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No software Patents in Europe - Demonstration in Brussels, 14 april







No software Patents in Europe -
Demonstration in Brussels, 14 april

No software Patents in Europe -
Demonstration in Brussels, 14 april
04/11/2004 02:52 AM

desde el día 5 hasta el 15 de abril .. from 5 until 15 april .. bram.be

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No software Patents in Europe - Demonstration in Brussels, 14 april

Grok Headline matches for No software Patents in Europe - Demonstration in Brussels, 14 april

Demonstration Against Software Patents
in Europe


Demonstration Against Software Patents
in Europe
04/10/2004 01:56 PM

PwC: software patents threat to Europe


PwC: software patents threat to Europe 09/15/2004 05:53 AM
Few prepared for consequences

Software patents in Europe go back to
square one


Software patents in Europe go back to
square one
02/05/2005 09:36 PM
Europe will have to wait awhile for software patents. The European Union is sending the process back to the starting point, in a victory for anti-patent forces.

Thank Poland for saving Europe from
software patents


Thank Poland for saving Europe from
software patents
12/28/2004 05:28 AM
Cory Doctorow: For years now, the forces of good in Europe have been fighting against reforms to EU patent laws that would allow software patents to be filed in Europe. Software patents have existed in the US for some time now, with disastrous results -- rather than encouraging innovation, these patents have been used by companies who produce nothing except lawsuits to shut down whole classes of technologies or to extort money from them.

There's no reasonable explanation for bringing software patents to Europe. The American experiment has been such a complete and utter failure, it's crystal-clear that software patents in Europe would be just as bad.

And the Euro-activists have won again and again, every battle, and the greedy jerks who support patents have strong-armed and cajoled the European Parliament into breaking its own rules to overturn the victories of the activists.

But at the very final moment, the Polish Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Science and Information Technology stepped in and blocked the Patent Directive, taking it off the EU agenda (for now, anyway). It was an incredibly brave and important moment, one that will keep the European technology industry and the citizens who rely on it free and safe.

ThankPoland is a site that is collecting thank-yous for the Polish Undersecretary of State, particularily from the EU, but also from around the world. We owe him a debt of gratitude and it's an honor to thank him today. Link (Thanks, Crosbie!)

FSF Europe to EICTIA: Drop support for
software patents


FSF Europe to EICTIA: Drop support for
software patents
04/05/2005 08:44 AM
Georg Grev, president of the Free Software Foundation Europe, has written to Rudy Provoost, president of the European Information & Communications Technology Industry Association, to explain why software patents are a bad idea. Quoting Bill Gates own observations about the nature of software patents, and presenting an interesting hypothetical about the the state of science today if Pythagoras had developed his theorem under a system where ideas are patented, Grev shreds the duplicitous claims of those who back the legalization of monopoly power to seize and steal ideas through the device of software patents. NewsForge presents the following text including Grev's letter as a public service for our readers.

Software patents are bad for coders like
literary patents would be for writers


Software patents are bad for coders like
literary patents would be for writers
06/22/2005 01:49 AM
Cory Doctorow: Richard Stallman, creator of the Free Software movement, has written a tremendous essay for the Guardian on the risks of software patents. Richard undertakes a gedankenexperiment about "literary patents" and the impact they would have had on Victor Hugo as he sat down to pen Les Miserables.
Now consider this hypothetical literary patent: Claim 1: a communication process that represents, in the mind of a reader, the concept of a character who has been in jail for a long time and subsequently changes his name...

These patents would all cover the story of one character in a novel. They overlap, but they do not precisely duplicate each other, so they could all be valid simultaneously - all the patent holders could have sued Victor Hugo. Any one of them could have prohibited publication of Les Misérables.

You might think these ideas are so simple that no patent office would have issued them. We programmers are often amazed by the simplicity of the ideas that real software patents cover - for instance, the European Patent Office has issued a patent on the progress bar, and one on accepting payment via credit cards. These would be laughable if they were not so dangerous.

Link (Thanks, Phil and Eloisa!)

Hi-tech sector lobbies for Europe-wide
patents


Hi-tech sector lobbies for Europe-wide
patents
06/24/2005 09:02 PM
Toms Hardware Guide Jun 24 2005 5:30AM GMT

Cincom CEO Thomas Nies Speaks at Red
Herring Venture Market Europe
Conference, April 13


Cincom CEO Thomas Nies Speaks at Red
Herring Venture Market Europe
Conference, April 13
04/06/2005 09:35 PM
Market Wire Apr 6 2005 10:27PM GMT

No EU Software Patents


No EU Software Patents 12/17/2004 06:33 PM

. The three most famous European authors of open-source software have issued an appeal against software patents on NoSoftwarePatents.com. Linus Torvalds (Linux), Michael Widenius (MySQL) and Rasmus Lerdorf (PHP) urge the EU Council, which will convene later in the week, not to adopt a draft directive on software patents that they consider "deceptive, dangerous, and democratically illegitimate". They also call on the Internet community to express solidarity by placing NoSoftwarePatents.com links and banners on many Web sites.

Defend the future! Europe's better off without software patents.
NoSoftwarePatents.com

It would be nice if someone with some serious design credentials would knock up some more aesthetically pleasing banners.


Software Patents Out, For Now


Software Patents Out, For Now 02/05/2005 09:46 PM
Patent legislation is one step further away from being passed in the European Union today. The Legal "Affairs Committee (JURI) said that the commission should re-submit the controversial directive. The Computer Implemented Inventions Directive" failed to receive backing from the government's elected MEP's.

The <a href="http://www.ffii.org/index.orig.en.html">FFII</a& gt;, a EU pressure group, described the decision as "a powerful statement from MEPs that the current Council text, and the logjam of concern it has caused, is simply not a sustainable way forward." FFII board member Jonas Maebe went on to say "The Commissioner can jumpstart the constructive dialogue by submitting a new and more balanced proposal to the European Parliament this time. By taking into account the countless new facts that have surfaced since the start of this procedure in 2002, the Commission has a great opportunity to reinvigorate the Lisbon strategy."

Poland had previously blocked the directive from coming in to being. It's opposed by groups who want to keep the EU free of copyrights on software, something common to the USA. They argue that rather than helping businesses protect their intellectual property, they act to stifle innovation. Supporters of the directive argue that EU legislation on copyrights is out dated and needs bringing into line with the US system.

The road ahead is un-clear; the commission has a variety of options that it can pursue. The most likely outcome with be a re-evaluation in a few months time. Critics of the directive say the extra time will allow countries more debate over the issue and give them another chance to fully assess its implications.

View: Previous coverage | FFII

Read full story...

U.S. to EU on software patents: "We sold
out, you should too"


U.S. to EU on software patents: "We sold
out, you should too"
06/09/2004 10:26 AM
European free software advocates, Green Party activists, Socialists, economists, small business owners, and other radicals are working to keep the European Union from instituting U.S.-style software patents. But don't give up hope. The U.S. government and some of the biggest U.S. software vendors are working to bring those backward Europeans into the modern world, where software development can eventually be limited to responsible companies instead of being done by any-old-body with a computer and a good idea.

"Software patents under attack"


"Software patents under attack" 07/05/2004 02:40 PM

Software Patents Off The Agenda In The
EU


Software Patents Off The Agenda In The
EU
12/22/2004 01:16 AM
This isn't a huge surprise given events of the last month, but the question of software patents has been removed from the agenda of the latest EU Council meeting, at the request of the Polish representative. It sounds like, hopefully, this issue is dying out in the EU, though, it's likely that supporters will keep pushing for it next year.

EU Moves Toward Software Patents


EU Moves Toward Software Patents 05/07/2004 08:29 PM

RMS On How To Fight Software Patents


RMS On How To Fight Software Patents 09/11/2004 06:37 PM

EU software patents: how the vote was
won


EU software patents: how the vote was
won
05/19/2004 05:53 AM
No hanging chads, but still a close call

Software patents under attack


Software patents under attack 07/05/2004 06:25 AM
EFF goes after ten most wanted

Software patents and rebel MEPs


Software patents and rebel MEPs 06/08/2004 06:04 AM
Letters Voting record doesn't follow party line

Creative Pressures id Software With
Patents


Creative Pressures id Software With
Patents
07/28/2004 11:26 AM

EU gives green light to software patents


EU gives green light to software patents 03/14/2005 04:52 PM
Without a clear mandate from its members, and in the face of outright opposition from a few of them, the EU finally acts in the US software industry's best interests and pushes forward software patents.

An Insider's View of Software Patents


An Insider's View of Software Patents 08/01/2004 08:02 PM

How to fight software patents - singly
and together


How to fight software patents - singly
and together
09/09/2004 12:21 PM
Software patents are the software project equivalent of land mines: Each design decision carries a risk of stepping on a patent, which can destroy your project.

EU Software Patents Directive Delayed
Once More


EU Software Patents Directive Delayed
Once More
09/24/2004 04:17 PM
A controversial software directive in the EU has been delayed once more. Daniel Cohn-Bendit, co-president of the Greens/EFA Group, told ElectricNews that "Officially, the council has experienced translation difficulties with the new official languages of the EU. In reality this file is returning to Coreper in order to allow the technical discussions between experts from the member states to continue."

The patent directive, part of the Lisbon agenda, was initially intended to form part of a frame work to make the EU the most competitive economic zone in the world by 2010. Intended to "tidy up" the EU's messy patent laws, the directive has became twisted from its original form. In its previous state, it would have allowed patenting of software and algorithms. Proponents of the directive argue that this is necessary to protect both big and small companies from competitors stealing their IP.

However, many others argue that the directive would stifle competition and cause more problems than it solved. If allowed/enacted, the directive would bring the EU into line with the US where the practise has caused dismay amongst software developers. Amazon's patenting of "one-click" buying is often cited as a good example of why the legislation is a bad idea.

View: More @ ElectricNews

Read full story...

Patents Harming Software Innovation


Patents Harming Software Innovation 09/02/2004 11:47 AM
It appears that there's a common theme emerging from those who understand how the patent system works. Lots of people have said it before, but here's yet another opinion piece explaining how software patents are killing innovation, by making it nearly impossible to build any new software product, without a huge liability risk. It points out, again, that true innovation isn't in coming up with the idea, but the application of the idea. Limiting the application to a single company that claims they got their first kills off many creative approaches to innovation, slowing down innovation and harming the overall economy. What's scary is that, for all the talk explaining this problem, almost nothing is actually being done to reform the patent system in the right direction.

Battle brews over Web software patents


Battle brews over Web software patents 01/27/2003 11:05 PM
International Herald Tribune Jan 27 2003 9:31PM ET

Germany to Vote Against Software Patents
in the EU


Germany to Vote Against Software Patents
in the EU
05/16/2004 02:22 AM

EU Ministers Approve Software Patents


EU Ministers Approve Software Patents 05/18/2004 04:12 PM
In a move that is likely to cause a lot more harm than good, the European Council has approved a dreadful plan to allow for software patents. The language of the plan has apparently removed an amendment that would have made the idea more palatable to open source supporters. ZDNet UK has more details. It's not a done deal yet, as it still needs to be voted on by the European Parliament - but it will be much more difficult to change the policy now. This is, once again, a case of people making political decisions rather than ones that will generally help the economy. Software patents will only tie up the patent and legal system and will do plenty to slow down innovation, rather than speed it up. Being able to invent something and being able to successfully sell it to the market are two completely different things. By saying that only those who invent a concept are allowed to sell it to the market, they are slowing down the ability for companies to successfully get new, useful products to market. With software patents, this is especially troublesome because it's very difficult to determine what in the software is actually patentable and very broad concepts that should never be locked up under a government granted monopoly end up that way.

More on the Microsoft v. EU Decision on
Software Patents


More on the Microsoft v. EU Decision on
Software Patents
12/24/2004 12:35 PM

UK firm patents software downloads


UK firm patents software downloads 06/16/2004 03:56 AM
BTG in talks 'with several firms'

NewsForge On U.S. Advice To EU On
Software Patents


NewsForge On U.S. Advice To EU On
Software Patents
06/09/2004 05:40 PM

Software patents 'threaten Linux'


Software patents 'threaten Linux' 01/23/2004 02:19 PM
Open source advocate Bruce Perens says the real threat to Linux is not from SCO, but from software patents.

Maybe Software Patents Won't Kill FOSS
After All


Maybe Software Patents Won't Kill FOSS
After All
07/26/2004 09:22 PM

EU software patents directive delayed -
again


EU software patents directive delayed -
again
09/24/2004 05:47 AM
Less action, more talk

Germany decides not to support the EC on
software patents


Germany decides not to support the EC on
software patents
05/14/2004 08:48 PM
Germany has decided not to support the European Commission's directive on software patents. Does this spell the end of the idea of issuing software patents in Europe?

Free software guru speaks on patents


Free software guru speaks on patents 05/25/2004 10:00 AM
End of world is nigh, warns Richard Stallman

US Exports DMCA, Software Patents To
Australia


US Exports DMCA, Software Patents To
Australia
08/03/2004 02:17 PM
While most of the press is focused on other aspects of the free trade agreement between the US and Australia, the tech world is noticing that this agreement exports plenty of the bad aspects of US intellectual property law, including software patents and DMCA-like anti-circumvention clauses. It's amusing that the talk about the bill from President Bush includes claims about "reducing restrictions" when the intellectual property parts of the bill are clearly building up restrictions and barriers to innovation. Of course, since it's such a big bill including all sorts of trade issues, most politicians are more focused on other complaints, which is why these innovation harming parts will mostly slip by unnoticed.

Patents Have Become The Nuclear
Stockpiling Of The Software Industry


Patents Have Become The Nuclear
Stockpiling Of The Software Industry
08/04/2004 06:23 AM
MÃ¥rten Mickos, CEO of mySQL, has written a piece over at Always-On, explaining (accurately) that the software patent game these days is t he equivalent of nuclear stockpiling. You build up as many patents as you can, because you know the competition is, too, and you'll need them to fight off any patent battle. It doesn't need to be this way. In fact, it shouldn't be this way, because all it's doing is slowing down innovation and diverting money away from development to lawyers. Mickos uses the database industry as an example. In the days before software patents, plenty of people took the relational database ideas of Edgar Codd (totally random aside: I had a database professor in college who had the bumper sticker: "Codd is God" in honor of Mr. Codd) and built up a thriving industry, including the standardization of SQL, on which the entire industry is based. While he doesn't say it specifically, the clear implication is that in a world of software patents, that situation wouldn't have existed. Letting everyone build their own implementations based on the idea of relational databases and the standards of SQL allowed a thriving, competitive industry to develop. Copyright laws protect the code. However, when we patent ideas, the first person to come up with the "idea" of a relational database could have patented it -- and simply stopped the competition from happening without coughing up license fees to IBM. As we've said before, innovat ion is more important than invention. By allowing the inventor to patent an entire concept, it kills the ability to innovate, harming the entire economy.

Blocking Foolish European Software
Patents


Blocking Foolish European Software
Patents
08/15/2004 01:42 PM
  • Jack Schofield (Guardian): W e won't kill you unless we have to. The issue is software patents. America has them, and Europe could get more of them - unless the German, British, French and other governments wake up to the stupidity of what they are trying to do.

  • Banning software patents: a call to
    action


    Banning software patents: a call to
    action
    12/11/2003 03:52 AM
    For the past nine months, much of the attention of the IT world has been drawn to the SCO v. IBM case. Having started out as a case about breach of contract, it is now about all three key areas of intellectual property law: copyright law (was code illegally copied from Unix into Linux?), patent law (did SCO violate IBM's patents?), and trademark law (who owns 'UNIX'?).
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