Felix Stalder on Sun, 8 Aug 2004 13:30:37 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> A 'licensing fee' for GNU/Linux? |
> Felix, sorry if I sound rude, but this is not true, and you > unintentionally spread FUD here! > > Proprietary licensing does _not_ protect customers from patent ligitation, > unless the license contract explicitly states so. Software patents can be > and have been enforced against users/licensees of proprietary software, > too. Unisys' enforcement of the LZW/GIF patent, with its legal action > against websites that used GIF images in 1999 (see > <http://lpf.ai.mit.edu/Patents/Gif/Gif.html>) is a prominent example. Well, actually, the story of the GIF patent controversy is exactly the other way around and fits perfectly into my argument about differences between proprietary and FOSS in terms of risk exposure in the coming patent mess. Yes, Unisys did sue some people over their use of .gif files on their webpages. But the details are important here. As Mark Starr, General Patent and Technology Counsel for Unisys at the time, explained it to Slashdot "if the GIFs on your Web site were created with software that is licensed by Unisys, you are fine. Nobody at Unisys is going to try to get $5000 or even $0.50 out of you. Period." [1] As he continued to explain, all of the major proprietary packages (Adobe, Corel etc) had licensed the patented technology and hence users where entitled make as many .gif images as they wanted for whatever purpose. What they were after were people who used programs that had not licensed the patents, which were mainly freeware (though sometimes this freeware was distributed as part of commercial software) and FOSS programs (though they played a minor role back then in the field of graphic design). > The suspension of Munich Linux project, which was made toalarm the > public about future risks for free software through software patenting > in the EU, was therefore dangerously dumb shoot-yourself-into-the-foot > PR which did nothing but play into the hands of the proprietary > software industry. Independent of how you think about the timing and its strategic value, the problem is real and it's not going to go away by not talking about it. It seems pretty clear to me that patents will be a major weapons against FOSS and the more this becomes public knowledge, the better it is for the fight against software patents. Contrary to what Moglen preaches so eloquently, the development of technology is never straight and the FSF does not have it all figured out. Recently, a two year old memo written by someone at HP arguing that patents are the Archilles heel of FOSS has surfaced [2]. He points in particular to section 7 of the GPL [3] which explicitly forbids to distribute GPL'ed software that contains patents that require a license fees. Asked to respond to it, Eben Moglen copped out, saying that the filing of a lawsuit alleging patent infringement would not be enough to activate section 7. What he did not say was that positive court decision would! Now, is this going to be 'shutdown' FOSS? I doubt it, because major companies such as IBM and HP have invested massively into FOSS and Microsoft and others have little interest to alienate them. But it could substantially transform the social dynamics around FOSS. After all, one of the not so unintended consequences of the patent system is that it allows to form cartells without running into anti-trust issues. [1] http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/08/31/0143246 [2] http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=04/07/19/2315200 [3] http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html ----+-------+---------+--- http://felix.openflows.org # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net