http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB115802923001560290.html
How Hartmut Pilch, Avid Computer Geek, Bested Microsoft
Foe of Software Patents, He Prevailed With Europe; Next, a Court Battle By *MARY JACOBY* September 12, 2006; Page A1
BRUSSELS -- A proposal here to create a new European patents court has the support of *Microsoft* Corp., *Siemens* AG and many other giants of Western industry. But can it survive an attack from Hartmut Pilch?
A 43-year-old linguist from Munich, Mr. Pilch speaks Chinese, Japanese and an artificial language called Lojban intended to eliminate ambiguity and promoted by some programmers. He is the unlikely leader of a movement of self-styled computer geeks out to sink a patents plan they say would stifle software programmers.
"Patents on software mean any programmer can be sued at any time," says Mr. Pilch, a simultaneous translator who writes computer programs for his own use in his leisure time.
In July last year, heeding appeals posted on the Web site of Mr. Pilch's lobbying group, about 200 programmers descended on the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, waving signs demanding the right to freely exchange computer code. "U.S. Software Patents Go Out," read a banner, in English, held aloft by two young Frenchmen.
The Parliament was poised to approve a law extending American-style software patents to Europe, the most lucrative consumer market outside the U.S. A technology industry group had hired a boat to cruise the river outside Parliament with a banner urging the lawmakers on. The programmers rented canoes and paddled out to the boat to unfurl their own banner: "Software Patents Kill Innovation." The president of the Parliament later called the incident a "naval battle."
The unhappy result for the big technology companies: A panicky Parliament suddenly backed off a law the industry giants had spent several years and millions of euros lobbying to enact. "It was the sheer volume and number of people," said Parliament member Sharon Bowles of Britain, a patent attorney and industry ally. The surprise winners: U.S. software companies *Red Hat* Inc. and *Sun Microsystems* Inc., the only large companies that had taken public stands against the software patents law.
Today, the battle has shifted to an effort to create a special patents court that would handle appeals cases from all over Europe. Companies like Microsoft support the idea in large part because many national courts currently reject software patents, bucking rulings by the European-wide patent office.
Mr. Pilch wants to maintain the antisoftware patent status quo, and so do the European programmers and students who belong to his group, the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure. Known as FFII, the organization is committed to the idea that basic computer language should be as free as human speech.
Mr. Pilch calls his mission vital to keeping Europe free from the lawsuits over digital rights that he claims increasingly hamper innovation in the U.S. Software around the world already is adequately protected from theft by copyright laws, he says.
Mr. Pilch's opponents liken FFII to a bunch of communists who don't want companies to profit from what they create. "They do sound closer to Karl Marx than Adam Smith," said Mark MacGann, executive director of the European Information & Communications Technology Industry Association, which represents *Philips Electronics* NV, *SAP* AG, Microsoft and more than 70 other companies backing software patents.
Mr. Pilch counters: "That's not true. I want to make money, too." He admits, however, that he became so absorbed in lobbying last year that he forgot to bill clients in the small translation business he operates out of a run-down office in Munich.
Mr. Pilch began FFII in 1998, as little more than a Web site. As news spread, he began getting small donations from like-minded programmers and small businesses. His growing cadre of volunteers, however, struggled to remember the Lojban words, such as "Cnino" ("news") and "Penmi" ("events"), that Mr. Pilch used to name FFII email lists.
"It would have been easier just to call them 'news' and 'events,' " says German university student Andre Rebentisch, who helps administer the lists. Still, more than 200 people eventually registered to help maintain FFII's member-edited site.
In 2002, the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, proposed the law that drew FFII's ire. It aimed to elevate the European Patent Office and its pro-software patent policies over the national courts. The EU's argument: A simpler, more unified patent system would make Europe's economy more competitive. Mr. Pilch's FFII put out a statement saying the proposal "paves the way to a global control of the information society by multinational -- mostly U.S." technology companies.
In April 2004, as the debate heated up, several hundred FFII demonstrators marched around European Union offices in Brussels in yellow "No Software Patents" T-shirts. They hoisted banners slamming Microsoft. Some demonstrators wore Che Guevara-style berets meant to symbolize a revolution against the Redmond, Wash., company's dominance of software markets. A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment.
Buoyed by $61,000 in grants from the Open Society Institute, the philanthropy of billionaire George Soros, FFII sent an army of students to lobby EU lawmakers. "Sometimes they would just burst in the door and demand to see you," says Ms. Bowles, the pro-patent member of Parliament. "Some of them didn't seem to understand the concept of making an appointment."
Mr. Pilch spent so much time lobbying that he began showing up exhausted for his day job in Munich. Japanese and Chinese clients were furious, says his Chinese-born wife, Wang Tao. Because he was forgetting to bill for his work, money was tight. The couple's two small children hardly ever saw him. "The marriage almost broke up," Ms. Wang says.
The grass-roots show of force worked. At the 2005 meeting in Strasbourg, pro-industry members of Parliament abandoned the proposed software law. "They produced a whole movement," said German Parliament member Klaus-Heiner Lehne, who led the unsuccessful push for the law. "Industry was sleeping."
FFII has reorganized to fight the proposal for a patent court. Prodded by his wife, Mr. Pilch has ceded day-to-day control of the group to Pieter Hintjens, owner of a small software business. Mr. Hintjens, a Belgian, was elected president at an FFII board meeting and keg party in Brussels last November, which, he says, "lasted until the beer ran out."
In July, the EU held a hearing in Brussels on the new patent court and related proposals. FFII activists packed the room, applauding loudly when speakers criticized the court. His group still is short of cash, Mr. Hintjens says. But he believes the movement has an asset even more vital than money: "a burning, true, almost religious conviction that we are right."
*Write to *Mary Jacoby at mary.jacoby@wsj.com mailto:mary.jacoby@wsj.com^1
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115802923001560290.html _______________________________________________ A2k mailing list A2k@lists.essential.org http://lists.essential.org/mailman/listinfo/a2k