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
I remember when there were more gopher sites than websites. Gopher's licensing wasn't bad, but they reserved the right to change it, so HTTP took over because it was free.
Hyperlinking isn't rocket science; there would have been a free implementation, and it would have won.
Assembly is the reverse of disassembly.
However, in harness with competition, it beats command and control all to hell, without piling up hundreds of millions of corpses.
Who should I have elected? Asshole A, asshole B, or asshole C? Shit, they're all assholes! I can run for office, but I have to compete against assholes funded by assholes, and be defrauded by assholes who find me threatening. What's your solution, or are you just going to be an asshole about it?
Most of these threads ignore an absolute fundamental of money and political power : Money buys power.
Politicians go into the business because it is an easy way to make money. The rich need the power, because buying or renting power is easier than competing in a free market.
These fundamentals were understood by every citizen in the early days of the Republic, and are learned again in every pre-revolutionary situation.
Nice to see the slashdot crowd catching on, tho you are all a bit slow.
What do you people think the Internet is? Its mostly a collection of Cisco routers and switches. Don't fool yourself if you think its this living breathing emergent organism that has evolved because of open source and Linux and all the techno weenie coders and packet kiddies circle jerking each other on IRC all night long. Its a network evolved BY corporations FOR corporations. The only difference is that they didn't have to pay royalties to any university for the idea.
The Patent system is completely obsolete. It has failed in its original goal, which was to encourage genuine innovators to make their research public.
Greedy parasites like this man can no be taken seriously. Where are the facts to back up anything that he says. The simple fact is, that there are none.
Patents exist, solely to establish artificial monopolies for the feudalistic rich parasites. Shame on this parasite, and shame on anyone who supports him.
This guy needs FLAMEBAIT tattoo'd on his forehead. Surrounded with blink tags.
Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
Advise/history, when heeded, can remove that hammer for good.
Of course, words don't stop someone that just wants to be greedy.
That if it had been patented and licensed before it became popular, then it never would have been adopted widely enough to have become popular in the first place.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
I admit Ron Paul seems like a better idea than the rest of the GOP presidential candidate brain trust ... should the guy try a 3rd party run?
I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
Who cares about that copycat? We all know that Steve Jobs invented the World Wide Web, along with Pixar, the light bulb, fire, I could go on.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
False, and as for "arcane family history", there are banking cartel families of whom the UN and international banking were and are their pet projects. Learn how your world works, and who has your government in their pockets.
Tie cuts off blood supply to brain. Film at 11.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
Is that thing still around?
... so, nothing new to see here.
So the statement that the UN created those things is false, and it's reasonable to call people out who claim it.
They do apparently share some relationship in framers and intended goals. That is, to foster regularization of international relations in the hopes of staving off what was currengly going on in the early 40s.
i'll believe a credible story of cooption. That happens all the time. Conspiracy without substance, though..
-josh
It's really lucky that UNIX was always open source and free-as-in beer, or else it would never have become the software backbone of the internet. Oh, wait...
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
The United Nations, and the global banks tied to it, are tools by the elite to usurp national sovereignty and wealth. They should all be destroyed.
National sovereignty and the concept of wealth are themselves concepts used by the elite to maintain their power.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
You have a very limited amount of time to concern yourself with researching everything you buy, so while you're avoiding Sony products because of the PS3 Other OS debacle and Apple for their excessive and anticompetitive litigation, what about orange juice? Do you buy it from a company that pay their employees a decent salary? One that itself buys oranges from a farm that does not hire illegal immigrants so they won't be able to complain about work conditions? Do they use renewable energy if possible or just go with the cheapest? Are the oranges they use genetically modified and patented? Is the package fully recyclable, in practice? There' a plethora of things you should care about and if every purchase of every item requires interviewing and investigating eight or nine different companies, you'll quickly die of thirst before you're able to buy the damned orange juice before even finding out if the thing is actually made from real oranges.
Yes, it's a pity there isn't any easily accessed high speed network of electronic database foe easily checking stuff like this.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
No, the definition of a conservative (except in the US) is a rabidly reactionary right winger who wants the rich elite to continue enjoying their lives free from the burdens of taxation or herd morality, while the poor masses struggle by to produce the wealth that the elite cream off.
Government is an attempt to stop the robber barons from controlling everything, and yes it fucking does restrict their freedom and wealth, and in doing so greatly expands the majority's genuine freedoms (not to starve to death or die of treatable diseases for a start)
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
Because that approach worked so well for GOPHER.
Government is an attempt to stop the robber barons from controlling everything,
Then it is a complete failure, since in today's world it functions to protect them from competition and to transfer wealth from the masses to the elites.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
As far as he and his peers are concerned, there is no true incentive to create without the promise of collecting long term rents... a concept provably false for products with low capital requirements, such as software development and fashion design.
It'snot a question of cash being the only possible incentive, just an acknowledgement that fashion designersand softwaredevelopers need to earn something to eat.
Surely if they have low capital requirements, that just means that the rents will be lower? I don't see why they would be zero.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
We've had html since the 1960s. The US Military created it. He didn't invent the web either. Usenet and many other forms were well in action long before BL came on the scene. He "Invented" putting a picture into a document, which he didn't even do that. Xerox did that first. He just came up wtih tieing it all together in a browser and port 80 instead of the other ports at the time like 1500. Big deal. It was obvious and not patenable because of that.
But you see, anyone who is IN the UN gets their turn to head up a conference on Disarmament.
If you're only going to invite people you like to a meeting, then you're preaching to the choir, and why should the unwelcome even bother trying to do better?
Who thinks that some forms of non-violent protest need to be directed at the UN?
Statements like these make me wish I get the opportunity someday to meet someone from the UN, just so I can deliberately ignore them.
/I pray it's not a beautiful woman.
I swear they give me mod points to shut me up.
What is left of humanity, when everything that is of use to humanity should be monotized. Pretty soon they will ask us to pay to walk into an air-conditioned store, because the AC chills the air and gives us a benefit. We must pay. It reminds me of a bobby dillan song.
If you are not busy being born, you are busy dieing. If you are not busy being born, you are busy paying.
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
...what's wrong if she managed to pull a twofer?
They guy doesn't say anything that's really out of the ordinary except that CERN might have made some money out of the web. This is an ad for Cory Doctorow nothing more.