EditorsAbout the SiteComes vs. MicrosoftUsing This Web SiteSite ArchivesCredibility IndexOOXMLOpenDocumentPatentsNovellNews DigestSite NewsRSS
Boycott Novell

10.02.08

Richard Stallman on European Patent Office “Corruption”

Posted in Finance, Patents, Europe at 7:49 am by Roy Schestowitz

Software patents protest against EPO

On several occasions since the strike and the protests [1, 2, 3, 4] we have explained what had gone wrong in the EPO. Richard Stallman, whose knowledge of the patent systems around the world became rather profound, has finally gotten around to presenting his point of view and interpretation:

Staff at the European Patent Office went on strike accusing the organization of corruption: specifically, stretching the standards for patents in order to make more money.

One of the ways that the EPO has done this is by issuing software patents in defiance of the treaty that set it up.

It is unrealistic to hope or believe that the system can endure so much manipulation — a manipulation that led to at least one major collapse in the United States. The following new article explains in details what it refers to as “Patent Crisis”.

Here’s a simple scenario. A startup produces an innovative idea and works with a patent lawyer to file a patent. This takes a considerable amount of time (a few months at least) and a substantial amount of money ($25K+). But the startup does it anyway and after the patent is filed, people feel comforted that their idea is safe.

Right? Of course not! Not even close. Any patent filed today will take 4-6 years to approve. In the current era where a week is a long time and a year is an eternity, the time to process a patent is unbearably long. Because of this gap, filing a patent appears useless. While you can threaten based on a pending patent, people are unlikely to take it seriously.

Another post touches on the issue of “Patent Exhaustion”. It’s a total mess.

One of the biggest challenges facing the patent system right now—especially in the IT industry—is the fragmentation of patent rights. The combination of more patents, broader patents, and increasingly complex products has made patent clearance extremely difficult for high-tech firms. Patent exhaustion helps because it reduces the number of times a given patent needs to be licensed for any given consumer product. A firm can be reasonably certain that if an upstream supplier has already licensed a particular patent, that firm doesn’t need to negotiate a license itself. That’s a good thing because negotiating patent agreements is far from costless. Licensing a patent at one point in a supply chain is almost certainly more efficient than a system that requires a fresh patent license for every step in the supply chain.

Does anyone still think that the patent system is sane? That it might actually recuperate without serious intervention?

“Intellectual property is the next software.”

Nathan Myhrvold, Microsoft patent troll

If you liked this post, consider subscribing to the RSS feed or join us now at the IRC channel.

Pages that cross-reference this one

Listed from October 23rd 2007 onwards, pingbacks and trackbacks (external) are omitted

Leave a Comment

What Else is New


  1. Patents Roundup: Microsoft|Myhrvold Trolls Fill Up Their Patent Basket

    An extensive summary of news about patents, particularly those affecting Free software



  2. Mono and Moonlight: GNU/Linux Polluters from Microsoft/Novell

    Another structured analysis in light of news and suspicious developments



  3. rPath Looks Beyond Ballnux and Novell/Microsoft

    rPath goes beyond SUSE and joins forces also with Ubuntu and CentOS



  4. Microsoft and Novell Celebrate Marriage in Public, But Customers Still Choose Red Hat

    Novell and Microsoft gang up against Red Hat, but are unable to woo many customers despite claims



  5. Microsoft Helps Novell Fight GNU/Linux with Ballnux

    Microsoft and Novell's pressure on Red Hat based on some of the latest articles



  6. 'Open' University Poisoned by (Former) Microsoft Employee, Mr. Bean

    The questionably-Open University gets its dose of Microsoft closeness



  7. Microsoft's Partner Group Attacks ODF

    A typical mouthpiece of Microsoft Corporation goes batting against its big (and open/free) rival



  8. Open Letter to the Portuguese Ministry of Education

    Discrimination against Free sofwtare in Portugal's government is noted



  9. Microsoft Tries to Dodge Vista Collusions Lawsuit as Ballmer Deposition Nears

    More material is released for public viewing and Microsoft embarrassment ensues



  10. Silver Lie and Silver Liars

    Microsoft's (and Novell's) campaign to market Silverlight (and Moonlight) tells lies



  11. The Microsoft-Influenced US Regulators Wrong on Yahoo!

    An accumulation of reports and a new video



  12. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: November 20th, 2008 - Part 2

    IRC Log for November 20th, 2008 - Part 2



  13. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: November 20th, 2008 - Part 1

    IRC Log for November 20th, 2008 - Part 1



  14. Why Novell Was Wrong to Attend Kochi Conference

    A clear explanation of Novell as a misfit in the recent F/OSS conference (India)



  15. Links 21/11/2008: Via Sees the Light; New KOffice 2.0 Beta

    Links for the day



  16. Microsoft 2.0: A Company of Debt

    Microsoft is finally selling debt as buybacks get a little excessive



  17. Microsoft Uses Novell to Say Open Source Software Supports OOXML

    In yesterday's conference in Europe, Novell was once again used as a selling point for Microsoft and lock-in



  18. Reader's Post: The Windows Software Development Minefield, and Mono

    An analysis of Mono -- from Novell and Microsoft to Fedora



  19. Marcel Gagné on Microsoft/Novell (Video)

    New episode that mentions our Web site



  20. Links 20/11/2008: IBM to Buy Transitive, China Helps GNU/Linux Development

    Links for the day



  21. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: November 19th, 2008 - Part 2

    IRC Log for November 19th, 2008- Part 2



  22. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: November 19th, 2008 - Part 1

    IRC Log for November 19th, 2008- Part 1



  23. How Bill Gates Sabotaged PCs to Make Business

    The story about OneCare being lumped in (to Windows) brings past memories of Gates' sabotage



  24. Sys-Con is Copyrighting Slightly Modified Press Releases

    Sys-Con turns press releases (about Novell staff in this case) into tweaked press releases with Sys-Con copyrights



  25. Novell's Moonlight Finds Fans: Microsoft Bloggers

    One of Moonlight's (and Mono's) biggest fan base is Microsoft



  26. The Analysts Know Everything

    Here is undeniable proof that analysts should not be listened to



  27. Patents Roundup: Microsoft Sues, Patents Critic Become Nobel Laureate, and More

    An extensive summary of news about software patents



  28. Waggener-Edstrom Behind the 2008 Laptop Bribes, Edelman Behind 2006's

    Waggener-Edstrom was this year's Microsoft 'proxy' for handling the Vista 7 [sic] laptops giveaway



  29. AstroTurfers Pretend to be GNU/Linux Users?

    Site trolls who pretend to be GNU/Linux users but actually use Windows



  30. Analyst Lies and Novell Business Growth

    Analysts refuted for bogus studies that align with their funders' desires


An invade, divide, and conquer Grand Plan

Novell CEO Ron HovsepianHighlight: Novell was the first to acknowledge that Microsoft FUD tactics had substance. Novell then used anti-Linux FUD to market itself. Learn more

Xandros founderHighlight: Xandros let Microsoft make patent claims and brag about (paid-for) OOXML support. Learn more

Linspire CEO Kevin CarmonyHighlight: Linspire's CEO not only fell into Microsoft arms, but he also assisted the company's attack on GNU/Linux. Learn more

Hand with moneyHighlight: Microsoft craves pseudo (proprietary) standards and gets its way using proxies and influence which it buys. Learn more

Eric RaymondHighlight: The invasion into the open source world is intended to leave Linux companies neglected, due to financial incentives from Microsoft. Learn more

XenSource CEOAnalysis: Xen, an open source hypervisor, possibly fell victim to Microsoft's aggressive (and stealthy) acquisition-by-proxy strategy. Learn more

More analysis >>

Recent Posts