> > Few people seem to understand that the purpose of a patent (which > > actually means "open", much to some people's surprise) is to strike a > > balance between making an invention public and protecting the commercial > > value of said invention. The whole point is to grant he who publishes > > the invention a reward for doing so.
> But this also means that when an invention would be made public > *anyway*, the public interest is getting screwed by granting the > patent.
> In other words, the body politic makes a deal: "we'll give you a > monopoly for N years, if you promise to make this public". If the > person is going to make it public anyway, then it's foolish for the > body politic to make that deal.
You misunderstand the basis of patent. The person doesn't have to _ever_ make his invention public.
He might just go to Bill Gates and say, "Sire, I invented the most marvelous thing. I dare not reveal it to the world because they would steal it, but you have enough money that if you would like to enjoy the invention, you may pay me for its private use."
Also, if I have a competitive edge, I might build a factory that uses my cool invention as a 'trade secret' and puts out goods cheaper or of better quality than you do. Because if there were no patent, you would have the same competitive edge as I and I would have no benefit of my cool invention. By allowing patent, I can share my idea with you and we can reach a price such that it's still worth it to both you and me to have you pay me. We both get benefit, and the world gets benefit. If showing you my idea means you can steal it, then there is no motivation for me to tell you.
Patent allows the common man to compete with the rich for access to invention by saying "we promise not to confuse 'sharing' with 'giving'."
The common confusion about patent is that people would just give things away when they can't sell them. But that is not their only option.
I think the reason that mathemeticians and physicists are always used as examples of people who freely share stuff is less to do with the fact that sharing is natural in the absence of patent and more to do with the fact that commercial applications of the information they trade in are scarce. In the modern day and age where interesting math can have commercial applications I don't think it would be the case that absent patent protection, sharing would always occur.
The reason I think patent protection for computer science is not a good idea right now is that there are too many cool things too densely packed in this too-young space. A lot of them really are obvious. And since patent precludes independent invention, and I'd venture a guess most people are going for patent protection to "keep independent invention from happening" not to "keep a unique idea that never would have been thought of protected", I think it's wrong.
I also think that patent protection should be keyed to the timelines of the businesses involved. Fortunes are made and lost overnight in CS. Patents that last for 17 years are effectively infinite. I think 2-3 year patents would sit a lot better with me. At least then in the case of gross error by the patent office on the 'obviousness' issue, the industry could still recover gracefully.
>>>>> "KMP" == Kent M Pitman <pit...@world.std.com> writes:
[...] KMP> I also think that patent protection should be keyed to the KMP> timelines of the businesses involved. Fortunes are made and KMP> lost overnight in CS. Patents that last for 17 years are KMP> effectively infinite. I think 2-3 year patents would sit a KMP> lot better with me.
That depends on the invention. For something like the RSA patent, 2-3 years would have been too short and indeed might have induced the inventors to sit on it until the market was ready for it -- defeating the porpose.
KMP> At least then in the case of gross error KMP> by the patent office on the 'obviousness' issue, the industry KMP> could still recover gracefully.
I understand the motivation but I doubt time limits alone will so what you want. Maybe time limits in addition to revenue derived (a variant of the limit idea you toy with) might work better, but I am unsure how and what else it might hurt. It seems pretty clear one switch (patent-cs-p) one knob to turn (length-of-term) will not cover the cases you care about, though.
> Don Geddis <d...@geddis.org> writes: > > I've seen lots of high-quality free software. Try to compare the Apache > > web server (free) to, say, an Oracle RDMBS on almost any measure of > > "product quality".
> You're assuming I'm thinking a _company_ based on free software is of > concern. > Because if someone talks to me about a company, the very first thing I > tell them is where to file for a trade name, how to get an employee ID > number for tax purposes, and so on. When someone says free software, > I don't see hurdles like this.
I guess I don't understand your focus on corporations. The Apache web server looks to me like a shining success of the free software community. It's high quality, well documented, etc. Most everything you might want from a commercial product. And yet, it was produced with volunteer labor, outside the structure of a corporation.
I had thought that one of your concerns was that free software projects produced lower-quality output. And your explanation was that they didn't have some of the responsibilities of corporations: documentation, support, QA, etc.
I grant that there are some free software corporations, like RedHat, so those don't need to concern us here. But what is your analysis of Apache? Isn't it a non-corporation, high quality, free software effort?
Or perhaps I've misunderstood your position...
-- Don ___________________________________________________________________________ ____ Don Geddis http://don.geddis.org d...@geddis.org I hope that after I die, people will say of me: "That guy sure owed me a lot of money." -- Deep Thoughts, by Jack Handey [1999]
Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> writes: > To me it sounds very much like labor unions that have solidarity > only with their own, which has been a stronghold of socialist ideas > for ages, guilds that allow only accepted members to benefit from > their knowledge, which were precursors to the labor unions.
I believe there was very essential differences between labor unions and guilds. Guilds were for educated craftsmen, whereas the "laborer" was unskilled and without bargaining power. They gained _some_ bargaining power by forming unions and thus having the threat of striking, but that power only goes as far as the support of the union. This goes a long way to understanding labor unions' hostility towards what they perceive as scabs and freeloaders.
> And since patent precludes independent invention, and I'd venture a guess > most people are going for patent protection to "keep independent invention > from happening" not to "keep a unique idea that never would have been thought > of protected", I think it's wrong.
Absolutely right. Independent invention should be seen as evidence that the patent office mis-judged "obviousness". Instead, it is used to collect damages in lawsuits.
Moreover: the patent office is looking for "obvious to someone of _ordinary_ skill in the art". In CS, this is similar to having an undergraduate degree. Even if thousands of CS professors thought the concept was obvious, and tens of thousands of graduate students did too: the patent office would still say that the invention was "non-obvious" if ordinary college students couldn't figure it out in their heads.
> Fortunes are made and lost overnight in CS. Patents > that last for 17 years are effectively infinite. I think 2-3 year patents > would sit a lot better with me.
Another good idea. The exceptions to this (like the RSA patent) are very rare. 17-year patents are causing CS much more harm than good.
-- Don ___________________________________________________________________________ ____ Don Geddis http://don.geddis.org d...@geddis.org Sometimes I think you have to march right in and demand your rights, even if you don't know what your rights are, or who the person is you're talking to. Then, on the way out, slam the door. -- Deep Thoughts, by Jack Handey
* Thomas Bushnell, BSG | But this also means that when an invention would be made public *anyway*, | the public interest is getting screwed by granting the patent.
How would the _invention_ be made public "anyway"? Why would someone _want_ to make something public if the public just takes it and leaves him with all his expenses and development cost? Considering the often enormous costs of bringing something brilliantly simple to market, the whole point of the patent system is to make it possible to make simple and obvious inventions that are only simple and obvious after the fact.
The public does not "own" whatever people come up with, but I guess that your basic attitude is precisely that the public has a _right_ to take the inventions and the work of the individual, sort of in exchange for free food or something.
/// -- In a fight against something, the fight has value, victory has none. In a fight for something, the fight is a loss, victory merely relief.
Centuries ago, Nostradamus foresaw when Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> would write:
> * Thomas Bushnell, BSG > | But this also means that when an invention would be made public *anyway*, > | the public interest is getting screwed by granting the patent.
> How would the _invention_ be made public "anyway"? Why would someone > _want_ to make something public if the public just takes it and leaves > him with all his expenses and development cost? Considering the often > enormous costs of bringing something brilliantly simple to market, the > whole point of the patent system is to make it possible to make simple > and obvious inventions that are only simple and obvious after the fact.
> The public does not "own" whatever people come up with, but I guess that > your basic attitude is precisely that the public has a _right_ to take > the inventions and the work of the individual, sort of in exchange for > free food or something.
Well, strangely enough, it seems that one of the conditions required for governments (which presumably _do_ "belong to the people," to one degree or another) to grant the legal instrument known as a "patent" is that the invention must indeed be made public.
After the 17 or 20 years that the patent runs, rights to use the invention do indeed get "given to the public."
There's certainly a whole lotta "public interest" involved... -- (concatenate 'string "cbbrowne" "@ntlug.org") http://www.ntlug.org/~cbbrowne/nonrdbms.html Rules of the Evil Overlord #130. "All members of my Legions of Terror will have professionally tailored uniforms. If the hero knocks a soldier unconscious and steals the uniform, the poor fit will give him away." <http://www.eviloverlord.com/>
Bulent Murtezaoglu <b...@acm.org> writes: > >>>>> "RJ" == Rahul Jain <rj...@sid-1129.sid.rice.edu> writes: > RJ> Bulent Murtezaoglu <b...@acm.org> writes: > >> Nor will I have him patent the thing and stifle competition. > RJ> Patenting something should _increase_ competition, [...] > Hey, I thought my remark was patently tongue-in-cheek!
It's a common bit of FUD that is thrown about the "Free Software" community as though it were true. There even people who believe that a gene sequence is patentable...
Just wanted to make sure everyone understood the realities of patents.
-- -> -/ - Rahul Jain - \- <- -> -\ http://linux.rice.edu/~rahul -=- mailto:rj...@techie.com /- <- -> -/ "Structure is nothing if it is all you got. Skeletons spook \- <- -> -\ people if [they] try to walk around on their own. I really /- <- -> -/ wonder why XML does not." -- Erik Naggum, comp.lang.lisp \- <- |--|--------|--------------|----|-------------|------|---------|-----|-| (c)1996-2002, All rights reserved. Disclaimer available upon request.
* Raffael Cavallaro | Since you are rightly concerned about balance, I think you should see | that, on balance, the commercial software world has favored precisely | those companies who do *not* care about customers getting reasonable | products at a reasonable price.
This sounds like "the commercial software world" is an entity of itself, distrinct from the same customers who get screwed. I do not think this is even possible. The customers _believe_ they have received reasonable products at a reasonable price, and the companies care very much that they believe this. If the facts are so different, how come they are so _unable_ to destroy the belief? This is not sinister religion or cult, it is simply business, right? That should mean that someone who can show that the prices or the products are unreasonable should get a fair hearing. When this does not happen, something is clearly wrong with at least one party's perceptions of the situation. The computer world has a long history of abandoning whole product classes when something else came along. The death of CP/M, for instance. All the excellent hardware and software that came from Digital Equipment Corporation, Hewlett Packard, Honeywell Bull, etc, is all gone, in favor of Unix-like software that takes more people to maintain and which some people argue cost more in total ownership.
However, the almost religious belief in "the future" has made a lot of people opt for things that are bad today but which has some "promise". Microsoft has managed to capture that notion of delivering the "promised land" and Windows was perhaps the best evidence yet -- it killed off so many so much better "alternatives" because people believed that Windows would be "the future". They have been willing to pay for entertaining this belief, but that belief is under serious threat. At the very least, there are now more futures, not just one.
| You say "these issues are debated every day in congress," but | congresspeople are *not* the commercial software community.
I read "in [the] Congress" to mean politicians and "in congress" to mean the community of business leaders.
| The Free Software movement is a truly grass roots movement that seeks to | redress this correctly (again, IMHO) perceived imbalance between motives | of profit v. quality and fair value for customers.
But the customers actually have a ver different take on all of this.
| When the dominant commercial software companies begin to ship products | that show the same sort of care that, for example, automobiles do, then | there will be less of a clamor for Free Software, because people will | recognize the value of a quality professionally produced product.
If it were a grass roots movement, it would be concerned with the same things that made the automobile industry concerned with quality and safety. Richard Stallman is no Ralph Nader. Instead of realizing that we need the software industry and then force it become responsible, the Free Software movement aims to hurt the industry in ways that does not teach it to be more responsible, since there is no guarantee that the attack on the industry will stop if they _get_ more responsible. In other words, Ralph Nader had a constructive purpose. Richard Stallman has a destructive purpose.
| However, since most shipping commercial software is shamefully unstable, | buggy, (often never fixed without the payment of *additional charges* for | "upgrades"), not to mention poorly documented, Free Software will | continue to gather support as a necessary corrective balance to the | billionaire-making juggernaut of shoddy commercial software.
The only commercial software for which this is _really_ true, is the crap that emanates from Microsoft. Other companies, having seen that this one large company can become so rich by providing 80%-solutions, figure that they do not have to make more than 80%-solutions themselves. This is one of the major reasons for the massive number of software failures. It is not particularly hard to write bug-free software, when you actually try, but if you think it is "impossible" or that bugs are acceptable, it will _seem_ very hard.
There are other software makers besides Microsoft. Do not believe _any_ of their propaganda. Microsoft is completely irrelevant. The people who want Microsoft products are _not_ your market. Do not buy _any_ of their stuff. Just do without it. This is not even difficult, much less hard. What do you want crap for, anyway?
/// -- In a fight against something, the fight has value, victory has none. In a fight for something, the fight is a loss, victory merely relief.
In article <3226951865852...@naggum.net>, Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> writes:
> ... > However, the almost religious belief in "the future" has made a lot of > people opt for things that are bad today but which has some "promise". > Microsoft has managed to capture that notion of delivering the "promised > land" and Windows was perhaps the best evidence yet -- it killed off so > many so much better "alternatives" because people believed that Windows > would be "the future". They have been willing to pay for entertaining
i think you attribute too much rationality to the buying decisions that led to the dominance of MS. from what i remember it was more like:
1. with the introduction of the PC computers became affordable to quite a few people
2. many of those people did not have the faintest idea about computers, but got convinced thatusing them would help them with whatever they wanted or had to do
3. if they knew anything, they knew that IBM was the big name in computers and going with IBM wouldn't be wrong
4. buying a PC got them DOS
5. the object code only system of program delivery removed any possibility of recompiling your code for something else
6. this enabled microsoft to force system builders to offer MS products almost exclusively
7. this led to a generation of "experts" who weren't (often still aren't) aware that alternatives to MS even exist and on whom many of the people who make purchasing decisions rely on
hs
--
don't use malice as an explanation when stupidity suffices
Christopher Browne <cbbro...@acm.org> wrote in message <news:m366372jgr.fsf@chvatal.cbbrowne.com>... > Well, strangely enough, it seems that one of the conditions required > for governments (which presumably _do_ "belong to the people," to one > degree or another) to grant the legal instrument known as a "patent" > is that the invention must indeed be made public.
> After the 17 or 20 years that the patent runs, rights to use the > invention do indeed get "given to the public."
> There's certainly a whole lotta "public interest" involved...
Worth noting in this context that the word "patent" means "in plain view." The idea is to promote the publication of inventions by granting a time limited monopoly on the right to profit from said inventions.
* Kent M Pitman <pit...@world.std.com> | Maybe it's that I read too much of Slashdot, but I hear a lot of people | who seem to think that the world would be "just great" if there were a de | facto monopoly operating system tht was Linux. That is, that having no | choice would be fine as long as there was no one making any money. To | me, that is just as wrong as the Microsoft effect, and fixes nothing.
This is all very natural, really. Few people seem to be able to grasp the notion of "alternative system" and manage to think about what things would be like if some serious changes were made. So if Microsoft has gained monopoly power, what is bad is not "monopoly power" but that Microsoft has gained it and things would be better if some less evil, possibly even "good", monopoly power could replace them. This is, of course, evidence of the traditionally accepted human stupidity in action.
Microsoft is not a monopoly that just sprung up out of nothing. It is based in a pathologically paranoid leader, Bill Gates, who is so insanely competitive that he thinks someone will topple Microsoft any day. So the only way _he_ can win is to topple other companies first. Since he and his fellow Microsoft staff are the only ones who are so _nuts_ that they think this way, they "win". Normal people do not consider _everybody_ a threat to their existence and do not compulsively acquire and destroy their "competition", nor do they seek to undermine _every_ other player in the market by coercive tactics. There is simply something wrong with the mental health of the Microsoft senior leadership when they manage to instill this kind of fear in their own employees. Insane competitiveness is contagious: everybody else have to prepare for it and work themselves into a frenzy. The whole point with a civilzation and a legal system is that people shall not have to fend off every possible predator on their own, but the American legal system has seriously failed to protect people (both businesses and customers) from predators in the market, so they have to get into a predotory mind-set themselves. Microsoft has proven that the old adage "dog-eat-dog" competition is not dead yet, and that in order to fight this evil monstrosity, people now believe they have to engage in similarly evil tactics. However bad the Microsoft people are, the proper solution is not to become like them and fight them on their own terms -- because whetever someone _thinks_ is "their terms" is most likely _not_ their actual terms, and they just see them as attacks they have a right to defend themselves against -- just increasing the amount of violence the predator needs to use to "win". Just listen to that psycho Steve Ballmer and his hysterical shrieks about Free Software! On the other hand, maybe some of the anti-commercial software people here have done just that, and almost hear the voice of that lunatic when they read Kent Pitman's articles? In a twist of irony, paranoid people have a tendency to create an environment in which their fears come true, and that is just the case with the psychos who run Microsoft -- they have single-handedly created an environment where other business people, their own customers, and politicians want to see them dead and destroyed, and so, too, with the Free Software people who are, and this is important, not _wrong_ in wanting the death of Microsoft.
However, the only way to beat a tyrant at his own game is to be a worse tyrant. Since the real evil is that tyrants can evolve in what was supposed to be a free economy overseen by a powerful government that would crush criminals in time, the government needs to crush the criminals quickly and mercilessly when it is too late. When the United States military forces can crush the Al Qaeda by carpet-bombing Afghanistan and have hopefully destroyed some of the "pharmaceutical" production of that country, and can stage wars on the "pharmaceutical" production of Columbia, it can and should be used to carpet-bomb Redmond, Washington.
Most good people do not want to fight, but some of them become bad when they think they have to or are somehow "forced" to, instead of being smart enough to figure out more precisely what they need to do. Since bad people is a fact of life, being smart enough to counter-act them intelligently is vital to the continued existence of civilization. What we see in the software industry is that the sheer naïvité of engineers, who are generally far less assertive and aggressive socially than those who want to "make it" as business leaders, retreat to the disciplines they master, and _therefore_ become so fantastically hostile when they think they are "wronged" and instead of having the decency to think long enough to figure out what they experience, erect images of "enemies". Be it in newsgroups or in the market, where the "worker" rebels against the "forces" of a "market" he does not understand, or in Free Software, where the same naïvité idolizes the hobbyist and scorns the professional, the pattern is the same: some experience of some form of pain causes a person to stop thinking and to declare whatever appears to be the source this "enemy" and that absolutely anything goes in fighting this "enemy". I cannot imagine a less intelligent or less mature way to respond. (This is one reason why I think the only real threat to human existence is the failure to stamp out stupidity.)
For the current problem of Free Software, it has become a lot worse with the increasing success in beating Microsoft, but, again, it has been a highly emotional and personal fight, instead of the professional fight it should have been. Microsoft "competes" by slaughtering the competition, while most other companies tries to compete in good spirit by offering better products. People who have been hurt by Microsoft, and I consider the fact that a computer crashes on you so you lose your work as being hurt by their willful incompetence, tend to hate them, and this is very understandable, but it is precisely that hatred that has made the evil monstrosity possible: People who hate are extremely predictable and very easy to make _completely_ ineffectual, and some paranoid and competitive psycho like Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer can easily and quickly tame this hatred and even turn it into a force for his own purposes, and what would be more beneficial for Microsoft than a huge war between programmers who thought they had to fight Microsoft by giving away their works on the one hand and the evil monopoly that could give the customers what they want.
Some have said that Microsoft cannot take GPL'ed source and just use it, but they can: They break every other contract they enter if they think it is to their competitive advantage to do so. And who would be able to sue them? Besides, how do you find out that some source code in a closely guarded secret-source system is ripped off from "free" code?
All in all, the Free Software is playing right into the hand of Microsoft -- by legitimizing their tactics and their goals, by giving away their own work, and by creating a business community where Microsoft can use their "might is right" philosophy to crush competitors, which is what everybody will expect when they start to compete with Microsoft, anyway.
> > You misunderstand the basis of patent. The person doesn't have to _ever_ > > make his invention public.
> Then you can't get a patent. Patents (unlke copyrights) may not be > secret.
You're right, not secret, as the patent is a public process, but Kent probably meant the person does not have to publicize his invention.
There is a very interesting example of a man, Jerome Lemelson, who filed some 550+ patents in his life, patents that have earned more than $1 Billion (!) yet he never actually created a thing! People argue about whether he was a genius or a leech but he (and his lawyers) worked the patent system to an extreme that is very hard to justify. Read: http://www.business2.com/articles/mag/0,1640,11582,FF.html it is quite an interesting story.
HS> i think you attribute too much rationality to the buying HS> decisions that led to the dominance of MS. from what i HS> remember it was more like:
I remember this differently though part of that time I thought I was an EE, so I might be wrong.
HS> 1. with the introduction of the PC computers became affordable HS> to quite a few people
Actually the PC was quite expensive compared to other small computers in the market but this goes with the credibility you mention in 3.
HS> 2. many of those people did not have the faintest idea about HS> computers, but got convinced thatusing them would help them HS> with whatever they wanted or had to do
My experience in the early to mid 80's was that they had all kinds of expectations from the small computer: accounting, invoicing, and maybe even word processing to an extent. Maybe we are talking about a different crowd though.
HS> 3. if they knew anything, they knew that IBM was the big name HS> in computers and going with IBM wouldn't be wrong
Yup.
HS> 4. buying a PC got them DOS
Yes, which MS could sell independently.
HS> 5. the object code only system of program delivery removed any HS> possibility of recompiling your code for something else
At the time, even if you had the source, you couldn't do much with it w/o the PC hardware. Most screen handling stuff went below the BIOS, and some if not most sections of the code for popular apps were written in assemebler. It wasn't like things were calling standard lib and having screen control funneled through curses.
HS> 6. this enabled microsoft to force system builders to offer MS HS> products almost exclusively
This would have been an advantage. MS did not stop there. They cooked up an ingenious licencing scheme where they effectively forced vendors to pay per machine shipped regradless of what OS it shipped with.
HS> 7. this led to a generation of "experts" who weren't (often HS> still aren't) aware that alternatives to MS even exist and on HS> whom many of the people who make purchasing decisions rely on
This is absolutely right. But you have to remember even up till the early 90's in the space you are describing there was Novell for servers and DOS for PC's. Mac's were too expensive, Sun/Dec I will not even mention. Even X-terminals were expensive. Xenix _might_ have been an option but even then people were getting attached to little utilities that required 100% compatibility. I was a reasonably knowledgeable person who did most of his coding on SunOS but when I was tasked with coming up with office systems recommendations in 1991, I found out you just couldn't beat clone 286's netbooting from 386 Novell servers. With custom apps written by 4GL sweatshops. That was the reality when you set out to spend other people's money. (My money? I think I had a Sun i386 back then).
Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> writes: > * Thomas Bushnell, BSG > | But this also means that when an invention would be made public *anyway*, > | the public interest is getting screwed by granting the patent.
> How would the _invention_ be made public "anyway"?
Lots of ways. For some things, there's no way to market them without the nature of the invention being obvious. Or one may have secondary reasons to want to make it public.
Since the patent system is a *bargain* that the body politic strikes, "we give you a monopoly, if you give us the details of how it works", it's reasonable for both sides to bargain for the best deal they can in that bargain.
Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> writes: > However, the almost religious belief in "the future" has made a lot of > people opt for things that are bad today but which has some "promise". > Microsoft has managed to capture that notion of delivering the "promised > land" and Windows was perhaps the best evidence yet -- it killed off so > many so much better "alternatives" because people believed that Windows > would be "the future". They have been willing to pay for entertaining > this belief, but that belief is under serious threat. At the very least, > there are now more futures, not just one.
when you codify process into a program, you are predicting a precise subset of the future. how valuable these predictions are is determined by the users. if they have lost trust in your predictions they are more likely to try the art of predicting, themselves. at some point, their skills match their requirement -- if this point is after you share your skills w/ them there is one less pronoun required wrt benefit. if before, they probably no longer value your particular skills/code/process/attitude in the long term.
* Thomas Bushnell, BSG | Since the patent system is a *bargain* that the body politic strikes, "we | give you a monopoly, if you give us the details of how it works", it's | reasonable for both sides to bargain for the best deal they can in that | bargain.
The public gets the product at all.
/// -- In a fight against something, the fight has value, victory has none. In a fight for something, the fight is a loss, victory merely relief.
Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> writes: > * Thomas Bushnell, BSG > | Since the patent system is a *bargain* that the body politic strikes, "we > | give you a monopoly, if you give us the details of how it works", it's > | reasonable for both sides to bargain for the best deal they can in that > | bargain.
> The public gets the product at all.
The patent isn't for that. Patents are *not* like copyrights, and they are founded on a different justification--one that you even accurately stated a while back. That it's a bargain of publicity for monopoly.
* Thomas Bushnell, BSG) | The patent isn't for that.
Yes, it is.
You seem to have access to a lawyer because of this retarded libel crap of yours, so ask him about intellectual property, or get a good book on the topic. This is stuff you can just read about and learn. There is no point in trying to communicate with someone who willfully ignores the existing literature in this area because of his political opinions.
/// -- In a fight against something, the fight has value, victory has none. In a fight for something, the fight is a loss, victory merely relief.
Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net> writes: > You seem to have access to a lawyer because of this retarded libel crap > of yours, so ask him about intellectual property, or get a good book on > the topic. This is stuff you can just read about and learn. There is no > point in trying to communicate with someone who willfully ignores the > existing literature in this area because of his political opinions.
Um, already done. And guess what: patents are uniformly described as a solution to the problem of inventors keeping inventions secret. And *thus* carefully distinguished from copyrights, which originated as a means to promote diversity of creative works.
> Um, already done. And guess what: patents are uniformly described as > a solution to the problem of inventors keeping inventions secret. And > *thus* carefully distinguished from copyrights, which originated as a > means to promote diversity of creative works.
So I fetched my nifty American Law textbook:
"Fundamentals of American Law", published by the NYU law school. The chapter on "Intellectual Property Law" is by Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss.
Dreyfuss outlines five rationales often given for IP law:
* "natural rights theory", "that the creator has a moral right to the fruits of his labor, including the benefits produced by his intellect."
* "the exchange-for-secrecy rationale", "that, without a legal right to prevent others from copying his invention, the creator may be tempted to keep it secret".
* "the quality control principle", exclusive rights prevent, for example, "others from distorting or mutilating his work".
* "prospecting theory", that exclusive rights keep the holder of the exclusive right in control, who thus has "comprehensive knowledge of how the field is unfolding and can help maintain an 'orderly market' in its further development".
* "the profit-incentive theory", which we all know about pretty well.
Dreyfuss first points out that the natural rights theory is "largely rejected" by American law, "although many nations' intellectual property laws are at least partly premised on this rationale."
The profit-incentive theory is labelled by her as "the most dominant influence" on American IP law, and she says that the copyright clause of the US Constitution is "as a whole ... interpreted as reflecting the profit-incentive theory".
The public interest rule in the copyright clause however controls, and is part of the reason that the natural rights theory is rejected in American law. "Profits are intended to encourage the creation of works that enrich the public. Thus, when situations arise in which the public's interest in access conflicts with the creator's interest in profits, it is the public that usually wins. Furthermore, the emphasis on profits means that the dignity interests encompassed by some of the other rationales [that is, the natural rights, quality control, and prospecting ones] receive only secondary recognition."
Now that's about IP in general. The notion that its a bargain is already thus established, and that if the bargain is not in the public's interest, the public has no reason to strike the bargain.
What about patents? Here is her introduction to the section on patent law, which clearly advances the exchange-for-secrecy motive as the primary one:
"Patent law protects what are commonly regarded as inventions. It creates, for 20 years, exclusive rights against all who make, use, offer to sell, or sell the protected invention, including independent inventors. In exchange, the patent is published so that the ideas in the invention go into the public domain immediately, where they can be used to create other inventions."
* Thomas Bushnell, BSG | Um, already done. And guess what: patents are uniformly described as a | solution to the problem of inventors keeping inventions secret.
That is just plain ridiculous nonsense. Patents are public documents, and although a patent search is generally expensive, you should be able to locate and read any patent if you have the patent number, very close to free of charge. Of course, there are several million of them, but at least IBM has a great patent search engine on the net.
I cannot imagine how you could become so confused. Read some books written by legal experts, and fewer by clueless anti-patent activists. I have already recommended David R. Koepsell: The Ontology of Cyberspace, Law, Philosphy, and the Future of Intellectual Propery. It is a remarkably intelligent exposition of both the current situation and the problems we face. Only 130 pages long, it is packed with insight.
/// -- In a fight against something, the fight has value, victory has none. In a fight for something, the fight is a loss, victory merely relief.