which is the reason why i think Design Patterns and Patterns are unpatentable..too many cooks created these meals to attribute to any one or group of individuals
The real challenge is the submittal process where one must submit at least 50% of the patentable code..what do you submit?
I always thought PostGIS whose algorithms were unique enough and whose creators were from a sufficiently small population
to place PostGIS into 'patentable' code but apparently PostGIS is firmly declared under 'GPL' to quote
I always thought PostGIS whose algorithms were unique enough and whose creators were from a sufficiently small population
to place PostGIS into 'patentable' code but apparently PostGIS is firmly declared under 'GPL' to quote
"To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use .."
Recalling an earlier year when a Lowell MA based company offered proprietary software which did'nt interoperate with other (GPL software..)
MS on the other hand seems to patent unique algorithms and or methodologies which are specific only to MS environments...Interesting..
Martin
Martin
----- Original Message -----From: JustinSent: Thursday, May 29, 2008 10:33 AMSubject: Re: [GENERAL] New MS patent: sounds like PG db rules
Nikola Milutinovic wrote:Question??? Does the license that Postgresql works under allow for a foundation or non for profit entity be created that would hold onto patents for original ideas of the contributors so WE can protect the users and developers of postgresqlStill, this sounds dangerous. It should be, even legally, WRONG to patent something that already exist and was not invented by the patentee. I know we can laugh off MS in court, but what about new DBs or project even built on PG that have this functionality? Software patents are a menace, I'm afraid. And this is still just one portion. IBM is also into this line of "work".
Nix.
----- Original Message ----
From: Dave Page <dpage@pgadmin.org>
To: Justin Clift <justin@salasaga.org>
Cc: Jonathan Bond-Caron <jbondc@gmail.com>; A. Kretschmer <andreas.kretschmer@schollglas.com>; pgsql-general@postgresql.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2008 3:18:31 PM
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] New MS patent: sounds like PG db rules
HI Justin
On Tue, May 27, 2008 at 2:06 PM, Justin Clift <justin@salasaga.org> wrote:
> I'm trying to point out that - PG is a database system - and MS may have
> just been granted a patent for a fundamental part of it.
>
> Thinking it might need looking in to, and trying to bring it to the
> attention of some that can (or even cares?). ;>
I don't think it's a major issue. Even if MS do think we infringe on
the patent it would be laughable for them to try to do anything about
it given that our rules implementation has provably existed in a
leading FOSS project for a decade or more.
--
Dave Page
EnterpriseDB UK: http://www.enterprisedb.com
--
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general
The idea start playing the game MS and other Software companies are playing where they keep applying for patents/copyrights where there is prior art. This would protect everyone in the development chain from having defend stupid lawsuits that these companies could bring against the biggest offenders.
USPTO only looks at existing patents and trademarks to see if they can issue a patent So if a patent makes claims on already existing art it puts the burden on the original inventor to get the patent revoke. Doing the above would help put an end to this.
This is just a suggestion.
No comments:
Post a Comment