Red Hat Asks Supreme Ct. to Exclude Software From Patentability (Groklaw)
Red Hat Asks Supreme Ct. to Exclude Software From Patentability (Groklaw)
Posted Oct 2, 2009 18:59 UTC (Fri) by drag (guest, #31333)In reply to: Red Hat Asks Supreme Ct. to Exclude Software From Patentability (Groklaw) by mosfet
Parent article: Red Hat Asks Supreme Ct. to Exclude Software From Patentability (Groklaw)
Posted Oct 2, 2009 20:04 UTC (Fri)
by man_ls (guest, #15091)
[Link] (13 responses)
Posted Oct 3, 2009 1:44 UTC (Sat)
by drag (guest, #31333)
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Then after their building explodes and spreads ghosts through out the city. The rivers turn to blood. Then then gate keeper and key keeper meets and opens up the portal in the sky. Then Gozer enters into our plain of existence and takes the form of the stay puff marshmallow man to destroy New York and start a thousands year reign of terror?
SCOTUS is like the man with his hand on the lever. Sure there was evil spirits terrorizing people before, but it ended up getting a lot worse.
Posted Oct 3, 2009 6:57 UTC (Sat)
by jhoger (guest, #33302)
[Link] (11 responses)
Courts avoid making law, but they end up having to when legislation is vague, conflicting, or has holes in it. We have software patents because our legislative branch has never spoken directly to the issue of software patents.
Companies big and medium sized start having to account for giant potential patent liabilities, and they'll put pressure on government.
So, things getting worse could force them to address the issue head on.
Posted Oct 3, 2009 8:59 UTC (Sat)
by man_ls (guest, #15091)
[Link] (10 responses)
Posted Oct 3, 2009 10:09 UTC (Sat)
by busterb (subscriber, #560)
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Posted Oct 3, 2009 10:44 UTC (Sat)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (8 responses)
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The thing that sucks, I suspect (call it a educated guess), is that since patents are considered as assists to a corporation that many large corporations that have large software patent portfolio have a conflict of interest... If software patents go away then they stand to lose a lot of value in the eyes of investors, since it will have a impact on their balance sheets. Also they are going to lose out on a large amount of revenue and business due to the loss of the cross-licensing agreements.
Now we know that these sort of things balance each other out.. that is you pay one company for their patents and they pay for yours so the overall value to a company is negligible, but it will still impact the way it _looks_ on the stock valuation.
Sort of like how firing large amounts of workers can temporarily boost stock values because employee's wages and such are accounted as liabilities... when in fact they really a significant investment in terms of training and expertise that that company is losing and will actually often cause long-term damage to that company.
Then on top of that patents have a chilling effect on competition.
Anybody and their mom can write software. A few dozen skilled guys with some PCs that are willing to put a huge amount of personal time investment into a software project can create competitive enterprise software. It's been done over and over again.
But with software patents in the loop their is no way those same people can hire the lawyers and pay for the patents in order to survive in the market place. One whiff of a lawsuit from some large corporation and any potential investors or customers will run away as soon as a announcement is made. For small companies the mere _threat_ of a lawsuit is probably a death sentence. (and for Linux software distros the threat is enough to keep them from having competitive features.)
So I expect that large companies are loath to support efforts to destroy software patents due to these (and probably others) conflicts of interest. Paying the patent trolls is probably just a cost of doing business for them at this point.
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It's like corporate tax. Corporations don't pay taxes, their customers do. (except in international market, then its the entire country that pays the price, not the individual corporations really. So again its not something that shows up in balance sheets)
As long as the costs are even across the board (say IBM pays the same patent fees that Microsoft does) then there is no competitive and little financial disadvantage to suffering through these patents. Its the individual businesses and people that pay for this overhead. One way or another.
And, in that way, software patents probably has a even more amplified effect in it's anti-competition. Microsoft can absorb the costs, so can IBM, so can other large software companies. Since it's all even then they are all forced to raise their prices to compensate. Since the same costs are paid by all these guys then there is no negative when competing against each other. However small companies can't afford the legal overhead so that they are at a significant disadvantage.
It's all pretty horrible and is probably another reason why you will never see a big push from major software vendors to limit it.
Posted Oct 3, 2009 11:57 UTC (Sat)
by asherringham (guest, #33251)
[Link] (7 responses)
I'd be interested if you expanded on this and described what you mean. Are you saying that Linux distros would include things they are currently afraid to, because of software patents? What things do you have in mind?
Posted Oct 3, 2009 12:37 UTC (Sat)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (2 responses)
you may question how big a difference this makes, but there's no question that there is an impact
Posted Oct 3, 2009 16:15 UTC (Sat)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (1 responses)
Another big one that is coming up is video drivers. OpenGL 3.0 includes several software patents. Support is required for full compatibility and OpenGL 3 is critical to being competitive with DirectX in the market place.
Posted Oct 4, 2009 5:07 UTC (Sun)
by coriordan (guest, #7544)
[Link]
Help to document these problems would be welcome on swpat.org:
Posted Oct 3, 2009 19:24 UTC (Sat)
by khim (subscriber, #9252)
[Link] (3 responses)
If you are using Linux then most distributions will not use hints
emebedded in fonts to show them. Because of the Apple's and Microsoft's
patents. If this is not the good example - I don't know what is.
Posted Oct 4, 2009 9:16 UTC (Sun)
by bawjaws (guest, #56952)
[Link] (2 responses)
Furthermore, the open source fonts are less likely to have these hint instructions in the first place.
So are we falling into the trap of thinking "it's patented, therefore it must be better"? After all these
Posted Oct 4, 2009 22:04 UTC (Sun)
by lambda (subscriber, #40735)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Oct 6, 2009 11:54 UTC (Tue)
by nye (subscriber, #51576)
[Link]
(Personally, I can't wait for displays to get to a few hundred DPI, at which point this subpixel business might finally go away. I can't stand the chromatic aliasing caused by even the best subpixel implementations, and people are using it as a crutch now to get away with producing poorer quality fonts.)
You mean, like what you have now. Software patents are legal and abused every day, in and out of court.
So?
So?
So?
Yes. In drag's very expressive example, the river of slime was not cleaned until the EPA guy turned the lever.
So?
So?
So?
So?
So?
So?
swpat.org pages
The text you are seeing on screen, for example...
The text you are seeing on screen, for example...
personally prefer the way it looks, I find it looks identical to the rendering in Mac OS X, a system
made by the holders of the relevant truetype patents.
So we're turning on patented code in order to use Microsoft's licensed fonts, when there are
metrically compatible free fonts available.
are 20 year-old patents. Type was rendered very differently in those days.
Subpixel antialiasing, which is a
technique used by Microsoft and Apple for crisper display of text on LCDs, is patented, and thus disabled by default in FreeType. So while the hinting for bitmap displays is less
relevant with today's antialiasing, the highest quality antialiasing available is still patented and
disabled in free software for that reason.
The text you are seeing on screen, for example...
The text you are seeing on screen, for example...