Supreme Court Rules Software Patents Invalid-Without Ever Mentioning Software Once In the Decision
"What this means is that companies like Apple, IBM, Microsoft, Google and others have had the value of their patent portfolios nearly completely erased today. If they wish to remain compliant with Sarbanes Oxley and other laws and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission they will need to level with their shareholders and tell them that their patent portfolios have been decimated."
db is on a plane headed to the Atlas Summit to give a talk about Galt as Inventor. When he gets off the plane, this news will greet him. Imagine a MODERN patent system understanding the manufacturing age but not the information age....
db is on a plane headed to the Atlas Summit to give a talk about Galt as Inventor. When he gets off the plane, this news will greet him. Imagine a MODERN patent system understanding the manufacturing age but not the information age....
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You are incorrect about these items are patented, but you are good at propagating nonsense. Even if there had been patents on some of these items, they would have been much more specific than you are implying and they would have expired a long time ago.
Please work with facts. For instance, please name a specific spurious patent. You clearly thought Alice was a spurious patent, and you were clearly incorrect.
This was not a patent on a generalized function. None of the Supreme Court Justices has a technical background, not one the Justices is a patent attorney, not one of them is qualified to be a first year patent attorney. I would add and neither are you.
This patent is not an escrow arrangement, requires very specific process (But because the Supreme Court does not know how to read a patent claim they ignore are the real world limitations), saves people billions of dollars, and did not exist until Alice created it. Note that escrow systems existed for centuries and CLS did not create an escrow system, they decided to steal Alice's technology
You are asserting "You didn't invent this, someone else made it happen." You are advocating for the theft of intellectual property by denying the right of ownership to the creative geniuses amongst us.
"Parents don’t own their children just because they brought them into existence.".
What does parenthood have to do with patents?
A moocher or a looter is someone who wants something they haven't earned. If the shoe fits...
Other peoples technology is spurious, but yours is good?????
Other people's property rights are unimportant, but yours are important???
Your statement is completely unprincipled.
The problem is using the broad brush of "inventing" and applying it to everything written in code. Programming is problem-solving, but not much coming out of software development is "new and novel" - it's trying to figure out a way to get something done.
The problem I have is that there are a whole plethora of patents on methods for getting something done that aren't a novel practice at all. Do I support software copyrights? Sure. But I think people have confused copyrights with patents - see the Novell vs Microsoft case. You also have so much blatant pirating ("Pirates of Silicon Valley" anyone?) and such a slow legal system for resolving anything that much of it becomes a moot point (Internet Explorer anyone?)
Things I think should apply for software patents: linked lists, the RDBMS, sort algorithms, new programming languages, protocols (sometimes), etc. Interfaces? That's a very long shot. I'm not going to say no, but something pretty close.
I want to see it get back to where it should be: patents should be for novel and useful ideas - not just anything someone is willing to pay a lawyer for. No offense, but that's how I see it.
Ownership and exclusivity are not the same thing, though they can overlap. Parents don’t own their children just because they brought them into existence. Likewise, inventors don’t “own” methods or processes just because they happened to think of them first (or claim they did).
Your concept of ownership also runs head-on into the “second to invent” problem – see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_di... and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mul... .
Patents force the legal system to base its decisions on inherently subjective criteria such as “novelty” and “nonobviousness”. Not good building blocks for a system of objective law.
Finally, attempting to malign those who don’t agree with you as “moochers” or “looters” does not strengthen your arguments. We recognize that inventors have property rights, we simply contend that patents extend those property rights way beyond their appropriate boundaries.
Your argument seems to parallel and echo President Obama's "You didn't build that." which itself echoed centuries of moochers railing against the fact that Nature makes some humans more intelligent, creative, and productive than others and tries to compensate for this deficit by hobbling their betters. I am curious why no one applies this to athletes who can run faster or jump higher but, readily, does so in the intellectual realm.
Well said.
"no software is ever truly original..."
That could be claimed for anything ever invented, and sometimes is. But after we gain knowledge, original ideas do come from the mind. Who owns those ideas. The one that has the idea or society?
The first commercially successful true engine, in that it could generate power and transmit it to a machine, was the atmospheric engine, invented by Thomas Newcomen around 1712.[18][19] It made use of technologies discovered by Savery and Papin. Newcomen's engine was relatively inefficient, and in most cases was used for pumping water. It worked by creating a partial vacuum by condensing steam under a piston within a cylinder. It was employed for draining mine workings at depths hitherto impossible, and also for providing a reusable water supply for driving waterwheels at factories sited away from a suitable "head". Water that had passed over the wheel was pumped back up into a storage reservoir above the wheel.[20]
In 1720 Jacob Leupold described a two-cylinder high-pressure steam engine.[21] The invention was published in his major work "Theatri Machinarum Hydraulicarum".[22] The engine used two lead-weighted pistons providing a continuous motion to a water pump. Each piston was raised by the steam pressure and returned to its original position by gravity. The two pistons shared a common four way rotary valve connected directly to a steam boiler.
On the Cotton Gin - and the failure of its patents:
"The invention solved an economic problem for the south by making the crop worth the effort to grow it for the textile market in New England. Whitney and Miller formed a partnership and in June 1793, Whitney returned to New Haven to take out his patent and to begin manufacturing the gins.
The cotton gin did not bring the partners the expected fortune, however. Whitney’s idea soon leaked out and pirated machines were quickly produced in Southern workshops. A patent was obtained but the problems of getting the gins into production allowed competing gin makers to beat him to the planters.
[...]
"The contested patent fight would last until 1807, involving about 60 lawsuits. Finally Whitney was established as the inventor of the cotton gin and would collect $90,000 from the suits. However, the time and money spent on the suits meant little profit on the invention."
-- http://www.eliwhitney.org/museum/about-e...
(If you read that site, you will find lacking any large list of patents even though Whitney did a lot of inventing:
"He invented the filing jig, which guided the workmen’s file and designed stencils with up to a dozen holes that helped to bore in the exact places. Whitney fixed mechanical stops to his lathe, which prevented the worker from turning the piece too far or not enough. As well as fashioning the dies and molds for various parts, Whitney was busy arranging for ..."
Many patents did come from Whitney's Workshop, mostly from Alfred C. Gilbert and mostly for toys:
http://www.eliwhitney.org/museum/-gilber...
While the number of 9-0 rulings has grown, the number of 5-4 decisions has shrunk — even though the court has five justices named by Republican presidents and four by Democrats. Only eight cases have come out that way so far; last term, there were 23. - http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/polit...
Because you appear to know the implications...
Is Apple aware of this?
How expert are you and db in software development? How many coding languages do you know, how much software have you written?
That's not a challenge, it's a voir dire.
"Am I to understand you promote patents granted in the manufacturing age but will call abstract inventions of the information age? "
We have a word for abstract inventions of the information age: the word is, "ideas". Isn't it possible to be granted a patent without actually having created anything? Just draw up a set of documents describe a process, or a device, and submit it for patenting, without having even built a prototype? (again, a question to which I don't know the answer, but assume you and db must...)
Then, like the tax code, it needs to be simplified.
excuse me, I need a cold shower, after all that...
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