How about countersuing?
Posted Apr 21, 2006 14:51 UTC (Fri) by
sepreece (subscriber, #19270)
In reply to:
How about countersuing? by Arker
Parent article:
Write Free Software, Pay $203,000 to Patent Holder (Right to Create)
Well, the *theory* is that patents encourage the inventor to disclose how the invention works, so that others can improve or build on it. Whn that happens, those people can similarly patent their improvements; if those improvements use the original invention, the result would still require a license of the original patent, as well as any license required by the inventor of the improvement.
The alternative would be that inventors go to excessive lengths to keep their inventions secret, by such means as hiding them inside opaque mechanisms, by licensing them instead of selling them, or by selling their use as a service instead of selling products tham embody the invention.
If medicines, for instance, could not be patented, you might need to go to a licensed clinic to get a shot of some secret substance when you were sick, rather than being able to buy a pill at your local pharmacy. And other companies would not be able to explore improvements on the drug or better ways of making it, because they wouldn't be able to find out what the chemical basis of the drug was or how to make it.
So, yes, patents probably do promote progress in many areas, when compared to the alternative of trade secrets. Whether software is such an area, whether the patent duration is fair, whether the duration should be the same for all kinds of patent, and whether the patent office grants many patents that really should have been rejected as obvious, trivial, or non-innovative are separate issues...
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