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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: W3C as Golden Goose (was RE: [Fwd: W3C ridiculous n ewpoli
-----Original Message----- From: Rex Brooks [mailto:rexb@s...] Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2001 8:16 AM To: Don Park; David Brownell; Bullard, Claude L (Len); xml-dev@l... Subject: Re: W3C as Golden Goose (was RE: [Fwd: W3C ridiculous new policy on patents]) > Having served on the IPR Task Force for the Web3D Consortium and having written the > ipr policy of HumanMarkup group before it came under OASIS auspices which supercede > those, I can say that RAND utterly demolishes anything resembling open standards. > Yes, it is THAT simple. As y'all probably know by now, the W3C has extended the comment period to 11 October; see http://www.w3.org/2001/10/patent-response "This allows for an extension to collect comments, and allows the Patent Policy Working Group to prepare for their next face-to-face meeting, which begins on 15 October 2001. Please note: due to the large number of comments received in the past two days, the Team and Patent Policy Working Group will require extra time to identify substantial comments and provide responses in kind." Note the phrase "extra time to identify substantial comments": I think that's the W3C's subtle way of saying "flames in Slashdot-ese are all very amusing, but constructive suggestions are more effective advocacy." Here's the way the W3C defines the problem: "As the proposed policy includes proposals such as: a requirement for disclosure provisions (Section 7); a procedure for launching new standards development activities as Royalty-Free Licensing Mode activities (sections 4 and 5); a procedure for launching new standards development activities as Reasonable and Non-Discriminatory (RAND) Licensing Mode activities (sections 4 and 5); W3C would like to know if your opposition to or support for the policy refers to all three of these proposals, or just some of them." If you want to end your substantive suggestion with a nice rhetorical flourish, Dave Winer has collected a few links to Tim Berners-Lee's more eloquent attacks on software patents in his weblog yesterday: http://scriptingnews.userland.com/2001/10/01
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