The Free Software Foundation and the GNU Project oppose publication of draft-housley-tls-authz-extns as an experimental standard.
The patent application disclosed by RedPhone Security has put any free software attempting to implement these extensions in a very difficult position.
Much of the communication on the Internet happens between computers according to standards that define common languages. If we are going to live in a free world using free software, our software must be allowed to speak these languages.
"Financial incompatibility -- that's precisely the effect of software patents."What kind of an twisted ecosystem would put interoperability/communication, which is intended to be open and free standards-based, in the hands of a company with 'interoperability tax'? Financial incompatibility -- that's precisely the effect of software patents. It wasn't long ago that The Register had an exclusive report involving a similar story. A recently-proposed IEEE wireless standard -- a decent one by all means -- had everyone scared of implementing it. Why? Because of patents. At the end of the say, patents prevent good products and good standards from being implemented. Nobody benefits.
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