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06.25.08

Patents Roundup: Good News, Bad News

Posted in Europe, Google, Interoperability, Microsoft, Patents, SUN at 7:02 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Many stories about software patents make an appearance at the moment (it’s clearly a hot topic) and there’s little time to expand on them, so here is just a sample of news worth reading if you care about the legal fight against Free software.

Patents Down in Europe, Sun

It was interesting to discover that patents in Europe are on the decline, but the reasons for this decline was discomforting. [via Glyn Moody]

European Patent Office issued fewer patents in 2007

[...]

Nonetheless, the EPO staff’s morale seems to have never been lower. A survey conducted among several thousand staff members found that only 4 per cent have faith in the management board. Only 6 per cent said they were satisfied with their direct superiors and the president. The auditors have also long been complaining that they are chronically overworked.

We previously wrote about Sun's view on software patents. While not much has changed, it’s reassuring to find this:

On his blog, Sun’s general counsel Mike Dillon provides an explanation as to why his company took the decision back in 2005 to reduce the number of patent applications it files…

Aside from our focus on patent quality, there is another reason we are filing fewer patents. It has to do with our business model. Unlike some companies, we don’t have a corporate goal for revenue derived from patents (and patent litigation).

UNIX-basedFor a company that suffers financially and reduces its workforce perpetually, the above seems like a bold statement. Reasons below.

Downturn/Recession Turns “Defensive” to Offensive

Digital Majority turns its readers’ attention to this article.

Why Patent Applications Increase in a Down Economy

[...]

In September, in a case known as “Re: Comisky,” the U.S. Patent Office held the inventor’s method for conducting mandatory arbitration involving legal documents was not patentable, essentially finding that a business process that does not require the use or implementation of technology, but depends on steps of human intervention, can not be awarded a patent.

Europe’s Back Door Again

Glyn Moody is well aware of the little scheme that’s apparently cooking in the EU. It’s partly about shoving in some software patents by the backdoor, using the help of Commissioner Charlie Mccreevy:

…where those “opportunities” almost certainly amount to sneaking in software patents by the backdoor.

Be alert for more of this stuff: the price of freedom is eternal vigilance etc. etc. etc.

Watch Don Marti’s critique of the Commission’s toothless and lawless (as in tiger) fight against RAND and the likes of it. We highlighted this problem before [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12].

You can’t have it both ways: if “Intellectual Property” should be treated like actual property, then you put it at risk when you use it in a crime. The European Commission isn’t picking on a US-based company for no reason here. In fact, the Commission generally advocates for expansions of exclusive rights in information that tend to benefit US-based companies at the expense of Europe. And in this case, the Commission didn’t even limit Microsoft’s use of the patent system. It only limited the company’s ability to make vague anticompetitive threats based on unspecified parts of a large patent portfolio, and handed over some protocol information that Samba was in the process of working out anyway.

A common-sense patent regime would limit the tools available to future software monopolists, and might make the next antitrust action unnecessary.

Copyrighted Datasets

Here is an interesting observation from Brendan Scott. He points out that his local laws may impose artificial barriers on interoperability.

The current authorities still hold that the reproduction of a data set, even for the purpose of interoperability, will be an infringement if there is copyright in the data set. Moreover, the courts have simply looked for a causal connection between the original work and the reproduction. The re-implementation of a work by piecing it together from observation may still result in an infringement.

The legislature has introduced an interoperability exception but it seems to be worded in a way limited to reproductions for the purpose of gaining information – and therefore doesn’t seem to be a lot of help in practice.

What would that mean if not only copyrights were involved? What if someone obtained a patent on a data transformation tool, which describes mapping between fixed objects? Watch this one from the news.

Start-up sues Google over e-mail switching tool”

Google was named on Monday in a trade secrets lawsuit alleging that the company’s business software unit copied a tiny start-up’s tool for moving customers off of Microsoft software onto Google’s.

LimitNone filed a complaint in an Illinois circuit court alleging that Google at first began promoting the smaller firm’s tool for migrating Microsoft Outlook customers to Gmail, then copied the idea and went into competition with it.

It sounds as though LimitNone got back-stabbed by Google, but patent laws certainly would not work here. The idea is by no means innovative and the solution not unique (it’s mathematics in the sense that data gets systematically translated). It’s important not to let such cases permit junk patents to exist.

No Regrets at Microsoft After Abuses, ODF Still Snubbed

Posted in America, Antitrust, Apple, Microsoft, Office Suites, Open XML, OpenDocument at 5:34 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Cover-up Work

I

n an earlier post, we showed that ODF adoption is definitely increasing. Microsoft meanwhile resorts to EEE (embrace, extend, and extinguish) because it’s the only method it understands. That, however, is not the subject of this one particular post.

According to observations made about a new article, Microsoft has little or no guilt after its merciless abuse of the whole system, which even its next-door press seems to be well aware of (whilst a reformed ISO and Microsoft blatantly deny). Watch this shrewd take.

Microsoft admits they were a bit clueless about the standardisation process, but they do not regret having stuffed the committees at the same time.

When it comes to standards, Microsoft does have prior experience. It ridicules and regularly manipulates such as process, as Bruce Perens confessed only yesterday, but they try to act dumb, knowing too well what they have done. They try to blame ignorance and thus find shelter in merits of innocence.

ODF from Microsoft? Keep Dreaming.

Just as Bob Sutor predicted at times of skepticism (regarding ODF support from Microsoft), half-hearted attempts are only to be expected.

Remember that it’s only a marketing push . It’s about putting the “ODF supported” label on shrink-wrapped boxes of Microsoft Office, thereby securing some business and government contracts. It’s all based on false assumptions. It’s about circumventing policies and having migrations to Office alternatives grind to a halt.

ODF support in Office for Mac? Forget about it.

And while ODF support has been promised for Office 2007 SP2, there’s no sign of it for Office 2008.

Never forget that the Mac version of Office is incompatible that that of Windows. Part of the many possible causes is OOXML, which is too messy even for Microsoft to manage.

Poor Documentation as Standard

Yesterday we wrote about Microsoft’s alleged destruction of key documentation that is needed for interoperability. Here comes some more damaging complaints, whose core resembles the high defect rate found in OOXML.

Plaintiffs Complain About Microsoft Docs”

[...]

There are now 1,276 identified problems with the technical documentation, compared to fewer than 900 at the beginning of the year, said Stephen Houck, a lawyer representing the so-called California group of states that are plaintiffs in the case.

By the nature of the business model, namely lock-in, interoperability is never part of Microsoft’s plan (unless it can cash in on it, e.g. using software patents, or if antitrust fines become too severe to bear). Need it be added that a lot of Microsoft’s technical documentation is a software patents bait?

flickr:2401893632

Why BBC is Microsoft Media (Video)

Posted in Apple, GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Videos at 4:52 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Ogg Theora

Direct link

Related posts for background:

Uruguay’s University of the Republic Embraces OpenDocument Format

Posted in Formats, Free/Libre Software, ISO, Office Suites, Open XML, OpenDocument, OpenOffice at 4:31 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Under most people’s noses, University of the Republic at Uruguay officially embraced ODF. Here is the automated English translation:

The University will use open standards ODF and PDF to manage office documents

The Central Board of Directors approved the document “Standards file format office” presented by the Commission Sector Development Computer recommends that the use of open standards ODF and PDF for the creation, storage and exchange of documents in the office and udelen in its relationship with the rest of society.

While the whole world speaks about the astounding download rates of Firefox 3, OpenOffice boasts an increasing download pace that currently exceeds 1.2 downloads per week, on average.

The OpenOffice.org 2.4.1 is on the way and I believe it will break our previous download-numbers. Looking at Firefox and their version number 3, I hope we will also have a big success with our upcoming OpenOffice.org 3.

This hopefully shows why Microsoft is so afraid of ODF, which is here to thrive.

IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: June 24th, 2008

Posted in IRC Logs at 3:56 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

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