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Re: [News] MIT Buys Monopolies Using Other People's Work

Verily I say unto thee, that The Lost Packet spake thusly:
> Phil Da Lick! wrote:
>> Homer wrote:
>>> Verily I say unto thee, that Roy Schestowitz spake thusly:

>>>> Universities Patenting More Student Ideas
>>> [...]
>>>> http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/01/03/2327255
>>>
>>> So let me get this straight, the /inventor/ does not "own" his own idea?
> 
> Not when he's technically employed by a university and inventing on 
> /their/ time.

1. Students /pay/ to attend University
2. Universities are funded by /taxpayers' money/
3. University study is /education/, not "employment"
4. The university's "investment" in resources (of whatever nature),
   represents an /opportunity/ for business capitalisation, not some
   kind of automatic entitlement. But then, ethically speaking, the goal
   of an education institution should be about education, not financial
   gain, and should therefore seek subsistence, not profit
5. A person's thoughts are their own. To believe otherwise is to support
   the defensibility of selling one's soul

>>> And people wonder why I'm so opposed to patents.
> 
> Nope. Still not seeing the logic there.

Well by /your/ logic, graduates should have to pay royalties from their
salaries to the university, after they've graduated, because that
university "owns" the knowledge those graduates acquired while studying.

So what proportion of /your/ salary do you pay to /your/ previous
education institutions?

>>> This proves conclusively that "patents" have zero to do with invention,
>>> it is purely a case of who walks through the patent office door, with a
>>> big wad of cash, first.
> 
> for historical example, Alexander Graham Bell vs. Elisha Gray for the 
> patent on the telephone. Gray invented the telephone, Bell beat him to 
> the patent office by a mere twelve minutes. Ergo, Bell gets the credit.

Well that just proves my point, doesn't it?

-- 
K.
http://slated.org

.----
| "At the time, I thought C was the most elegant language and Java
|  the most practical one. That point of view lasted for maybe two
|  weeks after initial exposure to Lisp."   ~ Constantine Vetoshev
`----

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