Patents and User Protection In OSS 70
missing_myself writes "Linux.com has nice summary on 'How major distributions are dealing with potential violations of patents and trademarks, cryptography, packaging proprietary software and consequential damages' from Bruce Byfield (a journalist from OSTG)." From the article: "Slowly, some commercial distributions are taking a different route. In the last few years, indemnification has become an increasingly important issue in FOSS communities, largely because of the SCO-IBM case. Claiming ownership of Unix, SCO alleges that IBM has allowed copyrighted code to pass from System V Unix to GNU/Linux. Although no evidence has been released and the trial is not scheduled until February 26, 2007, the issues in the case have made both commercial and community FOSS participants reevaluate their practices."
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:5, Interesting)
Possibly - they did a slash-and-burn on their personnel this summer, and recently (a week or so ago) "persuaded" their investors to chip in $10M to keep them afloat. Assuming their burn rate doesn't change, they might just stick around to see trial.
It all depends on whether Novell gets to take their money - they owe 95% of their "Unix" revenue to Novell (well, technically they owe 100%, and Novell gives them 5% back.) Novell has a motion before the court to get 95% of SCOX's money placed in escrow.
they will have little or no money to sustain a case
They claim that their legal fees are capped, so their lawyers are working for free after their cash is gone (assuming they're (a) telling the truth, and (b) SCOX manages to avoid bankruptcy altogether.)
My biggest burning question is where does UNIX (the code) go to? Who would inherit SCOs IP?
Assuming that SCOX has Unix IP to begin with (their contract with Novell says they don't,) it would be sold to the highest bidder in bankruptcy court, just like any other assets.
Will UNIX enter the public domain?
Probably not - unless someone buys it at their fire-sale and releases it as such. Rumor has it that it might already be public domain, because AT&T released it without copyright attribution (this is hearsay based on the AT&T/Berkely settlement.)
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:2)
There is enough at stake that for others it is worth a punt of a few million, just on the rare off chance they might get a settlement worth having a share of.
As such I'd be surprised if some entity wasn't around for the court case. Whether there is anyone else there but lawyers by that point is another question entirely. The way
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:3, Insightful)
Um, why not? No matter what, the single mother would be bankrupt anyway. So, the winning side wouldn't profit terribly from getting their share paid.
But should the single mother have a good case, I think even expensive team of lawyers might take an interest in the case based on the term, that provided they win they get payed by the losing side, and get not payed when they lose.
In the current situation, she cou
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:1)
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:1)
You are correct. This case is extremely bidirectional. On one side there is puny insignificant de-listed SCO, and on the other is huge massive bureaucratic ex-monopolist IBM.
Don't let your hatred of SCO blind you to the fact that this trial is extremely unbalanced.
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:2, Funny)
We don't have a justice system. We have a legal system.
China. Their legal system is corrupt, bureaucratic, slothful, wasteful, and horrible... but not like ours.
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes. That's what a trial is supposed to do: sort out one particular issue. If your evil doer committed the murder in question, then that would be relavent. The legal system is intended to be blind to matters of personality, and trials are supposed to rest solely on facts. Things don't
Re: (Score:1)
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:3, Insightful)
That's just the tip of the iceberg. Even assuming a speedy trial (perhaps 6 months, if they get a jury/judge that can stay awake through all the technical arguments), then come the appeals. This whole SCO/Linux brouhaha is just a battle of attrition now. It'll be interesting to see who cracks first and when.
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm, I think that will be the company who hardly has any money, aka SCO.
Re:February 26, 2007 (Score:1)
Re:Wishy-washy (Score:5, Insightful)
Protecting intellectual property is good. Going after old women because someone downloaded a mp3 on thier cable line is bad. Having fees which do not match the crime are bad.
The problem is everyone has become so greedy. It is a cycle. The software companies got greedy, so they pushed the end users around with absurd EULA's. The users got ticked off and pushed back copying and distributing protected materials on P2P networks. Software companies cripled their software and made it call home. Hackers got ticked off and wrote hacks.
My advice to software companies is this: Treat the end user with respect. Why shouldn't an end user be allowed to make one back up copy of their software (for example)?
Re:Wishy-washy (Score:2)
I've been buying software since 1982, and believe me, people were copying software long before there were EULAs. In fact, copy prevention measures were being put in place before there were any EULAs too.
Don't try to make out that this is all the fault of the eevil software companies - the copying came first. Perhaps n
Re:Wishy-washy (Score:3, Informative)
Protecting intellectual property is good.
Even if applied "properly," I question the validity of the assumption that ideas can be "owned." The term itself is misleading [gnu.org] and two major branches of intellectual property (copyright and patents) are based on highly dubious assumptions.
The arguments are extensive, and others have framed them far better than I can. Consider reading "Information Liberation [uow.edu.au]" by Brian Martin (available online, of course), in particular Chapt [uow.edu.au]
Not wishy-washy at all (Score:2)
Re:Wishy-washy (Score:3, Insightful)
If you are wondering what the people who post to
Re:Wishy-washy (Score:2)
Re:Wishy-washy (Score:1)
Does that mean linux will become like windows? (Score:5, Insightful)
I know windows won't let me use the OS in every way I want. For example, they have DRM that is enforced, DVD players under windows can lock you into a region. A friend had a linux laptop that was not locked into any region.
Is Linux going to start doing the same thing as windows? Are the major distros worried about being sued?
There are way too many lawyers in the USA. I bet if someone did a study, they would find just about everyone will be sued at least once in their life. Too bad it is not like the old days of PC computers when software companies made good money and left users alone. But ever since software companies stopped selling software and started selling services, they now are going after users. I guess selling software once for $50 is not as profitable as activating software on a monthly fee of $12.95. Take the RPG of the 80's and compare them to the games of today. :( If they had open networks, it would be like the 80's, but companies see a way of making more money.
Re:Does that mean linux will become like windows? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's entirely possible that I'm not understanding what you're getting at... but I see things as being quite the opposite as you. As I see it, it's because software companies won't give up the sell product business model that we have all these problems. If the software companies would stop trying to charge me for the zero-cost replication of their product, and would instead charge me for service, that would be fine. If they offer bad service, I can cancel my subscription, stop getting support, and still use the product (at my own risk!). If I'm in a jam, I can pay for service, in effect paying for them to actually do something.
This seems to work (to varying extents) for some OSS software vendors. I can use Mandriva, but if I want support, or faster downloads of newest products, I can pay for those services. I have no problem paying for access to enhanced services. I also see nothing wrong for charging users to play online games (servers and electricity cost money). I'm not convinced that charging me $50 everytime I want to install a copy of something is equally valid.
Frankly it's much easier, as a user, to stop being bothered by a company when they are service-based, since you can just cancel your subscription. It's annoying to have to deal with copy-protection and DRM on products that you "bought" years ago.
OpenSource Patents (Score:2)
2 cents,
Queen B
Re:OpenSource Patents (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:OpenSource Patents (Score:3, Interesting)
Please correct me if I'm mistaken.
Re:Does that mean linux will become like windows? (Score:2)
major distros don't tend to distribute this dvd decoding software for exactly this reason it tends to be obtained from user run repositries.
Re:Does that mean linux will become like windows? (Score:3, Funny)
Are you kidding? The US has a dangerously small number of lawyers. We need more; many more.
Re:Does that mean linux will become like windows? (Score:2)
Re:Does that mean linux will become like windows? (Score:1)
I remember downloading Space Quest Series off the BBS. They usually had a check (what's on page xx of the manual) to validate the purchase. Nothing new here, though the use of computers has massively increased an
still theoretical (Score:2, Interesting)
To date, no patent claim has ever been upheld against FOSS, and no individual or corporation has needed indemnification yet.
I think that claim is correct. I don't know of any successful claims against major FOSS projects (does anyone have a reference one way or the other, either showing exhaustively that all cases have been fruitless, or showing counter-examples, where claims were upheld?). Overall it seems somewhat strange to be building in indemnification for something that is still, essent
Re:still theoretical (Score:2)
All insurance is based on something that's theoretical - it just depends on how theoretical.
Up until last December, a tsunami that could kill a quarter of a million people was only theoretical. Up until last August, a hurricane that would force the evacuation of New Orleans was only theoretical. And up until September 11, 2001, terrorists flying jets into New York sk
Re:still theoretical (Score:3, Insightful)
All of your other examples are of things that have happened, only with a new level of damage. How do you underwrite an entirely new category of risk?
Re:still theoretical (Score:2)
Salesman: According to my uncle who is a real whiz with aliens, an alien attack is coming this way.
Peter Griffin: *thinking to himself* Hmmmm, I too have an uncle. Come in.
Re:still theoretical (Score:3, Informative)
I guess my question would be, how do you define "baseless?" Currently, under both federal and s
Re:still theoretical (Score:2)
No doubt it is - strictly speaking. It is also meaningless*. I know of several projects that have been sent threatening letters by patent holders, including VLC, Helmut Dersch and a doctor who was writing some patient record keeping/practice management free software. In order for a claim to be upheld against these individuals and communities of free software developers, they would have had to spend the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars necessary to fight it out in
Copyright infringement by IBM? (Score:3, Informative)
I thought this was now a simple contract disagreement.
Is there a 4th amended complaint?
Re:Copyright infringement by IBM? (Score:2)
It's all a non issue - re: software patents.. (Score:1)
To use an analogy, the decimal system is far easier and more powerful to use than the roman numeral system, but it took 300 years for the change over to happen due to the persistance of the roman numeral elite.
Galileo wasn't exorinated untill the early 1990's, long after he was dead... allot of good the exorination did him. But it help the catholic church not run off its followers with silly notions of the earth or man being the center of the un
Patents Are The Problem Not The Software (Score:5, Interesting)
All of this software is legal outside of the US, whether there are US patents held on it or not. It is the US patent system that is at fault here, not the software vendors.
The US needs to get its act together, or it will find itself falling behind in homegrown new technology as all the innovative companies move (or stay) overseas.
Bob
Re:Patents Are The Problem Not The Software (Score:5, Insightful)
Anybody can file an anonymous protest against a patent application before it issues, so all it takes is assigning people to read the apps and make the challenges. Companies taking out "defensive patents" are missing the point, filing for new junk patents to defend against other junk patents only makes the problem worse. Those patent lawyers ought to be earning their money invalidating junk patents, not filing new ones.
Re:Patents Are The Problem Not The Software (Score:1)
Sad, no? (Score:1)
It's almost comical, watching someone try to beat a mountain (linux) with a stick, but sad too. When will sense prevail?
Where will it end? (Score:2)
Patent Claims DO Shut Down FOSS (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, if the open source patent pools could be used offensively [blogspot.com], or the Independent Invention Defense [blogspot.com] were allowed, we'd probably see some action.
Re:Patent Claims DO Shut Down FOSS (Score:2)
Which?
Re:Patent Claims DO Shut Down FOSS (Score:2)
Re:Patent Claims DO Shut Down FOSS (Score:1)
I hate to make such an analogy, but this sounds exactly what Boromir said in The Lord of the Rings. Using evil for good is a very dangerous thing.
Re:Patent Claims DO Shut Down FOSS (Score:2)
You are right. I probably should have said "could be used reciprocally," as in, an author gets cease-and-desisted or sued for patent infringement by X, so they reciprocally cease-and-desist or sue X using patents from the pool. This is how the big corps get away with software development that is otherwise off-limits to the smaller guy. But I absolutely agree
Solution: Ignore them (Score:2)
You guys just... don't... get... it ! (Score:4, Insightful)
Welcome back to the Wild West. He who can code, controls the world. We write code. We use code. End of story - Except...
Corporate America has a schizophrenic obsession with the code we write and use. On the one hand, they see something for free and want in. On the other, they see an ENORMOUS threat to everything they stand for, and want us all taken out back and shot.
Well, this time, it doesn't really matter what Corporate America wants. They can play along if they want, but every time they try to play (or buy) the new sheriff in town, they get tarred and feathered and send home crying to mommy that we treated them unfairly. "They broke my pathetically weak DRM! They won't let me root their PCs! Make them play fair, Un'ca Sam!"
Patents? What do the distros do about it? The "real" distros, by which I mean those that don't have shareholders to answer to, do nothing. And if they buckle, someone else will come along to replace them - Once you know how, it doesn't take much to "roll your own" distro (I say that as someone who has done it... granted, maintaining one, with active users, takes a lot of free time).
So stop Asking Slashdot what horrors will befall us when the festering patent dungheap hits the cool-breeze-blowing fan of Open Source. Because the fan gets a little dirty, and keeps right on spinning, while those flinging the feces get covered in shit.
Re:You guys just... don't... get... it ! (Score:1)
It's nice to see so much optimism in this matter, but I don't see on which you base it. Although corporations have been slow to adapt until now, why couldn't that change in the future. Just see how much they push for software patents in Europe.
And even if these corporations are slow, they might still do a lot of dama
Re:You guys just... don't... get... it ! (Score:4, Interesting)
Exactly my point (if phrased in a somewhat less extremist manner)! As long as a single country (*cough* Vanuatu *cough*), a single state, a single town, a single pair of people, exists that doesn't feel inclined to play ball with those who would lock our culture away from us and charge us just for a peek, no one can tell us "you can't use XOR because Microsoft owns the patent on it". Or rather, they can tell us until they die from exhaustion, but it won't much matter, because this very much counts as a war of attrition, and while corporations and governments may theoretically live forever, real humans - Well, as Doritos says, "Crunch all you want, we'll make more".
but I don't see on which you base it.
Simple civil disobedience. The fact that most of us look proudly on the Boston tea party, sympathize with the students at Tiennamen Square, root for Robin Hood, cheer on "DVD Jon" (All "evil lawbreakers" in the opinion of our political leaders and corporate masters)... All those serve as proof enough to me that we will eventually "win". It may take the blood of billions, imprisoned and tortured in secret prisons in the name of profit, but freedom has a way of popping up even in the most oppressive of situations.
Even the uncertainty about the legal status of oss
Hmm, I don't think you quite followed my original meaning... The "legal status" doesn't matter one whit in the long term viability of open source.
For laws to matter, you need (at least) two preconditions...
One, which I already mentioned, you need a monopoly on laws. The US doesn't have that. The EU doesn't have that. The UN doesn't have that. I really doubt any single nation will ever truly rule the entire human race for long.
And two: People need to believe in laws for those laws to have any power. Laws very much count as consentual fiction - Take away the "consent" part, and you have nothing but fiction. Case in point, speed limits. Spooky Canadian GPS schemes aside, very few people care much about the posted speed limits. And those who get caught violating once or twice a year pay a pittance of a "sin" tax for the privelage of going faster. Even with so draconian a situation as the "War on (some) Drugs", you have somewhere around a third of the population in open revolt against a set of laws on which the US government (as an aggregate) spends the MAJORITY of its policing budget, yet still fails to do more than waste even more money filling prisons.
Re:You guys just... don't... get... it ! (Score:2)
Since those laws were nullified after the release of Debian 3.0 (Woody), the repository no longer serves a useful purpose and is now empty.
The non-US section has nothing to do with patents. Debian's patent policy is quite simple: all patents are ignored, except when they are being actively enforced against the creators/distributors/users of Free software; whereupon the patented softwar
Re:You guys just... don't... get... it ! (Score:2)
Nothing peculiar about open source... (Score:2)
The only substantial difference is that with F/OSS software, it's easier to identify violations and remediate them. It's also easier to trace the responsible party.
The whole discussion highlights a travesty of US law -- that liability for patent violation can be extended beyond the violator to parties ignorant of the implementation. This is doubly idiot