Groklaw story with transcript from Sean Daly of the post announcement press Q&A with Neelie Kroes of the EC: http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071022114731199
EC's press statement: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/07/1567&forma...
EC's FAQ: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=MEMO/07/420&form...
An NY Times article quoting our own Georg: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/22/technology/22cnd-soft.html?_r=1&hp&...
and MS's PR: http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2007/oct07/10-22MSStatement.mspx
Hi everyone: First of all, how can the "deal" include a patent grant (or patent license) if there are no such things as software patents in the EU? I never understood this whole globalized patent thing anyway...
Lets say I write a piece of software (here in Germany) that implements something that is patented under US-Jurisdiction. Everyone worlwide can download this software from my homepage and the GPL tells them that there are no patents (or that I grant everyone rights to do whatever) - which is completely right from my point of view, BUT still someone in the US holds a patent on something done with my software. Now where is the flaw? Does the GPL legally prevent me from releasing the code at all? (that would be me violating the law in my home country) Or am I not allowed to distribute this piece of software internationally? (that would be me violating American law by releasing software on a German web-site) Or are US-Citizins not allowed to download the software? (that would be Americans not able to exercise the rights they are granted by the GPL)
so confusing...
Anyway, more ontopic: The Groklaw-article says that Technologies that are patented (in the US) may not be implemented in GPL-Code because the GPL prohibits these "patent deals". If this is the case, how can this decision be acceptable?
Will FSFE appeal the courts' decision?
Greetings Hannes
Am Montag 22 Oktober 2007 21:48:51 schrieb Ciaran O'Riordan:
Groklaw story with transcript from Sean Daly of the post announcement press Q&A with Neelie Kroes of the EC: http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071022114731199
EC's press statement: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/07/1567&forma... TML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en
EC's FAQ: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=MEMO/07/420&form... HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en
An NY Times article quoting our own Georg: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/22/technology/22cnd-soft.html?_r=1&hp&... login
and MS's PR: http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2007/oct07/10-22MSStatement.mspx
Hannes Hauswedell hannes@fsfe.org writes:
First of all, how can the "deal" include a patent grant (or patent license) if there are no such things as software patents in the EU?
The problem is that patents partly exist in the EU. The power of patent governance is split between a legislature, an executive, and a judiciary.
The legislature (the European Patent Convention) says that software ideas are not patentable.
The executive (the European Patent Office) ignores this and approves software patent applications.
The judiciary (the national courts) usually declares the EPO's software patents to be invalid whenever there is a court case.
So, for the most part, Europeans are safe from software patents. There are very few court cases because the patent holders are afraid their patents will be invalidated.
In 2005, after years of work, we blocked an attempt to change the legislation. That change would have made software patents valid.
Today, there are attempts being made, such as the EPLA, to remove the national courts from patent governance. The people behind the EPLA want to replace the national courts with a centralised EU court whose judges will be selected and continually reviewed by the EPO.
Everyone worlwide can download this software from my homepage and the GPL tells them that there are no patents (or that I grant everyone rights to do whatever) - which is completely right from my point of view, BUT still someone in the US holds a patent on something done with my software. Now where is the flaw?
The GPL can say that when *you* distribute the software, *you* agree not to use your patents sue the recipients, but if someone else has a patent, they could still use their patent to sue the recipients.
If their patent was granted in the US, they can sue people in the US. If there patent was granted in Germany, they can sue people in Germany.
Does the GPL legally prevent me from releasing the code at all? (that would be me violating the law in my home country) Or am I not allowed to distribute this piece of software internationally? (that would be me violating American law by releasing software on a German web-site) Or are US-Citizins not allowed to download the software? (that would be Americans not able to exercise the rights they are granted by the GPL)
Unfortunately, the patent system leaves us in a very unclear situation.
If a patent exists, that just means that some government employee thinks it looks valid and has rubber stamped it, however, they are paid for each patent they approve, and they only have a few hours per patent. Combine this with that patent applications are purposely written as vaguely as possible, and you end up with a lot of invalid patents.
So if a patent exists, that doesn't mean the patent is valid. And if someone says you're using their patented idea, they might be wrong - a judge might disagree.
The Groklaw-article says that Technologies that are patented (in the US) may not be implemented in GPL-Code because the GPL prohibits these "patent deals". If this is the case, how can this decision be acceptable?
I haven't read the deal, so someone else'll have to answer this bit.
On Mon, Oct 22, 2007 at 10:48:51PM +0100, Ciaran O'Riordan wrote:
Groklaw story with transcript from Sean Daly of the post announcement press Q&A with Neelie Kroes of the EC: http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071022114731199
EC's press statement: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/07/1567&forma...
EC's FAQ: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=MEMO/07/420&form...
An NY Times article quoting our own Georg: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/22/technology/22cnd-soft.html?_r=1&hp&...
and MS's PR: http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2007/oct07/10-22MSStatement.mspx
I read the events as Neelie Kroes having sold herself out.
Microsoft Tax on information access: 10000 EUR Microsoft Tax on commercial distribution: 0.48% (hello Red Hat) No Microsoft Tax only for non-commercial (bye bye Free Software business) For added points: Comission still pretends Software Patents are valid
How this can be good I don't know...
Rui
Hi all,
On Tue, 23 Oct 2007 10:16:14 +0100 Rui Miguel Silva Seabra rms@1407.org wrote:
rmss> I read the events as Neelie Kroes having sold herself out.
While there are groups and people putting out that message, it isn't exactly helpful or necessarily true. I would recommend
http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=2007102408501134
and in particular
http://walkingwithelephants.blogspot.com/2007/10/half-loaf.html
for further reading, which analyses the situation pretty well.
The patent provisions are obviously insufficient for Free Software, and thus Samba. So one might be tempted to say that the Commission has allowed Microsoft to impose terms that are sufficient only for those who are long extinct, or those who don't compete commercially. Having informed the Commission about the inadequacy of those terms, we could also maintain they could not claim ignorance.
But that would be missing the overall picture. The information will be made available now, and there should be no problems in the Copyright and trade secret fields, at least.
So the last item we need to figure out is how to solve the patent issue, which is non-trivial simply because software patents exist, and any executive will treat granted patents as valid patents until successfully invalidated or until the legislative body changes the situation.
The road to competition and interoperability remains abolition of patents on software. While many of us had hoped DG Competition might be more helpful in this by pointing out the obvious flaw of software patents bringing about a situation where interoperability information cannot be used by the actual competitors. This did not happen.
So ultimately this was a step in the right direction, but more work remains to be done.
Regards, Georg
On Thu, Oct 25, 2007 at 11:22:09AM +0200, Georg C. F. Greve wrote:
Hi all,
On Tue, 23 Oct 2007 10:16:14 +0100 Rui Miguel Silva Seabra rms@1407.org wrote:
rmss> I read the events as Neelie Kroes having sold herself out.
While there are groups and people putting out that message, it isn't exactly helpful or necessarily true. I would recommend
No, it's not. But it's either that or an ingenuity that doesn't fit the part of a regulator, specially one who seemed to be so angry at Microsoft's attempt to make a mockery of the process.
I've read it. It confirmed the worst fears.
and in particular
http://walkingwithelephants.blogspot.com/2007/10/half-loaf.html
for further reading, which analyses the situation pretty well.
The patent provisions are obviously insufficient for Free Software, and thus Samba.
They are also insuficient for any business that could be made.
So ultimately this was a step in the right direction, but more work remains to be done.
It was a step, but quite far from the "juice" Neil Armstrong's famous phrase had :)
Rui
On Thu, Oct 25, 2007 at 11:22:09AM +0200, Georg C. F. Greve wrote:
The patent provisions are obviously insufficient for Free Software, and thus Samba.
Not only them... look at Section 5.5. of the "No Patents" agreement:
[quote]An Authorized Person's memory will be considered to be unaided if such Authorized Person has not intentionally memorized the Confidential Information for the purpose of retaining and subsequently using or disclosing it.[/quote]
But that would be missing the overall picture. The information will be made available now, and there should be no problems in the Copyright and trade secret fields, at least.
This doesn't seem like "available" or "no problem" in the copyright field...
It actually looks like an NDA, so I'm imagining software implementing the protocol without documenting, comments, readable vars/functions, etc...
Rui
Hi,
APRIL (French association for promotion and research in libre computing):
The EU/Microsoft Agreement on Interoperability: Who Is the Victor? http://www.april.org/articles/communiques/pr-20071023.html.en (press release also available in French)
FFII:
EU tells open source to start paying MS patent tax http://press.ffii.org/Press_releases/EU_tells_open_source_to_start_paying_MS... (press release also available in French)
Freely,
On Thu, 2007-10-25 at 18:01 +0200, Benoît Sibaud wrote:
Hi,
APRIL (French association for promotion and research in libre computing):
The EU/Microsoft Agreement on Interoperability: Who Is the Victor? http://www.april.org/articles/communiques/pr-20071023.html.en (press release also available in French)
"Victor" ? shouldn't that be "Winner" ?
Simo.
Hi,
The EU/Microsoft Agreement on Interoperability: Who Is the Victor? http://www.april.org/articles/communiques/pr-20071023.html.en (press release also available in French)
"Victor" ? shouldn't that be "Winner" ?
Victor should be OK too. http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/victor Written in French, this press release has been translated in English and proofread by at least one English native-speaker from the FSF.