Microsoft Talks to Open Source “Community Members” About Patent Royalties
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-05-19 13:44:46 UTC
- Modified: 2008-05-19 13:46:27 UTC
"I've heard from Novell sales representatives that Microsoft sales executives have started calling the Suse Linux Enterprise Server coupons "royalty payments""
--Matt Asay, April 21st, 2008
Here is just a quick shot from the hip.
Watch this
smug new article closely enough and you will see just what vision Microsoft has for Free software, which it implicitly considers as separate from its own
provisional idea of Open Source (
self-serving of course).
And Microsoft is in "on-going dialog" with community members over making it easier to find the royalties in its documents.
Microsoft wants open source software to accept software patents globally and also pay for the privilege of using mathematics.
Thank you, Novell.
⬆
Comments
AlexH
2008-05-19 15:21:00
... pointing out the royalty-bearing areas of a document is actually a good thing. For the CIFS documentation, they handed over to Samba a document and listed the patents that they said applied to the standard. With that list, the Samba team can now actively avoid those patents to ensure that they're not infringing them.
Yes, software patents are bad, but surely it's better to have a map of the landmines than to try and find them manually?
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-19 15:31:20
AlexH
2008-05-19 16:03:39
"Under the agreement, Microsoft is required to make available and keep current a list of patent numbers it believes are related to the Microsoft implementation of the workgroup server protocols, without granting an implicit patent license to any Free Software implementation."
-- http://www.samba.org/samba/PFIF/
Samba don't have to scan through thousands of patents; that's precisely the point. You're arguing against yourself again: the alternative to being provided a list of patents is that projects like Samba absolutely have to go through thousands of patents or (more likely) ignore patents and try to deal with issues when they arise.
Miles
2008-05-19 17:23:44
AlexH
2008-05-19 17:41:05
The sad thing is, it's not like Roy's position on this issue is wrong. Software patents are terrible, and do direct measurable harm to free software.
But we live in a world where a number of major places - the US, Japan - have them, and you have to live with that. If Microsoft, and everyone else, *explicitly* said what patents they believe they have, that would actually help enormously. Agreements like http://www.protocolfreedom.org/ are actually a good thing in this context.
By coming out against things like this, without thinking them through, we risk further damage on top of the existing damage of software patents.
Miles
2008-05-19 18:05:25
My point is that Roy doesn't acknowledge any evidence that doesn't match his own perception of reality and simply hides his head in the sand when any is presented.
He doesn't ever read the articles he links to (as I'm sure you've discovered) and never bothers to think things through logically, and so only serves to mislead himself and others who don't bother to read said articles (or do any thinking of their own).
He jumps to conclusions all the time without knowing all of the facts and just assumes the worst about the people and groups he doesn't like.
"I don't like group XYZ, so whenever XYZ does anything... it must be fore some evil purpose."
That's classic "Roy logic".
Rui Miguel Silva Seabra
2008-05-19 21:41:35
How could you work around RSA? You couldn't. When did RSA become widespread? After the patent expired. What was the result?
20 years delay of introducing encryption to computer users on a massively spread form.
HOW on earth can anyone be so naïve as to even think patents are circunventable if known...
Xanadu
2008-05-19 21:52:33
Dan O'Brian
2008-05-19 22:54:43
So Xanadu, sounds more like you are the one trying to convince yourself that this whole site isn't a sham.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-19 22:57:41
Samba was the exception and by no means the norm and it came after like a decade of fighting in vain.
ZiggyFish
2008-05-20 00:18:47
Firstly, get a life.
Secondly, you seem to forget the point of this site. The site is call BoycottNovel for a reason.
Thirdly, you never back up your statements.
Fourthly, you seem to have ignored Rui Miguel Silva Seabra's comment.
And Fifthly you won't reply to this comment because you know I'm right.
ZiggyFish
2008-05-20 00:21:53
And even then it was only the EU lawsuit that they were forced to give Samba the docs needed.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-20 00:28:26
AlexH
2008-05-20 07:21:15
If you have to deal with a jurisdiction where software patents exist, it's better to know what you're dealing with. I don't see why this is such a difficult concept.
@ZiggyFish: I actually always back up my statements with references and citations. I know you don't come here for a balanced point of view, but if you have a factual problem with anything I say, then challenge me on it.
plh
2008-05-20 10:16:25
And pay for the privilege of using inventions which Microsoft has stolen from them or others with parachronistic patents like its extended clipboard formats, RSS subscription, and Enlightenment-style pager patents.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-20 12:20:14
Well, for that type of job (legal attack over virtual desktops) they have proxies like Acacia, with former Microsoft employees [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10].
Sally
2008-05-20 21:11:48
Just like unjust marijuana laws, no, we don't have to live with that. Just because a law is passed doesn't make it moral or correct, wealthy men pass unjust laws while fooling the people with lies. Whether patents may or may not have been a good thing at one time is debatable, but right now they are evil and the law must be changed. In America most of the people are dumb and fat, so expect them not to care about patents as a whole, but in countries where the people aren't so complacent and stupid, they care enough to protest against them.
We live on a rock, bound by gravity, we will never get off and anywhere if we continue the corrupt, wealthy elite to control us and stifle innovation. The U.S. space program is one example of wasted potential which needs to open up in order for us to progress as a people.
ZiggyFish
2008-05-20 22:40:07
But in that case it's better of no one knowing (which is what the situation with option source). If no one knows about it, no one can sue (btw, which is also another fundamental problem with patents)
The problem isn't software makers, it's the software patents. If you deal with the software (the actual software that infringes on the patents) it's self, your only dealing with the symptom of the problem and NOT solving or preventing the problem from occurring again.
Murphy's Law states:
It is found that anything that can go wrong at sea generally does go wrong sooner or later.
Software patents are anti-competitive in there nature (there are companies that are founded around software patents.), But you can still protect your products though copy write laws which is non anti-competitive.
So after I've said that. Tell me AlexH, why should software patents exist (here's your chance to prove me wrong about you in my previous post)?
Roy Schestowitz
2008-05-21 01:38:13
Just as there's nothing fair or ethical about apartheid, sexism, slavery and oppression, there's no legitimacy to software patents.