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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2007 00:09:57 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- References: <BAY130-F371380985BE0E1146C37999FBE0@example.com> <875029960701052353o1e6a1fb4p9f088592a9f15f87@example.com> <87hcv4xssk.fsf@example.com> <875029960701071251u3ae217e3xb7f0748a691d94b3@example.com>
Fergal Daly writes: > Despite it being the USPTO who first granted software patents, it was > a court that ruled that they were valid and set the precedent. No. The USPTO for years *refused to issue* patents simply because the devices were described as software, and the court told it that it can't do that; it must review the patent applications on the merits. The court did what it was supposed to do, and it was sustained by higher courts. The decision was impeachable, it was impeached, and presumably the right decision (on the legal merits of the case) was reached---in favor of the plaintiff, who eventually got his patent. > Until then no one was really sure if they were enforceable. It was > not a foregone conclusion. *sigh* again. Once granted, a patent is enforceable unless it is invalidated. The question is, can a patent be granted on software? The USPTO decided it didn't want to deal with them; an applicant appealed, and a court said that they cannot discriminate against devices simply because they're implemented in software. > I don't think the court that set the precedent could possibly have > known or understood the consequences of their actions and since > subsequent courts follow that precedent, they are not analysing the > overall economic consequences of software patents as a concept. Who needs to? The analysis is trivial: a monopoly is granted, which results in restrictions on use and transfer of income to the patentee. The latter is the purpose of a patent, as explicitly stated in the U.S. Constitution; the former is an adverse side effect accepted for the sake of the encouragement of the useful arts. I'm sure that the courts that hear such cases understand this---they mention it often enough in their decisions. Unsurprisingly, 35 USC as written at the time didn't mention software. However, that doesn't mean it doesn't apply; how it applies is the business of the court to decide. > The only consequences they need be concerned with are those > relating to the case they're considering. Precisely, if you restrict "consequences" to legal ones. The legislature may have screwed up social or economic policy when it wrote 35 USC. That is not the court's problem, and it would be severely criticized, perhaps even impeached, if it tried to rectify what it considered to be a mistake due to overbroad language. That would be changing the law ex post. This legal system has worked well for the U.S. for 200+ years. Mistakes are made and/or sustained, but there are much worse systems (and there is no concrete example of a system that I know of that does a better job, though there are several that are roughly comparable). > > But in fact, *we simply have no clue about the actual effects* of > > thorough-going application of patent law to software. > There have been I think 2 seious academic studies of the effects of > existing regime and they have concluded that it has slowed innovation. No, there have been 2 serious studies promoted on www.gnu.org *because* they concluded that it has slowed innovation. There are several other serious studies (eg, those on which the EU has based its current trend toward adopting software patents) that have been promoted in several venues *because* they concluded that it enables innovation. But there have been hundreds of serious studies by now, which don't get a lot of airplay for various reasons. The jury's out still. > I don't your comment about reuse at all. What about glibc, ncurses, > glib, gtk, kde etc etc? If you can mention KDE and GTK+ in the same breath as examples of reuse, I have to wonder what you're thinking, because surely you know as well as I do that GTK+ != Qt, and that GNOME was organized explicitly because the Qt license wasn't open enough, regardless of the merits of the software. It's also unobvious to me what it means to talk about reuse of glibc, which implements the ISO C and POSIX library standards, of which there are probably a dozen or so major implementations. Is compiling code originally targeted for FreeBSD on Linux and discovering it Just Works reuse of glibc? I don't know! > There is massive reuse of open, unpatented libraries. Of course, in some sense. But that's not the question. The question I'm asking is would there be even more reuse in *socially beneficial* ways if those libraries were proprietary in some way. The answer without the qualifier is pretty obviously no; but the answer with the qualifier is very controversial > You'll have to elaborate on that point. I already did, as you quote: > > Note that Stallman has been badmouthing my project for more than a > > decade, and has *never* reused anything we've developed since 1994. > Yes there are many examples of non-reuse but on several occasions, > I've dug into the code of an existing project and shuddered. It's not obvious that *doing* something about that shudder is the right response. This is a point that Fred Brooks made in his 20th year retrospective on *The Mythical Man-Month*: it may be that the right response is to swallow hard and get to work on the next project, working around the weaknesses of the icky thang. This urge to fiddle with minor breakage is a major frustration for me; XEmacs sucks, and it sucks in major ways. But it also sucks in a lot of minor ways, and rather than do the important things, like get Unicode inside or unify the file system interface around URLs, my colleagues spend time on mostly useless things like updating ISO-8859-7 support from 1998 to 2003 versions. And right now I'm suffering a bit because that fiddling resulted in further breakage. > If that's the case, why are there discussions about how a newly > right-wing-ised the supreme court may overturn Roe vs Wade (abortion > ruling)? Perhaps "radical reinterpretation" is too strong but it does > reinterpret for new circumstances and does reverse precedents of lower > courts, The "right-wing-ised" Court arrived in the Reagan Administration, and it hasn't overturned Roe v. Wade yet, despite 25 years of increasing conservative influence. And what is reversed is a "decision", not a "precedent". The difference is that reversing a decision means to reevaluate it in the context of the original case. That's not going to happen in Roe; the decision of the Supreme Court is final. To overturn Roe, the Court will have to create a *new* precedent for somewhat different circumstances, and Congress will have to write legislation that takes advantage of that loophole without infringing the principle of Roe. This is not going to be easy; even right-wing judges have their professional pride. As for "reinterpreting for new circumstances", I don't know much about that. My understanding is that courts are not supposed to do it. They are able to change the direction of future precedent by taking new circumstances into account, but an existing precedent is an existing precedent. It may be reversed on the grounds that it was wrong *at the time*, but adapting existing law to new circumstances is the job of the legislature in the U.S. system.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- From: Fergal Daly
- References:
- [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- From: Kenneth Burling
- Re: [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- From: Fergal Daly
- Re: [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] RE: Shuttleworth Interview at Red Herring (Roger Markus)
- From: Fergal Daly
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