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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"He just says what is already the case and never recommends an objective basis for an objective application."
I do not perceive a problem. I perceive moochers. I understand that patent law must have a place in the information age. stick in the manufacturing age.
"The Congress shall have power ... To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries;"
I'm in favor of strong copyright and trademark protection, but not any form of patent protection. The difference, to my mind, is between protecting content (such as a literary work or trademark design) and granting an exclusive right to perform a process (such as a method for creating fire). There can be overlap between the two, but for the most part the division between content and process is clear, and should be reflected in the laws of a free society.
My concept of “ownership” does not include forbidding someone else from doing something because I claim to have thought of it first. A person has the fundamental right to promote his/her own well-being by the application of knowledge obtained from others (unless constrained by voluntary contract, such as those protecting trade secrets), as well as from original thought and experience.
I’ll leave it for others to decide whether this makes me an “anarchist”.
As for the whole idea of "1-click purchase", I agree with you, it's obviously in order to increase profit by skipping another important step : the time it takes for the user to reconsider a sale, therefore taking advantage of a lot more impulse buy moves, knowing that a large part of the customers won't bother to cancel after ordering, if they have a slight buyer's regret. Of course, I too always avoid that button.
Anyway, I did not introduce that worthless "1-click" thing in the thread, khalling did and seems to be fond of it, judging by how much he is clinging to it, ignoring everything else I'm writing (he's probably not a programmer, since he obviously does not understand anything to what I'm saying, preferring to utter "you give your opinion, no evidence" instead of popping google up and look up for references).
The fact remains that USPTO rarely assesses properly the validity of patent claims before granting patents, and most software patents, if not all, are simply too obvious and should never have been granted in the first place. The goal of the patenting system was originally to foster innovation by granting a limited monopoly of an original invention, in exchange for the information describing it, therefore ensuring it is not lost, and that others will make it evolve. This system is rapidly becoming dangerous, because it is becoming more rewarding to just rely on secret to keep a monopoly for a some time, while the competition tries to figure out the secret sauce. In case of software systems, the software _is_ the information, therefore patenting it is inadequate for all purposes, except for frivolous lawsuits (a programmer doesn't care whether what he creates has already been created somewhere else, only lawyers will twist facts to make it appears that he somehow magically copied -they use the word "stealed"- someone else). Besides, no software is ever truly original, there is always a whole spectrum of applications emerging in the same general direction, using the same basic algorithms and patterns.
Tin cans and string can't transfer text information onto the internet. My Android phone, my Amiga, or my M100 can, each using very different software to perform the same function.
I have been at this for 30 years writing about "property rights in cyberspace" and similar topics. I do not have a lot of answers, either. It is a difficult problem, at least for me. Perhaps you are smarter and have some answers. So far, you have not even offered a cogent question on intellectual property and US Patent Law but only defend the status quo.
... and I am not an anarchist...
It is famous that America's competitive textile mills were built by Samuel Slater who brought the plans from England in his head. That story is known to hackers such as Joey Paris who rhymed:
"The source is the source,
of course of course
and no one can copy the source
of course
unless the source
can be carried in your head."
Three-fifths votes for slaves was also "integral to the Constitution." So what? You have offered only an appeal to authority not a fact independent from it.
Am I to understand you promote patents granted in the manufacturing age but will call abstract inventions of the information age?
The law interpreted here is a mish mash of contradictory statements. how's this for example:
“But if what is new is not eligible, or improves the eligible, the claims as a whole is ineligible.”
All inventions are a combination of known elements
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