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US Report Sees Perils To America's Tech Future

dcblogs sends this excerpt from ComputerWorld: "The ability of the U.S. to compete globally is eroding, according to an Obama administration report released Friday. It described itself as a 'call to arms.' Titled 'The Competitiveness and Innovative Capacity of the United States (PDF),' it points out a number of 'alarms,' including: the U.S. ran a trade surplus in 'advanced technology products,' which includes biotechnology products, computers, semiconductors and robotics, until 2002. In 2010, however, the U.S. 'ran an $81 billion trade deficit in this critically important sector.' In terms of federal research, in 1980 the federal government provided about 70% of all dollars spent on basic research, but since then the government's share of basic research funding given to all entities has fallen to 57%. It also says real median household income has stalled, and argues for policies that foster innovation."

373 comments

  1. Fine. Kill software patents. by sconeu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You want to foster innovation? Make it so a company doesn't have to spend zillions on lawyers to deal with trolls.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  2. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by SirGarlon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not just software. Biotechnology patents appear headed for the same sort of train wreck from what little I know of them.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  3. Easy way to fix. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kill the patent system, it protects big companies against smaller ones. Big companies produce status quo, smaller ones have to innovate to survive
    Make it illegal to outsource, every time I get hired to fixed outsourced code, I usually end up totally scrapping it and starting over.

    1. Re:Easy way to fix. by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But it also does the opposite. Imagine spending years to bring a product to market only to see it reverse engineered and copied (and sold cheaper, to a wider audience) by a company with the resources to do it -- you're out of business before you even get started. You essentially just did their R&D for them.

      The patent system has much room for improvement, but it does serve a useful purpose.

    2. Re:Easy way to fix. by todrules · · Score: 1

      Why make it illegal then? It seems like you're getting extra jobs just because of it.

    3. Re:Easy way to fix. by myurr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If it's that trivial to reverse engineer is it really worth the patent? For discussions sake let's take James Dyson's vacuum cleaners. They are of a novel design, likely took a fair bit of R&D, and by most standards are probably worth a patent (despite copying the basic principles from elsewhere and simply applying them to a vacuum cleaner).

      How long a monopoly should he have been granted for that design? Ten years? Twenty? If the answer is one to two years then that is probably the lead time on designing a good product in that sector even when you are reverse engineering the design. That time would still be enough for Dyson to establish themselves in the market, make a good return on their R&D, and then compete against the established players in a free market. Dyson would have been forced to compete on quality, value, and other traditional differentiators rather than being able to just benefit from the patent granted monopoly.

      That introduction of competition soon after the initial release is actually likely to spur more innovation from many more companies and will ultimately benefit the consumer far more than granting any single entity a monopoly.

      Perhaps a high quality patent system with a shorter time limit on patents is a lot better than the current system; but I would argue we are unlikely to ever get that, and that having no patent system at all is at worst the next best option.

    4. Re:Easy way to fix. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That thar's a man of straw! Let's burn 'im!

    5. Re:Easy way to fix. by Feyshtey · · Score: 2

      You assume that while Dyson is out talking to banks, pitching his plans, trying to reel in investors, and setting up his first assembly location, no one with readily available funding, manufacturing and distribution ties is paying attention.

      Without patent protections there's nothing preventing one of the people he's pitched the idea to deciding that paying him for the idea is a hell of a lot less profitable than just doing it for themselves. And that's just one example of where his hopes and dreams could be derailed.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    6. Re:Easy way to fix. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make it illegal to outsource, every time I get hired to fixed outsourced code, I usually end up totally scrapping it and starting over.

      In your line of work you're more likely to see crappy code, because if the code was good they wouldn't be hiring you to fix it. And many companies can tolerate or not even notice buggy code, it often has to be really crap before they are willing spend $$$$ to fix it.

      That said, there's lots of crappy code whether outsourced or not... Sometimes there's just no time to fix it all :(.

    7. Re:Easy way to fix. by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Define "easy": it might have taken a dozen man-years spent over the course of six months. Just because a large player has sufficient resources to make a task go quickly does not mean it was easily done. And to answer the other oart of that question: even if it took a week it still seems worthy. Not all good ideas need to be complex ideas. Conversely not all novel simple ideas are good ones - this doesn't mean they should not be patentable, only that those patents won't be worth a hell of a lot.

      For your example: assuming that after inventing it, the vacuum was brought immediately to market without any delays due to finding funding or other concerns, a year or two might be enough to recoup some of the time spent. But it's disingenuous to say he can compete on other merits after that point: well-funded competition could beat him on every single point, especially if he's just a small operation.

      Even as much as the current system benefits big players,*no* patent syste. would benefit them far more.

    8. Re:Easy way to fix. by dtmos · · Score: 1

      If the answer is one to two years then that is probably the lead time on designing a good product in that sector even when you are reverse engineering the design. That time would still be enough for Dyson to establish themselves in the market, make a good return on their R&D, and then compete against the established players in a free market.

      Go in business for yourself, try to do all this in 24 months, succeed, then come back and say it's "enough time." Otherwise . . . recall that Dyson has been working on the cyclonic vacuum idea since the late 1970s, and introduced his first cyclonic vacuum in 1983. He's been at it a while. Two years' lead time? Pfft.

      Besides, why shouldn't somebody be able to compete on innovation and better ways to do things? Why should everyone be "forced to compete on quality, value, and other traditional differentiators"? Personally, I like new, improved ways of doing things, and besides, isn't innovation a traditional differentiator, anyway?

      Don't forget that Dyson neither invented nor patented the basic cyclonic separation principle used in his vacuums. It's an old idea, and hasn't been under patent protection for many decades; many other companies were free to implement the idea once Dyson showed that there was a market for it. He did patent some variations, in particular, "a vacuum cleaning appliance compris[ing] a lower efficiency cyclone unit and a high efficiency cyclone unit connected in series [that] enables both large and fine dirt particles to be dealt with." However, none of these patents seem to be constricting the market, since today at least five other major manufacturers make cyclonic vacuum cleaners for home use.

      Reverse engineering is always trivial, compared to engineering from scratch. The tricks on engineering from scratch are (a) working on the right problem in the first place; (b) convincing yourself that the problem does, in fact, have a solution; (c) finding the solution; and (d) getting the solution into the market. Holding someone else's innovation in your hand does parts (a) through (c) for you; all you have to do is (d).

    9. Re:Easy way to fix. by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      Then let them build such a thing?

      Granted above your post it was suggested they get a couple years of patent granted monopoly time... So theoretically this other 'investor' who steals the design must wait for those couple years to go by... But if their really is nothing 'special' about the thing 'invented' that this investor can just toss something together and roll it out, maybe it really wasn't worth a patent...?

      Even so just demoing or even explaining a innovative process to someone isn't enough to just let them 'copy' it. So one way or another someone would have to try to make the same thing, spurring more development and providing more funds into the economy.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    10. Re:Easy way to fix. by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

      If it's that trivial to reverse engineer is it really worth the patent?

      It doesn't have to be trivial; it just has to be cheaper, and it usually is.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    11. Re:Easy way to fix. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't have to reverse engineer it, only copy-paste. There are engines made by China that are direct sand-casted copies of Chevy 350s, shamelessly complete with logo and everything. There are Chinese knock-offs of Haas mills, that are part for part copies, only with far worse tolerances.

      You don't have to reverse engineer it, only reproduce it to make it a problem for the original company, because you can get 80% or more of the functionality for half the price with the knock-off, who didn't have to develop it.

    12. Re:Easy way to fix. by myurr · · Score: 1

      I am in business for myself and, depending on the industry, 2 years is enough time. Certainly if something can be trivially reverse engineered, as in the parents point, then 2 years is typically more than enough to bring that idea to market. I only used Dyson as an off the top of my head example so apologies if I made some assumptions.

      But your own post kind of validates my point - Dyson has been hugely successful despite not having a patent stopping competitors from copying, despite taking many more than 2 years to bring the product to market, despite it taking many more than 2 years to catch on and take off, despite it being a new application of an old idea, and they have been competing using innovation again despite not having that blanket patent.

      So quite by accident I guess this is a perfect example of where not having a patent hasn't held back an innovative company that makes products people want at a quality and price point that people are happy with.

    13. Re:Easy way to fix. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A nice tweak of the patent system could be that if something is declared open source by its inventors or authors, it cannot be patented even after alteration (by others).

    14. Re:Easy way to fix. by dtmos · · Score: 1

      2 years is typically more than enough to bring that idea to market

      Yeah, but that's not what you said. You said, "That time would still be enough for Dyson to establish themselves in the market, make a good return on their R&D, and then compete against the established players in a free market." Bringing that idea to market is only the beginning. Recouping your R&D costs, and successfully competing against entrenched multinational corporations, after entering the market is the difficult part to do in two years.

      Dyson has been hugely successful despite not having a patent stopping competitors from copying

      Oh, no -- he has many patents stopping competitors from copying his products -- in fact, he won US$5 million from Hoover in a patent infringement case. The point is, his patents have forced his competitors to innovate, and produce different products, that do not read on his patents, thereby giving consumers more choice, and improving the state of the art.

  4. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why limit it to software patents? Our country did so well at the beginning (in part) because we completely ignored the old world's patents. Patents exist to hinder competitors, and are slowing down our progress.

  5. 2002 - the year of the outsource by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone remember the turn of the century when you could speak with a technical support individual and actually understand eachother?

    Way to go outsourcing to the lowest bidder.

  6. Old News by Moof123 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Folks have been shouting these warnings from the rooftops for quite a while. First we sent the factory, now we are sending the associated engineering/science jobs over too. Other countries are investing more in education, while we have been busy making mocking of smart people an art form.

    1. Re:Old News by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      And reality tv don't forget that.

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    2. Re:Old News by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 2

      What you have is a shortage of healthy, able bodied young people. Everything else flows from this. If you start now, you should see improvement in 20 years time. Good luck; I think you will need it.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    3. Re:Old News by Bootsy+Collins · · Score: 2

      I remember a movie about this.

    4. Re:Old News by lgw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The threaqds above this are bashing patents, but this is the real problem. America needs to culturally value the geek. It's better culturally than when I was in school, but we don't seem to have nearly the strength in our engineering programs these days - not that the schools are necessarily worse, but the number of American-born students in the progams isn't where it should be, and the tuition bubble really isn't helping!

      Even though it's pretty obvious these days that only a MESH degree will give you any chance of earning your way out of your tuition debt, there is still no cultural bias towards these programs the way there is elsewhere in the world. If the smart people are here, the design jobs will be here too. Top-notch companies hire where the talent is, and if we lose that we're pretty much doomed.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:Old News by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      That's true, but this time it is coming from the government, which is actually a bit new.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    6. Re:Old News by MagikSlinger · · Score: 1

      And reality tv don't forget that.

      He wasn't. >_<;

      --
      The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
    7. Re:Old News by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And, given the new idea for a Pacific Free Trade Agreement, quite a bit hypocritical.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    8. Re:Old News by khallow · · Score: 0

      Look at employment numbers. There's a lot of unemployed young people. That tells us the contrary, that for the circumstances, the US has too many young people.

    9. Re:Old News by Kohath · · Score: 1

      America needs to culturally value the geek.

      Geeks need to culturally value America.

      One way to help people to value you is to be on their side.

    10. Re:Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the heck is a MESH degree. Google returns one valid example from uchicago, but that's about it. I usually hear STEM in discussions like these.

    11. Re:Old News by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      You mean as in nubile youths to sell into slavery to Arabs for oil? Because everything flows from oil ... a youthful well educated population without the natural resources (mostly oil) to fuel their productivity is useless.

      The current US living standard wouldn't allow extra youths to compete with youths in other countries with similar education but much lower income ... that's why to buy oil the US sells military "protection", agricultural products, IP (the top universities are the best in the world) but most of all the American dream (ie. the dream that some day the trade deficit will reverse and US bonds can actually return a realized profit for the countries now accumulating them). More youths is the last thing the US needs at the moment.

    12. Re:Old News by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is no shortage of able-bodied young people, there is a shortage of work for them and a prevailing attitude that anyone who does blue collar work is some kind of failure in life. We also encourage companies to export jobs to other countries, where working in a factory is not considered to be the mark of failure and where being educated is not considered to be something shameful.

      We need a cultural shift, that's all. The media needs to stop telling young men that no woman will want them if they work a blue collar job, stop telling young women to abandon any man who is not a millionaire, and most importantly stop telling our young people that engineers are antisocial nerds.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    13. Re:Old News by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      the number of American-born students in the progams isn't where it should be

      That's because the salaries and working conditions coming out of STEM programs really aren't that great. They're better in engineering and technology, especially computing, but they're still just not there compared to law, finance, or medicine.

      Hell, let's compare apples to apples rather than BE degrees to MD degrees. We'll compare PhD to MD.

      PhD? You do damned well in undergrad, you apply and get into grad school, you make do on ~$20,000/year +/- $4000 for 5 years of your mid-twenties, and then you receive your PhD. Depending on the level of funding for scientists in your field, you will probably have to do 1-3 postdocs earning $30,000-$50,000 before you become qualified for a proper faculty/scientist position at a university or other laboratory setting earning $60,000-$80,000/year. After 6 years at this position, you may either be given a nice raise and a job for life, or fired summarily and made to start that 6-year slog all over again. All this time, you've been working massively long hours, you often had to hunt for your own funding, and don't think you were getting vacations as a post-doc! (NOTE: The "hot" sciences of computing and chemical engineering have it significantly better than this, but they used to be not merely healthy but BOOMING.)

      MD? You do really damned well in undergrad, you apply and get into med school (somehow), you take on student-loan debt for med school lasting 3-4 years, then you do a year's internship, then a 2-3 year residency. Notably, your wages as an intern or resident just about match those of the post-doc, with similar hours and job security to the post-doc, while you have student-loan debt from undergrad med school to pay off. If you ultimately get through all of this and succeed, you become a qualified doctor who can earn six figures in a hospital or practice, but it's damned easy to fall off the track at any point.

      JD? You do really damned well in undergrad, you apply to law school and get in, you do 2-3 years of law school on student-loan debt, you pass the Bar Exam, and you get a job as a lawyer earning $50,000/year-$70,000/year. You now have exhaustingly hard work and debt to pay off, and these days pretty bad job prospects out of law school, but if you succeed you can earn scads of money in a law firm, do good for people in public service, and someday maybe even break into politics.

      Now ultimately, in terms of indebtedness and invested effort, they're all in the same ballpark of each other. However, in terms of rewards if you actually "win", and therefore in terms of expected values, medicine and law are obviously much better. There are fields of science and engineering research that remain fairly well-funded, such as computing and chemistry (especially chemical engineering), but even these aren't what they used to be (I've heard a story about university department chairs lining up by the dozens for a chance to interview the graduating class of PhDs somewhere for tenure-track faculty positions, of which there were 3). Meanwhile, the other "core sciences" of physics and biology are starving for the funding to support both existing research and new researchers.

      This is not to say that nobody should try to enter science. I sure as hell want to become a scientist in computing, and from what I've heard, we're pretty decently off. You can graduate with your PhD, and while the chances of winning a faculty position at an R1 research university are microscopic, you can probably find a research job at a non-R1 university or lab, or an industrial job applying your research. Meanwhile, you only spent 5 years living off ramen rather than living off ramen while going into debt.

      The core message, however, needs to be shouted from mountaintops. Don't cut the science budget and then wonder why there aren't enough scientists! If we spent on science what we spend on war, every little geek and his jock brother could work in a lab!

    14. Re:Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey youve allways got the nba and football route to pay back your loans-you are world champions after all

    15. Re:Old News by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In order to do that, we need an economic shift. Pay blue collar workers enough to raise a family, and the stigma will go away. These are the people who do the actual work that CEOs get compensated for.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    16. Re:Old News by Hatta · · Score: 1

      America needs to culturally value the geek. It's better culturally than when I was in school

      I don't think it is. Sure, technology is everywhere now, and a lot more people are spending a lot more time with it. But that doesn't really make one a geek. What makes someone a geek is determined curiosity which is as rare as it ever has been.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    17. Re:Old News by HiThere · · Score: 1

      America does not value the skilled worker, and does not value the academic scholar and does not value the intellectual. Subtle effects aren't newsworthy.

      It's not just what the media says. if you become skilled in your job, you are likely to be replaced, because the company doesn't want anyone who isn't easily replaceable. If you study hard, you are neglecting the development of your social skills, and it's the social skills that are admired. If you work hard, you are ignoring your family (if you have one). And you are at any time subject to being moved across the country to a new job. Guess what that does to your spouse and family. Especially if you need two incomes to "maintain a decent living style", or given student loans, to even keep up with you loan payments.

      Ever since at least the 1950's companies have been demanding more and more commitment from their workers, and offering less in return. It's not JUST the geek that they don't value, it's any individual who isn't in upper management. And society has focused more and more on atomizing the social environment, so that there isn't a reliable social support group. (Some churches still serve that function, to an extent, but even there it's an increasingly limited extent.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    18. Re:Old News by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.

      Things may get better in North America when immigrants have replaced the lot of you, or they may not. But for you... things are just going to keep getting worse and worse.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    19. Re:Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Geek has been redefined to mean "purchaser of many gadgets". Language does that. I'd suggest Nerd, but that's more about social outcasts than any sort of skillset. :\

    20. Re:Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, or it possibly tells us some other things such as:

      1) The boomers lost 60% of their retirement in the past few years, meaning they can't leave the workforce so there is no room of the younger people.

      2) The young people have skills that have been outsourced for much cheaper, leaving a glut of people with no positions to fill. College grads can't even get paper bagging jobs because "they'll just leave when something better comes along"

      3) Certain political parties are actually refusing to hire until Obama is out of office. Purely out of spite and resentment, though they often talk about 'patriotism'.

      4) Colleges have worked very hard to remove the benefit of education and simply turn the schools into mills for attainment of leans, leaving education a distant 2nd or 3rd priority. So those young people have no truly marketable skills despite being 100K in debt after school.

      Very small chance is population as the US doesn't have explosive population growth, it's almost all politics.

    21. Re:Old News by lgw · · Score: 2

      What the heck is a MESH degree.
      It's a MEST major, with a minor in typos.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    22. Re:Old News by lgw · · Score: 1

      Never get a PhD if you want money. It's pretty obvious, really.

      But with a degree with "engineering" the name and a good intership, you'll have a job with a professional salary. With a degree with "studies" in the name, you'll have a fine future at Starbucks.

      (BTW, most of our science spending historically has come from war budgets - go figure.)

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    23. Re:Old News by lgw · · Score: 1

      Random violence against people purely because they're good in school and not sports is way down. Being fascinated by technology is now socially acceptable. Wanting a job where you "work with technology" is now tolerated. Really, it's progress.

      But in India, a software developer working for a multinational is a step above a doctor or lawyer socially (and in pay). A buddy of mine was back in India to vists family when he was accosted by street thugs. He told them they had better leave him alone, because he was a software developer. They did. I can't even imagine that here.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    24. Re:Old News by lgw · · Score: 1

      That's about haf the companies though - the failing half. Good (engineering-related) companies value talent. Sure, social skills are a significant part of that, because you can't be a leader without them. Yes, my career has involved moving across the country to where the jobs were (twice), but nothing compared to, say, a military family.

      And society has focused more and more on atomizing the social environment, so that there isn't a reliable social support group. (Some churches still serve that function, to an extent, but even there it's an increasingly limited extent.)

      I completely agree with this part. People want to government to provide charity instead of the curch or mutual aid society, precisely because it isn't a social group, so there's not that shame involved with getting the government check. Of course, that shame was the only thing that kept the funding balanced, and now we're doomed.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    25. Re:Old News by Sosarian+Avatar · · Score: 1

      The media needs to stop telling young men that no woman will want them if they work a blue collar job, stop telling young women to abandon any man who is not a millionaire

      Your earlier statement was much closer to correct: the media and our society need to stop telling young people that they'll be an unwanted failure if they spend their time doing any kind of productive, positive task. Based on discussions with my fellow mid-30somthing friends, both sexes were given strong messages that we needed to have a full education & successful career to the limit of our ability, otherwise we'd be a personal & romantic failure.

      The gender gap primarily showed up in that while both were told to date people similar to them, the men were pushed to see themselves as failures if surpassed by a mate, while women were warned we'd be disappointments worthy only of scorn from peers if our mate lagged too far behind us. It was also impressed upon women that having kids erases the failure of being undereducated/underemployed, while being childless or childfree would mark us as damaged goods (to put it politely).

      --
      Apathy Sucks, Nobody for President!
    26. Re:Old News by Sosarian+Avatar · · Score: 1

      It might, it might not. From what I've heard, sanitation workers had been very highly paid, but it still wasn't the kind of job one's parents went around bragging about. Also, blue-collar parents have often encouraged their kids to aim for white-collar work (especially if the kid was talented or got great grades) because a day at a desk in a climate-controlled room is a lot easier on the body than spent doing most blue-collar work. That placed a stigma on the blue-collar jobs as being the ones a young person took if they weren't talented, skilled, or especially smart.

      The "blue collar" (I think) jobs that might be the most likely to improve in standing if they were well-paid would be skilled caregiving for elderly/disabled people. The bottom-of-the-barrel pay only attracts people nobody else will hire, and since they generally can't be trusted or relied upon, they're not given responsibility or much work that requires a brain, which in turn is part of why the pay is awful. Raise the pay & responsibilities to lighten the load on nurses & family members, and things would change drastically -- which would be a good thing, given the surge in demand that will show up in a decade or so.

      --
      Apathy Sucks, Nobody for President!
    27. Re:Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe we need more able-minded people.

    28. Re:Old News by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Random violence against people purely because they're good in school and not sports is way down

      I'd like to see the data on that one.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    29. Re:Old News by khallow · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to disagree with me? The only item up there that would detract from my claim that there are "too many" young people is #3, that employers are deliberately losing vast amounts of money to spite a political movement. Utter bunk, but at least it's a way to disagree.

    30. Re:Old News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Math
      Engineering
      Science
      Healthcare

      I am guessing...

    31. Re:Old News by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Never get a PhD if you want money. It's pretty obvious, really.

      You're right. I should have compared Bachelors and Masters of Engineering or Science degrees to law or medicine or business.

  7. Propaganda? by Troyusrex · · Score: 2, Informative

    I always become concerned about the objectivity of something when I see statistics like this: "In terms of federal research, in 1980 the federal government provided about 70% of all dollars spent on basic research, but since then the government's share of basic research funding given to all entities has fallen to 57%." That's pretty meaningless. the government could be giving 300% more than before but private entities are giving so much more it erodes the government's percent share. I'd take this report with a HUGE grain of salt.

    1. Re:Propaganda? by DanTheStone · · Score: 1

      If you read it, the theme is, "The government needs to spend a lot of money directly on research in order for research to happen". I don't believe that. I think the out-of-control patent system is what's messed up our research. The place where I work does things in specific ways in order to be within the realm of our patents and (as far as I can tell) outside others' patents. That's stupid. We should all be able to use the best system possible that we can think of, without getting sued by competitors who think of the same ideas.

    2. Re:Propaganda? by g0bshiTe · · Score: 1

      It sounds to me more like "my term in office is coming to a close, I have pretty much not accomplished anything, this is getting released to say we need to do something without me actually having to do something about it."

      --
      I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
    3. Re:Propaganda? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, "best system possible that we can think of" is very vague. It may NOT be obvious until someone else finds it obvious. I bet a lot of the old respected patents are full of this. The problem for your system becomes... YOU DIDN'T THINK OF THIS because you just copied me/us/them. And letting that slide pretty much renders ALL patents useless and demotivates inventors. Minus the "business model" patents... and "software/logic" patents, I think the system works pretty well.

    4. Re:Propaganda? by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you read it, the theme is, "The government needs to spend a lot of money directly on research in order for research to happen". I don't believe that. I think the out-of-control patent system is what's messed up our research. The place where I work does things in specific ways in order to be within the realm of our patents and (as far as I can tell) outside others' patents.

      If you are doing that, you are probably doing commercialization research, which, while it is research, isn't the basic research for which the report is discussing the role of federal funding.

      While basic research sometimes results in patents, it at least as often is producing results which advance knowledge without providing immediately useful and patentable applications, which is then picked up by firms that do commercialization for further work on which patentable applications are based.

      Basic research for the most part is very high risk, very long time to payoff, and very little certainty as to what market anything of value that is discovered will end up finding application in, all of which are factors which make it unattractive for private, profit-seeking investors. The benefits are diffuse and often go to people other than those spending the money to the work initially (you could change that by making facts patentable, rather than invention, but that's, I think most would agree, an even bigger source of problems than anything in the current patent regime.)

      We should all be able to use the best system possible that we can think of, without getting sued by competitors who think of the same ideas.

      Are you arguing for eliminating patents, or are you arguing for some kind of mandatory licensing regime? Either would serve the goal you describe, though the impacts on investment currently done where the expectation of patentable results would seem likely to be different.

    5. Re:Propaganda? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      You hit the nail on the head. My thought was, "Unless we know how much the federal government is spending today on basic research versus how much it spent on basic research in 1980 (adjusted for inflation), percentages don't tell us anything." Additionally, the fact that they chose to present it as percentage of total spending on basic research suggests that in fact federal spending on basic research has increased at well above the inflation rate (just like most of the federal budget). Actually, I just read the summary of the report where it states that government funding of basic research has increased, but not by as much as the authors think it should have.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    6. Re:Propaganda? by Rockoon · · Score: 0

      If you read it, the theme is, "The government needs to spend a lot of money directly on research in order for research to happen".

      I read it as "The government wants to pick the winners and losers again."

      I do believe that.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    7. Re:Propaganda? by yodleboy · · Score: 1

      what's the point of proposing a solution if a bunch of "take my ball and go home" types on the other side of the aisle are just going to stonewall you every time? Republicans have elevated cutting off the nose to spite the face to a new level lately. It's almost to the point that Obama could say "an FDA sponsored project just found a cure for all forms of cancer but we need another $100 in the budget to make it available to everyone" and Republicans would vote against it just because Obama announced it. Don't believe it? How about the recent hostage situation over employment taxes? Nothing but a ploy by the right to get more time to cram pork into the long term solution. Pretty typical really. Let's let OTHER people be miserable now so I can be more comfortable later. Do they every actually think of anyone but themselves and big business?

    8. Re:Propaganda? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It sounds to me more like "my term in office is coming to a close, I have pretty much not accomplished anything, this is getting released to say we need to do something without me actually having to do something about it."

      It sounds to me like you are a partisan hack who wants to insist that 8 years of poor policy and wasted effort on wars and failed energy resellers can be undone with 3 years of policy focusing on improving education and keeping skilled workers where they need to be to benefit society.

    9. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you are doing that, you are probably doing commercialization research, which, while it is research, isn't the basic research for which the report is discussing the role of federal funding.

      Then you aren't innovating. Frankly, I see no sign that the federal government is good at funding any sort of research, basic or commercialization.

      Basic research for the most part is very high risk, very long time to payoff, and very little certainty as to what market anything of value that is discovered will end up finding application in, all of which are factors which make it unattractive for private, profit-seeking investors.

      But similarly, very attractive to economic parasites who don't want accountability messing up their feeding cycle. Personally, I think focused contributions from rich people and businesses is more effective for basic research funding than government funding.

    10. Re:Propaganda? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Your skepticism shows a good scientific mind, but is unfortunately misplaced. The governmental science budget allocated through the NSF, NIH, and DARPA has just been cut over and over and over again.

    11. Re:Propaganda? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      And what happens to your R&D department when their work is copied by your competitors as soon as they find out about it? Why would you spend money on an activity that provides no benefit to your company?

    12. Re:Propaganda? by Genda · · Score: 2

      Perhaps you should look up what a shift from 70% to 57% from 1980 means. That is, when you compare the amount provided by private sector research investment and what happened to that research. So just throwing off a smug comment about statistics that actually contributes nothing to the conversation is at best dilatory, you might want to bother digging a little deeper into the facts behind the conversation.

      Here are some interesting questions whose answers would be most illuminating;
      1. What was the total spending on research per year for the United States since 1980?
      2. By dollars spent or GDP%, what was the amount spent by the US government vs Corporate sources?
      3. What percentage of that research was made available for public consumption vs what was bound up in corporate patents per year?
      4. What was the breakdown of investment dollars or GDP%, tending over the 30 years in question?

      For the most part, the government spent significantly less on research over the last 30 years. Moreover, though the total spending on research per year leading up to 2005 wavered between 2 and 3 percent of the GDP, we are currently in something of a research slump. Research spending for the last 6 years has remained virtually constant, except for defense based research which increased markedly. In short, those with whom we are competing, are substantially outspending us in research, which every viable source tells us is one of Governments best investments (extremely high return on investment), with the exception of military research which has for the most part, a rather low return on investment. Finally, corporate research tends to get tied up in patents (I hope you're not surprised) meaning that government research often but not always has more public value. There is a current push to have University research that has been government funded released to public access. Of course the Universities are complaining, but if the research was paid for by tax dollars, all Americans should receive the benefit.

      If you'd like to evaluate some of the source reference for these observations I suggest The Congressional Budget Office and perhaps this document by the AASS. There are plenty of other sources if you'd bother to research the issue. Other iInteresting sources put us in global context and point at how we've degenerated into our current political, economic and sociological state. If it weren't so worrisome, it would be fascinating.

    13. Re:Propaganda? by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      ... Frankly, I see no sign that the federal government is good at funding any sort of research, basic or commercialization. ... Personally, I think focused contributions from rich people and businesses is more effective for basic research funding than government funding.

      Ah... no sign of any sort of useful research. Do you have any evidence for this belief? Please show us that you aren't, y'know, just makin' stuff up.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    14. Re:Propaganda? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Basic research for the most part is very high risk, very long time to payoff, and very little certainty as to what market anything of value that is discovered will end up finding application in, all of which are factors which make it unattractive for private, profit-seeking investors. The benefits are diffuse and often go to people other than those spending the money to the work initially (you could change that by making facts patentable, rather than invention, but that's, I think most would agree, an even bigger source of problems than anything in the current patent regime.)

      All this is true. But we should also point out that basic research has the highest ROI of any sort of investment. Not necessarily for private investors, but for society as a whole.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Propaganda? by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      You hit the nail on the head. My thought was, "Unless we know how much the federal government is spending today on basic research versus how much it spent on basic research in 1980 (adjusted for inflation), percentages don't tell us anything." Additionally, the fact that they chose to present it as percentage of total spending on basic research suggests that in fact federal spending on basic research has increased at well above the inflation rate (just like most of the federal budget)....

      Right because logically the Federal R&D budget should, in real terms, remain fixed - despite the increase in the size of population, the economy, and the increases in the population and economy of our competitors. And if it increases just a bit, in real terms, but well behind the growth of population and economy of the U.S. and its competitors - then they should have nothing at all to worry about, because the 1980 funding level in absolute terms was - remarkably - the ideal level for all time.

      Oddly I never see right-wingers arguing that the 1980 Defense budget (less than half our current spending in constant dollars) was just perfect.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    16. Re:Propaganda? by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      Your skepticism shows a good scientific mind, but is unfortunately misplaced. The governmental science budget allocated through the NSF, NIH, and DARPA has just been cut over and over and over again.

      You give the OP far too much credit. Skepticism doesn't mark a good scientific mind - it is the practice of actually looking at the evidence.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    17. Re:Propaganda? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      What the size of the federal basic research budget should be is a completely different question. The question under discussion is whether the government report as worded makes its case. Its case is based on the fact that the federal basic research budget is only 57% of the total money spent on basic research and in 1980 it was 70% of the total. That fact is irrelevant. You may argue that the federal government should spend more on basic research, but there is no reason why the federal government's share of the total amount of money spent on basic research should remain constant.
      At no point did I argue about what the federal basic research budget should be. I argued that this report was pure propaganda. Of course, when one argues that things like the federal budget should be decided on the basis of what the money is being spent on rather than some artificial comparison to what it was in the past that makes one a "right-winger" and all of one's arguments can be dismissed.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    18. Re:Propaganda? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      I see no sign that the federal government is good at funding any sort of research, basic or commercialization.

      A bit hypocritical, that statement, given that you are using one of the most visible products of federal funding ever to post that.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    19. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that research, useful or not, didn't occur. But my meaning probably wasn't clear. Rather I meant that the US government is notably bad in terms of dollars spent for outcome received at funding research, for example, large projects such as the International Space Station, the Human Genome Project, the Superconducting Super Collider, and fusion power research.

      All of these have some degree of comparison with a more successful approach. For example, the ISS can be compared in scientific value to the Mir station. And the Human Genome Project had a significant contribution from Celera that rapidly sped up the entire program.

      Currently, a remarkably inefficient area is renewable power research due to some large guaranteed loans granted to a number of now failed businesses in the field.

      I'd go as far as to say that some of this effort is so counterproductive that it is effectively paying scientists not to do useful research and engineers not to develop useful things. I'd put the renewable power research and ISS development in that category.

    20. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      A bit hypocritical, that statement, given that you are using one of the most visible products of federal funding ever to post that.

      And what would that be? We're on the internet not ARPAnet. I use a private computer, communicate via private lines via a private ISP. And I access private servers to post messages.

      The internet would have happened. It's just a fluke that the US government happened to be involved in its creation.

    21. Re:Propaganda? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Why are you libertards so utterly and completely unable to look up history? Private business was all about creating walled gardens instead of interoperable networks. The Internet as it is now would most certainly not have happened without its origin as a research project in interoperable networking.

      And whether or not it would have happened anyway is in fact irrelevant, as it did happen the way it did, all the basic research and first build-out funded by the federal government; whereas you flatly stated that you had seen no sign of good research being funded by the feds. While posting on a network built by fed-funded research.

      Not just a hypocrite, but a stupid hypocrite as well.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    22. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1
      What's the point of all the name calling? Many walled gardens were attempted historically. They ultimately failed because the customers wanted to speak to people outside the walled garden and do things not allowed by the walled garden.

      And whether or not it would have happened anyway is in fact irrelevant, as it did happen the way it did, all the basic research and first build-out funded by the federal government; whereas you flatly stated that you had seen no sign of good research being funded by the feds. While posting on a network built by fed-funded research.

      Of course, you would make this argument. If spending government money has the same effect as not spending government money, then there's no impact, much less the sign of good research you claim to see here.

      Government spending taints many industries and endeavors. That doesn't mean that it does anything in the process. The report that this very article is about makes this fallacy in spades, treating every government expenditure as beneficial and essential to whatever it happened to land in.

      Good research has to change its area of study for better than would be the case in its absence. And it should do so for a reasonable cost. I find so many people can't understand this much less make a credible judgment.

    23. Re:Propaganda? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      It's not name-calling, it's stating facts.

      Again, you're moving the goalposts. You stated you had seen no positive outcomes of government research, while posting on the end-product of such research. If you don't see the contradiction, then you are retarded. Thus, libertard.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    24. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      Again, you're moving the goalposts.

      I guess we'll just have to disagree. I'll just point out that the role the US government played in the creation of the internet has been grossly exaggerated and the meager research so funded, would have been done anyway in the absence of government funding.

      As a result of that latter point, in my view it can't be a positive outcome of government research, because it isn't a positive outcome, but rather a neutral outcome - the world isn't better off due to the government expenditure. The signature on the checks doesn't magically change the nature or effectiveness of the research.

      It's worth keeping in mind that a lot of current research is just "privatized profit, socialized risk" schemes. The businesses often would have done the research anyway, but they got someone else to pay for it.

    25. Re:Propaganda? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      'would have been' is speculation. The facts say that the Internet is a government-funded initiative. Of which you said you had never seen a good one.

      Now, when you find that you formulated your point of view in a stupid way, there are two things you can do: either admit that, reformulate, and start a useful discussion, or act as if you're right and start twisting definitions around. Guess which makes you look smart, and which makes you look like a complete retarded twit?

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    26. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      'would have been' is speculation.

      Educated speculation. I notice you don't have anything to add to it.

      The facts say that the Internet is a government-funded initiative.

      So what? Government money gets used for a lot of things. I already explained why that isn't sufficient.

      Now, when you find that you formulated your point of view in a stupid way, there are two things you can do: either admit that, reformulate, and start a useful discussion, or act as if you're right and start twisting definitions around. Guess which makes you look smart, and which makes you look like a complete retarded twit?

      What makes you think this is about semantics? It's a basic economics question. Did government money change anything about the internet by being there for ARPAnet? My answer is "no".

    27. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      To continue with my observation, the first kiiler app of the internet was email, which actually preceded the networks associated with the early internet. It first appeared on machines that had been paid for with government money, but once again, it's pointless to claim that government funding created it when it would have existed anyway.

      Email was the true unifier of the internet. Because if you made a walled garden that excluded email from outside the walled garden, then people had a big incentive to move to something else. So everyone had incentive to able to pass email between different networks.

      This is why I say that government research into ARPAnet was not "good research". Because it was work that would have been done anyway. Keep in mind that a key rationalization for government research is precisely that it is work that the private world supposedly won't do. Too much of government research is really paying businesses to do their own research. And ARPAnet development was one such example.

    28. Re:Propaganda? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      I'm giving up. You're too stupid to have sensible discussion with.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    29. Re:Propaganda? by khallow · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that we can't see the outcomes of choices that weren't made. It should be a rule. We only pay for something with public funds, if we can't get it another way.

    30. Re:Propaganda? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that we can't see the outcomes of choices that weren't made.

      What. The. Fuck?

      You have done nothing but argue the outcome of a choice that wasn't made. You really are this stupid?

      I really couldn't let this go without pointing out that with every post you make you prove the argument for postnatal abortion to improve the gene pool.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  8. What did you expect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you expect when you canned Nasa's human space flights.

    1. Re:What did you expect by nomadic · · Score: 2

      NASA was doing small science on a big science budget, and was notoriously risk adverse, avoiding innovation in order to run the same tired old experiments.

  9. the numbers are wrong by alen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1995 - Intel/MS and a few other US companies sold dell some parts, dell made a computer in texas and exported it
    2011 - intel/ms and others ship the parts to china and the computer comes back to the US

    the numbers only look at the cost of products coming in. it's been well established that apple and every other US company keeps most of the value of tech products and the manufacturing cost the chinese get is tiny. that's why acer and asus have net margins like food companies

    1. Re:the numbers are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not quite. Once China started doing some stuff and did a good job, we sent more. And now it's gotten to where we simply don't have the process engineering expertise to fabricate a lot of really high-tech stuff, and it will take years to regain that expertise. You can't learn that kind of stuff from a book, you only really learn it from experience, and since we no longer have any factories doing some of those things, there's nowhere to get experience. So China makes parts we have no capability of making even if we wanted to. At least not for a decade would we be competitive.

    2. Re:the numbers are wrong by NeumannCons · · Score: 2

      2015 - intel/ms produce all goods in China - the computer sent to the US
      2020 - intel/ms declare bankruptcy. Chinese companies produce all parts and software, computer sent to the US

      The problem is not just the assembly cost, which is in fact marginal. The problem is the costs all down the supply chain. All the components inside, say, an Ipod are made in China. All the profits made producing and selling those items stay in China. I don't think you could even produce a computer in the US today. You'd have to get and ship all your parts from Asia. Hard drives, memory, displays, discrete components - all made overseas. The huge support base for producing all electronics have moved overseas. If a $200 Ipod costs Apple $150 in parts, $10 assembly/packaging/shipping and $40 profit, that's still $150 that flowed into Chinese economy - not the US economy.

      Prototyping and design used to be done here. It's now easier to get the engineering talent overseas where engineers have access and contact with the people producing the actual parts they need to use in their own products. We've lost the production capability, we're about to lose knowledge about how to even create the devices we invented.

    3. Re:the numbers are wrong by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      2011- Intel/MS create the parts in Bangalore, stamp them out in Taiwan, sell them to China, who assembles them into computers which come back to the US.

      Fixed that for you. Implication- the only exportable commodity the United States has any more is MBAs and capital investment.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    4. Re:the numbers are wrong by bussdriver · · Score: 1

      When all you have is traitor MBAs running the corps in the USA, sooner or later the suppliers in China will realize they do not need you because you moved everything important over to them; then they can buy you out! Now those MBAs who handed them everything are now sales people in a shell corp for Chinese owners who used to be just be their cost externalization dump. Except the CEOs, who can sell off the business after they finished selling everything off to China. This has happened to medium and small businesses in the US already. Will it happen to Dell or HP before they fall off the fortune 500?

      China is making huge steps towards making all the chips too.

    5. Re:the numbers are wrong by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      2015 - intel/ms produce all goods in China - the computer sent to the US
      2020 - intel/ms declare bankruptcy. Chinese companies produce all parts and software, computer sent to the US

      The problem is not just the assembly cost, which is in fact marginal. The problem is the costs all down the supply chain. All the components inside, say, an Ipod are made in China. All the profits made producing and selling those items stay in China. I don't think you could even produce a computer in the US today. You'd have to get and ship all your parts from Asia. Hard drives, memory, displays, discrete components - all made overseas. The huge support base for producing all electronics have moved overseas. If a $200 Ipod costs Apple $150 in parts, $10 assembly/packaging/shipping and $40 profit, that's still $150 that flowed into Chinese economy - not the US economy.

      Prototyping and design used to be done here. It's now easier to get the engineering talent overseas where engineers have access and contact with the people producing the actual parts they need to use in their own products. We've lost the production capability, we're about to lose knowledge about how to even create the devices we invented.

      Erm, no. The margin is WAY more in Apple's favor (in this example) and way more in the favor of US companies in general. Here is an example with numbers: http://www.chinalawblog.com/2011/11/chinese_manufacturing_profit_margin_what_profit_margin.html. You are right, there is a lot flowing into the Chinese economy but markup on consumer goods is at LEAST 2x mfg costs, and in a lot of cases closer to 5x (to get to MSRP, where it gets whittled back down). But overall, don't expect that even if you get a "Deal" on some iThing or a big TV, you spent anything less than twice what it cost to manufacture, and that money stays right here in the good old US of A (and it pays nothing but engineers, accountants, planners, distributors, and shareholders, none of those messy type occupations to bother with.)

    6. Re:the numbers are wrong by drussell · · Score: 1

      If a $200 Ipod costs Apple $150 in parts, $10 assembly/packaging/shipping and $40 profit, that's still $150 that flowed into Chinese economy - not the US economy.

      The parts cost for a $200 ipod to Apple is probably more like $40, not $150... That makes a big difference...

    7. Re:the numbers are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly right, but you'll never hear this from anyone in the government because, even here, being a patriot is a dirty word.

    8. Re:the numbers are wrong by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Except that the really high tech stuff like airliners and heavy earth movers and CPUs is still made in the US.

      It's the cheap ass consumer crap that's made in China.

    9. Re:the numbers are wrong by braindrainbahrain · · Score: 1

      2015 - intel/ms produce all goods in China - the computer sent to the US

      2020 - intel/ms declare bankruptcy. Chinese companies produce all parts and software, computer sent to the US

      2015 - intel/ms produce all goods in China - the computer sent to the US

      2020 - intel/ms report record profits. Executives and board members of Intel and MS receive multi-billion dollar bonuses. Since they are the only US based employees of said companies, they congratulate each other on another banner year.

      Fixed that for ya! ;)

    10. Re:the numbers are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe we should start deporting^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hexporting MBAs more quickly, then.

    11. Re:the numbers are wrong by happyfeet2000 · · Score: 1

      Read your Marx again: China is learning to create real value (manufacturing), the USA is learning to depend on circunstantial and artificial movements of money, that is luxury items and oportunistic financial manouvers. Eventually things will balance and reach their real levels.

  10. Irony follows by Leolo · · Score: 5, Funny

    What we need is to extend copyright, broader and stronger patents and generaly to beef up all IP laws. How about automatic injunctions for all accusations of patent infringement, like SOPA and PIPA gives copyright holders? That should spur on innovation!

    Oh, and cut taxes and gov't spending!

    1. Re:Irony follows by SirGarlon · · Score: 2

      Chapter 4, "Moving Forward," does mention patents but in language so brief and vague it could mean anything: "[ensure] that the intellectual property system continues to function in a way that encourages growth."

      It's the word "continues" in the preceding statement that suggest the government actually does have its head up its ass.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    2. Re:Irony follows by Lexx+Greatrex · · Score: 1

      What we need is to extend copyright, broader and stronger patents and generaly to beef up all IP laws. How about automatic injunctions for all accusations of patent infringement, like SOPA and PIPA gives copyright holders? That should spur on innovation!

      Oh, and cut taxes and gov't spending!

      The only unfortunate thing about your statement is that its brilliant irony will be lost on the masses. So I will frame it in a way even the politicians can understand... Once upon a time there was a boy who cried wolf. One evening the villagers heard a commotion over the Internet. They assembled in the town square around the body of a slain child. It was only then they realized there was no boy, it was the wolf all along.

  11. Bad press by DinDaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, well maybe if large chunks of our congress and populace didn't spend time spouting how scientists and technical people are biased and corrupt and don't know any better than plain folks, and we didn't pass laws that strangled technical innovation in a fashion obvious to anyone with a technical background, more kids would be interested in those fields

    1. Re:Bad press by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much of the 'bad press' is directly due to the actions of the scientific community oversimplifing, and overstepping the bounds of what is 'proven' and 'not proven'. How many times have I heard the claim that there is 'no proof' God exists so a scientific person can't belive in Him.

      If scientists would stick to science and stay out of philosophy that would make things much better , but that is a difficult task because to do science well you must have philosphy of Knowledge and a philosphy of science.

      The 'pulblic' will have a lot more trust in science when every minor study that comes out stops being sited as 'proof' that something totally unproved by the study. Also, when 'scientists' stop opposing attempts to form integrated philopsphies based on science that are not sticky athiestic and instead focus on actual evdence there will be room for a great deal more research and progress.

      There can be no such thing as 'progress' withoug a goal.
      There can be no such thing as 'knowledge' if all you do is gather data.
      Much of the bias and arrogance in the modern scientific establishment is do people attempting to use science to push athiesm, totalitarinism, libralism , communism, fundamentalism or whatever other ism is out there while the whole time abusing the scientific process.

    2. Re:Bad press by Kohath · · Score: 0, Troll

      Then "scientists and technical people" need to butt out of their neighbors' lives and stop trying to take their neighbors' money. Mind your own business and respect your fellow man. It's what peace is made of.

      And if you don't want corruption (or talk of corruption), then stop seeking power over people. Power corrupts. Power-seekers will always be suspected of being corrupt, usually with good cause.

    3. Re:Bad press by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what are you talking about? your ambiguity leaves much to be desired in your comment.

    4. Re:Bad press by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many times have I heard the claim that there is 'no proof' God exists so a scientific person can't belive in Him.

      Yeah, ok asshole. Scientists aren't allowed to be citizens or normal people, they have to be goal-seeking robots who mindlessly apply the scientific method to their narrowly defined research interest. Fuck you. The scientific community by and large does not over simply or overstep anything when scientists are operating in their official capacity as scientists, e.g. when we are publishing or speaking on peer reviewed scientific literature. But we are people first and we get all the rights (and baggage) of that association. We can advocate and speak our opinions about our work, their implications, and whatever the fuck else we want to talk about. In conclusion, you are an asshole, and the problems you outline speak more broadly about your own ignorant portrayal about the state of science.

    5. Re:Bad press by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much of the bias and arrogance in the modern scientific establishment is do people attempting to use science to push athiesm, totalitarinism, libralism , communism, fundamentalism or whatever other ism is out there while the whole time abusing the scientific process.

      Like capitalism? Or... hang on... theologism?

    6. Re:Bad press by f()rK()_Bomb · · Score: 1

      You basically just proved the parents point. Congrats. Maybe if people had the intelligence to not believe in imaginary beings created by the brain we wouldn't be in this mess. Lack of critical thinking skills is correlated with belief in god. Better education will result in more critical thinking which allows people to see through the illusion of god. This process is well under way in many countries including Canada, Australia, Japan and large chunks of Europe. More than half of the people in Europe consider religion to be irrelevant.

      --
      "The space elevator will be built about 50 years after everyone stops laughing." - Arthur C. Clarke ~1980
    7. Re:Bad press by holmstar · · Score: 1

      need to butt out of their neighbors' lives and stop trying to take their neighbors' money

      What the hell are you talking about? I can only assume that you're angry that some scientists get government grants and you don't like the conclusions of their research.

    8. Re:Bad press by Kohath · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? I can only assume that you're angry that some scientists get government grants and you don't like the conclusions of their research.

      And then those research conclusions are used by big government types to tax, to take away choices, and to force people to live The Right Way, according to the "conclusions" of the scientists. Yes.

      As long as "science" is the justification to use government force against people, "scientists" will be looked upon as a dangerous enemy by people who don't want to be forced. I'm hoping we can all decide to stop using government force against people and science can go back to being about knowledge.

    9. Re:Bad press by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Maybe if people had the intelligence to not believe in imaginary beings created by the brain we wouldn't be in this mess. Lack of critical thinking skills is correlated with belief in god...blah blah blah

      Sorry, but you don't know any better than anyone else does. Your opinion is just that, and you know what they say about opinions.

      Bias on the other hand, such as what you show, seems to be a shared belief. Bias on either side is the problem, not Theology or the lack of Theology.

      And no, the jury has not closed to those with an open mind. To you it may have closed. The big bang does not answer questions of the origin of the Universe. Theories of a multiverse just confuse the issues more. Plato's questions regarding the "Origin of Good" and Aristotle's questions regarding "The un-caused "cause" are just as valid now as when they were asked originally. Those theories are just as sound as anything you can show me regarding theories of a godless Universe.

      Funny how many people evangelize atheism with the same, or more, conviction you get from some of those in traditional Religions.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    10. Re:Bad press by f()rK()_Bomb · · Score: 1

      Well we do know, you just disregarded the whole sentence about critical thinking removing belief in god. That isn't opinion, that is a study from Harvard. There are also many other similar studies. Nothing you mention has anything to do with god as people refer to it. It's just philosophy. I have no problem with the possibility of a higher level intelligence god like being. We will surely become such beings eventually. But to think such a being would be any of the gods people refer to in religion seems ridiculous to anyone who analyses the situation in depth.

      --
      "The space elevator will be built about 50 years after everyone stops laughing." - Arthur C. Clarke ~1980
  12. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not all patents?

  13. horse left barn long ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Slick Willie gave our horses to the Chinese in the name of "free trade" and they are now raising and breeding their own horses. Shrub was also in Beijing's pocket since it was the only way he could keep the dollars flowing for his pet projects like Iraq and other things his neo-con handlers wanted. How can one be surprised that a country of motivated citizens would want to innovate themselves out of grunt assembly labor and into design?

    Free trade is a levelling agent. It will pull up the lowest and pull down the highest. The anomaly of cheap Chinese imports at WalMart only exists as long as the American worker makes more than that world average. Once the wages are re-balanced the American worker will be no further ahead than he/she was before the flood gates to China opened. Also, trickle down economics works just fine -- money flows from the rich to the poor via the steepest slope. That path does not pass through the middle class American pocket book -- that's what the neo-cons and the corporate mouth pieces don't want you to realize. Put in a more geeky way, bad things happen when you dead short a battery -- free trade policies and speed trading eliminate the impedence and are going to lead to further economic problems -- maybe explosion and maybe just regression to the global mean (if we are lucky).

    1. Re:horse left barn long ago by Osgeld · · Score: 2

      thats all fine and dandy but it went into full force in the mid 1980's, place blame where it belongs

    2. Re:horse left barn long ago by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      thats all fine and dandy but it went into full force in the mid 1980's, place blame where it belongs

      I think it's pretty reasonable to say Nixon's administration presided over the beginning of all this.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    3. Re:horse left barn long ago by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      true, that is why I said full force

    4. Re:horse left barn long ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whats with lib idiots and Nixon all the time?

  14. Surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Surprised? You shouldn't be. When the patent system is such that innovators are punished by large corporations with bull**** patents and the gov't is run by the MPAA and RIAA, what did you expect? The system downright halts innovations, not encourages them. The system needs to be removed and re-thought, not added-to like the Nazi-style SOPA bill. That will make things 100x worse, I guarantee it.

  15. you cant spend by nimbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    30+ years chiseling away at workers rights, outsourcing skilled trade to other countries, and eviscerating education funding
    only to reflect upon your work and remark, "gosh, people arent that smart and we dont do much with technology but consume it"

    you chose it as a model of hypercapitalism. when we agreed to shuffle the working class, the middle class, into early retirement, fast food dead end jobs, and bankrupted private pensions it was a choice. when we caved the stock market and drained dry the last cent from the 401k of the middle class, we did so knowing it could only make the rich richer, and the poor poorer. as we danced in our lemon socialism and hapilly bailed out the wealthiest conglomerates and banks, we were instructed that the hardship would be socialized and the profit would be privatized. "americans," the ones that do most of the living and working in our society, dont do much because they cant do much; this has been assured by the government of the people, for the people, and it has no right to question its work.

    we are reaping the benefit of generations of obscene wealth, fueled by trickle down reagonomics and stoked by politicians who consider market capitalism a golden calf that does no evil. Our society is driven by profit, and so long as the goal is profit, the outcome and returns will be consolidated to a plutocracy that doesnt care if little johnny learns to read or write, so long as he works enough hours at the walmart to consume the products at the walmart.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:you cant spend by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      Wow. You can write. Well.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    2. Re:you cant spend by LeanSystems · · Score: 1

      If only his keyboard had a shift key.

    3. Re:you cant spend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The OP is not a good writer. The point they are making is burred under layers of badly formatted sentences, hyperbole and multi-syllabic words. Good writing is clear and to the point. Good writing is easily read and easily understood. It conveys meaning. Good writing does not show off unneeded vocabulary nor twist sentences into knots. You have confused good writing with trying to sound intelligent.

    4. Re:you cant spend by superwiz · · Score: 1

      What hyper-capitalism? Not a single administration in the past 20 years saw a reduction in regulation. That's a direct reduction in degree of control over business by business owners. Oddly enough, the only administration which tried to fix the education system was Republican and its efforts were met with largest resistance from the teachers. The world is exactly opposite of what you proclaim it to be.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    5. Re:you cant spend by demonbug · · Score: 5, Funny

      If only his keyboard had a shift key.

      His decision not to use the Shift key is a protestation against the lack of upward mobility in today's society. Those of us in the lower cases have no hope of joining the capitals; the capitalist Shift key merely offers the hollow promise that we may someday rise to the top.

      So, yeah; the Shift key is clearly a capitalist conspiracy.

    6. Re:you cant spend by MitchDev · · Score: 1

      I found his post easy to read and understand. I find his lick of capitalization annoying, but he did actually use paragraphs and punctuation. Nothing wrong with his post at all. Read %insert favorite classic author here% if you want "Good Writing", whatever the hell "Good Writing" actually means...

    7. Re:you cant spend by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Way to protest hyper-capitalization!

    8. Re:you cant spend by ThePeices · · Score: 1

      I started to read your comment but had to give up in abject frustration due to your utter lack of the use of the Shift key.

      Im sure you made some fantastic points that will make people stop and think, and then write out ( properly formatted ) well thought out replies to your post.

      But those points were lost in the sea of lowercase letters that you typed out.

      Oh well, onto the next post.

    9. Re:you cant spend by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      The so-called 'Republican Fix' did far more harm than good.

    10. Re:you cant spend by jafac · · Score: 1

      or caps-lock!

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    11. Re:you cant spend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What hyper-capitalism? Not a single administration in the past 20 years saw a reduction in regulation. That's a direct reduction in degree of control over business by business owners. Oddly enough, the only administration which tried to fix the education system was Republican and its efforts were met with largest resistance from the teachers. The world is exactly opposite of what you proclaim it to be.

      What were you smoking when Glass-Steagal was repealed and the regulatory walls between Finance and Investing came tumbling down?

    12. Re:you cant spend by superwiz · · Score: 1

      It wasn't allowed to happen. It was very actively opposed by the teachers. Teachers hate standardization of curriculum. But population is very mobile in the US. So schools end up being forced a minimal curriculum that can be taught to students who change schools every few years. Knowledge is not independent morsels which can be taught on their own. It's structured in a layered way. If you can't depend on an average student in you class having a certain background, you are forced to dumb down what you teach. If it were clear that everyone in the country who passed 5th grade (or any grade) was guaranteed to know certain mathematical methods, certain amount of biology, chemistry and physics, a certain amount of English grammar, literature, etc. Then a teacher in the subsequent grade in each school would be able to build on that. As it is right now, no such guarantee exists. So all curriculum is simplified. The reason I find it odd that it was a Republican who made the first attempt at standardizing curriculum is that this was an anti-Federalist position (Federalist position would allows states to define curriculum and would not allow Federal government to interfere). And Republicans are generally Federalist in their ideology.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    13. Re:you cant spend by superwiz · · Score: 1

      That's not what happened. A much milder event happened. Investment banks were always involved in corporate finance. They were simply allowed to be involved in retail banking, too. This allowed them to have direct access to FED lending. But the amount of regulation which was added was much greater. If banking were truly deregulated, we wouldn't have just checking and savings account. Your local S&L would be indistinguishable from a stock broker, who would be indistinguishable from a commodity and FX broker. At the moment an interest one pays on buying a home is about 4-5%. Interest that one pays on buying stocks (even if they are just stocks in companies which own homes and collect rent on them so they carry the same risk as actually owning a home) is 10%+. Banking is, in fact, more regulated than medicine.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    14. Re:you cant spend by f()rK()_Bomb · · Score: 1

      His post was clear and to the point. It even rises nicely to a finish. The fact you think its complicated and twisty speaks volumes about your education level. This is standard stuff any high school level teenager could read. I wonder what you would think of the work of an author like James Joyce :p

      --
      "The space elevator will be built about 50 years after everyone stops laughing." - Arthur C. Clarke ~1980
  16. What innovation? by gmuslera · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This one?

    Make me remember Discworld's gods, that were pretty dumb in general because there is no evolutionary pressure when you are omnipotent. Why try to innovate if you can simply patent common sense and copyright culture forever, push your patent/copyright laws in all the world and take money from that?

    1. Re:What innovation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haaa refreshing point of view. But that would only be a patch. Inovation and creativeness only come in its true form when someone can dedicate its whole tough process to imagination and thinking. No one can in our society.. well actually 1% of the world can, they posses 99% of the rest of the world. But those are way too preocupied in making it 99.1% instead of using what they have to chage things... thy are happy the way they are. When no one has to worry about the rent about the food about shelter can we really be creative.

    2. Re:What innovation? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      1% of the world is a couple of DINKS earning a combined household income of $68,000/year. I used to work in a very liberal environment that was full of 'em.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  17. Rome syndrome anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    An empire that is starting to buckle under its own weight of ridiculous spending and incessant world conquest. Sound familiar?

    1. Re:Rome syndrome anyone? by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Too familiar. I wonder why empires always follow the same path to their deaths...I wonder what they are chasing?

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    2. Re:Rome syndrome anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Human Nature?

  18. Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    JUST FUCKING STOP WAGING SENSLESS $3 TRILLION+ WARS
    #mother of all facepalms#

    On a serious note (non-US citizen): It is a shame seeing this once great country going to ruins. Unfortunately I can't see Obama being able to do much about this as long as the GOP/the Teabaggers are going apeshit on sanity.

  19. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Instead they can spend a ton of money on research and development, produce a product, and a month later find themselves competing with a dozen competitors who invested nothing in research and developement and can therefor sell the product for a fraction of the cost and still make a profit. The innovators find themselves in a situation in which they made all the investment but cannot recoup the costs, while others are enriched without taking on the risk.

    Explain to me how that fosters innovation.

    There's a shade of grey in there to be discovered somewhere between everything and nothing.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  20. So we're saying that an increase in privately funded r&d is a *bad* thing?

    1. Re:so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Moreso that there is not enough privately funded research , especially "basic" or "theoretical" research. Theoretical research does not pay off quickly enough for those that privately finance research. Most modern tech was based on theoretical discoveries from 25-50 years ago.

    2. Re:so by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Is the change in the R&D percentage because of an increase in privately funded R&D, or a decrease in government funded R&D?

      Or, more to the point: Has R&D funding increased or decreased?

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    3. Re:so by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Both have been decreasing on a total income basis. The Federal component more rapidly.

      It is the best way to create a giant cluster fuck I can think of.

  21. We need to compete globally by ackthpt · · Score: 1

    But only with approved companies and countries. Doesn't that sound like a wonderful industry to be in - consulting who to trade aggressively with and who you shouldn't trade with (unless there's slim odds you'll get caught)?

    In terms of household income, adjusted for inflation, the US has been going backwards for decades - not simply as wealth left he country, but as the means of generating GDP were pushed off shore.

    Consider this: Workers at Company A buy goods from Companies B and C, while workers at Companies B and C buy from the companies other than their employers. Now, Company A lays off all but sales and marketing, putting manufacturing and packaging into offshore hands. Companies B and C have smaller pool to sell goods to. So... Company B lays off all but a few front office, outsourcing the remaining sales and marketing outside the region. The pool of those who can buy from Company A and Company B are mostly Company C. When Company C follows suit, who's left to buy from A, B and C?

    Granted, that's rather simplified, but it is the exodus which has been ongoing since the first Transistor radios arrived from Japan, decades ago. A presence in the US isn't even necessary as almost every function but Board of Directors and CEO can be done elsewhere.

    A grim prospect. But ... this should make US a fertile ground for moving back into, in theory.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:We need to compete globally by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      "A grim prospect. But ... this should make US a fertile ground for moving back into, in theory."

      Why? Why would anybody give up the cheaper wages offshore, to bring work back here?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  22. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Ah, casual racism, alive and well in today's America.

  23. nanny state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can you legislate innovation? How 'bout the govt get the hell out of the way so people are free to innovate on their own?

    1. Re:nanny state by captbob2002 · · Score: 1

      So long as what you do doesn't look remotely like some else's patents....that they are just sitting on? Gov't out of the way? Out of the way OF WHAT? Private enterprise does not fund basic research anymore, they barely fund development of their own products. The rich making sure they get richer...and that NO ONE ELSE DOES is the problem, not the so-called 'nanny state.'

    2. Re:nanny state by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      More like the exact opposite. People cannot innovate without education, without protection for those innovations (not being stolen by the chinese), and without some sort of a safety net that allows them to take risks. The government is therefore deeply invested in innovation, and, as the article points out, funds a lot of it.

      I'm not in the US, but not far off. My graduate programme in comp sci is 85% foreign I think, so of 120 or so grad students we have less than 20 who are from canada. The rest are from india, china, the middle east (and I'm half indian). The same could be said for most programmes in the US of the same sort (engineering, comp sci etc.). The undergraduate programme is largely domestic, but those guys mostly get stuck implementing boring business process stuff, and not actually innovating.

      You can't 'get out of the way' and hope it will all magically work out when other governments are investing in innovation. There are lots of different ways to do that, you could for example, directly fund solar power companies, you could subsidize power from solar sources, you could directly build solar power and a government enterprise and then sell it off if you are so inclined. Hell, you could just pay more money to people who are future innovators, rather than having science and engineering programmes be more expensive, make them less expensive, that sort of thing. You can provide local and provincial level (in the US these would be states but the effect is the same), building space for startup companies, 'innovation centres' as we call them, and so on.

      Simply put, given the choice, no one with money is going to invest it in the US if they get a better deal elsewhere, they'll invest in china and india. They get multipliers from governments, they get better people, from better education systems and so on. The only reason to invest in the US is if you want into the US market and have to invest in the US for that, but with the way trade is, you invest somewhere other than the US, and then sell crap to the americans to take their money.

      Sure, if you want to build something in europe you probably have more regulatory hurdles than the US. And, all else being equal, that makes the US more attractive. But if a government is chipping in 20 or 25% (or, in my case in the games business 40 or 50%), that makes the paperwork worth it.

    3. Re:nanny state by 0123456 · · Score: 2

      You can't 'get out of the way' and hope it will all magically work out when other governments are investing in innovation.

      How many government 'investments in innovation' have ever produced any long-term benefit? I remember the Japanese government continually talking about the wonderful new computer technologies they were funding over the last couple of decades, yet those projects never actually seemed to produce anything.

      There are lots of different ways to do that, you could for example, directly fund solar power companies, you could subsidize power from solar sources, you could directly build solar power and a government enterprise and then sell it off if you are so inclined.

      Because American 'investments in solar power' have proven so wonderfully successful over the last couple of years.

      In the real world history has shown that government is incredibly bad at picking winners.

    4. Re:nanny state by Sir_Sri · · Score: 2

      Tell that to BMW, BioWare and Ubisoft montreal, Airbus, Volkswagon, GM etc. All those game companies who set up shop in texas with local grants (notably in austin), and so on.

      You don't see the long term benefit of japanese investments in computing? Remember floppy disks? How about RAM, lots of that stuff was Japan first in innovation. Innovation doesn't necessarily completely change the paradigm of how technology is used, it can be incremental and still be hugely valuable.

      And then there's the whole internet. No, that wasn't useful to have been a government sponsored programme at all was it?

      Even in the solar arena, the problem they have in the UK with subsidies for power from solar panels being subsidized at some ridiculous rate, is that the cost of solar is dropping so fast that the subsidies are basically free money, and they can't afford the programme. It was too successful. Who's making those innovations? The US.

      And yes, american investments in solar have been enormously successful. You've increased solar generation by a factor of 5 in 4 years, brought the cost down by about that same factor per KW/h. Sure, on the scale of total US power generation it's still a drop in the bucket, but when you add a drop to a bucket, you're only going to get a drop. The way I do the math you're looking at doubling that capacity again in the next 3 or 4 years, if not more than that (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_power_in_the_United_States).

      Part of the thrust of the topic is that investment in the US has been inadequate. If I hire you to write a game engine for me, but I only offer you 500 bucks to do it, well guess what, it's going to be bad. The US can (not necessarily will) do a lot of things differently, and could throw a lot more money at the problem. How much is the 'right' amount I have no idea though.

  24. It's like a sad joke. by walterbyrd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nobody can figure out why fewer Americans want to study for STEM careers, but everybody agrees that the solution is bring in more visa workers to take the jobs of US STEM workers.

    In regard to STEM training, the report makes an argument for immigration reform that enables foreign students to remain in the U.S. It doesn't offer specifics on an approach for accomplishing this, or look at the debate around this issue. In 2010, there were 7.6 million STEM workers in the U.S., representing about one in 18 workers. Computer and math occupations account for close to half the STEM employment.

    The U.S., the report said, produces fewer STEM graduates relative to other developed countries. Citing data from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OCED), the report said that in 2009, nearly 13% of U.S. graduates with bachelor's degrees were in STEM fields, near the bottom of OCED countries.

    "Significant economic competitors -- such as South Korea (26.3%), Germany (24.5%), Canada (19.2%), and the United Kingdom (18.1%) -- are on the long list of countries producing a much higher percentage of STEM graduates," the report said.

    One in five STEM workers is foreign born, with 63% coming from Asia, the report said. The foreign-born share of STEM workers with graduate degrees is 44%.

    1. Re:It's like a sad joke. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...Because there's too much glitz and glam and they're conned into believing they, too, can be an American Idol.

    2. Re:It's like a sad joke. by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      If you actually think about how much effort it would take to fix the American education system to produce better students, versus the effort it would take to increase immigration for knowledge workers, it totally makes sense to argue for immigration. So really, America is still the land of opportunity -- for people who went to school somewhere else and got a decent education.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    3. Re:It's like a sad joke. by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2

      Because STEM workers are treated like commodities, and there's no stability in being a STEM worker. I tell that to every kid who wants to study computer programming- to go into some other field because as a STEM worker you're just a cog in a machine competing with cogs in the third world who earn 1/4th of what you need to survive.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    4. Re:It's like a sad joke. by jafac · · Score: 4, Interesting

      At a new year's party - I endured a long conversation of a bunch of self-proclaimed "nerds and geeks" talking about how our new nerdy sci-fi culture was breeding a new generation of brilliant science-and-math oriented geniuses. Because we all grew up loving sci fi tv shows like star trek and star wars, and because we all play video games and read comic books.

      I played the bad guy. The stick in the mud. As I always do. I expect not to be invited back next year. I asked the room: how many of them had completed Calculus, or Linear Algebra, or were working in Science or Engineering fields. Not a one. Well, one. But he was a Marketing Manager at a software company, and couldn't write a singe line of code to save his life. I am such a shit - I made them feel bad.

      And that's what this is all about. Ego. Math and Science classes are hard work, and when you fail you get bad grades, and feel bad. And there isn't a big audience clapping, or a row of cheerleaders chanting "go team go!" when you win. No. Our culture celebrates ignorance, and punishes brilliance.

      I honestly don't think that this nation deserves to be competitive anymore. We had our brief flash of glory. 40 years of selfish, bad policy. It will take a change of heart, and then at least 20 years to build it back. And I don't think that we have the gumption, and the capitalists who run our nation don't want to build anything back. They don't even want to pay to repair bridges. They will leave this country a smoking ruin, and move on to where the money is. Switzerland. Luxembourg. Dubai. KSA.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    5. Re:It's like a sad joke. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because STEM workers are treated like commodities, and there's no stability in being a STEM worker. I tell that to every kid who wants to study computer programming- to go into some other field because as a STEM worker you're just a cog in a machine competing with cogs in the third world who earn 1/4th of what you need to survive.

      As opposed to what? Human resources? Accounting? Marketing? Most middle class white collar workers are treated this way, and most blue collar workers are treated worse. Law and Medicine used to be good escape paths, but Law is pretty awful as a career choice right now and in the foreseeable future, and Medicine is getting there. The only career goal a kid can set that isn't likely to end up with him being treated like shit is to be an executive, and if that is his goal I hope he has a well connected family.

  25. Average math scores by SirGarlon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The report on page 1-8 has a nice graph of average math scores. However it occurs to me that what matters most for innovation is not average scores but the number of students above a certain level of ability. Basically, if a country has enough high-scoring math students to fill the pipeline of scientists and engineers, it doesn't matter how many low-performing students are dragging down the mean. One of the reasons large Asian countries (China, India, and I would guess Indonesia) are well poised for technical progress is that they have a large population and hence a large talent pool. As long as they can efficiently discover and cultivate their talent they should be fine.

    I have never seen anyone talk about the number of high-performing students a country really needs to fill its pipeline. But if you want to talk about being competitive, especially in the next decade where pressure on public budgets at all levels will go from bad to worse, doesn't it make more sense to concentrate on finding the good students and giving them opportunities (scholarships, etc.), and on bumping the above-average ones over that threshold into excellence, than to continue vain attempts to improve the average?

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    1. Re:Average math scores by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ... doesn't it make more sense to concentrate on finding the good students and giving them opportunities (scholarships, etc.), and on bumping the above-average ones over that threshold into excellence, than to continue vain attempts to improve the average?

      What you're saying is anathema to the majority of liberals in the U.S.

    2. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the US of A, everybody is equal in front of the laws, unless you are politicians, who 99.99% is a jerk, but everyone still love you.

    3. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you're saying is anathema to every single educator in the entire world.

    4. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      South Korea has a population of about 50M, about 1/6 of USA. We don't have that many of those "high-performing students." Hell, can you name any South Korean Nobel laureate (there's only one)? Or a Fields Medalist (none)? Or an astronaut (only one, traveling on Soyuz)? Or any IT icons like Steve Jobs or Bill Gates?

      We do have some scantily clad teenage girl pop singers, but even in that regard USA is vastly superior.

      We're doing well because we know improving the average is important, and while our brightest students might be not as bright as MIT students, our averages are much better than your averages. Visit South Korea, you will never see a clerk who can't subtract numbers. Most clerks will swipe your items with one hand while typing coupon codes into the machine with her other hand, at the same time.

      Visionaries are important, but without a *massive* competent workforce, your visionaries will end up implementing their ideas in Chinese factories.

    5. Re:Average math scores by dbc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not just math scores, but in every area. The school system concentrates on bringing everyone up to average in everything, instead of nurturing talents and enabling a child so soar in some specialized area. With one exception: sports. Sports talent is nurtured and allowed to soar. Other areas, not so much.

      Everyone needs a certain minimal skill level in a broad range of topics. So make sure everyone gets the basics. But then allow accelerated concentration in a area of talent. Schools don't like to do that. Try arguing for allowing your child to be accelerated in math, literature, any non-sport. Won't happen. You'll argue until you are blue in the face and the school system will push back with all their might.

      Try reversing the argument. Suppose the principal said: "Well, yes, your child shows exceptional talent in baseball. Easily enough that with the right coaching he could get a college scholarship, and perhaps even make the major leagues. But other kids will feel bad if we give him more attention. Two days of PE a week is what he gets." The town would hang the principal in effigy. Rightly so, IMHO. Everyone should get a chance to nurture their talent, whatever it is.

      But what about a kid who could benefit from acceleration in math? That child will instead be given more busy-work homework that frustrates him or her to tears.

      Sorry for the rant, but I take this personally. My daughter is 12, and has worked about half way through my calculus book from freshman engineering. Do you know any schools that will let a 12 year old take AP Calc?

      The idea of "No child left behind" is fine. But how about "No talent wasted and no enthusiasm crushed."

    6. Re:Average math scores by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      Depends on how you sell it. A nationwide effort to find and cultivate bright students could go over very well with the liberal crowd, as long as you make sure to find the talent among the poor and minorities as well as the rich white kids.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    7. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      doesn't it make more sense to concentrate on finding the good students and giving them opportunities (scholarships, etc.), and on bumping the above-average ones over that threshold into excellence, than to continue vain attempts to improve the average?

      The above-average math students who go on to technical careers in industry will end up working for average math students, who will sit judgement on all of their plans and activities.

    8. Re:Average math scores by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      It's not just math scores, but in every area. The school system concentrates on bringing everyone up to average in everything, instead of nurturing talents and enabling a child so soar in some specialized area. With one exception: sports.

      Interesting you mention that. My stepmother was director of the gifted-children's program in a middle school. She had to defend herself against charges of elitism on a daily basis, and the phrase she came up with to describe her program was "varsity academics."

      Opportunities for gifted education in the public schools vary wildly from one state to another. But I think even my stepmother's state gutted the program when the mandates of "No Child Left Behind" came along -- they couldn't afford to do both, and one was required by law.

      Sounds like your daughter got the short end of that deal. Maybe she should think about taking advantage of the opportunities the school system has to offer, and play varsity sports. (I known that sounds ironic but I'm serious). It sounds like you have got the academics covered at home -- though she will probably surpass your teaching at the rate she is going.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    9. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet it wasn't the liberals who brought us No Child Left Behind in order to ensure that all students are above average.

    10. Re:Average math scores by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Look for a charter school in your area that will nurture her talent, or go the homeschooling route (or maybe a hybrid -- a charter school dedicated to supporting homeschooling). There are plenty of resources available to support homeschoolers and it really isn't difficult if your child is self-motivated.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    11. Re:Average math scores by crunchygranola · · Score: 2

      ... doesn't it make more sense to concentrate on finding the good students and giving them opportunities (scholarships, etc.), and on bumping the above-average ones over that threshold into excellence, than to continue vain attempts to improve the average?

      What you're saying is anathema to the majority of liberals in the U.S.

      Which is why the "No Child Left Behind" act that legislates attempting to improve the average was proposed and signed by that well known flaming liberal George W. Bush?

      Oh, that's right - it doesn't count if a Republican does it.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    12. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the reasons large Asian countries (China, India, and I would guess Indonesia) are well poised for technical progress is that they have a large population and hence a large talent pool. As long as they can efficiently discover and cultivate their talent they should be fine.

      Which is not quite easy, especially in a context of rampant bureaucracy/mediocracy - I know it directly, I used to live in such conditions (former communist regimes in East Europe). A pretty accurate depiction of the mechanism by Ursula K. Le Guin, also an enjoyable reading.

    13. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you heard of Stanford EPGY?

    14. Re:Average math scores by tsotha · · Score: 1

      It's anathema to mainstream conservatives as well. Remember NCLB, was the product of both Ted Kennedy and George Bush.

    15. Re:Average math scores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would look into the Kahn Academy and MIT Open Courseware. MIT and Stanford have recorded lectures that she can watch. Also you can find books on Amazon. Get her some good books. Don't just use what you have lying around in your bookshelf. Get top rated books from Amazon.

      Basically you are going to have to take responsibility of this on your own.

    16. Re:Average math scores by FishOuttaWater · · Score: 1

      Yes, we Republicans are still scratching our heads over that one. My best guess is that Kennedy had incriminating photos from a wild New Year's Eve party.

  26. Wow, I needed a report to tell me that by elrous0 · · Score: 1

    In other breaking news, U.S. manufacturing has mostly been outsourced overseas, government regulation has been largely thrown out the window since the 80's, the deficit is too high, and we spend too much on our military.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Wow, I needed a report to tell me that by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      >U.S. manufacturing has mostly been outsourced overseas

      Myth. The US is the largest manufacturing nation in the world.

      http://shopfloor.org/2011/03/u-s-manufacturing-remains-worlds-largest/18756

    2. Re:Wow, I needed a report to tell me that by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      >U.S. manufacturing has mostly been outsourced overseas

      Myth. The US is the largest manufacturing nation in the world.

      http://shopfloor.org/2011/03/u-s-manufacturing-remains-worlds-largest/18756

      If you look up this link, and read the comments, and follow those links you will discover that the ShopFloor article is wrong. China has been the largest manufacturer since 2008.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    3. Re:Wow, I needed a report to tell me that by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Government regulation, far from being "thrown out the window", is more overbearing than ever.

  27. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Kamiza+Ikioi · · Score: 1

    You want to foster innovation? Make it so a company doesn't have to spend zillions on lawyers to deal with trolls.

    Yeah, just create a karma system and let your users identify and mute the trolls.

    --
    I8-D
  28. New economy - post industrial age by RichMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The world is facing a major economic turmoil.

    Basic manufacturing labor is in 2 forms
    1) local construction this is non-portable and while modernization gains have happened. It is still taking many man hours to make a house.
    2) assembly (this is gadgets or cars) the finished good is portable modernization has applied the Ford factor and there is incredible pressure to reduce the man/hour cost.
              a) finished goods are globally transportable, means manpower is used where manpower is lowest cost
              b) mechanization is reducting the needed manpower for assembly, every year there is less for someone to do to assemble 100 of something
              c) this somewhat applies to farming

    The great industrial revolution provided jobs for lots of people to move from farming to manufacturing. We are now facing the reverse prospect where the mechinical revolution is displacing manufacturing jobs. There really are no replacement jobs, "tech" jobs require education and there are not really enough demand.

    The post-industrial age is upon us. There really are not places for most of the people to work.

    1. Re:New economy - post industrial age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what will we do of the excess people then ?

    2. Re:New economy - post industrial age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soylent Green!

    3. Re:New economy - post industrial age by RichMan · · Score: 1

      >> But what will we do of the excess people then ?

      sarcasm -> solyent green

      Very Real !!
      There will be war/revolution.

      A very large mostly idle population always leads to unrest. The eventual victors apply their population against others in war. The losers suffer internal revolution. The question is which governments move to the optimal solution first. The idle population problem is solved in two manners by the solution. However the solution is not permanent unless you can prevent the population from recovering.

      The proper solution is we live the life of leisure we should have with modern efficiencies working 10 hours a week each. That will not happen.
      So we get one of the other solutions.

    4. Re:New economy - post industrial age by w_dragon · · Score: 1

      In the past those large idle populations have had problems getting food on the table - we can now provide for people who don't work (whether or not that happens depends on where you are). If people are well-fed and can find shelter without having a job will we see the same levels of discontent?

    5. Re:New economy - post industrial age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Keep them entertained for as long as possible and then hope it's someone else's problem....

    6. Re:New economy - post industrial age by RichMan · · Score: 1

      > we can now provide for people who don't work

      Do we really? See the US and the elimination of the welfare state. To some degree this can be done if you can get the willpower to have a high taxes.
      Providing for the poor who don't work means taxing the rich, aka the 1% at high levels. That is not happening. And the "system" is not going to let it happen.

    7. Re:New economy - post industrial age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If people are well-fed and can find shelter without having a job will we see the same levels of discontent?

      Yes. You're welcome.

    8. Re:New economy - post industrial age by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Where do you live that people are well-fed and can find shelter without having a job, permanently?

    9. Re:New economy - post industrial age by Ouilsen · · Score: 1

      This is too simple as an explanation for me. People as those on the streets during the London riots are the espected long-term effect of 30 years of Thatcherism. They are not "well-fed" in terms of dignity and education. To just name a few lacking key features of a sane human being. Of course they can shovel in burgers and PS3 games all day long.

  29. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You want to foster innovation? Make it so a company doesn't have to spend zillions on lawyers to deal with trolls.

    Might also want to see there are fewer tax breaks available to companies who shift work out of the country.

    I spent a portion of my life in Michigan, where tax incentives were all over the place, trying to keep GM, Ford, Chrysler in the towns they were in, but even after all the tax breaks and assistance the companies still moved a lot of manufacturing to Mexico, Brazil, Spain, Japan, etc. Now almost everyone is moving manufacturing to Thailand, China or Vietnam - with reform efforts in Burma expect investment (read: moving manufacturing and research there as well.)

    Discouraging the outright offshoring of everything isn't necessarily protectionist and certainly is in line when confronting countries like China, where they've pegged their currency artificially low to draw in research, manufacturing, etc. It's how they are growing their economy, not entirely unlike how the Japan government subsidised exports for decades, which drew jobs and wealth into Japan, by way of research, manufacturing, etc.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  30. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by myurr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anything that is trivial to reverse engineer and steal in such a manner probably didn't require that much R&D and isn't worth a patent, certainly for the length of time current patents grant a monopoly.

    The current situation is that companies with lots of money can hold smaller competitors to ransom by abusing the patent system. The worst case of abolishing patents is that companies with lots of money can spend more on marketing than smaller competitors and therefore dominate the market. At least with the latter we have a system where more people can build upon those products and try to do something novel, rather than the absurd situation we end up with at the moment where you HAVE to have a valuable patent portfolio that you're willing to use in legal action on other companies in order to compete.

  31. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by demonbug · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why limit it to software patents? Our country did so well at the beginning (in part) because we completely ignored the old world's patents. Patents exist to hinder competitors, and are slowing down our progress.

    Yes, we did better because we were able to ignore the "old world patents". Meaning, patents were bad when we weren't the ones that held them. I'm not sure that's really a good argument for getting rid of patents as it doesn't really speak to whether patents help or hinder innovation; it only shows that any nation not at the top of the patent pyramid has a vested interest in ignoring them.

    Not saying I disagree with the premise that patents can actually hinder innovation, I just don't think your example provides any support for your claim. Quite the opposite, in fact.

  32. The real problem by cjcela · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think that the larger issue with America these days is connected to our cultural tendency about measuring success in terms of money and power. In the newer generations, this is displacing the very values that made the nation great, and resulting in short term and immediate results kind of thinking. We are teaching our youth to think like a 5-year old with a tantrum, with an insane sense of entitlement and no responsibility. And the older generations are not much better. Add to this the fact that there are no visionaries among the people with power to make changes in the nation, be it the heads of large corporations, the congress, or elected officers. Long term is thought as "5 years down the road". That does not scale for the size and complexity of America today. We need a 100-year plan, not a "will do whatever necessary to get re-elected next year" plan. And this long term plan should not be based on controlling the rest of the world or waging wars when other countries do not submit to our might; we should use our resources wisely to take care of our own people instead, and shift to a sustainable economic model so we do not need resources from other countries. The only reason we have not collapsed onto ourselves is that the rest of the world is messed up too. But we can do so much better than that. My impression is that unless we start thinking long term and incorporate healthier values into education, to slowly revert this tendency, the decline of America will not only continue but accelerate in all areas, including technology, quality of life for the average citizen, and the position of our country in the world. At this rate, we will be a part of the 3rd world in 50 years. We can do better for our children.

    1. Re:The real problem by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      What's even more of a problem: a lot of the business leaders are looking at the mess and thinking "Well, at least I have the money to make sure that I don't go down the drain like the rest of the people."

      We can do better, but a lot of people disagree on what the better is and how to achieve it. The drawbacks of a democracy: if the majority thinks that a certain set of goals is the way to go, we will slowly move towards it.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    2. Re:The real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the importance of share prices means that there are folks on Wall Street who don't look beyond the next quarter.

    3. Re:The real problem by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Not all of the under 25 crowd is rolling with the entitlement mentality. Until now the most vocal of our youth have been the ones that want their money for nothing, but then just this week we saw Ron Paul winning the districts in Iowa with the youngest demographics.. and if there is anything at all that says anti-entitlement, its fucking supporting Ron Paul.

      I truly believe that what we need most is to maximize GDP growth. All across the world the countries with the highest GDP per capita hold the top tier standards of living across all metrics. Sure there are differences here and there, but as much as folk like to complain about those differences they are just quibbling about what are essentially minor differences.

      For example people like to point out the differences between america's private health care to the best public health care systems. This type of comparison is a fraud. Compare any country with a low GDP per capita with any country with a high GDP per capita and you see there really isnt that big of a difference between any of the high GDP per capita countries. Its true that some countries are more efficient than others, but the over-riding factor in terms of health care is still the GDP per capita and not the nature of the method of funding it.

      This observation holds not just for health care, but for every metric pertinent to standards of living.

      America has the largest economy with one of the best standards of living because we have traditionally sustained exceptional GDP growth. We have all gotten richer, that does include our poor, and our goal should be to continue getting richer as a whole rather than to appease the petty jealousies of those that feel entitled.

      We can sustain an average 7% GDP growth.. we've done it in the past. Doubling our wealth every 10 years beats the snot out of everything the entitlement crowds are complaining about. Thats how we grew to have one of the highest standard of living in the first place, and if we want to maximize our future standards of living then clearly maximizing our GDP growth will be a necessity to achieve that goal.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    4. Re:The real problem by cjcela · · Score: 1

      I think if we want to fix this, culturally, we need to get out of the "I want to be rich" idea, because it cannot possibly happening to a sizeable percentage of people without extreme social unbalances. Also, the idea that growth can be sustained indefinitely is a dangerous fallacy. You can keep printing money and raising you salary all you want, but the truth is that we have a limited amount of resources on Earth, and once they are gone there is no more. And we cannot eat money. We are not using these resources wisely, nor we are partitioning them in an equitable way among our society. At some point we need to find a system that is sustainable, or we will either deplete everything, or the control of these resources would be so concentrated that for practical purposes it will be as if they are depleted for 99.99% of the population. The idea that something can grow indefinitely on limited resources is not sound, and can only possibly benefit the individuals that are in control of these scarce resources by means of appeasing the rest of the potential consumers. There is a lack of alignment between what we need to do and what we are told is the solution, and the people who is explaining it to us have not necessarily our best interests in mind. So it is up to each of us to listen to it or not. At some point people has to grow up and start thinking on their own.

    5. Re:The real problem by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Are you under the delusion that the US is a democracy? Or even a republic?

      It's about as close to a republic as Rome was at around 50BC. Maybe a bit less. And social change is happening faster due to the increase in the speed of communication. Expect Julius Caesar within the decade.

      Of course, things don't repeat that precisely. I don't know how the autocrat will come into power, or even whether she/he/it will be publicly visible. (I don't think it's already happened, but it's not beyond the bounds of possibility. Bush made me wonder. And it might explain some of Obama's actions.)

      Note that this is not arguing against the statement that we live in an oligarchy run by plutocrats...which isn't, quite, the same as a plutocracy. Wealth isn't enough, you also need to be of the proper "family", or your power is severely limited. But it's not infrequent that one of the oligarchs will "take control". As long as there isn't enough dissention from within the other members of the oligarchy, this will be allowed to continue. Then someone else will rise as a rival for power, and the dissention may even erupt into public notice. Check out the Medichi. Frequently the real power isn't even a notable public presence.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    6. Re:The real problem by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      I think if we want to fix this, culturally, we need to get out of the "I want to be rich" idea

      Most americans dont know that they are already rich, so the problem isnt wanting to be rich. They want to be richer. Jealousy.

      Also, the idea that growth can be sustained indefinitely is a dangerous fallacy. You can keep printing money and raising you salary all you want, but the truth is that we have a limited amount of resources on Earth, and once they are gone there is no more. And we cannot eat money. We are not using these resources wisely, nor we are partitioning them in an equitable way among our society. At some point we need to find a system that is sustainable, or we will either deplete everything, or the control of these resources would be so concentrated that for practical purposes it will be as if they are depleted for 99.99% of the population. The idea that something can grow indefinitely on limited resources is not sound, and can only possibly benefit the individuals that are in control of these scarce resources by means of appeasing the rest of the potential consumers.

      The fallacy is what you just suggested. It is not a zero sum game. Wealth can and does get created without a mobilization of additional resources. To quote Richard Feynman:

      "The idea of distributing everything evenly is based on a theory that there’s only X amount of stuff in the world, that somehow we took it away from the poorer countries in the first place, and therefore we should give it back to them. But this theory doesn’t take into account the real reason for the differences between countries -- that is, the development of new techniques for growing food, the development of machinery to grow food and do other things, and the fact that all this machinery requires the concentration of capital. It isn’t the stuff, but the power to make the stuff, that is important. But I realize now that these people were not in science; they didn’t understand it. They didn’t understand technology; they didn’t understand their time." - Richard Feynman

      (emphasis mine)

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    7. Re:The real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that the problem is a culture of greed. About the fallacy, I think you are missing the point. If all resources are hoarded in a way that most of the population of the planet does not have access to them, what are they going to transform? I think Feynman was referring to a different situation (and I agree with his general idea). But what are you going to grow if the only seeds available are genetically engineered and patented, and they sue you and take your farm if you try to reuse the seeds, and you do not have money to purchase new? The amount of resources we have is limited, and we are using them foolishly for the benefit of few. Give it time and the power play of economics will transform into the "how the hell will the human race survive?" game. All in the name of our backward ideologies.

    8. Re:The real problem by airdweller · · Score: 0

      "America has the largest economy with one of the best standards of living..."
      EU is the largest economy.

      As for the standard of living:
      Human Development Index - 4th out of 172
      GDP (PPP) per capita - 7th out of 183
      GDP (nominal) per capita - 9th out of 183
      Quality-of-life Index - 13th out of 111
      Human Poverty Index - 17th out of 19.

  33. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 4, Funny

    You want to foster innovation? Make it so a company doesn't have to spend zillions on lawyers to deal with trolls.

    You're overstating the problem. For 100 gold I can hire a fighter and a cleric. Problem solved.

  34. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    FYI, the situation you describe is a good thing. The first company needs to keep innovating once competitors come out, not stop as you seem to think they should. Look to the fashion industry to see how it's done. There are TONS of copycats out there but good designers have no problem making products people will pay good $$$ for... why? Because they never stop innovating, and that's the key you are missing.

  35. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    0) Most ideas are a dime a dozen, the difficult bit is actually doing it well and successfully. Despite all their efforts on copying China isn't going to get a man on the moon by next month. Why should someone who just happened to patent some obvious idea be able to stop others who could be better able at implementing the idea?
    1) The patent system does not scale. It's too hard for the patent office to determine "nonobvious". It's much easier for them to just issue a patent and let the courts deal with it. The cost/punishment for filing obvious patents is not high enough to discourage a typical corporation - so they can just try different variations till they get what they want.
    2) From what I see patents reward trolls and "one clicks" more than genuine innovators, and they slow down innovation more than encourage it. Can't be bothered finding that "shade of grey", as far as I'm concerned the "baby" is long dead and might as well be thrown out with the bathwater.
    3) Much stuff is bought because of marketing, branding and distribution, not because there was lots of R&D on it.

    Copyright on the other hand is fine, but for a much shorter time.

  36. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing racist about that. GP was commenting on language, not race.

  37. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by lightknight · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most things, software and mechanical, are trivial to reverse engineer.

    A slight tweak on a screw can mean all the difference in a number of applications, leaving many engineers shaking their heads; this tweak, however, can easily be copied in a week's time.

    Ease of replication is not a measure of effort, novelty, or invention.

    --
    I am John Hurt.
  38. fortunately for Obama administration by superwiz · · Score: 0

    It's not their problem anymore.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  39. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by smpoole7 · · Score: 2

    > Instead they can spend a ton of money on research and development, produce a product, and a month later
    > find themselves competing with a dozen competitors who invested nothing in research and developement ...

    This isn't an either/or -- regardless of what some comments here would imply. :) It's not a binary solution set: either we do away with all patents, or continue with the present system.

    As originally envisioned, patents were to protect novel and unique ideas and inventions. The problem, of course, is that nowadays, virtually anything can be patented, regardless of prior art or lack of novelty.

    So to answer your (implied) question: if you spend a ton of money on research and produce a product, it depends. If it's something truly new and unique, yes, you should have patent protection. But if it's just a slight rework of an older idea, no, I DON'T think taht should be patentable. In that case, yes, you WILL get killed by competition, but I would argue that if it took you "tons of research and development" to come up with something like that, your R&D department is incompetent and maybe economic darwinism ought to put YOU in its sights. :)

    My own humble proposals are actually simple. This isn't rocket science.

    1. Eliminate so-called "design" and "method" patents.

    2. If it can be demonstrated that a person of similar intelligence could have developed the same idea in a "clean room" environment (i.e., without reverse engineering), the idea isn't patentable.

    We could argue about this one, but here goes anyway:

    3. No device that uses, as a primary component, a patented device, can itself then be patented. Example: I patent a new type of widget. You develop a way to use that widget in an airplane wing and try to patent that use. My patent is approved, but yours should be denied.

    Finally, for the nth time: LOSER PAY LEGISLATION. The US is one of the few industrialized nations that doesn't have this OBVIOUS protection. If the loser of a spurious lawsuit had to pay the costs, this would take care of the remaining litigation surrounding scurrilous, stupid patents.

    Just my opinion, and worth exactly what you paid for it. :)

    --
    Cogito, igitur comedam pizza.
  40. Competition by jdavidb · · Score: 1

    "The ability of the U.S. to compete globally is eroding."

    That's fine with me. It's not a race.

    1. Re:Competition by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Perhaps a better way of explaining that is "the US is losing its technological prowess, which grants it immunity to its actions and allows it to wage uncontested war; it is now remembering all the friends and enemies it has stepped on, and how countries tend to have long memories..."

      We (the US) are now pushing for a war with Iran (which we can't afford), and wish to hitch ourselves to Asia, in an attempt to both stay relevant and acquire a new source of revenue. The reason for our increased presence in Asia is directly linked to a historical context -> he who controls the silk road, earns a lot of money; Similar idea here, if we control the trade routes through the use of our military (under the guise of protection), we stand to profit from it.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    2. Re:Competition by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      I appreciate the distinction between "we" and "the US." :D

      Personally, I'm ready to surrender. About ten years ago I supported some of the stuff we did, and I'm sorry for my role in that. I have no intention of doing more of the same to make things worse under the guise of "We have to now because people are mad at us!" With any luck they will not be able to afford to get across the ocean with enough strength to hit most of us.

      http://billstclair.com/blog/open_letter_of_conditional_surrender_in_the_war_on_terror.html

      I am more than ready for the US to lose its immunity for the consequences of its actions.

      And I'm also ready for those who want to profit from the silk road to bear the full expense of their own security, rather than distributing it onto the rest of us.

  41. Anyone remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...the 1984 David Report on the sorry state of mathematics in the US, and it's followup (Renewing U.S. Mathematics: A Plan for the 1990s)?

    Like last year's budget committee we assemble a team of experts in their field, have them analyze the problem and propose solutions. We then ignore everything they say and carry on with the behavior that got us into the current mess.

  42. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Hognoxious · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's a shade of grey in there to be discovered somewhere between everything and nothing.

    You must be new here.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  43. Accounting Loopholes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you think this might have something to do with the Irish Tax Loop holes that companies use (among others)?

    1. Re:Accounting Loopholes by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Actually, it might have something to do with the lack of NEED to use those loopholes. When the tax burden was higher, corporations had the choice of growing enterprise by investing in R&D or losing fraction of that money by paying taxes on it. This was a tax loop hole. Now that the tax burden is lower, they make more money by leveraging their lower borrowing cost to buy out smaller players. The theory is that the money which get spent on buying out smaller players gets reinvested in more new enterprises. So this makes the R&D cycle more agile (no connection to Agile(TM) intended).

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    2. Re:Accounting Loopholes by squidflakes · · Score: 1

      And when was this? Because companies in the US currently enjoy some of the lowest tax rates in the developed world, and yet, still manage not to invest in community R&D projects.

    3. Re:Accounting Loopholes by superwiz · · Score: 1

      The larger companies do not appear to invest in R&D because they do not do most of their R&D directly. Again, their investment in R&D happens through investment in R&D start ups (think medical research companies with market caps of 100M or less) and then buying them out when the smaller companies' products get regulatory approvals. This doesn't show up as R&D in the budgets of the S&P 500. It shows up as M&A. But it does amount to channeling money in the R&D direction. The direct R&D investment was higher before the 90s (when the tax rate was higher). I am not sure what's a "community" R&D project. Just keep in mind, that a large portion of the money that is received through the buy outs ends up sponsoring further start ups (so the R&D reinvestment cycle continues).

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    4. Re:Accounting Loopholes by squidflakes · · Score: 1

      Community R&D is funding provided through grants or gifts to non-corporately owned research groups, typically through universities or independent labs that get most of their funding through government programs (usually the National Science Foundation) and make up the short falls with funds from corporate donations foundations.

      The work that comes out of these labs is usually publicly announced or contains research that would be difficult to capitalize but still has value as a starting point for further research.

      I think we may be talking at cross purposes here. I understood the article to be more about the public side or perhaps even something like DARPA rather than purely corporate R&D efforts.

      As an example, the Ford Motor Company has a pool of money reserved for a number of yearly grants and gifts for scientific research every year. This money is outside of their normal R&D efforts which are paid for by regular budgeting processes. Much like a company will make matching contributions to the United Way or other charity, Ford has supported a lot of independent research that has nothing to do with the automotive industry. Over the years though, that pool of money has shrunk, as have the pools normally available from other companies and foundations.

      At the same time, the money the government invests in independent research has also shrunk, putting a huge squeeze on labs and scientists across the country.

    5. Re:Accounting Loopholes by squidflakes · · Score: 1

      Oh, and my apologies, after re-reading your original comment I realized that my response seems sort of bizarre. I think I skimmed too much and didn't really get the meat of what you were saying.

  44. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 2

    Alright, reverse your thinking then:
    Some of the best inventions are simple and elegant solutions to historically cumbersome problems. You might one day have a eureka moment in which you realize that a very easily implemented bit of code can increase computations exponentially or work around some issue.

    In today's world you can spend $1000 and wait a few weeks to get a patent that will allow you to retire in style. Whereas with no patents, that big evil corporation can sick 10 coders(or engineers, or whatever, pick your industry) on your design and have the idea unraveled in a day or two and implemented in their code within a month. Your retirement is canceled. THAT is the worst case scenario if you abolish patents.

    The possibilities for anyone EXCEPT the massive corporations really coming out well with no protections on invention are miniscule. With the funding available to those corporations they can take your idea and have it produced at 1000x the rate and quantity, strongarm distributors and retailers, and saturate the market with a cheaper product. Do you think a bank is going to give you a loan to roll that product out knowing full well that there will be mimics on the market within weeks of your release that are cheaper and probably better? Do you think you can sell your idea to a corporation? Why would they buy it knowing their competitors will steal it?

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  45. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going to nit-pick your language a little bit: The patent-system exists because legislators and their constituents believe that it promotes innovation (limited monopolies provide an incentive to invent/patent/license). You might believe the results are the opposite, but that does not change the intent of the legislators. You are certainly right that some independent innovation is hindered because of the risk of patent-infringement liability. But you also needs to accept that we have trouble measuring the costs and benefits to all the economic actors in the system.

  46. Idiocracy by ch-chuck · · Score: 2

    So, Idiocracy was a prophetic documentary ;)

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  47. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 2

    You assume that the inventor is a corporation that can continue a trend of innovation, and not instead you or me in a garage somewhere.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  48. "Government share??" by Hasai · · Score: 2

    "In terms of federal research, in 1980 the federal government provided about 70% of all dollars spent on basic research, but since then the government's share of basic research funding given to all entities has fallen to 57%."

    You mean to tell me that this is part of the beef? That Great God Government (beat head three times on the floor in the direction of Washington) now has less control over what people can research?

    Can someone explain to me why this is a bad thing?

    --

    Regards;

    Hasai

    1. Re:"Government share??" by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because most companies will only invest money into research that is virtually guaranteed to be monetized in a short enough period of time to look good on the balance sheets while the corporate officers who decide to put money into R&D remain at the companies - translating into bigger bonuses for them. Such research is generally small incremental improvements of existing designs, such as drug companies slightly tweaking an existing drug so they can extend the patent. Actual basic research that can actually revolutionize things is by definition uncertain. Making any return on investment likewise uncertain and unattractive to companies that base their entire existence around that.

    2. Re:"Government share??" by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Economists have long known that there are only two fundamental contributors to real economic growth.

      1. Population growth.

      2. Technological growth.

      Put the kibosh on the second and you are in a world of hurt. This is exactly what the USA has been doing for the last 30 years.

      http://www.viodi.com/2011/02/27/can-u-s-reverse-the-decline-in-rd-spending-global-competitiveness-at-risk/

    3. Re:"Government share??" by artor3 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Because the private companies aren't picking up the slack. If you want cutting edge research into how to give old men erections, then the private industry is all over it. If you want research the better the state of humanity, but which won't put much money into the 1%'s pockets, then you damn well better hope the government is funding research, because no private industry would touch that with a ten foot pole.

    4. Re:"Government share??" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simply because those other than government require *more* control over the research...

    5. Re:"Government share??" by squidflakes · · Score: 1

      Because everyone's darling "the free market" isn't stepping in to provide those dollars. And, word to the wise, the government never decides what a project researches unless the lab is completely owned by a branch of the government. NSF grants and the like do nothing of the sort.

    6. Re:"Government share??" by beringreenbear · · Score: 1

      Private enterprise almost never funds something that can not be immediately turned into a product. You can more-or-less take this as an axiom.

      This means that there are vanishingly few sources of funding to perform basic R that is, the basic research that discovers new knowledge that is then refined and turned into a new product. This new product leads to competitive growth, but this growth would never have happened without the initial funding. See also: NASA (in it's hey-day). It's not that Government now has less control over what can be researched is a good or bad thing. It's that there are vanishingly few other sources of funding that fill in the gap when government does not fund basic research.

      Scientists and engineers have got to eat and pay the bills, too. If you want basic R&D, pay them. It just so happens that, for economic reasons, almost the only player in funding basic R&D is The State. This is much like the argument about who should pay for autopsies. Economically, no one will pay for them as the only person who benefits from the initial outlay of cash is the dead person. ...who's dead! Everyone else benefits from the results of the autopsy. Therefore, who should pay? The only vehicle that can do something for the common good of all is The State by definition.

    7. Re:"Government share??" by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      "In terms of federal research, in 1980 the federal government provided about 70% of all dollars spent on basic research, but since then the government's share of basic research funding given to all entities has fallen to 57%."

      So wait a minute. In 1980, the Federal Government was providing 70% of basic research funding. Meaning, 30% came from private industry.

      Now, in 2012, the Federal Government is providing 57% of basic research funding. Meaning, 43% comes from private industry.

      You're arguing that private industry isn't "filling in the game. But they're spending 13% MORE (proportionally) in 2011 than they were in 1980.

      You seem to be arguing the EXACT OPPOSITE of what the blurb we've been reading says. What am I missing?

    8. Re:"Government share??" by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      That was supposed to be "filling in the gap", not "filling in the game". Sorry. Didn't preview.

    9. Re:"Government share??" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you lack even a basic understanding of how percentages work? This is embarrassing. If the government spends $70 billion and private industry spends $30 billion, we have the stated 70/30 split. If the government cuts back to $40 billion and private industry spends $30 billion, we now have the 57/43 split without private industry spending a single dime more. An increase in percentage says absolutely nothing about an increase in amount spent unless you also know the total amount spent.

    10. Re:"Government share??" by Maow · · Score: 1

      "In terms of federal research, in 1980 the federal government provided about 70% of all dollars spent on basic research, but since then the government's share of basic research funding given to all entities has fallen to 57%."

      You mean to tell me that this is part of the beef? That Great God Government (beat head three times on the floor in the direction of Washington) now has less control over what people can research?

      Can someone explain to me why this is a bad thing?

      Because governments used to invest in research that had long term payoff; corporate research tends toward short term payoff.

      You've heard of, say, the Internet? Government research / funding to get it going to a critical mass. Space exploration and its derivative benefits? Government spending... Someone has to do basic science research, not just research into selling new shiny toys to consumers.

      Also, it's idiotic to say,

      now has less control over what people can research

      it's not so much that government is dictating what can and cannot be researched (except by small government types like Republicans banning stem cell research of certain types), it's that the gov't isn't funding research directly.

    11. Re:"Government share??" by Maow · · Score: 1

      (My posts have been disappearing today; I hope this isn't a double post as the original one is not showing, I swear!)

      "In terms of federal research, in 1980 the federal government provided about 70% of all dollars spent on basic research, but since then the government's share of basic research funding given to all entities has fallen to 57%."

      You mean to tell me that this is part of the beef? That Great God Government (beat head three times on the floor in the direction of Washington) now has less control over what people can research?

      Can someone explain to me why this is a bad thing?

      Because governments tended to fund long term research where benefits might not appear for a decade. Corporations tend to invest in research that has payoffs measured in months or a few years.

      i.e. Government financed research into the Internet (you may have heard of it), space exploration, etc., which have had huge benefits that didn't appear for a decade or more.

      Also, it's idiotic (in more ways than one) to say

      Government (beat head three times on the floor in the direction of Washington) now has less control over what people can research?

      Government isn't dictating what can and cannot be researched (except small-government Republicans who blocked government-funded into research into stem cells, expected to have massive long-term benefits: this has driven the research elsewhere).

  49. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    "Why limit it to software patents? Our country did so well at the beginning (in part) because we completely ignored the old world's patents. Patents exist to hinder competitors, and are slowing down our progress."

    Completely irrelevant. A patent in one country still isn't valid in another. Try again.

  50. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, how about protecting patents only until the cost of investment has been earned, then you have to compete fairly. Real costs, no bullshit hollywood accounting.

  51. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by steelfood · · Score: 1

    Make it so that websites can't be taken offline at the drop of a hat (or a suspected case of copyright infringement).

    You can't have a thriving economy and strong "IP" protections, because the very purpose of said protections is to allow "temporary" monopolies. Monopolies do not create a thriving economy. Monopolies lead to stagnation and regression.

    The purpose of the temporary monopoly is to give the creater or inventor incentive to create and invent. It is not to give the creater or inventor lifetime exclusivity to the creation or invention.

    But none of your "advisors" is going to tell you that.

    --
    "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  52. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Xugumad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > You might one day have a eureka moment in which you realize that a very easily implemented bit of code can increase computations exponentially or work around some issue.

    Do you have any examples?

    From my point of view, very little is done as a small, isolated invention these days. I would indicate, for example, Facebook. The idea of Facebook is trivial to reverse engineer, and numerous attempts at improved versions have been attempted, but most have failed with a few (LinkedIn springs to mind) carving out small niches for themselves. The secret ingredient is no longer in a single trivially replicated invention, but in a process (how Facebook has evolved as a platform has kept it ahead of the competition - although I'll admit getting market share early also helped a lot).

    I'd also argue that if you simply have a eureka moment, why is that enough to let you retire? Surely we should be looking to reward effort expended over luck?

  53. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    0) Most ideas are a dime a dozen, the difficult bit is actually doing it well and successfully. Despite all their efforts on copying China isn't going to get a man on the moon by next month. Why should someone who just happened to patent some obvious idea be able to stop others who could be better able at implementing the idea?

    China wont be in the moon next month because they dont have the technology. If China had hands-on all of our space tech, they would most certainly be in a position to do anything we can do, and do it cheaper. That's the whole point. That's why we keep or space and military tech secret ; So that we remain dominant and the advantages inherent in our investment remain ours, at least for some period of time.

    Why would an innovator not want to be protected in the same manner?

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  54. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1
    Which is exactly why I said :

    There's a shade of grey in there to be discovered somewhere between everything and nothing.

    :)

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  55. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by trum4n · · Score: 1

    We need to make a law about who gets the patent. If all my hard work goes directly to my company, and i see nothing out of it, why should i bother? Prevent this, and i feel a lot more ideas will see the light. Also, make the process public and easy. Why do i need to hire a lawyer just to file a patent?

  56. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    In the consumer market they do quite the opposite, but in science they do. Do I really need to explain further? The wheel's a lot harder to reinvent.

  57. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    And before that people were stealing each other's ideas from under their noses, a smart guy invents something, and a marketing fag steals it and makes a fortune. Idk wtf your talking about...

    The innovators find themselves in a situation in which they made all the investment but cannot recoup the costs, while others are enriched without taking on the risk.

    Why can't the innovator have investors? Also what if the innovator holds the patent (like most do)? The patent system is exactly designed anti your statement. Some are saying it's TOO effective.

  58. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

    They have to pretend it does promote innovation, but that doesn't mean they actually believe it does. They have to pretend that the CTEA promoted authorship, but I doubt anybody that voted for it actually believed that would be the result.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  59. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The poster didn't say kill *all* patents. Just software patents. That makes a HUGE difference.

    For example, producing a useful drug costs a fortune and takes forever due to the ridiculous amount of experimentation involved. Software development does not have those costs.

    Furthermore, the patents being granted are to very obvious things which are having a chilling effect on software development. Not a stimulating effect. Software patents are doing the *exact opposite* of what patents are supposed to do (to software).

    So, your example doesn't apply in the context of software development, and software patents should absolutely be abolished in order to foster software innovation.

  60. The chinese by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    Could it have anything to do with us getting hacked 100x times. As an off-shore investor would you really wan the USA "cloud" when A. the government can pretty much commandeer your shit w/o a warrant. And the Chinese seem to have unlimited access to American data. Our IT market probably looks very very unattractive for off shore companies w all the "IT" stuff going on this country that's been strangling internet freedom.

    1. Re:The chinese by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Well then why does everyone in the USA keep trying to shift everything to the cloud? To keep capitalist software in business against the forces of piracy on the one hand, market saturation on another, Free Software on the third hand, and genuine technological issues with desktops on the last.

    2. Re:The chinese by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      1. They're stupid (practicality / long term solutions)
      2. They're arrogant (expectation of trust on data security)

      Irregardless this push makes us look undesirable to put it nicely.

    3. Re:The chinese by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Oh fair enough. I'm slowly working on a solution to this problem, but...

  61. To whomever modded the parent as "troll" by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

    Let me explain what I meant. Many liberals seems to be strongly influenced by sympathy for every member of society. I think this is the impetus for some U.S. public schools having eliminated "tracking", in which students are assigned into groups of like-performing individuals. What the GP seemed to be arguing for was, essentially, "tracking" (in the educational sense). That's why I expected it was anathema to many or most liberals.

    1. Re:To whomever modded the parent as "troll" by SirGarlon · · Score: 2

      I have found, the hard way, that one's choice of words matter a lot when the moderators are handing out points. But it's not just liberals who are opposed to tracking -- it's any parent whose kid is not in the "A" track.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  62. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    Facebook : Perfect example.

    Started in 2004 for a college kid and some roomates and classmates. Originally available to just his college campus.

    At that time (2004) what was Microsoft worth?
    How about IBM?
    What about HP?
    Wasnt that the year that Google became a publicly traded company?


    I wonder if any of those entities would have had the ability to take the concept of facebook and roll it out exponentially bigger, faster, with greater resources....

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  63. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    If you go to a guy with a massive bankroll, a factory, a staff of engineers and ties to manufacturing, distrubution and marketing, and you show him a design for a brand new kind of widget, why would he make you a millionaire by funding it? You just gave him the idea. He can just start making it.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  64. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Genda · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Its not the issue of racism. Its the wholesale destruction of entire sectors of the work force as companies look for ways to cut their bottom line. I'm looking for a tech job in the silicon valley. Over the last 3 months I have to say I'm getting sick and tired of not having spoken to a single person who is American, speaks without an intense Indian or Chinese accent (in fact I may have passed over perfectly good jobs because the person speaking to me was completely and I mean completely unintelligible.) I've worked with hundreds of people from India and China (hell I'm half Chinese, my Mother is Chinese, I was born in Taiwan.) I don't have a problem with these people's race, I like them, I like their food, I love their cultures. I have a problem with the fact that I've watched my salary slowly erode to about 50%. How am I supposed to compete with a tidal wave of HB-1 visas who come from a country with a billion people so the fact that they represent the top half a percentile and have a Masters degree, still means there are millions of them and they're perfectly willing to take my job at half the price. If it now takes a Masters Degree to get a job pushing a broom in the valley because of the glut of skilled foreign workers, there's no room for native workers, how is a native worker supposed to compete. there's no finance for older native workers to improve themselves (the collapsing state economy has steadily made going back to school harder and harder.) There's no market for young fresh native workers coming out of school. All the while, money that would be spent here to improve our State's economy is being pumped into making China or India more wealthy.

    Out sourcing jobs in general and the tech market in particular is, in my opinion the very best way possible to implode both America's economy and future ability to determine it's own technological future. All you have to do to make something disappear in America is stop investing in it. Stop investing in skilled American workers, and surprise, in no time at all, they'll just go away. I have good friends who used to be happy engineers, engineering away. Now they cook food, or sell real estate (good luck with that), or they've moved into the health care industry. What they don't do is engineering. All it took was two massive economic busts since 2001. I look at the ads today on DICE, and its crazy what they're asking now for a customer support engineer. If you're tired of talking to people with Punjabi accents think enough to dull a knife when you call for technical support, tell the vendors you deal with, that you want to speak to an American support engineers in the future, in fact let them know you will now stop doing business with companies that outsource their support. OR, you won't have to worry any more, because very soon there won't be any here to do the job anyway.

    Outsourcing makes sense for tiny start-ups paying to realize a dream out of there own packets in the midst of the bootstrap (though as our currency meets parity with the yuan and the rupee, even this use is quick disappearing.) I'm just saying, we need to provide serious tax incentives for companies that use native workers and even more serious tax liabilities for companies that heavily outsource. The world is flattening out economically, and that's probably a good thing at a number of levels. But until we reach that point, if we don't protect our working class, we'll destroy the American consumer, and then where's our economy? We're in the midst of the economic spasms caused by American corporations trying to squeeze the beast from both ends and killing off the American workforce in the process. Its time to say enough. its time to ensure that Americans have meaningful work first, because short-sighted runs to profit ultimately hurt everyone save a vanishingly small few. This blind free-fall to the bottom of the pig trough by Corporate America needs to come to a crashing halt, while there's something still left to save.

  65. Gosh, I wonder why? by wcrowe · · Score: 2

    "We came up with a plan to increase competitiveness and innovation," an administration spokesman said, "but we discovered that the process had already been patented, so we had to cancel the project."

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
    1. Re: Gosh, I wonder why? by evilviper · · Score: 1

      "but we discovered that the process had already been patented, so we had to cancel the project."

      Bull. We got modern aircraft from companies trying to work their way around the Wright brothers' patents. Did you notice 747s don't have "wing warping"?

      WebM/VP8 only exists because working around MPEG patents was profitable enough to sustain On2's codec development efforts. Hell, MPEG only exists because of Intel buying control of Cinepak and people wanting an alternative.

      Patents have been a very large motivator for research and development. Their tarnished status today is due to an increasingly fucked-up legal system, not anything actually wrong with patents.

      So point me to these patents that are impossible to workaround and also not worth the license fee.

      And spare me the "Gimme Gimme" crowd who just want to use the tech developed at great expense by everyone else, without having to pay for it (the short-sighted version of the prisioner's dilemma)...

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  66. EAT IT by icongorilla · · Score: 2

    I currently translate Japanese academic documents to English for an Indian company while living in Seattle Washington for less than minimuim wage. This is your future folks. You as might as well get ready to sell your things now because you aren't going to be able to afford to keep any of it.

    --
    The thought of hanging myself at my student loan organization doesn't bug me as much when I think it might make a differ
    1. Re:EAT IT by Disfnord · · Score: 1

      But all my things are cheap Chinese crap. Who in their right mind would want to buy that used?

  67. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    Because your non-dumbass patented it before showing your idea to others. It's happened plenty the other way around, some inventors have just proven themselves to be absent minded when it comes to marketing, they barely relate sometimes. Nike swoosh guy is a perfect example (that one ended OK though after a few decades).

  68. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

    Actually, we weren't. There were indeed rich people who owned slaves, but slavery tends to act as an economic crutch, and there are actually solid economics arguments against slavery.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  69. Finnancial innovation can replace tech one by umghhh · · Score: 2

    so no one has to worry - heroes of Wall Street will save the day for everyone....

  70. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by smpoole7 · · Score: 1

    Sure. I was agreeing with you, albeit in a long-winded sort of way. :)

    --
    Cogito, igitur comedam pizza.
  71. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

    The patent system exists as it does because established companies wish to inhibit innovation that could cause them economic harm and they have the pockets to buy legislators to do their bidding.

  72. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    I failed to respond to that last line...

    I work with many well-meaning morons. I also work with hard-working beauracrats, backstabbers, and miscreants. I don't care they put in massive effort, if the product of that is at best garbage and at worst cancerous self-service I dont believe reward is what they should recieve.

    It's a natural law that those able to overcome are those rewarded with a continuation of their line. As much as the progressives would have you believe that everyone should get a participation award, Darwin would disagree.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  73. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by next_ghost · · Score: 1

    The "we" you're talking about is actually just a handful of megacorporations that make those patented technologies in China and India. The "we" you should be talking about, small businesses that have no choice but to make their inventions locally, were thrown overboard decades ago and have no vested interest worth speaking of.

  74. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Xugumad · · Score: 2

    Any of those companies could have taken the concept of Facebook and implemented their own, but they would have remained playing catch-up with features in Facebook (as it moved from a college-centric system to a more generalised social media platform, as the API was released, etc.)

    I would also point out that Facebook patent filings appear to have first been done in 2006 ( http://www.seobythesea.com/2010/01/facebook-patent-filings/ ), two years later.

    As it stands, it took Google 7 years to get its own Facebook-clone out, and that's doing decidedly mixedly so far. I don't recall patents being amongst G+'s issues, though...

  75. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by scottbomb · · Score: 1

    Your company doesn't pay you? If you're doing your research on company time with the company's equipment, property, etc, then they rightfully get the patent. If it's not your job to invent/innovate at the company, then do it on your own time and get your own patent.

  76. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Anything that is trivial to reverse engineer and steal in such a manner probably didn't require that much R&D and isn't worth a patent, certainly for the length of time current patents grant a monopoly."

    Once a new drug is on the market its exact formulation is known, so reverse engineering is a trivial matter. However the required R&D for a new drug is typically around 10 years and $1 billion.

  77. Another Bush Legacy by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    NAFTA opened up a lot of doorways to cheap labor in other countries. The manufacturing and tech sectors followed the cheap labor by off-shoring jobs and facilities. NAFTA basically sterilized the manufacturing and tech sector jobs in the US but it was *sick* profit for the corporations who were now setting up shop in every 2-bit town south of the border. The situation we're in now isn't a surprise to anyone who was in those sectors back in the 90s. "America's Tech Future" was decided on a long time ago.

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    1. Re:Another Bush Legacy by JayBean · · Score: 2

      Except that it was signed under the Clinton Administration. True, Bush (the elder) did start the whole thing, but Clinton came into office, made some changes, and endorsed it.

    2. Re:Another Bush Legacy by RicoX9 · · Score: 1

      And Bush & Co did everything they could to accelerate the rush of jobs and manufacturing offshore while simultaneously bankrupting the country by lowering taxes and starting multiple un-winnable "wars". Our great-great-grandchildren will be paying our debt if the country hasn't declared default by then. Most likely the US will be a wholly-owned subsidiary of China and Monsanto by then.

  78. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    A piece of software can easily cost millions in development. Reverse engineering it would cost thousands. My example stands perefectly well.

    There are sites for HP and IBM that are almost entirely R&D that each house 1000 to 3000 people, or more. A group might produce a product after an 18-24 month cycle, IF they come up with a workable idea. For every one product that makes it off the manufacturing floor and into the hands of a customer there are another 10 that failed during some part of the product lifecycle. Failure or not, that's investment that someone else need not put money into if they can just steal the workable idea after the fact.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  79. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    So all the competitors who spent millions on research and development and arrived at the same conclusions should just eat the loss? Please, patents make no sense for software and should be limited to machines and physically realized inventions.

    Frankly, given how much innovation comes from publicly funded research in computer science and from startups that do not have a patent war chest, I find it difficult to believe that ending the age of software patents would somehow kill innovation in this country. Most of the major leaps forward in software have occurred because people could build on the work of others, and not have to worry about going to court because of an algorithm buried deep in their code. Just about all the software in use today is built on many layers of other software.

    To put it another way, had TCP been patented, there would be no world wide web, no Google, and pretty much all the flashy technology that the news media loves to report on would never have been created.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  80. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by ChatHuant · · Score: 2

    I spent a portion of my life in Michigan, where tax incentives were all over the place, trying to keep GM, Ford, Chrysler in the towns they were in, but even after all the tax breaks and assistance the companies still moved a lot of manufacturing to Mexico, Brazil, Spain, Japan, etc. Now almost everyone is moving manufacturing to Thailand, China or Vietnam - with reform efforts in Burma expect investment (read: moving manufacturing and research there as well.)

    Of course this happens, and I don't know why anybody is surprised. Even with taxes at 0, the companies in the US would still need to pay the workers' wages, and comply with various environmental and work safety laws. All the kowtowing to corporations states and municipalities do is just pathetic and sad - states and municipalities don't use any stick and just don't have enough carrot, since even with no taxes at all, the balance sheet is still very much in favor of corporations moving their production elsewhere. That's a direct result of unfettered globalization, and that's why I think politicians peddling economic revival via tax cuts are mostly liars, and people buying into this concept are mostly idiots.
     
    The taxes aren't and haven't been the problem (and neither are environmental regulations, no matter what the Wall Street Journal whines about). The problem is rather the fact that corporations are allowed to game the system. They use the freedom of trade to create jobs where wages and regulations are low, and to sell the merchandise where the money (still) is. The money corporations get isn't invested it back nor used to pay wages in the rich countries, where it comes from; instead corporations pay a pittance to the workers, some good bribes to a few select politicians, to make sure the status quo is maintained, and the rest is profit.

    IMHO, the government should take a much harder look at outsourcing; a corporation that has outsourced its factories should be forced by law to respect the USA environmental and labor standards for any product it wants to sell back into the USA. This would go some way towards making production in the USA a more interesting alternative, and it would also help the workers everywhere. Unfortunately the government doesn't have the intestinal fortitude to even look askance at corporations

  81. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    Actually, I started the arguments about facebook a little late in its history. 6 days after launching thefacebook.com Zuckerburg was accused of having mislead 3 other people into believing he was going to help them launch a social netoworking site. They accused Zuckerburg of using their ideas to produce thefacebook.com, and what later evolved into Facebook.

    If only they had had a patent....

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  82. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by artor3 · · Score: 2

    Are you kidding me? Ir's always easier to reverse engineer something than it is to make it in the first place, especially in things like pharmaceuticals and mechanical designs. But that's not even important, because companies routinely outsource manufacturing. That would become corporate suicide in a world with no IP. Every company would need to produce everything itself. You couldn't have fabless semiconductor companies... instead every company would need to build its own multibillion dollar fab.

    The abolishment of IP would be the death of engineering.

  83. Obviously. by endus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What's so sad about all this is that anyone outside of the government and the (pardon the term) 1% have known this was coming for a long time now. Hell, I'm sure they knew it was coming too, they just didn't care because they are traitors out to corrupt capitalism and democracy to line their own pockets. I have no problem with capitalism, it's the only viable economic system, but you cannot allow people to corrupt the system of government to tilt the playing field in their favor. That's not capitalism.

    I love how the Republicans whine about liberals being in favor of "wealth redistribution" when their own policies are clearly aimed at wealth redistribution in the other direction. Neither strategy is capitalistic and neither strategy is viable in the long term. How, exactly, is propping up the music industry, an industry with a completely outdated business model and declining content quality, capitalism? How is it helpful to the country to do so? The answer, of course, is that it isn't. It's just what happens when you let executives of the failing industry bribe politicians legally. Meanwhile, the copyright legislation they have pushed for is wreaking havoc on the innovation which made America competitive in the first place. They sell this to voters under the illusion that the US will be on top of the food chain forever, regardless of what we do, and we can just dictate new rules when we don't like the old ones. It's not going to work that way for long.

    There have been articles on the decline of basic research in this country for years now. I remember posting links to USENET on the same ever so long ago. It's the same thing that has happened to manufacturing that people have been decrying for decades. The US is moving towards an economy based entirely on gambling in the stock market. We don't produce things anymore, hell we don't even INVEST in things anymore, we just let bankers find new ways to wring more money out of the middle class. High frequency trading? Seriously? No one sees a problem with an industry that produces absolutely no value and no product whatsoever? This is all well and good for them...until the rest of the world catches on that they are adding no value they can continue to exploit them as well. However, they'll be driving their Mercedes through endless ghetto with bullets whizzing by their windows.

    It's not a sustainable model for a society, but it is exactly what we are heading for and it's exactly what we deserve. We've chosen to become fat and stupid and to allow ourselves to support people who offer nothing in return. Liberals are certainly NO better, but where I see it the most is in the Republican party. People are willing to go to the mat for people who make more in a year than they will in their lifetime, even though those people are demonstrably bad at their jobs. Executives are leaving companies worse off than when they started and yet somehow still receive massive bonuses...and the right leaning middle class supports this! Their ostensibly "capitalism friendly" political opinions lead them into arguments with leftists...and they forget that they're not just supposed to oppose leftists, but they're supposed to be capitalists themselves and support capitalistic policies. They shout down people who decry poor copyright legislation and invest in companies which are just garbage. Look at the tech bubble. All you had to do was get an IT kid fresh out of college, pay him 40 grand a year, and he could tell you that investing in a company that had no product and provided no service, but had a nifty website, was a bad idea.

    I could rant all day about this stuff. Won't do any good though. The stupid have won and the system is beyond hope. Hopefully I can eek out a decent living and die before the inevitable crash.

  84. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by P-niiice · · Score: 1

    You want to foster innovation? Make it so a company doesn't have to spend zillions on lawyers to deal with trolls.

    We'd see CEO's come up with some nice innovative ways to spend the extra millions, that's for sure.

  85. lot of fluff by khallow · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Glancing through the "executive summary", I see a blatant case of bias right off the bat. The summary mentions three pillars: research, education, and infrastructure. It fails to mention the real pillar: healthy private enterprise. With that, you can fund the three pillars above. Without it, you're eventually going to fail. Even if you can find the funds to support the three pillars, you have no way to bring it to the market, meaning someone else will reap the rewards of your effort.

    Second, it makes the assumption that government spending on these pillars works. As I noted in a recent thread about government funded engineering and research, there are vast differences of several orders of magnitude in how efficient research projects are from the best to the worst.

    Perhaps the Obama administration has enough of a clue to set up effective research operations though I haven't seen any indication of that. But even if so, we still have to face that Congress, holder of the purse, has little interest in efficient research operations nor do most of the likely recipients of the funding.

    This particularly holds for the least accountable of scientific research, so-called "blue sky" research. Obviously, the US government is quite capable of spending lots of money on blue sky research, but I don't grant that it is similarly capable of getting lots of blue sky research in return for that money.

    We see similar problems with the other two pillars. Educational loans are notorious for having massively driven up the cost of education while simultaneously resulting in a drop in quality of many college degrees. And infrastructure building is a shifty past time that often results in near useless, overly expensive, or shoddy infrastructure that doesn't serve the role for which it was constructed.

    This incidentally was the original topic of the thread when someone alleged that engineers are envious of China because of its ability to order massive engineering projects (which also happen to be infrastructure building projects). My original disagreement a few posts up that thread was that such projects had several serious problems with them, chiefly a deeply flawed implementation (but also bad economics) that made them unworthy of an engineer's consideration. That didn't go over well for some reason.

    None of these address the gap between coming up with something in the lab and transporting that to something useful to society. It's not innovation, if that gap cannot be jumped.

  86. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by stretch0611 · · Score: 2

    You're overstating the problem. For 100 gold I can hire a fighter and a cleric. Problem solved.

    A muscle bound men at arms is cheap... However, the last I checked, the price of a decent healer is a lot of money and keeps on going up every year.

    --
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  87. This will get fixed as soon as outsourcing stops. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 2

    (Sarcasm) See? It's just that simple. But of course, outsourcing must be right because the market never makes mistakes. (End Sarcasm).
    We lose a lot of engineering competence when college students see a 4-year engineering degree as a way to compete with folks making $10 an hour at most, while a business, law or medical degree are easier and almost guarantee a higher income. Not only that, we tend to give away what expertise we do have every time we outsource the manufacture of a new item to a foreign country.

    So what do you *expect* to happen?

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  88. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, we weren't. There were indeed rich people who owned slaves, but slavery tends to act as an economic crutch, and there are actually solid economics arguments against slavery.

    This is wrong.
    Slavery is cheap labor that you don't care about (you wouldn't give a shit about the quality of life of slaves when you determined your country's average quality of life of), and that doesn't cost the public much (don't need to factor those bodies in when building roads, hospitals, courts, schools, etc., etc.).

    Slavery is a bad thing, but it's always a mathematically better option when talking about cost and output.

    The only economic argument against slavery is that the cheap labor prevents people from inventing faster, easier, and more efficient ways of doing things. However this is just untrue. Slaves are laborers, and just as new methods, tools and machines displace the regular workforce, they did the same for the enslaved workforce back in the day.

    There was this little thing called the cotton gin that basically sums this all up.

  89. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    ...had TCP been patented, there would be no world wide web, no Google, and pretty much all the flashy technology that the news media loves to report on would never have been created.

    Sure there would. There would just be a person, a group or a company that made a lot of money on that innovative idea. From our perspective the differences would be impercetable.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  90. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by andy1307 · · Score: 1

    we need to provide serious tax incentives for companies that use native workers and even more serious tax liabilities for companies that heavily outsource.

    So should we apply tariffs on imported products as well? Or is it just a problem when it's YOUR ox being gored?

  91. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

    You assume that the inventor is a corporation that can continue a trend of innovation, and not instead you or me in a garage somewhere.

    There are many independent individual inventors that have hundreds of patents and many successful products. Quantity (corporate cubical-farms of wage-slaves) doesn't always trump quality (a single individual with drive, talent, intellect, and ability). You may well get a higher number of patents from a cubical-farm, but the individual inventor is more likely IMHO to come up with something that is truly game-changing.

    One big advantage a large business has is the marketing skills, capital, and ability to monetize an invention and/or patent. Sadly, even in situations where available capital isn't the issue, the single inventor suffers because most don't have the skills to develop and market their invention and/or use their patent(s) to best advantage.

    One other point. The "Corporation(TM) VS Inventor" theme isn't always so pure and simple like the movies. Many corporations formed as a result of an inventor coming up with a product or idea and forming a corporation so as to gather people around to help with the development/marketing/monetization that he may not have the skills for, as I mentioned above. So, you may have a situation where a small inventor is selling his invention/patent to another, more-successful inventor who formed a corporation. Thus, the invention is more likely to see development and actual production than if it had languished in somebody's garage.

    The problem isn't big corporations, it's corrupt government that's turned the patent/trademark/copyright systems into competition-suppression systems. History shows that in general, corruption in government tracks with the size of government, regardless of type of government, with few exceptions. Not how wealthy corporations or individuals are.

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  92. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

    Some of the best inventions are simple and elegant solutions to historically cumbersome problems. You might one day have a eureka moment in which you realize that a very easily implemented bit of code can increase computations exponentially or work around some issue.

    And the sooner these are in public domain, the better off the world will be.

    But not you personally! Poor baby.

    Your retirement is canceled. THAT is the worst case scenario if you abolish patents.

    I'm honestly not sure if you're arguing for or against patents at this point.

    Seriously? How first-world-problem is this? Retirement was never guaranteed, much less early retirement. A lot of modern companies got as large as they are today because they weren't founded by idiots who thought that the key to happiness in life was doing as little as possible.

    But go ahead. Patent your idea so that others can't use it, explicitly so you don't have to contribute anything for the rest of your life. By all means.

    The possibilities for anyone EXCEPT the massive corporations really coming out well with no protections on invention are miniscule. With the funding available to those corporations they can take your idea and have it produced at 1000x the rate and quantity, strongarm distributors and retailers, and saturate the market with a cheaper product.

    If you gave away your idea for a software algorithm (the algorithm more than the code itself, mind you, as copyright still applies), it will almost certainly be included in open source projects. There's not a lot of cheaper products than free. Whether or not these are high enough quality to win in the market, who knows, but they'll exist.

    So I really don't understand your point at all.

  93. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Instead they can spend a ton of money on research and development, produce a product, and a month later find themselves competing with a dozen competitors who invested nothing in research and developement and can therefor sell the product for a fraction of the cost and still make a profit.

    I challenge you to list me one innovation in the software realm in that past 5 or 6 years that genuinely deserves a patent. Something truly innovative that someone with decent undergraduate education couldn't have implemented independently.

    Here's a hint: "doing something that we've already done *over wireless*, *by touch interface*, or *as a service*" are not innovative.

    The only thing that I can think of in the past 35 years is the RSA or LZ algorithms, but they cant be patented since it is math.

  94. Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does it occur to the Nobama administration that, coincidentally, increasing the length of copyright while copyright is being used to protect technological innovation resulted in a downward trend in technological development? Patents last 20 years because politicians realized that protecting technology for longer periods of time causes technological innovation stagnation. Now that politicians are all in corporate pockets, especially Democrats like Carter and Clinton, technological innovation is protected by incredibly long copyright laws. As pointed out hundreds of years ago the longer you protect current technology the less incentive there is to develop new technology. Duh.

  95. College does not tech the right skills and to many by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    College does not tech the right skills and to many people are going to it who are not college material.

    Why are college have lot's of filler classes that are not needed?

    Why do people like jobs' who DON't have a college degrees get look down on? Job's did a lot with out the high cost piece of paper (and that was back in the day where less people where going to college)

    Does does tech schools get look down on?

    Why does tech not have apprenticeships?

    Why was the PayPal founder Peter Thiel paying for entrepreneurs to skip college and work on startup's?

    Why in CS is there a BIG GAP from what you learn in college and the real job? tech schools have alot more real job skills.

    people who are not college material. but can do a tech schools or apprenticeships?

  96. remove health plan for the job so people can go ou by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    remove health plan for the job so people can go out on there own and come up with ideas.

  97. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    I realize that many of my arguments have leaned toward a depiction of corporations being evil. That is not my intent, and I do not believe it. I use those arguments more as a means of reversing the argument on those who think the little guy would be better off if they were able to eliminate patent law.

    The protections of patents rightly protect all parties. It's not a perfect system by any stretch (often promoting the filing of a patent on the 'who knows, someone might actually want this shit someday' line of thinking). But it's better than no system IMO.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  98. The inevitable result by squidflakes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A certain segment of the /. population loves to decry government involvement in anything, stating that business, unhindered, would naturally step-in to cure the various evils and ills that the government is so inept at dealing with, and the service would be better, people would be happier, and a modest profit could be made on the side.

    Having seen the results of this sort of thinking first hand, I can honestly say that these people are delusional. Of course, I know that I won't ever convince them to change their minds (especially when I insult them), but I feel like typing, so here goes.

    I used to be a lab assistant working in a large U.S. university's biomedical research facility. The area I worked was devoted to the keeping, raising, and study of cephalopods. We were the largest such facility in the US and among the top in the world for that type of science. Granted, it is a very specialized field, but the prestige was genuine and we attracted top talent.

    Most of our funding came from government grants. The NSF and a few others were our bread and butter even though most of our research was directed toward marketable technologies and techniques. We also sold squid parts to commercial labs. Turns out, squid have a massive axion connecting their eye and the optical lobe of the brain. If humans had a T1 running from our eyes to our brains, squid have an OC-198. We also researched the color changing properties of cephalopod skin, their hydraulic muscle structure, their three heart circulatory system, their corneas and eye lenses (they match ours btw. If you've ever had eye surgery to replace a torn lens, thank a squid), their ink, and their behavior.

    To keep all of these critters in one building took a lot of large equipment and a lot of highly skilled people; people that could have made buckets of cash in a commercial setting but chose the lab because we were figuring out thinks like why squid don't get cancer or suffer nearly as many degenerative diseases of the eye. We were trying to figure out why squid and octopuses suffered dementia near the end of their lives and how we could help prevent it. See, once we do that in squid, the way to doing it in people is considerably shorter.

    Anyway, all that work took money and that meant begging Uncle Sam for more and more cash which seemed to take more and more paperwork every year. What the government couldn't or wouldn't fund, we supplemented with corporate donations and gifts. The whammy here is that a bunch of biologists who would rather be in 30 feet of water in the Caribbean watching squid fuck are notoriously terrible at convincing others of the need for their research. Still, it had to get done, and done it got. Once you knew the way to fill everything out for the government, it was much easier. They were concerned that you weren't fucking off with the money, that you weren't engaged in monkey torture or feeding rat poison to children, and that you were accounting for every penny. If they were going to give you money, they wanted to know what you did with it. Ok, cool, keep our receipts and stop feeding rat poison to the local children, easily done. The corporate "gifts" and donations were another kettle of squid. They too wanted to know that you weren't fucking off with the money, and wanted it accounted down to the penny, but they were neutral on most ethical subjects. They also wanted to give suggestions. Hey, it would really help out BigCo. if you could figure out a way to reliably and cheaply extract or synthesize cephalotoxin or some tetrodotoxin. In fact, it would help so much that your grant rides on your ability to do so.

    And there is the hook. Sure, it is the corporation's money to do as they see fit, but when they step in to "help" they don't want base research, they don't want behavior studies, and they don't give a shit about learning to understand cephalopod communications or the possibility of sentience, they want something that will help their bottom line and they want it right god damn now.

    No

    1. Re:The inevitable result by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 2

      Put more simply, no government regulation = gang/mafia rule (e.g. Somalia). Too much = dysfunctional dictatorship (e.g. North Korea). We have real world examples. It's just that the politicians and media are made to ignore them.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    2. Re:The inevitable result by squidflakes · · Score: 1

      I guess its the Buddhist in me, but I would definitely agree. Balance in all things is the way to go.

    3. Re:The inevitable result by sonoftheright · · Score: 0

      I think you're attacking a straw man here. Let me clue you in on what the anti-government folks actually mean when they promote the private sector:

      First, your example presents quite an interesting little morsel for me to masticate for you: the difference in philosophy and approach between government and commercial grants. You must realize that the government doesn't mind funding science projects - it gets to list those little donations on its budget, and taxpayers generally aren't against our countries' funding of scientific advancement (as long as it's clean; hence, the ethical accountability - you've got to keep a clean paper trail). However, the anti-government types naturally rail against the government's purpose and mindset towards investment: to divert a steady, forced flow of taxpayer money towards projects that "look reasonable" and don't disturb the general flow. Why does a government official want anything else? Keep their citizen base happy - or at least tolerant - and they will resign to being sapped of a portion of their lifesblood.

      Now, compare this philosophy to that of the corporation. Of course they're greedy. Of course they're profit-seeking. Of course they're only in this business for themselves. However, in order to feed these needs, they rely on the willing and voluntary cooperation of a large customer base (as opposed to the entire population of tolerant taxpayers), and they need to maintain standards to keep that customer base happy enough to keep buying. Innovation and investment - even in fringe, "no-profit" ventures - can be advertised as the "corporation helping out the little guy scientist," etc. for commercial gain, but they will also want to find as much profitable edge as they can.

      It's this needed edge - the need to keep a customer base pleased, to beat out competition, and win over a skeptical populace - that spurs a private corporation on. And the only way to spur itself on, as khallow mentions, is allowing the private industry a part in these innovations and using its influence to drive the productivity and practicality of these ventures to new heights. "Jumping the gap" is what spurs growth.

      Many, at this point, will shake their heads and grumble: "What about those fields of knowledge that are not profitable to the private industry?" Well, profitability takes many forms. Increasing a concentration on the worth of new knowledge and research - through the education system, through non-profit programs devoted to the study of these topics, through transmission of the viral need for more knowledge - would allow there to be programs people would be able to donate to if they wished to spur on research in these topics. These in turn could contribute to the complementary departments in respected universities to inspire research and deeper exploration in healthy environments.

      Government involvement is only decried because of the unsustainable waste of money essentially robbed from the general populace, becoming a giant money-flushing machine that refuses to stop taking and spending on arbitrary, policy-driven programs. In the end, it takes a lot more than indiscriminately throwing money at something to cause growth.

    4. Re:The inevitable result by sonoftheright · · Score: 0

      This is false. You cannot have gang or mafia rule without either 1) government regulation creating a prohibition environment (in which a healthy black market thrives, supporting those who aren't afraid to use force) or 2) "foreign aid" (and systems similar to it), in which extremely liquid resources are appropriated and used as a crutch to keep the powerful powerful and keep everyone else on a leash. Otherwise, independent individuals on a microeconomic level will have the chance to enter into the market and create enough prosperity to join forces and pay for their own personal protection. Take the example of the yam farmer who cannot afford to begin farming because too many of his customers rely on freely available food either distributed by "aid" agencies or controlled by gangs as soon as it makes it to the continent. This video describes a lot of the problems and solutions that exis: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFABdPOpr2A&feature=player_embedded#!

      I love how people uphold Somalia as the ultimate example of an anarchist society ruled by cruel force, when the reality is far different: yes, there is violence due to the conflicts between the Transitional Federal Government and the Islamist factions; yes, there is death, civilian casualties, and unrest; however, this does not account for their 2.7% economic growth rate over the past 15 years (despite large-scale emigration to find asylum, massive government and local infrastructure failure, and persistent and pervasive violence). And still we send aid over there, and not military aid or economic aid - we send aid to their TFG, directly, to "support infrastructure" (http://www.so.undp.org/index.php/Somalia-Stories/Employment-Generation-for-Early-Recovery.html), provide "jobs" (read: government dependencies), and restore civilian reliance. Sigh...

  99. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is wrong.
    Slavery is cheap labor that you don't care about (you wouldn't give a shit about the quality of life of slaves when you determined your country's average quality of life of), and that doesn't cost the public much (don't need to factor those bodies in when building roads, hospitals, courts, schools, etc., etc.).

    This is not wrong. Economics has been called The Dismal Science. A lot of people think it's called that because of all the boring numbers and supply and widgets and demand and aggregate statistics. In fact nothing could be further from the truth. Economics was named The Dismal Science by Thomas Carlyle who was in favor of slavery. He got really frustrated by economists who kept publishing papers showing that slavery was economically inefficient. Carlyle wrote an article called Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question in which he advocated slavery as a means of regulating the labor market.

    ~Loyal

    --
    I aim to misbehave.
  100. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1
    http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/an-invention-that-could-change-the-internet-for-ever-1678109.html FTA :

    The new system, Wolfram Alpha, showcased at Harvard University in the US last week, takes the first step towards what many consider to be the internet's Holy Grail – a global store of information that understands and responds to ordinary language in the same way a person does.

    ...

    Computer experts believe the new search engine will be an evolutionary leap in the development of the internet.

    Result of the second hit on a Google search for "Revolutionary software invention"

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  101. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by jafac · · Score: 1

    The true big expense of companies now, is on lobbyists and bribery via telegraphed stock buybacks and insider-trading for politicians. This is why companies are not hiring workers or investing in R&D. The biggest bang for the buck now, is bribing politicians, to print money, to pay wealthy plutocrats, to bribe politicians.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  102. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by kirillian · · Score: 1

    AFAIK that's actually disputed evidence. I don't think we have a clear picture of what actually happened there. What IS clear, however, is that Mark took that concept and ran with it and created something that worked. AFTER it was successful, we have these accusers claiming that because they were in on the idea, that they should get to reap the profits of the EFFORT that Mark put in. A social networking site was NOT even close to an original idea. Even the individual features Facebook had were not original. Facebook worked hard to put together a complete package and market it better than their competitors. The end result is that Facebook became what it is because of work and adaptation, not an idea. Granted, ideas are important, but ideas themselves are only a piece of the puzzle.

  103. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody forces you to hire a lawyer to file a patent in the US. You may do all of the process yourself, but when it gets to writing the claims section (the only actionable part of the file) you will need to be versed in the language necessary to describe the part in very technical and legal terms - a language that is a blend of legalese and technospeak. At that point, you might as well hire a lawyer because there are specific phrases that you can use to defend or kill a patent in court, so you want to use those phrases if they help you patent and you want to avoid any pitfall phrases that will limit your patent's scope, and a patent lawyer (that YOU hire) will help you write your claims section, do a prior art search, and handle any patent prosecutions from the USPTO as they can, and forward the rest on to you.

    Why is the claims section written in a complex blend of legalese and technospeak, you ask? Because in the end, a patent is going to be used in a court of law (as Edison famously said, "A patent is just an invitation to a lawsuit."), and so must be legally specific enough to describe the breadth of the claims, but also has to be specific enough to accurately describe the part using technical terms. You can use your own vocabulary so long as it is internally consistent (so you do not have to be educated in the proper vocabulary to file a patent, and to christen/define a new technical term) with itself.

    In the end, one does not "just" file a patent willy-nilly. It is the beginning of a very long and expensive process, and it is longer and more expensive if you do not hire a lawyer. Your lawyer-hate is unjustified in the patent system as it currently exists.

  104. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that half of the US public thinks the worldis 6000 years old and jesubs is comming soon to take them away.

  105. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by kirillian · · Score: 1

    Most of the funding is provided by US tax payers in the form of grants to Universities. Drug companies perform a very small fraction of the R&D that goes into the drugs they hold patents on. Universities then sell the patents generated by their students to these drug companies for fractions of the R&D costs to us taxpayers. Drug companies spend most of their budgets on marketing...commercials...sending reps to Doctor Offices to give them samples/tell them about the drugs/push them to use the drug in lieu of other solutions (wife's personal experience).

  106. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by s.petry · · Score: 5, Informative

    The backing of patenting an "IDEA" is ludicrous, sorry but there is no other way to describe it.

    Do you think that only 1 person had the idea of using a shopping cart icon, or calling their on line store "a Shopping cart" back when the WWW became available to the average consumer? or even back during DARPA when we were dreaming of the WWW?

    If you answer "yes", quite frankly you are a moron so please don't read any further. If you answer "no", then why would the USPTO give 1 company a patent for a shopping cart icon, an on-line store, or a name for an idea on a web page? Before you say "but.. but.. but.." it was done, and lawsuits have been flying ever since on the stupid things that they allow to be patented.

    Microsoft is now suing B&N over 5 patents, all relate to either: Background downloading, Icons changing based on activity, or status bars and their placements. These are not things that should have ever been patented. It's like GM getting a patent on the wheel, and Ford getting a patent on the gear.

    How can anyone think that it's beneficial? I'm baffled, and every person I talk to only likes patents for 2 reasons. 1, it gets their name on one and 2. they can now barter with other people that have patents. It does nothing for innovation and only protects people now a days from other people with patents.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  107. Where to start ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe with the Senate/Congress critters, break out the oak ruler and teach them to think or not make laws they can't understand!

  108. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Genda · · Score: 2

    You know, this is a really difficult problem and because everything is part of a larger dynamical system, so often pressure applied anywhere has unexpected results. that said, I'm less interested in punishing foreign products, and far more interested in splinting the break in our economic system. I believe the best thing to to do is applying firm but even pressure on corporations to do what in the end is actually in their own best interest (healthy workforce = healthy consumer = healthy economy = happy corporation), and explain to them openly, all along the way we're all trying to do 'X', because we want to create 'Y', and 'Y' is good for you and me both, so please don't struggle too much.

    In the end its a little like being a good parent. You can't be your children's friend. A child will want to eat candy and not their vegetables. This is perfect childhood logic, candy is delicious. Its up to a responsible party (the Parent) to ensure the child does want is good for the child and good for society (grows up to be a good citizen.) For the exact same reason, a corporation (an entity with only one purpose, make profit), needs a responsible external party to make certain it does what's good for it and society. We do this by creating a body of laws and regulations. Just as a parent manages a child by regulating that which is important to the child, a government must regulate that which is important to the corporation, as we already said, that would be profit. If it profits a corporation to be responsible, they will be responsible. Just put the dots close together and point the way and let them figure it out for themselves.

    And for the "Objectivists" among us who think there is something magical in the intelligence of the marketplace, I would posit that the average corporation is no brighter intrinsically than a 5 year old child. It will kill itself in the long term for short term profit, it happens every day. I'm somehow fascinated by people who'd never dream of letting an out of control 5 year old run amok, but would never dream of constraining corporate mischief and misbehavior. CAN YOU SAY CREDIT DEFAULT SWAP!!! We are now chewing on the broken dreams of greedy men and women. Its time for our society to grow a pair, and spank the wicked, reward the steadfast, and tell the entire class to be quiet and do as they are told.

  109. Be scientific by hessian · · Score: 0

    What has changed in the USA since the time of its technological dominance?

    1. Rise of the welfare state.
    2. Population replacement
      (a) Homegrown white trash "Dancing with the Stars" types are not longer seen as stupid and useless, but average.
      (b) Smart people don't breed.
      (c) Democratic party is hell-bent on importing voters to replace the majority.
      (d) Too many safety regulations, not enough open land, have reversed upward trend of natural selection.
    3. Focus on "service industries" instead of innovation.
    4. Too much fantasy world stuff, whether weird cult religions, Twilight, Harry Potter, etc.

    It's not rocket science to see this civilization is collapsing.

    See you all at 2600.

  110. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by HiThere · · Score: 1

    You or me in a garage somewhere will never be able to file an acceptable patent, or defend the patent against infringement, or defend our use of the patent against patent trolls.

    Better to just get rid of them.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  111. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    There would just be a person, a group or a company that made a lot of money on that innovative idea. From our perspective the differences would be impercetable.

    No, there would have been substantial differences. Attempts to make things like web browsers or search engines would have been mired in patents and royalties. The success of the Internet is partly (perhaps primarily) due to the fact that anyone can implement the standard at any time -- you can connect any computer to the Internet, period. There is no lock-in, just a standard that everyone uses and that nobody has to pay for.

    Have you noticed how many different audio and video codecs there are? Imagine if there were that many incompatible computer networks and technologies. In the best case, web browsers, search engines, and the systems being built on top of those technologies would have taken many more years to reach prominence while "the market" we all waited for patents to expire. In the more likely case, such things would have never existed; we would be using proprietary, incompatible systems and instead of one web browser we would need a plethora of different browsing programs, each with a different set of restrictions and royalty structures and each incompatible with every other.

    Imagine the difficulty of creating a search engine that tried to provide results from across myriad networks, each with patented protocols. It would be so expensive to operate that advertising dollars could never keep it afloat, and that is assuming that the licensing terms even allow licensees to run such an operation. The world's search engines would all be behind paywalls, accessible only to university students and employees of wealthy businesses.

    Remember that the Internet was formed by merging several different networks. If the protocols on which the Internet is built had been patented, those networks would not have truly merged; people would have computers that could connect to one or the other of those networks, and would have to pay to access gateways. The biggest advantage of the Internet is that you do not have to worry about which network you are on, and you do not have to pay to send messages across different networks. The networks that comprise the Internet would, in many cases, be incompatible without a common protocol (IP).

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  112. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was the same scenario in any country ("under developed" or "third world") a while back, when the markets were supposed to have opened for "globalization". It practically meant huge american company presence, they opened stores, introduced products with massive investments that native companies couldn't (can't) match. Much of american boom during the last few decades (pre-2000) was due to new markets.

    People and companies in lots of places are now catching up, and are now able to compete.

    Don't expect great salaries just because you are an American, learn to compete (if it means dwindling salaries for the next couple of generations).

  113. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    I know a guy who works out of his garage (workshop) that owns a dozen patents, 2 of which he has successfully defended. He's got another 7 pending applications.

    It's not the most friendly process, but far from unattainable.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  114. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No, we need to go back to the rule that only landowners can vote. Of course, that's a little obsolete these days (lots of upper-middle-class people rent by choice because they're mobile, or live in NYC), so instead, there should be some kind of educational standard to vote, which doesn't discriminate based on race or sex, only educational level (i.e., if you can't understand Darwin's theory, regardless of whether you agree with it, you're too stupid to vote; also, if you don't understand the basic structure of the nation's government, and don't understand that the President doesn't make laws, you have no business voting). Things started really going downhill when any moron on the street could vote, and also when Senators were popularly elected.

  115. NASA Spin-offs by Linnen · · Score: 1

    I realize that the 'in' thing is to bash "big, bad inefficient" government, but do try to keep up with the times. 30 second search on Wikipedia.
    From Wiki
    1 NASA spin-off technologies

    1.1 Health and medicine
    1.1.1 Light-emitting diodes (LEDs)
    1.1.2 Infrared ear thermometers
    1.1.3 Ventricular assist device
    1.1.4 Artificial limbs
    1.2 Transportation
    1.2.1 Aircraft anti-icing systems
    1.2.2 Highway safety
    1.2.3 Improved radial tires
    1.2.4 Chemical detection
    1.3 Public safety
    1.3.1 Video enhancing and analysis systems
    1.3.2 Fire-resistant reinforcement
    1.3.3 Firefighting equipment
    1.4 Consumer, home, and recreation
    1.4.1 Temper foam
    1.4.2 Enriched baby food
    1.4.3 Portable cordless vacuums
    1.4.4 Freeze drying
    1.5 Environmental and agricultural resources
    1.5.1 Water purification
    1.5.2 Solar energy
    1.5.3 Pollution remediation
    1.6 Computer technology
    1.6.1 Structural analysis software
    1.6.2 Remotely controlled ovens
    1.6.3 NASA Visualization Explorer
    1.7 Industrial productivity
    1.7.1 Powdered lubricants
    1.7.2 Improved mine safety
    1.7.3 Food safety

    NASA even publishes a report of its spin-off technologies ( http://www.sti.nasa.gov/tto/ )
    Here is a list from 2010;
    NASA Technologies Benefiting Society
    Health and Medicine
    Burnishing Techniques Strengthen Hip Implants
    Signal Processing Methods Monitor Cranial Pressure
    Ultraviolet-Blocking Lenses Protect, Enhance Vision
    Hyperspectral Systems Increase Imaging Capabilities
    Transportation
    Programs Model the Future of Air Traffic Management
    Tail Rotor Airfoils Stabilize Helicopters, Reduce Noise
    Personal Aircraft Point to the Future of Transportation
    Ducted Fan Designs Lead to Potential New Vehicles
    Winglets Save Billions of Dollars in Fuel Costs
    Sensor Systems Collect Critical Aerodynamics Data
    Coatings Extend Life of Engines and Infrastructure
    Public Safety
    Radiometers Optimize Local Weather Prediction
    Energy-Efficient Systems Eliminate Icing Danger for UAVs
    Rocket-Powered Parachutes Rescue Entire Planes
    Technologies Advance UAVs for Science, Military
    Inflatable Antennas Support Emergency Communication
    Smart Sensors Assess Structural Health
    Hand-Held Devices Detect Explosives and Chemical Agents
    Terahertz Tools Advance Imaging for Security, Industry
    Consumer, Home, and Recreation
    LED Systems Target Plant Growth
    Aeroge

  116. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    Slavery is cheap labor that you don't care about (you wouldn't give a shit about the quality of life of slaves when you determined your country's average quality of life of)

    First of all, this doesn't parse.

    But if you're trying to say that slave owners don't care about the quality of life of their slaves, that's wrong too. Back in the days of slavery, it was normal for owners to take rather good care of their slaves, and buy decent (but practical) clothes for them. First of all, slaves were really expensive back then. $800 for a slave was a lot of money in 1800. Cheaper than paying a white person to be your full-time live-in servant, yes, but still expensive. Second, just like now, people always wanted to show off to their neighbors how much money they had, so they didn't let their slaves (esp. the domestic ones) run around in torn-up clothes, because when their neighbors visited, this would look bad. Slaves were considered possessions (obviously), but along with that came a certain amount of care, just like anyone would want to take good care of some expensive item they purchased (car, etc.) instead of neglecting it.

    Now obviously, they didn't worry much about the slaves' mental well-being, if they felt fulfilled with their job, whether they were depressed, etc. But it's not like they gave them rags to wear and starved them to death (except perhaps for a few especially cruel and stupid owners--slaves in poor health aren't going to be very productive workers).

    The only economic argument against slavery is that the cheap labor prevents people from inventing faster, easier, and more efficient ways of doing things.

    The other economic argument is that it can greatly reduce employment for your lower classes in your normal population; it's a bit like outsourcing. If those lower classes can find other work to do (that's more profitable than picking crops), then it works out OK, but if not, you end up with a bad economy and discontent. From what I've read, the economy in the South before the Civil War wasn't very good, and part of the reason for the war was that their economy was on the verge of collapse anyway. There were tons of poor people who had little work because the slaves did the menial work, and there was no industrialization to employ the poor white people like in the North. But of course the rich people got the poor people to blame the North for their problems instead of their own leaders at home.

  117. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1

    How come this isn't modded WAY up?

    --
    We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
  118. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    I think you're missing the point. If I'm going to get the same salary, why should I put in any extra effort to file patents or come up with better (patentable) ideas, rather than just doing the minimum to retain my paycheck? Or if I do have a brilliant idea, why should I give it to my company, instead of just sitting on it, quitting work, and patenting it myself after a couple of years? Or why should I not just sit on it and not tell anyone, since my company's only going to give me $500 for it, and only after going to a LOT of extra work (writing it up, dealing with the patent attorneys, etc.)? If my company were going to give me a 15% cut of any profits generated by the patent, then that would be incentive to come up with more patentable ideas; but companies don't do that, they just give you a crappy flat fee and expect you to do all the filing work on your own time. So why bother?

  119. Backs to the wall, lads! by Hognoxious · · Score: 0

    The first company needs to keep innovating once competitors come out, not stop as you seem to think they should.

    You can tell other people (and companies are groups of people) what they should do when it's your money they're spending. Until then you can just shut the fuck up and keep watching Star Trek.

    Explain how "keeping innovating" per se increases revenue. See, innovating costs. It requires equipment and facilities. It requires large numbers of educated people who (greedy selfish bastards one and all) expect to get a salary in order to pay off their student loans, feed their families & similar shit that you wouldn't understand.

    Look to the fashion industry to see how it's done.

    There's a world of difference between CPUs and frocks. Just for starters, if you proclaimed that a Z80 with a stripe on it was the most awesome thing ever, anyone who actually knows what a Z80 and carse what it does is would laugh at you, and they'd be right.

    And it doesn't take millions of R&D spending to take a crinoline and make it out of lycra, then pair it with a chainmail basque. A few grand's worth of crack should do it.

    There are TONS of copycats out there but good designers have no problem making products people will pay good $$$ for... why?

    Goods of ostentation, for starters.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:Backs to the wall, lads! by mhelander · · Score: 1

      "Just for starters, if you proclaimed that a Z80 with a stripe on it was the most awesome thing ever, anyone who actually knows what a Z80 and carse what it does is would laugh at you, and they'd be right."

      But what about an all white casing where the user cannot change the battery? Slam dunk, right?

    2. Re:Backs to the wall, lads! by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      You can tell other people (and companies are groups of people) what they should do when it's your money they're spending.

      Ehmm, newsflash, that *IS* my money. IP law is just that, a set of laws. Written by public servants, upheld by public servants, judged by public servants. And if We, the People decide the law should be different, then it has to change. That might get us into a boatload of trouble with other countries and make it impossible to do business in ours, but it should still be our decision to make.

      As voting members of a democracy, we can decide it is worthwhile to give inventors/creators an extra incentive, and we can just as well decide that it is doing more harm than good, and needs to be changed or abolished.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
  120. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Here's another example for you: Ebay. There's nothing patentable there (if there are any patents, they're stupid Amazon-one-click type patents, not worthy patents). But Ebay isn't successful because of any great technology running on their servers, it's just that they were the first and now biggest. Lots of people have made Ebay clones, with very little success in taking marketshare away from Ebay (unfortunately).

    It's the same with Facebook. You could make a site exactly like it if you wanted, but that's not going to bring in lots of users. Everyone's on Facebook, because all their friends are on Facebook. The only time people use the alternative sites is because either 1) they don't mind having social networking accounts on lots of different sites at once (meaning they have too much time on their hands), or 2) they hate Facebook (which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but if you're the only one of your friends who refuses to use Facebook, you can't expect them all to create an account on the alternative site just to talk to you).

  121. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can relate to your post. I'm in Los Angeles working in IT and software. I call it "reverse discrimination", "upside-down world", "systematic domestic ethnic cleansing", etc. Nothing frustrates me more than being panel interviewed by foreign workers that are half my age and know less than me. I'm tired of not hearing English spoken at work place. I'm tired of not getting access to systems at work since I'm "American". This is not a case of feeling entitled. I paid my dues, paid my taxes, paid for my education, served in military, Yes, I'm working on changing into a new career. In regards to the original topic/post - I won't encourage my daughter in engineering/software unless she plans to do reseach or go into academia.

  122. Re:College does not tech the right skills and to m by Elaugaufein · · Score: 1

    Probably because a real job in CS isn't what you (or a lot of CS graduates) think it is. CS is not a different way of saying Software Engineering. CS is about how computing works and more efficient ways to do it (like improving the algorithmic efficiency of sorting), not about how to efficiently and effectively produce 1 000 000 lines of code dedicated to special case X (e.g. flying a plane). Some fields are like that, there's a difference between being a physicist (perhaps a mathematician might be more accurate even in some contexts) and an engineer too.

  123. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by LoztInSpace · · Score: 1

    If you are filing a patent as part of your job then the "extra effort" becomes part of your duties doesn't it? As with anything your boss asks you to do, you need to allocate and schedule the time to do it. Why would anyone, employee or employer, expect this to be done on the filer's personal time? Does the scenario you are raging at actually exist?

  124. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Genda · · Score: 1

    Friend, its not dwindling salaries. Its NO SALARIES. In 1970 99% of the clothing Americans wore was made in the United States. Today 99% is made out of country. The clothing industrial for all intents and purposes has been eliminated from this country. So go right ahead, tell the American worker "Y'all have to live on 35% of your highest point wage and not only is your child not going to college, you'd better like the car you have because you're driving it till the wheels fall off, oh, and you need to sell the house and move into a 2 bedroom apartment because you sure as Jebus made little green apples aren't going to be able to afford the tax, insurance and maintenance." How fast do you think the rioting will start? How about we come up with a new product made from starving babies, nip the poor right in the bud as it were. We'll call it SoylentAC.

    Now tell American workers "Guys, the world's economy is flattening out so for maybe 5 to 10 years, all the jobs are leaving the country. Don't worry, when the working wage of an American is the same as for a Somali street person, all the jobs will be back and you too can work 16 hours a day for all the gruel you can choke down. Actually it won't be that bad, because with 5 to 10 years of no income, most of you will be dead anyway, so with only a handful of workers left there'll be plenty of work to go around." Explain to me how any part of that is in any way acceptable.

    You throw that comment off pretty glibly Mr. AC. What makes you think you won't be one the folks that starves on the street when there are ten guys in other countries happy to do your job for less than you can live on.

  125. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with pretty much everything you are saying, except that I don't agree that IT workers that come here from india are truly "skilled". Rather, I've never seen people more inept and skill-less in my entire life. They are NOT cheaper, they are more expensive in that they take way, way, way longer to get stuff done and then it's crap at that. They don't know how to communicate and they are not passionate about doing a good job. They do charge less per hour, but then end up being more expensive on account of what I just described. If you want to hire cheap lame people, there are tons of that right here in America, and they are citizens who at least speak English. If someone could come here and do my level of work, in the time it takes me to get it done, for 1/2 the price - I would be out of work permanently. The proof is in what you see. With that exception, I too am sick and tired of having to try and talk with some Visa-job-stealing dope, that can't put two words together OR rub two thought together..

  126. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Genda · · Score: 1

    Not to put too fine a point on it, It was immigrant Irish who cleaned up the swamps surrounding New Orleans and Baton Rouge, because nobody would consider using an expensive slave to do what was considered effectively a suicide job. The Irish who arrived fresh from the potato famines were considered less than human. They were used for all kinds of jobs ranging from clearing disease infested swamps to military cannon fodder. Any place where you wanted a steady supply of disposable human beings. Same with the Chinese building the railroad from the west. Slave were valuable. Immigrants, not so much.

  127. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, what you describe sounds a lot like much of China's trade policy; we enjoy manufacturing everything there and no one seems to worry...

  128. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I disagree with you. Americans feel so entitled. Indians are hard working and cheap. We create jobs for middle management who like our work ethic. I'm glad your children won't be interested in tech careers. My wife just gave birth to a boy who can fill the spot. Warmest regards.

  129. The World Is Run By Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Government investment in basic research/pure science has lagged, at the same time balance-of-trade in high-tech has suffered massively and real median household income has stalled.
     
    Many people would claim this is pure coincidence.
     
    The mindset that cuts funding to NASA while spending ever increasing untold trillions on modern warfare and engines of destruction is the same mindset which allows lawyers and greedy megacorps to define laws which amount to "protect my business and immediate-term profits rather than actually *allowing the market to grow*".
     
    Most of the modern governments are run by luddites, technophobes, and techno-village-idiots, people who *flat out refuse* to listen to the good advice of industry experts and instead follow a path of essentially graft-and-corruption (er, sorry , I mean "corporate lobbying").

  130. The answer is.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wild guess here, Obama's answer is to spend more government money.

  131. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Why should someone who just happened to patent some obvious idea be able to stop others who could be better able at implementing the idea?

    It's too hard for the patent office to determine "nonobvious". It's much easier for them to just issue a patent and let the courts deal with it. The cost/punishment for filing obvious patents is not high enough to discourage a typical corporation - so they can just try different variations till they get what they want.

    From what I see patents reward trolls and "one clicks" more than genuine innovators, and they slow down innovation more than encourage it.

    The problem I see with your arguments is that you're basically arguing against the present-day patent system, not the way the patent system is supposed to be. After all, the law was "not obvious to a practitioner of the arts"; of course, just like the 4th Amendment, that law is simply being ignored by the government. Obviously, our present patent system is broken, and we'd be better off with no patents at all than what we have now. The question, however, is: would it be better to have no patents, or have a good system where obvious patents are actually thrown out, and the punishment for filing bad patents is very high? I don't know the answer to that, but I don't believe your assertion that it's "too hard" for the USPTO to determine obviousness. They just don't bother, since they get more money by collecting fees for awarding patents, and not for throwing them out.

  132. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure that's really a good argument for getting rid of patents as it doesn't really speak to whether patents help or hinder innovation; it only shows that any nation not at the top of the patent pyramid has a vested interest in ignoring them.

    You've just answered your own question, haven't you? If all the competitors (aka not at the top) have an interest in ignoring them, then the top nation is competing with one hand tied behind its metaphorical back. That may be ok provided it's winning, but otherwise it's suboptimal.

  133. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess it depends on who we define as "we". When I see articles about U.S. interests, as an American, I seldom feel that it applies to me. What they are referring to most of the time are the interests of CEO's and other elites. Seldom are worker's interests included in the desire to be "competitive", whatever that means. No one can force us to "compete", that's just an excuse to force workers to match salaries with slaves, and the result is that workers have to drop their living standards somewhere down to 3rd world standards in order to "compete".

  134. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Dragon+Bait · · Score: 1

    Hell yes, and while we're at it stop women voting. They may get dumb ideas like running for president if we don't nip all this political correctness in the bud.

    Why is the parent marked as "troll" when it should be marked as "sarcasm" or "funny"?

  135. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the 99%, innovation usually means that you engineer your (or someone else's) way out of a job. That's a far bigger impediment to innovation in my opinion. There are a ton of innovations that are purposely overlooked because the bulk of the reward (profit) goes to the owner, not workers. Worse, not only workers not rewarded, but are actually punished by increases in productivity. In your example, the ability of a small company, or of workers in general, to compete with the big guys isn't even a concept, and I think this is a much bigger problem to solve if we want to foster innovation than rewarding people who have tons of money and time to invest. Patents only protect the little guy in completely new markets. In mature markets they greatly favor established players over new entrants, and actually end up discouraging innovation as a result.

    The other side of innovation, which is motivating workers to find more efficient ways to do their jobs, doesn't happen much in our current system, and likely will never happen until we ditch capitalism. Anyway, I see your point, but when you look at the massive amount of wasted worker creativity, innovation at the top level is a drop in the bucket.

  136. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    If you are filing a patent as part of your job then the "extra effort" becomes part of your duties doesn't it?

    Nope. Not many employees have the job title "patent filer". Usually, they're doing something else in the realm of engineering, and they come up with some improved method to do something, and that turns into a patent filing. Their normal job is NOT to file patents, it's to do their normal job, such as RTL design, or whatever. That's the job that their time has been budgeted for.

    As with anything your boss asks you to do, you need to allocate and schedule the time to do it.

    Not if you don't tell the boss, "hey boss! I came up with this great new method to do X, and I think we should file a patent on it!!". Instead, if you say, "yes, I came up with an improved method to do X, which should save up a little time." and the boss asks, "do you think we should file a patent on it", and you reply after thinking "the last thing I need right now is more work piled on me!", "Sorry boss, I don't think so. I think it would fail the non-obvious test and in my professional opinion it's not patent-worthy.", then he's much less likely to push the issue.

    Why would anyone, employee or employer, expect this to be done on the filer's personal time?

    Because filing a patent takes a lot of extra time, and as I said before, the employee who invents something (to scratch an itch so to speak, to make their regular job easier) still has to do his normal job. You think they're going to push back all their schedules just so the employee can meet with the patent lawyer and go through draft after draft of his patent filing? No, they're going to ask you to do what you have to do to meet the schedule and also get the patent filed. "Yeah, I'm going to need you to come in on Sunday too..."

    Sorry, I've spent too many years in corporate environments and have seen how it works. There's no big reward for filing patents, other than the "prestige" of having it on your resume (whoopee) and maybe a $500 or $1000 cash award, and the idea that management will rearrange a project's schedule just so an employee can file a patent is naive at best.

  137. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

    Universities and other publicly-funded research institutions perform basic research for the most part. We study disease X, and find targets Y and Z that might be exploited for drug discovery by pharmaceutical companies. Starting about 10 years ago, a few of the largest universities started small high-throughput screening labs where university researchers could learn how to do some of the screening work done in the private sector. I've used one such facility at the University of Wisconsin. However the number of compounds available for screening is at least an order of magnitude smaller than what is available to pharmaceutical companies. More important than the number of compounds available for testing is the funds to do it. Pharma has it, academia doesn't.

    Even in the rare cases where the universities do come up with something that shows efficacy, that doesn't necessarily make it a good compound. How well does it inhibit? How easy is it to make? How stable is it? How soluble is it? What else does the compound inhibit? Does it show undesirable side effects? How easy is it to formulate? Modification of lead compounds is pretty much the middle third of drug discovery, and can take three years or more. Some universities have medicinal chemists, but at least in my experience they do not have time, interest (running their own labs they've naturally got their own projects and interests), personnel, or funds to take a compound discovered at a different lab and work it over for a few years. Even if they did, no university has the funds to get a compound through clinical trials.

    Biotech and pharmaceuticals companies fund all the phase I, II, and III clinical trials. The amount of time and money spent on compound modification by biotech and pharma dwarfs the universities, to put it mildly. The same is true for the time and money spent on screening chemical libraries and preclinical trials. Biotech and pharma also have involvement in the very earliest stage of target identification and verification. Universities are important in the drug discovery process. They provide some of the targets, do the vast majority of the basic research needed before you can even tease out a target, and provide all of the early (BS/MS/PhD) and most of the middle (postdoctoral) training of the personnel that biotech and pharma need. But for the majority of drug or drug candidate the bulk of the time and money spent is from biotech and pharmaceuticals companies, not the universities.

  138. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your argument assumes that patents are the only way to recoup investments and that companies won't conduct R&D and recoup investments without them. I disagree, innovation will continue without patents and, historically, many advancements have occurred independently by more than one source simultaneously and without patents. If a company wants to make beyond a normal profit it must continue to innovate instead of sitting on a 20 year old patent for revenue. and other companies must continue to innovate in order to make beyond a normal profit as well.

    Necessity drives innovation and if there is a market need for something the market will optimally find ways to develop it. But it's more difficult for markets to do this when patent distortions get in the way. The market as a whole has more resources and interest in providing itself with socially beneficial innovations than a monopolist that only wants to provide itself with self interested monopoly rents.

    There is little to no evidence that patents foster innovation and there is plenty of evidence that innovation progresses better without them. The U.S. tech industry advanced more rapidly during a time when patents weren't as strictly enforced. The founding fathers were very critical of intellectual property, Thomas Jefferson was initially against it, and it was partly their initial criticism that helped foster our early innovation. Patents are deeply entrenched and have been for a longer period of time in the pharmaceutical industry and the U.S. private pharmaceutical industry hardly ever advances anymore. A lot more medical related technological advancements now occur in other countries that aren't as strict on patents or advancements occur at taxpayer money.

    See

    http://www.dklevine.com/general/intellectual/against.htm
    http://patentabsurdity.com/

  139. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 2

    "Explain to me how that fosters innovation. "

    Because it causes deflation -- everything is cheaper, which makes it easier to live on less and have more free time for innovation.

    After hundreds of years of innovation, we've now reached the point where most human labor is spent on "guarding", not "production".
    http://www.whywork.org/rethinking/whywork/abolition.html

    See also:
    "RSA Animate - Drive: The surprising truth about what motivates us" by Dan Pink
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XAPnuFjJc

    And on how Bill Gates learned to program in part from dumpster diving to read other people's code:
    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=437640&cid=22255952

    People like Eric von Hippel at MIT have written about how about 80% or so of innovation comes from customers, anyway...

    What we really need is a "basic income" so anyone who wants to focus on innovating and giving away the results without enforcing "artificial scarcity" can afford to do so.
    http://www.basicincome.org/bien/

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  140. Stupid measure by TheSync · · Score: 1

    It is stupid to measure trade in scientific/engineering goods and say the US is losing its edge.

    The key is scientific/engineering intellectual property - where are things designed rather than manufactured. The IP for the iPhone was developed in the US, and Apple reaps most of the profits from iPhone sales, despite manufacturing none of it.

    Google is headquartered in the US, and most of its profit come from ideas hatched in the US. Microsoft and Intel as well.

    Of course all of these US-headquartered companies also have operations outside the US, but then foreign-headquartered multinationals (Sony, ARM, etc.) also have US operations as well.

    I will admit that a lot of consumer electronics design is being done in Japan (and increasingly Korea) and that the US is pretty far behind them.

    And also we have a crazy amount of people doing non-STEM majors in college, often on loans that will never be repaid because they either won't get a paying job in their field of interpretive dance or if they do get a job it won't pay much.

  141. Wow, such a great business model by AverageWindowsUser · · Score: 1

    1. Replace Government Research Funding With PDF's Posted Online
    2. Use cool, hip lingo like "call to arms" to be cool like Warcraft
    3. Make sure ad for CIA Intelligence Degree appears on discussion of said PDF
    4. Make people pay you (tuition) to steal their ideas in college !!!
    5. Profit* !!!
    6. Use profits to control the world's oil !!!

    *No profits are actually made in this sequence, just more national debt

  142. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about hash collision avoidance? I have filed for such a patent. It was a eureka moment when I realized how one could implement a fairly easy bit of code to prevent cryptographic hash collisions.

  143. Patents :/ by Turnerj · · Score: 1

    I agree like most of the people here (assuming that the comments I read account for most of the people) that patents are a bad idea. (That makes me think, I should patent "patents" or the act of making one)

    Anyway, maybe a different system to patents could allow the original creator/inventor to get credit for their works instead. Rather than having a patent which creates a legal bind and lawsuits, have simply a place where the name and ideas/diagrams/notes of the idea is stored. This idea being, make it just general attribution of an idea when you use it.

    Example: If Person A invented the Wheel, Person B invented the Car which uses Person A's Wheel. Person B gives credit to Person A for inventing the Wheel. This could go on to a Person C who invents a Bus. Person C gives credit to Person B for the general idea and Person A for the Wheel.

    This example is pretty crap though it could work. Simply giving credit to the original creator of the idea when you use it may work. If you had a business that invented something awesome, do you really think the competition would really want to say that the idea for the technology came from you? It isn't a rock solid idea by any means however maybe this needs to be looked at from a more licensing situation (ie. GPL, Public Domain, CC etc). While ideas can one way or another be free, building upon ideas needs to credit the right people.

  144. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You seem to assume that a software patent would make any difference for a person in a garage somewhere.

  145. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by ogdenk · · Score: 1

    Patents aren't a bad idea but they should be non-transferrable and any patent for which no product is sold should be null and void within a year or two. Using litigation as your sole business model should be outlawed as well. And patent examiners should be able to examine a working prototype in detail with an industry expert before granting the patent.

    Software patents as a whole are evil and need to be abolished. Most of the world doesn't respect them anyway and there's too many of them covering very basic expected functionality in software applications. You shouldn't be able to patent numbers or a list of instructions. That's why we have copyright.

  146. Please do not start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    your comment in the subject line. Thank

    ---
    you!

  147. OH NOES!! by Lost+Race · · Score: 2

    American innovation is faltering! This is a call to arms!

    1) Lower taxes on the rich

    2) De-regulate corporations

    3) Extend copyright

    Whew! Problem solved!

  148. So lets recap: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So lets recap. Government cuts funding for basic research "We don't need them damn pencil neck geeks burning up our hard earned tax dollars", etc, while simultaneously, corporations kill all basic research "we don't need them damn pencil neck geeks burning up our hard earned profits", etc. Companies are laying off engineers by the truckload, including electrical, software (systems and application), mechanical, etc. Biomedical researchers get massive numbers of dirty looks from DHS and others because "they could make somethin' that helps them terrorists", and ultra-right wing nut-jobs hate all of the scientists because that evolution stuff might tell them that the sun doesn't go around the earth, so they need to die unemployed. Patents and copyrights went stupid well past mental starting about 1992. Its gotten worse. There shouldn't be software patents at all. There shouldn't be patents on biomedical science. Copyrights really should only last 20 years. Big money *DEMANDS* that it lasts forever. Lawyers have made millions on patents. Everyone else loses. So toss those items around, and say with a straight face: "I'm still shocked that we aren't selling more hi-tech". And you would be the only one.

  149. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1

    I have to disagree most of this.

    First, spending 1k on a patent is not realistic, not if you want it to stand. I've done this and seen it done. Try 40k with a lawyer to shepherd it through the entire process.

    Next, the idea that a big team will just copy your innovation and wipe you out is just not an accurate picture of reality for a lot of reasons.

    One is a team has its own confusions and pitfalls and no team escapes them. So rather than quickly copying you, actually, they'll be slow as this and that waits for approval and people fight and miscommunicate and priorities and funding changes and oh ...the meetings.

    Then there's the fact that a knock off is never as good as the visionary's original. The reasons knock offs prevail in the physical world is because the overhead of manufacturing an original is about the same or even more than a knock off, so the visionary has no price advantage and perhaps a price disadvantage if the visionary expects to be compensated for her vision.

    This is just the opposite in software where the marginal cost of producing another widget is effectively nil. Now the one with the overhead is the Microsoft with the fat overpaid hierarchy and the big team and the big building and the Congressional lobbying costs etc. etc.

    finally visionaries continue to have vision. They are like artists and their products are cohesive and focused and consistent and intuitive in ways that Big Team in Big Companies have a hard time emulating long term.

    Look at IntelliJ vs IBM or vs Borland or vs Oracle's offerings. It's all the same feature set on paper, but people love IntelliJ and willing pay for it in a world of free (their recent foray into open source notwithstanding) .

    Why? Because it possesses that certain something ,that fine craftsmanship and quality that people who make their living writing code recognize and value.

    In a certain sense, Apple is the same thing. Sure, they're up to the gills in patents now, but back in the day, before there was widespread patenting, they were the visionary product. People loved them and paid more for Apple computers. They had the manufacturing overhead problem- they weren't purely software- so they were more expensive and MS / IBM clones took market share, but even then they kept alive.

    When Jobs came back, he had a vision and implemented it (or assembled a vision from his talented employees' separate visions and then took credit ) but anyway they competed on the basis of a unified vision. This is not what MS is or ever was.

    You don't need patents to exist and do well in a competitive software environment. Patents definitely favor the big players since they're the only ones who can survive a patent fight . The only way to patent and make money in software without a few million already in the bank to back you up in an eastern district of Texas courtroom is if you exist as a patent troll- all lawsuit, no product.

    Software developers today exist as serfs - at the pleasure of large or not so large companies who at any time can crush you completely. This isn't always at the forefront of their minds, but there's no good reason it shouldn't be.

    I know of a more than a few software companies who quietly don't sell into the US markets anymore for just this reason. You can die at any moment for reasons that have nothing to do with legitimate competition. Who wants to spend ten years of their lives writing some genius piece of software only to be destroyed in a day by a knock at the door? That's the definition of anti-motivation- sudden death through lawyer. It plaques everyone I know who is thinking about starting a company.Mark Cuban recently said that every start up he knows is being sued by someone. This is the opposite of incentive to innovate and the opposite of value-based competition.

    And the legislators know it. Sens. Kyl (AZ) and Schumer (NY) recently passed the most cynical bill

  150. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article is about a certain nation that aren't as smart as they used to be or think they are, so do the math.

  151. What's the x ordinate? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    take the concept of facebook and roll it out exponentially bigger

    That word doesn't mean what you think it does.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  152. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    As originally envisioned, patents were to protect novel and unique ideas and inventions.

    Wrong. They didn't cover ideas at all. The belief that they do (or should) is half the problem with the current system [see below].

    Eliminate so-called "design" and "method" patents.

    What is a design patent? Or rather, what do you think it is? I don't see a problem with them myself, properly applied.

    If it can be demonstrated that a person of similar intelligence could have developed the same idea in a "clean room" environment (i.e., without reverse engineering), the idea isn't patentable.

    Please learn the difference between an idea and an invention. How could you possibly reverse engineer pattern of neurons? In any case, if I've even seen the device in action, it's not really a true cleanroom implementation, is it?

    Finally, for the nth time: LOSER PAY LEGISLATION.

    Agreed, that'd solve the other half of the problem [see above].

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  153. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    OK, how about protecting patents only until the cost of investment has been earned

    So why bother inventing anything if all you can do is break even?

    Actually, that's not all you can do. Breaking even would be the best you can do. Who's going to cover the losses for the inventions that don't work out? The taxpayer? You?

    then you have to compete fairly.

    What's that even supposed to mean?

    Real costs, no bullshit hollywood accounting.

    If I employ ten people to do a job that three could do, is that real? I don't have much of an incentive to be more efficient, do I - anything I gain will be taken away.

    Essentially, you're proposing to legislate profit margins. This may sound noble, but it's another way of saying "cost plus". A lot of defense projects work on that basis. A lot of them go way over budget. Go figure.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  154. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by tsotha · · Score: 1

    You or me in a garage somewhere will never be able to defend our patent anyway. Whatever we've discovered will be covered by one of IBM's or Microsoft's overly broad patents, and they'll sue us into bankruptcy.

  155. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by rmstar · · Score: 1

    Failure or not, that's investment that someone else need not put money into if they can just steal the workable idea after the fact.

    You have this backwards. What happens is that big useless companies waste millions on small trivialities, and then somehow believe they have the right to harass everybody else who came up with the same thing in an evening. Well, currenlty, the law says that they have the right, and that is a problem.

    And some companies spend a lot of money patenting everything they can in a given field, and then drop it in a whim of management. Now nobody can do anything in that field for twenty years.

    You are also completely missing the point (also made by others here) that actually making a competitive product is the hard and expensive part, in particular for software.

  156. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by rmstar · · Score: 1

    The abolishment of IP would be the death of engineering.

    Before pulling out the hanky for drying your tears, please pull out your head from wherever you have it and realize that except for a very small group of crazy people nobody is calling for the death of IP.

  157. Different culture by FishOuttaWater · · Score: 1

    Oddly enough, *all* the valedictorians in my high school class were Koreans. IMO, there were sharper people in the school, but the Koreans were very meticulous about getting the A's. I don't see meticulous being the path to Nobel prizes or business glory.

  158. Re:2002 - the year of casual racism by Genda · · Score: 1

    Please accept my humblest apology for those who are in pain, and in their pain may be less than gracious to you and yours. There have always been immigrants to this country. For the most part, their arrival was met by anger and frustration at those whose jobs were impacted by their arrival. Its a normal thing here. Sadly that puts you at the bottom of the Schist List. Worse, you aren't taking low paying minimum wage service jobs, you're hitting us at the upper middle class region and for the first time people who normally never see the threat you impose, feel seriously put upon.

    We have for generations been told by our political representatives that we have, if not the right, at least the expectation of good work available for all. Your coming here threatens this. You can't compare life here with life in India. We for the longest time were a nation with a low population density and a high natural resource level. That meant that anyone with even the slightest intent, a functioning frontal lobe and a smattering of gumption could fully expect to thrive and if lucky even become wealthy. By opening our economic borders to the world, our wealth has exploded out and the world's people have exploded in. The effect is to quickly make America a second and potentially a third world nation in what amounts to record time. We used to keep a very high economic wall around us to artificially maintain our standards of living. Of course that came at the price of keeping poorer nations poor.

    You might want to have a little compassion for people being pinched in the adjustment. I don't blame you for wanting a better life. Some will. I blame short sighted, greedy men who have no vision and think that human beings are an interchangeable commodity. Since 1980 our way of life has been hijacked by blind corporate interest. Its been a slow motion car wreck for our environment, our middle class, and the body of laws and distinctions that form our system of civil rights. Business people simply can't distinguish an American engineer from an Indian engineer, its all head count to them. From my experience of Indian engineers, most of you are extremely well trained and at the top of your classes. However, to get there you often have a rather narrow technological focus (because that is what the market is looking for) and in the process of getting there you often neglect the kind of broader education that would provide you with the kind of fun, inventive and creative skills that I find so prevalent in American engineers. This makes Indian engineers a bit more rigid, less adaptable and less figurative in their undertakings. For a tenth run on a legacy product that's wonderful. For a first run at a start-up that's a disaster. The start-up doesn't need product X,00000000.000000. It needs product X +/- 4. You then dance with change as your customers tell you what they really want. This is the frustration you hear in the parent responses comment. Its often hard for artists to play with accountants and at their best, America's scientists and engineers have artistic souls.

    So there is a place here for you and your son. You just want to notice for whom the bell tolls, because you best of all should know the benefits and dangers of the Karmic Wheel... those it raises today, it rolls over tomorrow. In the end if we feel entitled, its because for the longest time, our government was interested in protecting our working class, and we were entitled. Just as your government is now doing, so you should be very careful about who you are judging because once our economies reach parity, you may live to regret the very words you speak. And if your son grows up in this culture, who knows, you may find yourself with a rapper and not an engineer.

  159. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

    The only problem is...that leaves you with a system where the people that get elected then get to decide/influence who gets to vote the next time around.

    Not to mention that there is a whole lot of people out there who may be frightfully stupid, but they work hard, pay their taxes, don't cause trouble for anyone and just want to live their lives. I guess you're suggesting that as they lose their representation, so too goes their taxation?

    --

    People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
  160. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is the parent marked as "troll" when it should be marked as "sarcasm" or "funny"?

    Ass burgers?

  161. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    The only problem is...that leaves you with a system where the people that get elected then get to decide/influence who gets to vote the next time around.

    Um, how is that different from any other system? Lots of people complain about our first-past-the-post voting system, but the only people with the power to change it are our elected representatives, and of course they're not too interested in doing so since that would probably keep them from being re-elected. We see the same thing when they decide voting districts, it's called "gerrymandering".

    Not to mention that there is a whole lot of people out there who may be frightfully stupid, but they work hard, pay their taxes, don't cause trouble for anyone and just want to live their lives. I guess you're suggesting that as they lose their representation, so too goes their taxation?

    By letting them vote, we're getting the results we see now: candidates elected based on popularity, dumb voters who think "he says he'll protect us from all those terrorists that hate us for our freedom!", etc. Would you let 8-year-old children elect your leaders? Of course not, so why do we allow people who have the reasoning capacity of children to elect leaders?

  162. % of funding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is the lowering of the percentage of government funding of basic reasearch considered a bad thing? We can't tell from this if the government supports less science or if private investors are giving more money to research, or both.

  163. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by turbidostato · · Score: 1

    "I just don't think your example provides any support for your claim"

    Think twice. You already accepted patents are a problem for those not at the top, do you?

    But that's as valid for any company as it's for countries: they are only good if you are already a big fish.

    Now, do you really thing the way to promote innovation is by means of tools that favor the old statu quo farts the most?

  164. Tax optimization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >the U.S. 'ran an $81 billion trade deficit in this critically important sector

    How much of it is due to Google and other companies tax optimization schemes ? $200 ?

  165. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by composer777 · · Score: 1

    Patents have two components, spreading risk, and creating profits. The first is necessary to foster innovation, the 2nd should be a very small priority. Here's why. If we're going to do the hypocritical hand wringing that usually benefits rich people, then we should also worry about risk minimization for small inventors. What does lowering risk for small entrepeneurs look like? Here's what stops me from starting a software company (not patents, that's for sure):
    1. If I fail, I won't be able to afford health insurance, which given my health problems, isn't acceptable
    2. I I fail, being a person of modest means, means I may not be able to afford basic necessities (food, shelter, etc.)
    3. I I fail, unlike a corporation, I have very little bankruptcy protection. I can't discharge my personal debts (which is the majority of debt for small entrepeneurs), and as a result I could lose everything I own. Contrast that with large corporations where risk is neatly partitioned into the business, and the wealthy investor can easily live off their considerable wealth while waiting for another opportunity
    4. I I succeed, I have much greater risk due to limited resources.

    Given that the above applies to 99% of us, the best way to foster innovation and competition is to remove the above barriers to competition by creating a system that absorbs risks for small entrepeneurs, who need it most.

    In terms of absorbing R&D risk, there a couple of things to keep in mind. First, many IP based businesses don't do much R&D. Quite a bit of drug research is paid for by government, and then given to corporations using technology transfer, so why worry about protecting leaches? Second, patents do little to protect individual risks, and do quite a bit more to ensure outsized gains for the patents that do succeed. This tends to reward (rich) people who can afford to get a bunch of patents and see which ones work. This isn't a hard problem to solve, it's just that patents aren't about fostering innovation, so they've been kept in a state that achieves their primary purpose, rewarding extremely wealthy people.

    What's a good system look like?
    1. Risk is spread to all companies that use a patent
    2. Companies are forced to license patents at a reasonable cost to competitors. Squeezing out competition through patents shouldn't be allowed.
    3. Licensees of said patent would have their total licensing fees limited to 20% of operating costs until all R&D for patents is paid for.
    4. Once R&D is paid for, patents become public domain.
    5. A small amount of extra profit off a patent may be allowed before letting it expire, but this should be limited to a reasonable percentage of R&D cost, not unlimited as it currently is.
    6. Companies that are very small may be allowed an exemption from the patent tax, or given a break while they get set up.
    7. Companies that are significantly larger than competitors may be barred from patenting items.
    8. Technology transfer from public to private domain should only happen if companies that use it are willing to pay the above 20% licensing fee until costs are covered. No more free rides on publicly funded research.

    How does a company make a profit? First, competitors are going to have an extra 20% overhead, so the original company can probably sell for a lower cost in the beginning. Trade secrets and greater experience would also allow them to sell goods for a lower cost. Beyond paying operating costs, how much profit does a company need? Operational costs pay the the salaries of true innovators so massive profits aren't required. Second, the patent system shouldn't concern itself with whether or not the creator can buy a yacht. This is a publicly created system, and while we should help with risk, it's not our job to make people rich.

    The next, untapped area of innovation involves workplace efficiency gains. Those gains should be at minimum split between workers and companies. Regulations should be put on salary reduction in the event of efficiency gains, so that everyone benefits.

  166. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

    I agree. The people granting patents are fucking morons. That's precisely why I said that there is a grey area between everything and nothing.

    --
    "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
  167. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by thoughtlover · · Score: 1

    ...so instead, there should be some kind of educational standard to vote, which doesn't discriminate based on race or sex, only educational level...

    Why stop there? If education is used as a metric to qualify (or disenfranchise) voters, then require basic education limits to serve in a jury. What's next? Maybe a certain education level needs to be attained to drive. Or to use the internet. When does it stop? You have to be a college grad to own a company? Or land?

    Honestly, I once pondered that having certain education levels to access certain parts of society might be a good way to solve some problems. That was a brief thought. Some college dropouts went on to be the richest and most-influential people in the world. Limiting peoples' access to parts of the Constitution is something that the 1% does to the rest --Not what the 99% suggests be done to the very same 99%. Creating new social barriers and issues within the 99%, by the 99%, is something that probably makes the top power brokers squeal in delight.

    I've come to believe that the real problem is education; specifically, the lack of a good, general education within the American populace. We need a massive reeducation project. Although, considering how school boards make it so difficult for teachers to actually teach, or the bureaucracy-riddled DOEdu and their one-size-fits-all standardization, or the ever-lowering funds actually dedicated to the act of teaching, it would appear that no one really wants an educated populace.

    --
    No sig for you! Come back one year!
  168. Re:Fine. Kill software patents. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Why stop there? If education is used as a metric to qualify (or disenfranchise) voters, then require basic education limits to serve in a jury.

    Given the horrendously stupid decisions we see from juries these days, that's a good idea.

    Maybe a certain education level needs to be attained to drive.

    Also a very good idea, since so many drivers are so dangerous, resulting in thousands of needless deaths every year. We're supposed to have a licensing system so that drivers have to get instruction (aka "education") in driving techniques, and then testing, in order to get the license, but something's not working there.

    Similarly, if you want to be a pilot, you have to pay a LOT of money and get a lot of instruction, and then go through rigorous testing, in order to get a pilot's license (and higher-rated licenses, like ones allowing you to fly for money or transport passengers, are even harder and more expensive).

    Why would you want some uneducated fool piloting an aircraft or operating a piece of heavy machinery?

    Now, some moron will probably jump in here and try to argue that training != education, and that's horseshit. Training is just a highly-focused form of education, but it generally relies on the student having a certain amount of background education. You can't go to pilot school without being able to read and write, do a certain amount of math, understand certain concepts about science, etc. When you're "training" to be a pilot, you learn a lot of things about aerodynamics that other people don't normally learn, unless they take college courses in aerodynamics; that's not simply "training" (as in learning how to operate the controls), that's education. Even in much more direct training, there's basic assumptions of education present, namely basic literacy which you only get through a general education.

    When does it stop?

    It doesn't. Letting incompetent, uneducated people do dangerous things and make important decisions leads to death and destruction. Letting some illiterate yahoo jump in an airplane and fly it will lead to him crashing it, killing himself and anyone else that happens to be in the way. It's the same with sitting on juries and voting. Stupid people sitting on juries leads to innocent people being imprisoned for decades or executed. Stupid people voting leads to a corrupt government and destruction of society.

    Some college dropouts went on to be the richest and most-influential people in the world.

    News flash: college dropouts are "educated", just not quite as much as the ones who stayed long enough to complete their degree. What the hell do you think they were doing from grades K-12? If they weren't goofing off, and were in a decent school, they were being educated. Then they received even more education in their first couple years of college. As a college grad myself, I think I got far more education in my first two years there than my last 2 years; the last two years was extremely focused on my major, whereas the first two years was much more broad-based, including humanities electives, English comp, freshman chemistry, physics, etc. I rarely think about anything I learned in the last two years, but the stuff I learned in the first two years has been useful for all kinds of different things. I could have easily quit after 2-3 years and still been just as successful in what I've done after college, if employers didn't care about me actually having the degree.

    Limiting peoples' access to parts of the Constitution is something that the 1% does to the rest

    No one's proposing limiting anyone's "access to the Constitution" be limited, just that they not be allowed to choose our leaders if they're Jerry Springer guests. Indeed, (in theory) the Constitution applies to everyone on US soil, including voting citizens, illegal aliens, foreign visitors, etc. The 1st Amendment right to freedom of speech isn't limited to US citizens, it applies everywhere where the US government has autho