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Against Monopolydefending the right to innovateSoftware |
Monopoly corrupts. Absolute monopoly corrupts absolutely. |
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current posts | more recent posts Open Source at the Freeman If you are interested in how open source produces great software without the benefit of copyright/patent protection, Michele and my article on the Freeman is now available. [Posted at 02/24/2007 09:55 AM by David K. Levine on Software Who lives by the sword ... may get seriously hurt by the sword. Today, a California court ruled that Microsoft infringed a couple of Alcatel-Lucent patents on compression of MP3 files and awarded a $1.52 billion damage payment from MS to A-L.
This will not kill MS, but is may teach it a lesson or two. Maybe Bill will wake up from his monopolist's sleep rediscover the value of competing by inventing. Maybe he will recall his earlier statements about the software industry that would have never happened if copyrights and patents had been enforced back then, and he will donate a nice billion to a new Foundation working to free the world of one of the most dangerous man-made viruses, IP. While we wait for the miracle to happen, let's smile at MS misfortunes and laugh at the following statement by the A-L's lawyer "We invented it, and everybody else is making money off of it." Yup, someone invented reading and writing, my dear, and we are all making money out of it. It is called progress. [Posted at 02/23/2007 11:50 AM by Michele Boldrin on Software The power of Bill Gates An earlier post asked if IP is affecting significantly income inequality. I do not have hard data to answer either way, and I guess it will take a long while before we get any. Still, my intuition says "yes", and probably significantly. But it takes a lot of "ifs" and "assumes" to argue it, so better leave it for a future date.
What IP certainly does is to increase the personal political power of IP monopolists beyond anything we had ever seen before, even in the "good old days" of the robber barons. Today we learn that Bill Gates has the power of freeing or keeping people in jail for years in countries as far away as Russia. The press worldwide is reporting that Mikhail Gorbachev has pleaded with him (BG) to spare some obscure school teacher in the Ural region 5 (five) years of Siberian labor camp. When will a court of miracles open up in Seattle for the worldwide roi thaumaturge of the globalization era? [Posted at 02/05/2007 05:18 PM by Michele Boldrin on Software Host By Your Own Petard Award Via Slashdot we find IBM suing Amazon for patent infringement. One of the downsides of the patent system is that people genuinely think they invented something new (Amazon) so they think they should be entitled to sue anyone who does anything vaguely similar (Barnes and Noble) - and they are outraged that anyone would suggest (IBM) that maybe what they invented wasn't really so new. People tend to be very proprietary about their ideas, rarely recognizing the extent to which the build on and incorporate other ideas. Is it utopian to suggest that instead of IBM sues Amazon, sues someone else, sues IBM - maybe we should just get rid of patents? Shifting money around in circles doesn't enhance incentives to innovate, and the court system has not proven a very effective method of resolving disputes over intellectual credit. [Posted at 10/23/2006 06:16 PM by David K. Levine on Software Supreme Court To Rule On Software Patents? The issue of software patents, particularly in regards to open source software, is increasingly contentious. According to Information Week,
The opponents of proliferating software patents who see them as a threat to open source software may finally get their day in court--the U.S. Supreme Court. The full Information Week article can be read here And stay tuned. [Posted at 09/07/2006 05:06 PM by John Bennett on Software Congress Readies New Digital Copyright Bill From CNET News.com:
For the last few years, a coalition of technology companies, academics and computer programmers has been trying to persuade Congress to scale back the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.The bill would permit wiretapping in investigations and civil forfeiture penalties. The full article is here. [Posted at 04/24/2006 04:42 AM by Sheldon Richman on Software Are Software Patents Evil? A talk by Paul Graham at Google about whether software patents are evil. One concern he has is whether in a world where patents are legal firms should patent things. Like Graham I would have a hard time advising anyone not to take advantage of the law as it exists - especially since if you don't take out defensive patents you are a potential victim. The talk is hardly a ringing endorsement of patents as a matter of public policy, though. First, he provides some insight into what sort of companies file patent lawsuits (as opposed to filing patents)
A company that sues competitors for patent infringement is like a a defender who has been beaten so thoroughly that he turns to plead with the referee. You don't do that if you can still reach the ball, even if you genuinely believe you've been fouled. So a company threatening patent suits is a company in trouble.The main case against patents is that they don't work terribly well in encouraging innovation - the reason for having them in the first place. Graham apparently agrees In the software business I know from experience whether patents encourage or discourage innovation, and the answer is the type that people who like to argue about public policy least like to hear: they don't affect innovation much, one way or the other. Most innovation in the software business happens in startups, and startups should simply ignore other companies' patents. At least, that's what we advise, and we bet money on that advice. [Posted at 04/10/2006 10:11 AM by David K. Levine on Software |
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