Intellectual Property and Economic Prosperity: Friends or Foes?
One of the USPTO report’s most frequently discussed findings was that “IP-intensive” industries employ a lot of people: “Direct employment in the subset of most IP-intensive industries identified in this report amounted to 27.1 million jobs in 2010, while indirect activities associated with these industries provided an additional 12.9 million jobs throughout the economy in 2010, for a total of 40.0 million jobs, or 27.7 percent of all jobs in the economy.”
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Yes s/w is mainly protected by copyrights. However, patents can certainly apply. My guess is that when Adobe was founded the patent office had a strong policy against patents on software implemented invention, so that got ingrained in their culture. Either way their fundamental technology would no longer be subject to live patents.
The correlation argument is not valid. Anyone who knows anything about property rights will see that their is a causation.
Honestly, if a group like this can reverse engineer a product as complex as Photoshop (e.g. GIMP), then the original product may no longer be as novel as people think. In this case SW is protected mainly by Copyrights, not patents, so reverse engineering is just fine.
Does anyone know of GNU getting government funding?
The Franklin model is getting its first true test, in an era of instantaneous communication that makes such a test fair.
I'm more interested in the competition between the two ideals for invention: Benjamin Franklin, who held all inventions in common, and Thomas Edison, who used the patent system to finance his research.
What is the GNU General Public License, but an intellectual common? Is anyone here familiar with that?
Actually, Benjamin Franklin had a similar idea. Were he alive today, he would set up a Free Hardware Foundation, to complement the Free Software Foundation. This on the theory that "information wants to be free."