Patent Concerns Unlikely To Nix Munich Linux Plan 244
MonkeyDev writes "Yahoo is reporting that Munich is ready to move forward with plans to 'abandon Microsoft Windows
in favor of upstart rival Linux. The council is expected to take a calculated risk and vote through the move, despite concerns about possible software patent infringements in the face of coming European Union legislation that caused months of delay.' Not everyone is excited about it. A software developer at MySQL claims 'Linux violates 283 U.S. software patents.' How does the Linux community respond to these claims?" (Florian Mueller, the MySQL developer mentioned, isn't opposed to Munich using Linux, though -- just the opposite.) Update: 09/29 02:22 GMT by T : Marten Mickos of MySQL AB writes with a correction: "Florian Müller is an independent software developer and entrepreneur. He is ALSO an advisor to MySQL AB but he does not work for the company. He is presently engaged in coordinating opposition against software
patents in EU, and thereby doing all of us within free software and open
source a great favour."
Wrong Job (Score:2, Insightful)
A MySQL software developer? Hmm, it would seem that it dosen't bother MySQL AB too much, so why should it bother Munich.
Seriously, if a MySQL developer is worried about the legality of running Linux then maybe he has the wrong job ;)
Re:Wrong Job (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Wrong Job (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, I'm sure Microsoft has looked into patents that Linux might violate, becuase they're looking to destroy Linux, and a legimate patent claim would certaintly help. If they had found something, I'm sure they would have used it by now.
Re:Wrong Job (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wrong Job (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wrong Job (Score:2)
Chances are MS won't sue directly they will find another patsy like SCO do it for them (again).
How many patents does any software violate? (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems that the goal of introducing software patents was to give all software development to the big guys with patent portfolios of their own they can use for defence.
Why they are waiting... (Score:4, Insightful)
Expect them to strike as soon as the future of software patents in Europe is known.
Headline: Munich EXPECTED to approve... (Score:2, Insightful)
This is not news until the vote actually occurs.
Re:Headline: Munich EXPECTED to approve... (Score:2, Informative)
Talk about posting too quickly (Score:5, Funny)
claims ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmmm, easy answer : back up your claims, show us the list.
Re:claims ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:claims ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Give us the list, so we can find the code which need to be fixed/changed.
Re:claims ? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:claims ? (Score:5, Funny)
The same way we respond to any other question about our beloved operating system: RTFM noob.
Re:claims ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Since patents expire after seventeen years it's wise to just let them go. It's definitely safer.
Re:claims ? (Score:5, Funny)
luckily for open source / free software advocates, ibm is currently fondling, not squeezing. :-)
But everyone doesn't have patents (Score:5, Insightful)
So, yes, everyone is guilty, but the IBM's of this world can weather the war just fine, while everyone else gets wiped out. In fact, the war is already in full swing and has simply become part of doing business.
I think RMS covers this in his speech The dangers of software patents [gnu.org].
Re:claims ? (Score:2)
Re:claims ? (Score:5, Informative)
For more details, see http://news.com.com/Group:+Linux+potentially+infr
Re:claims ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Can someone explain software patents? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:2)
Copyrights vs. Patents (Score:2)
Re:Copyrights vs. Patents (Score:2)
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:2)
but I am sure someone can find an implementation of dynamic memory allocation prior to May 13, 1991
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:5, Informative)
If I understand it correctly, this patent is much more specific than parent suggests. The abstract and initial claims make it sound like the standard general memory allocation system, but if you read further it turns out to be intended for parallelized FORTRAN scientific computing. The purpose is to ensure that all of the necessary data is actually in memory and prevent swapping.
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:3, Interesting)
linkage editor means for storing information about an amount of memory required at initialization of an executable program, in a management information section of a file containing the executable program by obtaining the amount of memory required, when each program is translated, assembled or
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:5, Informative)
If you ship software that has code in it that is covered by a patent what does that mean?
Patents cover the manufacture, sale, and use of an item.
Can the owner of the patent hit the author up for money?
Yes, the author manufactured and sold it without a license to the patent. This is what patents mainly protect. What will be more likely that the patent holder will get an injunction saying that the author can no longer sell his product, and then seek damages.
Can they hit the users of the code up for money?
Yes, the user used it without a license. See cases involving geneticaly modified seeds.
Can the author say "you, the user, are responsible for getting licenses for any patents that cover this code" and pass the buck?
Yes and no. If they the author doesn't have permision to grant further licenses for use of the patent, then the users must get one themselves from the patent holder. But the author needs a license to produce and sell the item in the first place too.
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:4, Informative)
For example: I patent a method of doing foo. You build an apparatus for doing foo, but you never really do foo, the customer at the end of the line practices the method. You do not infringe, the customer does. Similar scenario: I claim a system for doing foo. You sell "f" and "oo" but you do not sell "foo." Your customer buys each and assembles them into "foo." They infringe, you do not.
This is why a lot of patents have a method claim or two and an apparatus claim and maybe a "means for". The idea is to cover all possible infringers (though you never go after the customer because they are poor). That all being said, my case law is spotty, and IANAL, but that is how the initial analysis goes down. I actually think there is a case stating the opposite of of my combination example, i.e., if you make the parts and ship them into the US, you infringer, but I can't be sure.
-truth
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:2)
Right! But in the case of Free Software the developer is (or may be) poor. So who do these people go after?
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:3, Informative)
-truth
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:3, Insightful)
For example, if a big company makes money of a piece of software covered by a software patent, its in the interests of said big company to sue a little guy who makes free software that infringes on the patent. Even if the little guy has absolutly no money, it doesnt matter. The aim of the lawsuit is to ensure that distrbution of the so
Re:Can someone explain software patents? (Score:2)
Well, for one, it means that you may have a harder time getting adoption of your software, especially by people with a lot to lose. Patent indemnity is a big deal for some
A lot of these angles are explored here:
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,16346
These are US software patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:These are US software patents (Score:2)
Hopefully the decision makers are more informed now.
Re:These are US software patents (Score:3, Informative)
Re:These are US software patents (Score:2)
Re:These are US software patents (Score:4, Informative)
The German Department of Justice seems to be in favor of software patents, but at same time it carefully avoids admitting so publically. From the Department's point of view, the latter makes sense, since almost all (all but a small number of very large) companies are strongly opposed to software patents here in Germany.
A day before the vote in the EU Counsil (May 17th, 2004), there was a protest in Berlin, and a speaker of Department of Justice told the protesters that Germany would abstain in the vote.
On May 18th, the following "compromise" was reached. The original text of article 2b
was changed to
(emphasis mine). That's right, the "couple of key changes" was to insert the words "new and"!
Of course, the law already states that a patent cannot be granted if there is prior art, so the effect of the change is exactly zero. How the change is supposed to prevent software patents is honestly beyond me, but nevertheless it caused Germany to vote in favor instead of abstaining.
re violation of n US patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:re violation of n US patents (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:re violation of n US patents (Score:4, Interesting)
1.not enough examination of a patent before its rubber stamped (if what some people here say about prior art for and how there exists great easy to find prior art for a bunch of these patents, then the PTO needs people who can find that prior art)
2.futher to 1, the next problem is that the whole system is geared towards approving as many patents as possible. It is more fanantially benificial to the PTO to approve a patent than to reject it. This has to change so that the PTO gets the same finantial outcome regardless of if the patent is passed.
3.It should be easier to get a patent overturned if proof of prior art is discovered. Also, the method of dealing with patent infringements should be changed.
There should be a single "Patent Infringements Tribunal" or something. All patent infringements and all cases where someone has claimed to find prior art would be heard there. There would be some kind of steps taken to ensure that friviolous prior art claims are not made.
For infringements, if the patent is found not to infringe in the case in question (or is overturned), the patent holder will be penalized. Ditto if prior art is found that makes the patent invalid. (although if that was introduced, things like the eolas vs microsoft case may not have happened because the MS lawyers are 800kg gorillas and the eolas lawyers are little tiny ants)
With the right changes, it is possible to allow genunely inovative software patents (although I dont like it, something like RSA does represent the investment of a fair bit of time Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman and does deserve some level of protection) to exist but the crappy patents (software and otherwise) to go away.
Re:re violation of n US patents (Score:5, Insightful)
If software patents only covered truly novel ideas like the patent system was initially designed to do, then no one would have a problem with them.
I look at it like this... good patents cover the way something is accomplished and bad patents cover the accomplishment. A good patent something like a particular method of preparing a chemical that is particuarly difficult normally to prepare. A bad patent is patenting that chemical, regardless of how it's prepared, as if that chemical's existence is owed to the patent holder.
It's hard to make up a good example of this with software, because any program you use, you're only seeing the output, but that may well be the patented methods, like a scrollbar in your example, which could be implemented many different ways of course.
-N
Re:re violation of n US patents (Score:3, Informative)
Well, in fact many chemicals exist solely because someone created them artificially. There are many modern chemicals that do not occur in nature. For that sort of substance, the simple existence of the substance itself is often a great contribution to technological advancement.
There are four types of patentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. section 101: processes, machines, manufactures, and compositions of matter.
Algorithms (Score:2)
Algorithms are what is used to accomplish something on computers. At least in Europe, algorithms and mathematical methods are not (yet) (officially) patentable.
If patents would have covered things like sorting algorithms, heap and stack management, control flow structures etc., my guess is that we would not have computers today.
Re:Algorithms (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess at that point, you'd have to also confirm it's a non-obvious method that is being patented. If someone invents a truly novel algorithm of encrypting communication that doesn't involve really big factorizations or something, that might warrant a patent. If someone develops an encryption algorithm though that just does different factorizations or longer keys than normal methods, while different, that algorithm isn't really novel.
So essentially, I guess algorithms could potentially be patented ethically, but it would more or less be a math patent, not a software patent. And i would take a good mathemetician to identify if it was obvious or not, because I know I certainly couldn't decide...
And even with all that, this is a gray area, which is largely why patent reform is necessary in the first place. Innovation is being hindered by these questions since some of the most innovation right now is coming out of software development.
-N
Developers themselves don't want to know (Score:2)
I think they are wise not to spend time investigating patents. Assuming that all the patents concerned are valid (actually many of them can probably be struck down, but at considerable cost of time and money), the situation may change from unknowningly infringement of 340 patents (57 undiscovered by that MySQL employee) to knowingly in
Insightful? (Score:2)
On the upside with such a blurred understanding of IP there may well be a job offer from SCO coming your way!
Re:re violation of n US patents (Score:2)
It's pretty clear what he meant, and I would add that the same issue of applicability exists in copyright regarding the DMCA.
It would be great if people who don't know as much about the details between patents, trademarks, and copyrights but DO RECOGNIZE the universal boundaries that when crossed constitute a situation where the law is not applicable.
Trademarks, copyrights, and patents all share the
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
So what? (Score:4, Funny)
> to these claims?
I just don't care.
Re:So what? (Score:4, Funny)
Well, 238 patents isn't much if you consider the amount of stupid patents out there. You can barely cross a street without violating one. In fact, I quite glad to see it's not that much of a disaster. Now if you remove things like using an image as an icon, drag and drop of files, pressing tab to change links in a browser, memory allocation, displaying characters while you type, ... you're probably down to 2.
Re:So what? (Score:3, Funny)
I agree, 183 patents isn't much if you consider the amount of stupid patents out there.
In fact at this rate there wont be any patents to worry about.
Re:So what? (Score:2, Funny)
Upstart? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Upstart? (Score:5, Insightful)
NOT a MySQL developer (Score:5, Informative)
Please read the source text carefully!
Florian Müller is NOT a MySQL developer. He is an independent software developer who ALSO is an advisor to MySQL.
And when Florian mentiones the patents, he is only quoting another source.
Florian Müller is engaged (successfully, I might add) in opposing the legalisation of software patents in EU. By doing this, he is doing all of us within the free software and open source world an enormous favour.
I am afraid that many of the postings on this topic are based on erroneous input data. Hope this helps to set things straight.
Marten Mickos, CEO, MySQL AB
Worry much? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah... (Score:4, Interesting)
And How Many Patents Does MySQL Infringe? (Score:3, Interesting)
> violates 283 U.S. software patents.
Linux _may_ infringe some of 283 U.S. software patents. And MySQL? Are they willing to tell us how many they may be infringing? Do they know? You can be damn sure they are infringing some.
Re:And How Many Patents Does MySQL Infringe? (Score:5, Informative)
John, this is a misquote from the start. MySQL has not claimed ANYTHING, nor has any MySQL developer. See my posting elsewhere under this topic.
A person who is only an advisor to MySQL has simply repeated something that someone else has previously said about Linux and patents.
I am sorry for the confusion, but we did not create it.
Marten Mickos, MySQL
Re:And How Many Patents Does MySQL Infringe? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And How Many Patents Does MySQL Infringe? (Score:2)
I agree with this assessment. There are a number of serious problems with software patents, and this is one.
Re:And How Many Patents Does MySQL Infringe? (Score:3, Insightful)
linux patent violation #1: (Score:5, Insightful)
Please explain to me why a computer program is not simply a gigantic math problem?
Can it's processing not be broken down into nothing more than binary operations of a function. A formula that some determined individual may write out longhand?
Sure, that blackboard may stretch to the moon (and be made of carbon nanotubes), but it is an equation nonetheless.
is it not?
I mean, it takes input values, and returns output values.
It's just a really useful math problem.
When did we suddenly become able to patent Mathematics?
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:3, Interesting)
See the RSA algorithm. It is non-obvious, and deserving of a patent.
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:2)
I might be wrong, but thats what I read on this puzzle box for a Simpsons puzzle. Some guy from MIT had patented the formula.
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:2)
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:3, Insightful)
Please explain to me why a machine is not simply a gigantic physical reaction?
Can its function not be broken down into nothing more than charged particles exerting force on each other? A system that some determined individual may explain in detail?
Sure, that explanation may take longer than the lifetime of the universe, but it is a fundamental reaction, nonetheless
Is it not?
I mean, it takes in energy from some source, and converts that energy to work.
It's just a really useful physic
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:5, Insightful)
But the difference in function has meaning to us, practical meaning, as humans. Software that can reliably pinpoint tumors in medical images is not "just mathematics." It has meaning and it has social ramifications.
You are trying to look at the issue, as many of the people here on slashdot try to do, completely objectively. That is, you are tending in the direction of trying to see the universe as it is without any subjective human categorizations. But human life and human society do not and cannot function this way.
There are distinctions that we can make between software and mathematics. The fact that you can generalize and generalize until everything is mathematics says nothing about what the practical attributes of software are.
In other words, you are looking at the uber-parent class's properties and methods instead of the ultimate derived class's properties and methods.
According to this logic, you might argue that all english textual trademarks are just letters, and letters are just information which can be represented in binary, which means they are all just numbers, so there's no reason to prefer any one number over another. To paraphrase, "Since when did we get to register numbers as trademarks?" Clearly, by this point, you've lost all concept of the actual properties of various trademarks in the human environment.
I think I'll just stop here.
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:4, Interesting)
As someone who works in the medical imaging industry, I can't argue with that. There is some amazing work being done in this field that truly deserves patents.
But at the same time, I have a hard time swallowing the idea that all 283 of those patents in Linux are of that quality. I suspect that they're all of the "so obvious no one ever bothered to file a patent until we came along" class of patent.
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:3, Informative)
You cannot reduce everything to mathematics. You can approximate a lot of stuff, but not accurately describe it. The fact is that in software, we are actually living in an idealised world. As far as your software itself is concerned, you do not have to care about all those exceptions and annoying side effects from the real world (even not when your software is used to search for brain tumors
Re:linux patent violation #1: (Score:3, Funny)
A network consultant gets an urgent call from a company manager, their network is down and they need him *NOW*. He walks into the company, looks everything over, says "hmmm
User input in a formal description (Score:4, Interesting)
The first, and probably the simplest, is to use a formal description of a state machine. Thus, the system is normally in the 'wait for input state', and then it branches to a state determined by the type of user input. This encapsulates the interactive element in a single part, and closely resembles the typical structure of most GUI systems (with callbacks etc).
The other method is to treat the system as a function of infinite arguments and use combinator logic. Curry all the arguments into the function, up to the latest existsing, then as each piece of new input occurs, add another argument, and curry it out. Something like an RDBMS is probably better suited to this sort of desription.
This is, I think, an impure calculus - currying is normally invoked to allow description of multiargument functions withing lambda calculus which requires single argument functions. Nevertheless, I can see no major hurdles to describing a program in such a manner.
Granted, I've not had the chance to express any non-trivial programs in either form as yet (lack of time), but I think that some programs are better suited to one representation that the other.
Worth noting that there is no change in the description if the input is known all a priori, and processed from a file, or if it's all garnered piecemeal. Consider a shell script for an example where this is obvious.
A mouse action is probably best represented by a tuple of tuples, giving button down and button up coordinates - thus ((10,10),(20,10)) represnts a mouse drag action, and clicks fall out as degenerate coordinates.
Alternativly, for another option, look at how a pure functional language does a GUI. For example, the wxHaskell bindings for, (unsurprisingly) Haskell. Haskell (a pure functional language with lazy evaluation) programs are just an implementation of a mathematical model of computation. Here, the description is effectivly as a set of functions, where the 'user input' determines which function to run [0]. Techincally, this is no longer a set of equations, however I can prove that this is equivelent to the state machine description above.
Any errors, feel free to correct - this is all a bit rough and ready. I just felt that it was worth pointing out that just because it might be absurb, doesn't make it impossible. For example, the halting problem seems absurb to everyone whose not studied it (because it's obvious if a program will finish).
[0] Or something close to that. I'm not intimatly familer with either the language or the bindings, so I might be a little of with the description.
Re:User input in a formal description (Score:3, Interesting)
Process algebras neatly take this concern together with the need to cover non-determinism due to concurrency, hence making the Pi-calculus a real rival to the Lambda-calculus as a fundamental theory of
Wrong number of patents... its higher... (Score:2)
Keep in mind software patents are by definition of what can and cannot be patented..... invalid.
you cannot patent abstract ideas and just what is it that you think software is... but abstraction...
The best way to deal with this is to realize the degradation fo the value of teh patent system due to its failure to follow its own basis.
Why don't we just say Linux violates the desires of corporations that prefer having con
"Linux violates 283 U.S. software patents" (Score:5, Interesting)
We only know about the linux 'violations' because the code is open. I'm sure if someone were to evaluate "those other operating systems" we'd find far more -- because there is no open public oversight of their code. They operate in secret, who's the wiser if they were deliberately violating patents?
Also, do any of "those other companies" provide indemnification to end users? No, in fact microsoft's license is almost exclusively to provide microsoft with indemnification from end users.
Using microsoft or any other OS isn't likely any safer than using linux, when it comes to patent violations.
The Linux Community's Answer (Score:5, Insightful)
You pulled 283 out of your ass. Those are just the ones you know about. You know why you pulled that number out of your ass? It's impossible to review the whole patent database and screen it against the whole of Linux. Humanly impossible. 283 is a made up number. May as well say 2,830 or 283,000.
An exact count of how many software patents are violated by Microsoft Windows, for instance, would be equally impossible - nay, more, because they keep their source code a secret; however, it is incontravertibly a similar if not higher number.
If you try to follow the U.S. software patent system you won't even be able to power a pocket calculator without a half-million dollars for attorneys and payoffs. Yes, you think I'm exaggerating, don't you.
That's why 100% of Americans ignore their own system. Everybody knows its ridiculous. Even SP's major proponents are afraid to use them because they fear the whole system will unravel if they test it, so all they do is occasionally shake people down, hit and run once and a while. They want to sue Linux over patents; they've been desperate to do it for years, and they're too scared of how badly it will backfire. They're probably right. So they're reduced to backdoors like SCO. And we see how well that cleverness works for them.
You could pull it out your ass as you suggest, OR (Score:2)
http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.ph
Re:You could pull it out your ass as you suggest, (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/
Linux and patents.. (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe it's not Linux which is what's wrong/broken. Fill in the rest.
Government can use patents..? (Score:2)
Re:Government can use patents..? (Score:2)
No so fast (Score:5, Insightful)
If some one said this to me, I would take the "Groklaw Approach". I would ask them first, what are the specific patents and second, how can he be sure that Linux violates all these patents. It would seem to me that to do a fair assessment of 283 patents would take a fair amount of time. So let's see the details.
My guess is that his answers would consist of words like "I", "don't", and "know".
Re:No so fast (Score:2, Interesting)
U.S. enforces patents... (Score:3, Funny)
hey, that's your foot america...what are you doing with that gun??!?
If patents applied to law practices... (Score:5, Insightful)
It would be very bizarre to hear an objection to a legal argument because someone else owned the right to make arguments of they style that the motion used. Perhaps only Johny Cochraine could "play the race card" or something like that. Every other law firm might have to pay him a royalty to use the argument.
If someone could come up with a clear demonstration showing that software patents are as sensible as legal strategy patents, then I'll bet that the supreme court would overturn the current incarnation of the patent laws in a heart beat.
Re:If patents applied to law practices... (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, business methods are patentable.
Historically (Before 1998,) business methods were not patentable for the following reasons:
However, this was questioned in State Street Bank & Trust v. Signature Financial Group Inc., 49 F. 3d 1369 (Fed Cir. 1998).
Signature was assigned a patent, "Data processing system for Hub and Spoke Financial Services Configuration," which described a computer system for asset management, where mutual funds ("Spokes") pooled their assets in an investment portfolio ("The Hub,") which was organized as a partnership to offer tax advantages and economies of scale.
State Street had been negotiating for use of the patent. When talks broke down, they brought legal action saying that the patent was invalid.
The lower court found for State Street, saying business methods are not patentable. The US Federal Court of Appeals overturned this decision, saying that considering business methods unpatentable was ill conceived and unsupported by the Patent Act. In other words, business methods should be treated as any other patent claim.
Because of this ruling, business methods are now patentable as long as they can be implemented in software. This has been one of the drivers on the rush for software patents.
Sources:
Disclaimer:
IANAL.
Re:Two Hundred and Eighty-Three? (Score:5, Informative)
Slashdotters, this is a very important discussion (the one on software patents), but let's start with accurate facts.
The 283 thing is old news and was just repeated by Mr Florian Müller (who is NOT a MySQL developer). See here:
http://news.com.com/Group:+Linux+potentially+infr
I quote from that article:
- - -
Linux potentially infringes 283 patents, including 27 held by Microsoft but none that have been validated by court judgments, according to a group that sells insurance to protect those using or selling Linux against intellectual-property litigation.
Dan Ravicher, founder and executive director of the Public Patent Foundation, conducted the analysis for Open Source Risk Management. OSRM is like an insurance company, selling legal protection against Linux copyright-infringement claims. It plans to expand the program to patent protections.
- - -
So it seems that an important discussion has got onto the wrong track due to incorrect input information.
But let us discuss software patents! MySQL's official position can be found here:
http://www.mysql.com/company/legal/patents.html [mysql.com]
Marten Mickos, CEO, MySQL AB
Re:Two Hundred and Eighty-Three? (Score:2)
Or to put it more concisely:
Re:Two Hundred and Eighty-Three? (Score:2)
Marten: As CEO of a major FOSS company, are you aware of any industry-wide push to challenge the validity of software patents in general? I'm not talking about challenging the existence of individual patents; is there any investigation going on as t
Re:Two Hundred and Eighty-Three? (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately I don't think there is any mechanism for challenging *all* software patents in one go, although I would welcome one.
But there is plenty of good work done behind the scenes (and on the scenes) with the purpose of limiting or completely abolishing the patentability of software.
These things change slowly, and all of us need to be prepared to live WITH software patents until the present malfunctioning software patent system has been changed.
Re:Two Hundred and Eighty-Three? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Linux is an "upstart"? (Score:2)
However, how many people have tried to describe Linux and found some difficulty relating the concept. It's not an easy thing to describe. Especially since it's just a kernel which few people ever interact with directly.