| By Simon Phipps | Article Rating: |
|
| August 17, 2006 06:15 AM EDT | Reads: |
21,082 |
"I'm convinced that the reform that's needed is a root-and-branch reform of the very concept of the patent," contends Simon Phipps (pictured) in his most recent Webmink blog posting (http://www.webmink.net/minkblog.htm). Today's software patents, he believes, breach the social contract on which the concept of a patent is based. SYS-CON reprints the blog entry in full here with the permission of the author.Tim O'Reilly highlighted the Blackboard patent dispute yesterday, and has this comment:
"It's a great example of someone using clear and ordinary language to illustrate just how far patent filings have come from their original intent of instructing people about how a purported invention works, and how far they go to obscure by legal language the appropriate prior art."This for me is the heart of the matter about software patents. The issue for me is not whether it should be possible to patent an invention that's implemented as software; the dividing line between software and hardware is becoming ever harder to discern, just look at OpenSPARC. The real issue is that today's software patents breach the social contract on which the concept of a patent is based.
The concept behind patents is that of protecting inventors against the copying of their ideas by others before they themselves have had the chance to benefit. Society does a deal with the inventor: "you give us the know-how, we'll protect you against copying long enough for you to profit." Both benefit. The know-how at large in society grows; the inventor profits. For it to be worthwhile for society to grant these "temporary monopolies", both sides of the deal have to be maintained.
I filed a few patents back when I was at IBM, and none of them seems to me to convey the know-how for a skilled programmer to be able to use the idea readily. They are patterns designed to help a patent attorney identify infringement. While the progress of the software industry's know-how was only being advanced by corporations, there was a (barely plausible) rationale for software patents; their lawyers could decode the patents. But now the individual developer acting in community is an equal source of progress, it is clear to me that the social contract is broken.
I'm not speaking for Sun on this issue, which is why this posting is on my personal blog, so that no-one can be mistaken about it (although everything I write over there is my own words too). But I'm convinced that the reform that's needed is a root-and-branch reform of the very concept of the patent, carried out in the light of the facts that the network is the computer and that open source is its soul.
Published August 17, 2006 Reads 21,082
Copyright © 2006 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
- i-Technology Viewpoint: "Spring Good!"
- The Next Programming Models, RIAs and Composite Applications
- i-Technology Viewpoint: "SOA Sucks"
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Is Model Driven Architecture Coming Into Its Own?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Death to the Browser
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Thinking Outside the VC Box
- i-Technology Blog: Zero-Cost Telephony, the 6-Ton Elephant in the Telco Room
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Attack of the Blogs
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Are We Blogging Each Other To Death?
- i-Technology Blog: Can Blogging Change the World?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Is Web 2.0 the Global SOA?
- i-Technology Blog: Death-Knell For "Rich Media? Hardly!
- i-Technology Viewpoint: We Need Not More Frameworks, But Better Programmers
- i-Technology Viewpoint: What Are the Drivers of Social Software's Success?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: It's Time to Take the Quotation Marks Off "Web 2.0"
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Google's GWT "May Change Web Development Forever"
- i-Technology Viewpoint: How Amazon S3 is Going to Change the World
- i-Technology Blog: Welcome to the New "Golden World" of Web 2.0 and Beyond
- i-Technology Blog: Forget Murder and Mayhem — At "Real-World Flex" It's Business As Usual
- How Can Metcalfe's Law Be Updated for Web 2.0?
More Stories By Simon Phipps
Simon Phipps, Sun's Chief Open Source Officer, is a technology futurist and a well-known computer industry insider. At various times he has programmed mainframes, Windows and on the Web and was previously involved in OSI standards in the 80s, in the earliest commercial collaborative conferencing software in the early 90s, in introducing Java and XML to IBM, and most recently with Sun's launching Sun's blogging site, blogs.sun.com. He lives in the UK, is based at Sun's Menlo Park campus in California and can be contacted via http://www.webmink.net.
![]() |
Action points? 08/17/06 06:44:45 AM EDT | |||
[from the article] This is a VERY big idea. And you have expressed it here with great simplicity. So, what next? |
||||
- Cloud Computing on Gartner's Top 10 List and SYS-CON Events' 2010 Calendar
- Confessions of a Ulitzer Addict
- IBM Hardware Chief, Intel VC Exec Arrested in Insider Trading Scam
- My Thoughts on Ulitzer
- Tactical Cloud Computing Panel at 1st Annual GovIT Expo
- Ulitzer.com Named Exclusive "New Media" Sponsor of Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
- Moving Your RIA Apps into the Cloud: Seven Challenges
- Adobe’s Aiming ColdFusion at Multiple Clouds
- Windows 7 – Microsoft’s First Step to the Cloud
- Ulitzer Provides a Powerful Social Journalism Platform
- Jill Tummler Singer, Deputy CIO of CIA, Keynotes at GovIT Expo
- Open Source Mobile Cloud Sync and Push Email
- Practical Approaches for Optimizing Website Performance
- The Difference Between Web Hosting and Cloud Computing
- Cloud Computing on Gartner's Top 10 List and SYS-CON Events' 2010 Calendar
- Ajax in RichFaces 3.3, JSF 2 and RichFaces 4
- Confessions of a Ulitzer Addict
- IBM Hardware Chief, Intel VC Exec Arrested in Insider Trading Scam
- My Thoughts on Ulitzer
- Tactical Cloud Computing Panel at 1st Annual GovIT Expo
- US Post Office Hops a Ride on NetSuite’s Cloud
- Ulitzer.com Named Exclusive "New Media" Sponsor of Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
- WPF Controls by DevExpress
- Moving Your RIA Apps into the Cloud: Seven Challenges
- Building a Drag-and-Drop Shopping Cart with AJAX
- What Is AJAX?
- Google Maps! AJAX-Style Web Development Using ASP.NET
- Flashback to January 2006: Exclusive SYS-CON.TV Interviews on "OpenAjax Alliance" Announcement
- AJAXWorld Conference & Expo to Take Place October 2-4, 2006, at the Santa Clara Convention Center, California
- AJAX Sponsor Webcasts Are Now Available at AJAXWorld Website
- How and Why AJAX, Not Java, Became the Favored Technology for Rich Internet Applications
- "Real-World AJAX" One-Day Seminar Arrives in Silicon Valley
- AJAXWorld University Announces AJAX Developer Bootcamp
- AJAX Support In JadeLiquid WebRenderer v3.1
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- Struts Validations Framework Using AJAX



























