S
(Shovel)
Guest
This probably belongs in general, but for sake of more intelligent debate...
Software Patenting is still being finalised in the EU, and the final vote has been delayed for a few months I believe. There's advocates on both sides, though the Reg reported that the "We're right, you're wrong" tactics of some members of the Open Source community may have totally cocked up the hope of getting some reasonable, non-American patent laws.
Anyway, today I read this
Here we have a company that no one has heard of with a patent from 1994 that seems to cover ActiveX and some Netscape plug ins - all developed "without permission".
Clearly, this company has done nothing with the patent, or the case would have been brought much earlier. They would also have their own product available implementing this patent.
Yet this has come to court. That's not to say that MS and later AOL will lose, just that it's absurd that a patent that predates Windows 95 can still be relevent (consider how quickly and dramatically the OS line has aged in the current computing climate for "impact").
Then there's the case last year when someone appeared owning the patent to the concept of bulliten boards/messageboards/forums etc. It predating the WWW but was still valid. It never got taken seriously, but it did still stand and with a different judge and more efficient legal line taken by the owners, something could have been made of it.
I believe (though please correct me if this is wrong) that the proposed patents in the EU are going to last 20 years... Imagine if, at the invention of the GUI, someone had patented the "drop down menu" or the "list box".
Especially now, when "foundational" advances in GUI design are much rarer, a patent could kill competition - or worse, bind a great idea to an otherwise shit product. Imitation and evolution is one of the things that has helped make the software industry move so quickly, yet laws exist to try and bind people back.
Erm, "Discuss"
Software Patenting is still being finalised in the EU, and the final vote has been delayed for a few months I believe. There's advocates on both sides, though the Reg reported that the "We're right, you're wrong" tactics of some members of the Open Source community may have totally cocked up the hope of getting some reasonable, non-American patent laws.
Anyway, today I read this
Here we have a company that no one has heard of with a patent from 1994 that seems to cover ActiveX and some Netscape plug ins - all developed "without permission".
Clearly, this company has done nothing with the patent, or the case would have been brought much earlier. They would also have their own product available implementing this patent.
Yet this has come to court. That's not to say that MS and later AOL will lose, just that it's absurd that a patent that predates Windows 95 can still be relevent (consider how quickly and dramatically the OS line has aged in the current computing climate for "impact").
Then there's the case last year when someone appeared owning the patent to the concept of bulliten boards/messageboards/forums etc. It predating the WWW but was still valid. It never got taken seriously, but it did still stand and with a different judge and more efficient legal line taken by the owners, something could have been made of it.
I believe (though please correct me if this is wrong) that the proposed patents in the EU are going to last 20 years... Imagine if, at the invention of the GUI, someone had patented the "drop down menu" or the "list box".
Especially now, when "foundational" advances in GUI design are much rarer, a patent could kill competition - or worse, bind a great idea to an otherwise shit product. Imitation and evolution is one of the things that has helped make the software industry move so quickly, yet laws exist to try and bind people back.
Erm, "Discuss"