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[News] Many Software Patents Die, Sun VP Attacks "Intellectual Property" Propaganda Term

  • Subject: [News] Many Software Patents Die, Sun VP Attacks "Intellectual Property" Propaganda Term
  • From: Roy Schestowitz <newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2009 09:47:43 +0000
  • Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.advocacy
  • User-agent: KNode/0.10.9
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Looks Like Bilski Decision Is Leading To Many Software Patent Claim Rejections

,----[ Quote ]
| When the Bilski decision came out, we said that it would greatly limit 
| software patents, but various patent system defenders (mostly lawyers) 
| insisted that I was wrong and most software was still perfectly patentable. 
| Basically, they said it just meant everyone had to write claims differently, 
| and we'd have just as many software patents as before.     
`----

http://techdirt.com/articles/20090128/0114363550.shtml

Intellectual Privilege

,----[ Quote ]
| [T]he term "intellectual privilege" seems to work. It's got the right initial 
| letters, which is a huge win! But it also correctly describes the actual 
| nature of the temporary rights we're considering.  
`----

http://blogs.sun.com/webmink/entry/intellectual_privilege


Related:

If Intellectual Property Is Neither Intellectual, Nor Property, What Is It?

,----[ Quote ]
| The main reason why I have trouble with the "property" part isn't just the 
| fact that it leads people to try to pretend it's just like tangible property, 
| but because it automatically biases how people think about the concept.  
`----

http://techdirt.com/articles/20080306/003240458.shtml


What Does "IP" Really Mean?

,----[ Quote ]
| For readers of Linux Journal, "IP" almost certainly refers to the Internet 
| Protocol, part of the TCP/IP suite that underpins the Internet. But to most  
| people, if it means anything, "IP" refers to something known as "intellectual 
| property". This widespread recognition is rather curious, 
| because "intellectual property" does not exist.   
`----

http://www.linuxjournal.com/node/1005736


Intellectual Property: setting the record straight

,----[ Quote ]
| Instead of speaking of “intellectual property”, which invokes that feel-good
| idea of property and ownership, we should speak of “intellectual monopolies”.
| For this is precisely what copyrights and patents are: they are monopolies
| granted by governments for a limited period as part of a bargain - that, in
| return, those who are granted those monopolies hand them over to the public
| domain once the term of the monopoly has lapsed.
`----

http://www.p2pnet.net/story/17745


Microsoft Interrupts CES Webcast To "Repect Intellectual Property"

,----[ Quote ]
| I could be wrong, but isn't the whole keynote about their
| intellectual property?
| 
| Not to mention, about a million people will leak the information
| within minutes anyway.
| 
| If Microsoft is wondering how they can make themselves "hipper"
| in the eyes of the consumer, not displaying messages like this
| one would be a great start.
`----

http://techoncrack.blogspot.com/2007/01/microsoft-interrupts-ces-webcast-to.html


Mondaq: United States: Federal Circuit Narrows Patent Eligible Subject Matter
In In Re Bilski

,----[ Quote ]
| Worth noting, however, is that Bilski did not claim a computer implementation
| of the recited method or a software claim. Thus, the "machine" prong of the
| machine-or-transformation test remains untested by the Federal Circuit as a
| result of the Bilski decision. However, the Court noted that in order to pass
| muster under the machine prong, the use of such a machine must "impose
| meaningful limits on the claim's scope." Field of use or insignificant
| extra-solution activity will not suffice. Moreover, the process claim in
| issue in Bilski was found to "not ... be a software claim." It therefore also
| remains open as to how or if a software clam can be written to satisfy the
| transformation prong of the test.
`----

http://www.digitalmajority.org/forum/t-109719/mondaq:united-states:federal-circuit-narrows-patent-eligible-subject-matter-in-in-re-bilski


Economist Critic of Software Patents gets Nobel Prize

,----[ Quote ]
| The FFII congratulates Eric S. Maskin, an economist who has long criticised
| the patenting of software, for receiving the 2007 Nobel Prize for Economics.
| Prof. Maskin and two colleagues receive the Prize for research into the
| optimal design of economic mechanisms. By applying his theory to the IT
| sector, Maskin demonstrated "that in such a dynamic industry, patent
| protection may reduce overall innovation and welfare."
`----

http://press.ffii.org/Press_releases/Economist_Critic_of_Software_Patents_gets_Nobel_Prize


Intellectual Property Regime Stifles Science and Innovation, Nobel Laureates
Say

,----[ Quote ]
| Patent monopolies are believed to drive innovation but they actually impede
| the pace of science and innovation, Stiglitz said. The current “patent
| thicket,” in which anyone who writes a successful software programme is sued
| for alleged patent infringement, highlights the current IP system’s failure
| to encourage innovation, he said.
|
| Another problem is that the social returns from innovation do not accord with
| the private returns associated with the patent system, Stiglitz said. The
| marginal benefit from innovation is that an idea may become available sooner
| than it might have. But the person who secures the patent on it wins a
| long-term monopoly, creating a gap between private and social returns.
`----

http://www.ip-watch.org/weblog/index.php?p=1129
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