freedom bits

Some bits about my work and life as president of Free Software Foundation Europe.

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WSJ's "Patently Absurd" and how it relates to the Development Agenda

Today's Wall Street Journal Online carries a very interesting article that should also be on page 14 of the printed edition, titled "Patently Absurd". The article shows how the patent system, once set up to further innovation and strengthen economy, now does the opposite -- and is becoming a threat to the U.S. economy.

Starting from the patent litigation of NTP against BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM). NTP seeks "$450 million or more in payments to" from RIM, while "NTP offers no product that competes with BlackBerrys. It sells nothing at all."

As Wall Street Journal further writes:

    Patents are supposed to protect intellectual property and spur
    innovation, and once upon a time in America they did. But like
    everything else the legal system touches nowadays, U.S. patent law has
    been hijacked so that it now operates nearly in reverse, deterring
    research and penalizing innovation.
    [...]
    Testifying before Congress last June, Josh Lerner, a Harvard Business
    School professor, summed up the problem: "In the past two decades, the
    U.S. has strengthened patent rights, while weakening the standards for
    granting patents." The result is that the patent system is fast
    becoming a detriment to U.S. competitiveness, not to mention basic
    fairness. So if your BlackBerry ever does go dark, don't curse the
    company. Blame the lawyers.

 

WSJ also quotes other cases, involving BCGI and even Microsoft, which has recently fallen victim to the patent monstrosity it helped unleash in the U.S. -- and still does outside the United States.

What WSJ fails to recognise is that the basic weakness is not only in the way patents are granted, challenged and enforced, although the U.S. system (like many others) has severe weaknesses in these areas. The fundamental weakness is in overburdening the patent system, by letting it reach outside the areas in which it can be a useful tool by extending it to algorithms, vague ideas, business models and software.

All of these areas do not have hard physical demarkation lines, one of the necessary prerequisites for patents to be useful. All software patents apply to all areas in which software might be used, not just the area for which a certain application was originally concieved. A patent that originally covered game console software suddenly becomes an extortionist's gold mine because it happens to cover an algorithm that nuclear power plants are critically dependent upon.

Also, software incorporates thousands of incremental ideas, each of which becomes effectively blocked innovatively and economically for decades when patents are granted. Since software patents require nothing but a lawyer to write highly complex descriptions of vague ideas which one might concieve possible one day, even if one has no idea how to implement them at the moment, companies like NTP are spreading patent minefields in our collective future, to be triggered by the first company to build successful business on an innovation that the patent holder was not capable of achieving themselves.

Only strong and effective limits on the patent system can avoid the problems we experience today. That is why we need to push back the limits of patentability to where the patent system can be useful, and revise the working of the system to do an effective job at furthering and promoting innovation.

Unfortunately, the global trend -- mainly pushed forward by the United States, often supported by Japan, European Union and Canada -- still appears to be geared towards a further extension of the patent system and thus a worsening of the situation. The blockade of the United States to establish a WIPO Evaluation and Review Office (WERO) in the Development Agenda (DA) discussion is a very good indication of this.

The WERO is the single most important part of the DA discussion, and while the original Friends of Development proposal called it "WIPO Evaluation and Research Office", I believe "WIPO Evaluation and Review Office" is more to the point. We need a review of these policies on a global level before mindlessly copying the U.S. system to the rest of the world.

As usual, it is the weakest on whom the price is most taxing and who suffer the most from injust and ineffective systems. If the United States are already feeling a negative economic impact of the system, how do you think the economy of, say, Namibia will be doing with such a system?

FOSDEM and back

After two meetings at the United Nations in Geneva I made my way to Brussels to participate in FOSDEM, which took place at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles on Saturday and Sunday.

As usual, FOSDEM was a place of great chaos and great fun. Some things have become long-established FOSDEM tradition by now, like the pre-FOSDEM beer at the Le Roy d'Espagne, or the fact that network connectivity only started to work reliably on Sunday afternoon when FOSDEM was essentially over.

As usual, the Free Software Foundation Europe had its traditional spot with three large tables bearing an impressive amount of t-shirts, including our new "Got Freedom?" Fellowship shirt. No less than 16 people, most of them volunteers, helped to make FSFE's booth at FOSDEM 2006 a great success.

Some of them at times take days of their vacation and travel thousands of kilometers without seeing any reimbursement for their trips or hotel rooms only to spend two days talking to hundreds of people, explaining FSFE, it's activities, the Fellowship, as well as selling t-shirts and referring people to the right points of contact for more complicate requests. The importance of this work is often underestimated, and too often does not get the praise it deserves.

Their work too often remains silently expected or accepted, and rarely gets the credit it deserves. Therefore: Thanks to all of you for what are doing, I am your biggest fan! I am truly grateful to be working with and for such a great team.

As for myself, FOSDEM was mainly spent running around and talking to many people, some of which I had not seen in a while, some I never had the chance to meet before, including the great team behind Asterisk, which I had a lot of fun with.

For monday, FSFE had been organising a media round table about software patents for which we had invited various parties in favor and against, including SAP, Microsoft and the BSA. Ultimately, only the BSA came in the person of Francisco Mingorance to argue in favor of software patents. On the other side it was planned to have Pieter Hintjens, president of the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure, one of FSFE's associate organisations, and myself for the Free Software Foundation Europe.

Unfortunately, I must have had some very bad luck with the famous mussels from Brussels on Sunday night. In any case, Monday morning found me in rather bad shape with all the unpleasant side effects you might imagine now, including some fever.

In the old days, I would have had to do this event regardless, and did so on previous occasions. This time however I was able to profit from the growth of FSFE's Team: After a call to some of our people on the ground, it was clear that Ciaran O'Riordan could join the discussion in my stead. As our Brussels representative, he is intimately familiar with all the issues around software patents and such discussions are part of his regular work.

I myself made my way to the airport together with Pablo, Maria and Xavier from our Spanish Team. When I finally boarded my flight to Hamburg, I found out how much luggage you can fit into the Canadair jet, because it turns out that Liza Minelli was on the plane with her entire entourage for tonight's concert in Hamburg.

Fortunately the flight was short and I soon arrived in Hamburg, where I now have to catch up with a mountain of paperwork, laundry and other not exactly trivial things before my next trip on Friday.


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