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If we insist on having mail filters, we need smarter ones than SmartFilter. I had to edit your response, Alain, before it would let this out. "The following email you sent was not delivered to the intended recipients as it had restricted contents in it! The restricted content present was "porn". Action taken: The email was Deleted." So much for this wonderful edifice of communication technologies. From: arg@u... [mailto:arg@u...] >"The Bush administration has proposed boosting Patent Office funding by 21 >percent, far above the average nondefense agency increase of 3 percent or >so." >Therefore, the "solution" to a 25-month patent backlog is apparently to >throw more money and resources at it, not to fundamentally reform the flawed >patenting process into a more sensible solution, right ? That's part of it, the immediate stuff. I know someone who works there and says that backlog and the lack of deep technical knowledge are the two major problems for sorting out patents. If you toss a technical community in that likes to claim it invents things it only modified, renames them, then tells the press what wonders they are, then I'm sorry, we get to take part of the blame. I've said this before and I repeat it here: the software titans are playing games we set examples for here on The Web. That is why I go on about fastidious history. Without it, things like the BT patent get passed. >I would personally >start with a heavy fine against the abusers who try to sneak in blatantly >silly or obscene ideas - obscenity as in "patenting the human genome", not >as in "possibly patentable p*** ideas". I hope you don't have any of these, >Len ? No, I patented breathing. Expect mail from my lawyers. >> This is beginning to look >> like an election issue. >Seriously, I >think it is overall beneficial that we have these controversies in the press >or the U.S. Congress or the European Parliament, or possibly even in places >where political decisions are taken. TimBL went on record saying that some form of legal assistance is needed. I agree. But again, folks, this will come down to campaigning and "who do you believe" unless we are very scrupulous. That SUN patent stood because no one at the W3C stood up to fight it. Justice is blind (and sometimes deaf too). If we play favorites in this game, if we let the cost of the defense be the sole discriminator, we are hosed. What these guys are doing is legal. What we have done is stupid. >Only that can ensure that these issues >are not decided upon behind our collective back. If that is not enough, some >form of civil disobedience, whether by individuals or companies, might also >help. No that just makes stupidity popular. We have to fix the systems and we have to quit feeding them hype-laced caca in the name of marketing. >Purely rhetorical question: if tomorrow a company obtained a U.S. >patent giving them some toll right on the Internet, what could they actually >do with it in practice ? It would be impossible to enforce unless Dubya >raises the Justice budget to Defense-like levels - let's not even mention >the "outside the U.S." scenario... Ummm... Have you ever looked into MPEG, patent pools, and the like? They don't enforce it like sending out an army. They litigate you into bankruptcy, seize assets, and make off with it unless you have the cahones to stand there and fight. It can be ruinous. We had to lose a division to fight Intel, but in the end, we stood up to it. We do own those patents. It cost us dearly. But note two sides: one, protect intellectual property because without property rights, none of the rest matter. Two, ensure that property claims are legitimate. For that, documentation counts. The patent office cannot do everything. >So, I'm not really scared by the idea of an IBM or Microsoft placing a >tollbooth over "the Web" (T.M.) or on every Internet-based business >transaction. Surely Gates and Ballmer haved phantasized someday about that >while doing the baboon dance on a stage and getting the ensuing testosterone >boost, but it seems to be beyond their reach. Again, wrong approach. They don't feel those insults and they might be the very people who can help turn this around by coming to understand the business model is bad in the long term. MS and IBM are not the enemy. There is no enemy. We have a systemic problem of not being able to enforce RAND and not being able to identify bogus patents. We made this worse by being an industry incapable of remembering history and rewriting it conveniently. The people in the patent offices are not superhuman or stupid: they are overworked, underfunded, and not capable of finding facts in an environment where due dilligence on prior art is not supported BY THE VERY FRIKKING SYSTEM BEING RESEARCHED BECAUSE WE FILLED IT WITH SELF-INDULGENT CACA. I'd be horsewhipped before I'd turn all of this over to the W3C. The plea for a "strong man, a single organization" is possibly the stupidest thing I've seen on the web. It is as if people like Berlind can't reason because they can't remember. That isn't the way to get it done. Put the W3C inside a set of relationships with ISO as the outer wheel. That puts the right people with the right skills in the right jobs. >We should probably not get >distracted by the most improbable scenarios, but keep the more probable one >under close scrutiny - do we know what they really are ? .Net MyServices was >among the possible ones until various feedback loops sent it back a few >times to the business model drawing board. It will come back. If we focus on patents, the issue is to make the system work and to reform it if needed. What does it take to do that? First, truth about technical innovation. Second, resources to find that. Third, organizations capable of making agreements at the level of nation-states, not vendors. Then we have to be dilligent. >> Conserve options. This is when you need them. >Yes, but which ones should we focus on, then ? It's impractical to keep all >of them open, I noticed. One's that enable us to choose other technologies when the ones in place aren't workable for whatever reason. That means we have to quit calling specifications "standards". One's that enable us to go to a different legislative authority when a consortium's members begin to violate agreements. >Another article I just saw: >http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/0,14179,2861033,00.html There are so many problems with what he says I can't even reply. This won't be solved with the "get the villagers and pitchforks and let's go slay the monster in the windmill". In this community, before they got up the hill, half would be redesigning the pitchforks and calling that invention, and the rest would be tilting. This one is beyond the power of the Internet, the W3C, or the lists. It goes to court and to the governments. I'd suggest we get back on good terms with ISO and quit thinking the MIT brain trust has the answers. They aren't qualified or skilled for this kind of work. It requires lawyers. len
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