On 22 Aug 2003 at 19:35, Ciaran O'Riordan wrote:
- This arguement should be phrased better, maybe with reference to
the fact that lone developers (me and you) will not be able to collaborate in the largest multi-ethnic project on Earth (the Linux kernel) as the legal overhead of patent lookups is too high. Again this is a problem for software _using_ industry as opposed to the _producing_ industry. Though in Free Software the _using_ and _producing_ industries are the same. */
Firstly, the Linux kernel is most certainly not the largest multi- ethnic project on Earth. Where did you hear this from?
I'm steering clear of free software, our favourite kernel, and lone developers because I don't think MEPs would fully appreciate the situation, so I'm focusing on small businesses.
I'd go further than that: many MEP's view free software with very mixed views. This is not helped by most of the gods of the GPL cult being clearly unconnected with the real world at best, and insane at worst.
We programmers tend to look at other programmers in terms of how good a coder they are, often forgiving other substantial failings in their character. This is not how a MEP looks at a programmer.
Patent lookup cost is a good point I missed. I'll make it relevant to the user industry by noting reduced possible quality.
Another interesting point is why were 20,000 software patents registered when they couldn't be enforced under the 1991 directive? I hate to be a conspiracy nut, but business magazines at the time said it was a good investment because EU patent law would be "harmonised" with international norms (ie; the US) within a decade. They were nearly right.
Cheers, Niall