Good on Mr. Smith. But was he in any way involved with the legal defense team for GNOME?
The story reads to me like GNOME spent $150k on a legal defense that saved themselves and carved out a little niche for FOSS projects, but otherwise allowed the patent troll to continue profiting from this patent.
> Of course, that’s little comfort to the 20+ victims attacked after GNOME with the now-proven-worthless Rothschild ‘086 patent, or the 50+ companies targeted with related patents that haven’t yet been re-examined.
Meanwhile, it looks like Mr. Smith basically did what the GNOME defense team should have done from the start and got the patent invalidated, with no funds to speak of.
When GNOME was raising the 150k they said they would not settle and would battle until the patent was overturned. People donated based upon this and then GNOME settled. This is why when things like the he said/she said argument with System 76 have come up I am mystified that some people are ready to believe GNOME's take. They have already shown that they are a project whose leadership's word can't be trusted.
I was wondering the same about the $1M donation they got in 2018. Turns out they misallocated a significant portion of it to things like social outreach programs.
There is nothing wrong with having SRPs if you're a multi-billion tech giant, but a underfunded open source product shouldn't be wasting money on social programs when their primary product was broken (which, in 2018, gnome3 certainly was). At the very least, they could have used it to hold proper user-focus groups to find out how their users actually used their product.
I think the organization is suffering from a serious mismanagement issue.
This comment makes no sense at all, every open source non-profit I've ever seen has made social outreach programs their main goal. There's nothing else to spend the funding on. They can't spend a ton of money on focus groups specifically because it's not a multi-billion tech giant and these foundations legally can't be making decisions based on how to make some product profitable. You need to ask a company to do that. These foundations have to make decisions based on their stated mission which is almost always solving a social issue. So in that sense the "primary product" of the foundation is really the community around the project, it actually can't be the project itself.
If you want to start another organization that only does user focus groups then by all means do it, but otherwise you're barking up the wrong tree. The designers (not the foundation) already do user studies regularly anyway, the reason they don't do full focus groups all the time is because it gets expensive real fast.
Paying devs and designers to do what? Testing for what? To make a product more profitable so you can further grow the foundation? If it's not doing social outreach or otherwise fulfilling the social mission of the nonprofit then I hope you understand it falls in that category and they can't legally do that, go to any of the member companies if you want that. When these nonprofits hire actual engineers and designers it's usually only on a contract basis to fix very specific problems that have to do with social issues around the project. It's otherwise hard for them to justify hiring staff to do that.
I wish you were wrong. I just looked this up out of curiousity, and Gnome themselves had their charity status denied by the IRS for this reason-
> You have a substantial nonexempt purpose because you develop software published under open source compatible licenses that authorize use by any person for any purpose, including nonexempt purposes such as commercial, recreational, or personal purposes, including campaign intervention and lobbying.
> Mere publishing under open source licenses for all to use does not show that the poor and underprivileged actually use the Tools. ? You do not limit your distribution and do not know who uses the Tools much less if they use them for artistic purposes. ? you do not know who uses the Tools much less what kind of content they create with the Tools.
That said it should be clear here that this was explicitly for a charity, not just a non profit, but even still it's pretty messed up.
I don't think it's that messed up. If you really want to make something that qualifies as a charity (or a for-profit business) then you can just do that separately. The existence of this foundation doesn't get in the way, they're a home for the trademarks and a few other things but otherwise they don't have much bearing on what you would do.
But there are some people at the foundation who would make it their goal to hire more developers, if the funding was there, it currently isn't.
That reasoning is like denying charity status to a church thrift store because they don't do income verification at the door, to ensure that only poor customers are allowed to shop there.
That's an extremely small percentage, most Linux developers aren't sponsored by the Linux Foundation. The majority of their expenses go towards events and training.
Not really, the question is how the organization is classified. Linux Foundation is a 501(c)(6) so they can sponsor some people but it's only for the purposes of furthering "common business interests" and not for profit.
I suspect it went into the settlement payment. Wouldn't it be ironic if so many principled advocates of open source and supporters of the GNOME project had their funds paid directly to a patent troll by GNOME themselves?
The GNOME Foundation defense fund donation website for this case is still open and accepting donations. In fact donations have been made to it recently. Why hasn't the site been shutdown or the text at the site modified to reflect that the suit has been long settled by the GNOME Foundation?
>I am mystified that some people are ready to believe GNOME's take
I won't comment on the issue itself, but the way you're framing this is total and complete nonsense. GNOME didn't have a "take", it was a blog written independently by one developer. You're confusing the Foundation itself with random developers. AFAIK System 76 also never put out any official statements, it was again more random unofficial statements by random employees. I would actually be more disappointed if either of these organizations' management was wasting their time making official statements on pointless open source drama.
I have no idea which press release you're talking about, every search I did on the subject turned up this news article or another one with very similar content, where there's no official press release: https://www.theregister.com/2021/11/10/system76_gnome_deskto...
Searching through the foundation's news posts shows only one press release about system76, which is positive in tone and isn't related to any argument: https://foundation.gnome.org/?s=system76
If you could post this press release so I could read it, that would be great. Maybe I'm just stupid and I missed something obvious. But I think you may be misremembering this.
> Leigh Rothschild said “I’m pleased that we have managed to settle this issue amicably. I have always supported the innovation of open source software and its developers and encourage its innovation and adoption.”
FOR SURE, BUDDY.
That sounds like something Putin would say after he gets absolutely decimated by the Ukrainians.
Easy. I'm a former patent examiner and in my view, the root cause of most bad patents is obviously the lack of time patent examiners get.
Most people here don't understand how patents are granted. Patent examiners don't get a lot of time. If I'm an examiner, and I can't find it in the time provided, and the application doesn't have some other issues (101, 112, etc.), the application is likely to be granted. This is not a matter of caring about the quality of the work. I'm confident that few critics of the USPTO would do a better job than current examiners under the same time constraints.
The most effective way to eliminate bad patents would be to increase the amount of time patent examiners get. The amount of time is based on some IBM study from the 1960s from what I know. Some adjustments to the time have been made, but it's nowhere near enough. Yes, we now have better search technologies, but we also have at least two orders of magnitude more documents to search.
I'm told that the amount of time examiners get probably won't increase without congressional intervention. Right now the USPTO only makes money through user fees. The USPTO receives no tax revenue at all. This situation is actually worse, as the Department of Commerce diverts some of the USPTO's revenues for other projects. At the very least the USPTO should be given control over their own money, and they should also receive tax revenue. Then examiners can be given more time and do a better job.
Here's why some other approaches won't work:
- Punishing examiners for making bad decisions will just make an already stressful job more stressful. This seems to be the current focus at the USPTO. Fortunately I haven't heard anyone being fired due to poor quality, so I think it's mostly talk.
- Adding more ways for companies to kill bad patents after they've been granted favors large corporations who can afford to kill bad patents. Small corporations and individuals are still powerless against bad patents.
Having lots of such work is no excuse to do it worse. It is however an excuse to have a growing backlog.
When it takes 10 years to have a patent granted governments will do something about it, but they won't if you "make do".
Appointments for certain government offices in my municipality are booked for 3 months in advance right now. It made the news and the local government is increasing staff.
This would have looked very differently if someone just decided to cut the allotted time for appointments in half.
Degraded service will be tolerated for a long long time. Broken or nonexistent service less so. Imagine the outcry if people and companies can't get patents anymore.
Thinking of it, patents should probably only be given to natural people and at most one every ten years per person (unless replacing an earlier patent), and who can only sign away up to 50% to a non-natural entity. That'll cut down on the bullshit as well. The notion that one person among billions can come up with multiple patentable ideas in such a timespan is patently ridiculous and need not be entertained. Patentable ideas should take research or domain knowledge accumulated over years and not be a five minute shower-thought.
> Having lots of such work is no excuse to do it worse. It is however an excuse to have a growing backlog.
Unfortunately, examiners are evaluated based upon the number of applications they process.
Furthermore, when an examiner denies a patent or a claim, the patent application can be amended and refiled. Over and over again. Until the examiner grants the patent. Which still only counts as one patent toward the examiner's quota.
So, that backlog that you're imagining sitting there passively waiting actually represents an ever growing workload for the examiners, while their career-limiting KPIs get worse and worse.
Well, not the entire problem, but yeah, a major chunk of it.
The problem of how to evaluate examiners' productivity is pretty similar to evaluating software developers'.
Unfortunately, the measure that is being used is akin to counting PRs merged.
It isn't hard to see how the PTO arrived at this method of evaluation: patent examiner time is their most constrained resource and they aren't provided the funds to hire more examiners, so of course they are focused on making the most efficient use of examiners' time to evaluate as many patent applications as they can.
Even so, patents are examined pretty thoroughly (just not thoroughly enough to prevent any bogus ones from slipping through) and it takes almost two years for a patent to be granted.
Yeah I debated using that word. Probably not entirely accurate. Something like “if you change that all the other problems are insignificant” might be better.
I think your explanation of how this can happen is plausible. But it’s also the problem with treating government services like businesses.
USPTO incentives should be aligned with the public good, not the bottom line.
This differs from a service like the USPS or Amtrak that address a market failure.
> This differs from a service like the USPS or Amtrak that address a market failure.
I think you may not understand the underlying economic forces.
Patents are explicitly addressing an existing market failure (that of suboptimal funding of innovation due to free rider disincentives). The mechanism is a grant by government fiat of an exclusive right for a limited time, enforced by the courts, and these grants (and the products covered by them) then become subject to ordinary market forces.
While I agree the USPTO should be better funded and examiners should have more time, what I find problematic is the attitude of the current approach, and of your solutions. That there is a torrent of bad patents, and the USPTO needs enough resources to fight them off, or they'll break through.
No! The USPTO is not a defending army trying to keep out barbarians. It grants patents. If it does not have time, or resources, then it does not grant patents. If the patent examiner feels they don't have enough time, the patent is denied - too bad. You can re-file, paying a fee for extended examination.
I feel any reform which does not change this approach will have only limited effectiveness, as patents will simply increase their complexity to make them more difficult to examine, until junk makes it through again. The USPTO must have the ability to say no.
P.S.: I feel I should bring up non-obviousness - prior-art is not the only disqualifier. It should disqualify all of these "do specific but obvious thing, on a computer" "inventions", prior-art or not. Perhaps the filer could be required to explain why their invention is non-obvious, saving the examiner some time.
> No! The USPTO is not a defending army trying to keep out barbarians. It grants patents. If it does not have time, or resources, then it does not grant patents. If the patent examiner feels they don't have enough time, the patent is denied - too bad. You can re-file, paying a fee for extended examination.
Rejections can not be arbitrary. If the examiner can't find prior art but wants to reject the application, what are they going to write in their office action, the response to the patent application? "I couldn't find anything, but I don't like your application, so I'm going to reject you." As a junior examiner, everything I did had to be approved by someone. There's no way that would get approved. I'd be told by my primary examiner to go back and find something if I want to reject, and by the way, I don't get any extra time.
I haven't heard of any examiner being fired for poor quality, but repeatedly writing rejections with no basis would probably get an examiner fired for poor quality eventually.
And the applicant can appeal. As far as I'm aware the examiner gets no time at all to respond to an appeal! (I didn't get any time for the one appeal that I had.) The examiner does get time to respond to an RCE or continuation. It doesn't take too many appeals to seriously impact an examiner's productivity metrics, and if the examiner falls below 95% of their target for too long, they're likely to be fired. [0]
A lot of attorneys complain that the USPTO is far too harsh. And I think they have some fair points. Only about half of patent applications are issued as patents within 3 years. The vast majority of applications (over 80% last I checked) are rejected in the first action. (I rejected every application I received in the first action.) The process needs to be fair. So there need to be mechanisms to prevent the USPTO from simply rejecting everything to be safe. If the USPTO rejects everything, why even bother having a patent system? (Note that I'm not defending the USPTO's current system, which I think is absurd to give the examiner no time for an appeal.)
> P.S.: I feel I should bring up non-obviousness - prior-art is not the only disqualifier.
I'm afraid that you don't know what you're talking about here. Obviousness is a prior art rejection, and it's the most common type of prior art rejection. An examiner could go on "official notice" and just declare something obvious or known without prior art, but as far as I'm aware that never works.
[0] The way these metrics work (roughly) is that certain actions get a time added to a counter. Then your "production" is calculated as the amount of time you earned (the counter) divided by the amount of time you spent in examination.
You are telling me how things currently work, I am talking about how they should work.
I never said to reject things arbitrarily. Only if there is not enough time for an examination. Think of it as putting things on a backlog. If faster turn-around is wanted, more funding can be provided. Lack of funding should only make the work slower, not broaden patentability.
> I'm afraid that you don't know what you're talking about here. Obviousness is a prior art rejection
I'm sorry but this is absurd, and if the patent office functions using this definition makes it no less absurd. Why would US patent law require both non-obviousness and lack of prior art, if the two are the same? The fact that claiming obviousness without prior art "never works" in the USPTO is just evidence of its deep dysfunction.
I sympathize with working in a bureaucracy that seems built to produce bad outcomes, but conflating arbitrary rejections with asking for more time/putting things on a back-log, obviousness, and prior art, really does not inspire confidence. It smells like reasoning deformed by a broken bureaucracy, rather than sensible application of principles or the spirit of the law.
> Why would US patent law require both non-obviousness and lack of prior art, if the two are the same? The fact that claiming obviousness without prior art "never works" in the USPTO is just evidence of its deep dysfunction.
I agree that this conflicts with the colloquial use, which may be why European law says "lacks inventive step" instead of "non-obvious".
I get the impression that "prior art" to you means that the claimed invention was previously disclosed, which is a rejection under 35 USC 102. But that has to be exactly as disclosed. It's a high bar to meet.
> It smells like reasoning deformed by a broken bureaucracy, rather than sensible application of principles or the spirit of the law.
> I agree that this conflicts with the colloquial use
The law you cite says, distilled:
A patent [..] may not be obtained [..] if the differences between the claimed invention and the prior art are such that the claimed invention as a whole would have been obvious [..] to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which the claimed invention pertains.
This is, if anything, a superset of the colloquial use of obvious. It covers not only everything obvious to practitioners in the field, but also things that are only obvious if you are familiar with every latest invention in that field.
To clarify: You seem to believe that looking at it in terms of "differences" narrows the scope of what is obvious. Why? "Prior art" is, literally, the sum of human knowledge and invention (up to some date). To say something is obvious in terms of differences from prior art means that, if there is an obvious way (to someone skilled in the art) to accomplish the claimed invention using any prior knowledge or invention, then that invention is itself obvious.
How could you read this any other way? How could something be obvious, but become not-obvious if you referred to prior art?
> the root cause of most bad patents is obviously the lack of time patent examiners get.
It takes about 30 seconds to realize that the above patent has zero novelty.
I'm not going to disagree with the patent office being underfunded, but the fact is that whoever granted this patent had a complete lack of critical reasoning skills, and no amount of time was going to help that.
I see this all the time with the patent office. They'll approve any madlib-style patent without thinking about it at all. Any patent of the form "______ wirelessly" gets approved. "________ with a computer" is the other offender. Sure, maybe they reject it on the first pass, but it always makes it through the second pass.
Want to know the truth about how patent approval works? Talk to a patent attorney who files them. Here's some true things about getting your patent accepted:
1. Novelty doesn't matter at all.
2. The lawyer doesn't need to understand anything about the technology to write up the patent. They do need a few of your buzzwords, but that's it.
3. Patents always get rejected the first time, and then if your lawyer is any good they always get accepted the first time.
I've got a fistful of patents myself, and the acceptance of the patent application had no relationship with the inventiveness of the invention.
> It takes about 30 seconds to realize that the above patent has zero novelty.
But can you find good corroborating evidence in 30 seconds? I'm pretty sure the applicant's lawyers would have a field day with "Patent Officer X rejected this due to their own critical thinking", no?
> This is not a matter of caring about the quality of the work. I'm confident that few critics of the USPTO would do a better job than current examiners under the same time constraints.
I doubt anyone criticises the workers at the bottom, if/once they're aware of said time constraints. Rather, the caring about the quality of the work is something the person who decides on the time constraints clearly doesn't do.
It is a matter of caring, but yeah of course it is decided by a higher-up, not every person working there being individually lax. (I don't expect google/malboro/shell/... employees to be individually evil either, for example, even if the companies clearly could be better-respected if they cared about doing their work in society well.)
Another possibility would be to create some system with an opportunity for an adversarial legal process. Allowing experts in the field to weigh in (providing prior art and/or professional opinions on patentability) might take some of the burden off the patent examiners themselves.
> The most effective way to eliminate bad patents would be to increase the amount of time patent examiners get.
I disagree. I think the most effective way to eliminate bad patents would be to eliminate patents altogether. If there are no patents then there can be no bad patents:)
More realistically, it would be more efficient to stop bad patents before they make it to the patent office and waste patent officers' time. And the best way to do that is probably to reduce the incentives to file bad patents. I don't know what the most effective way to do that is though, maybe expire patents sooner, limit the number of patents an entity can file in a period of time, increase the fee for each additional patent filed, a penalty for patents that are rejected or invalidated, require you to actually produce (or license to someone else to produce) the thing you patent in order to keep it, etc.
Why can't all patent applications be mandatorially opened for a public comments period for a period of say 3 months for anyone else to file any objections? The act of patent application provisionally would protect the idea till the patent is granted.
Then the examiner could look at both the application and the comments and decide whether to grant or reject the application.
Patent examiners can look basically anywhere a member of the public can and some other places.
The internal search tools check a lot of patent databases and are quite good, but take time to learn.
The USPTO has a lot of subscription databases as well, including fancy AI/ML-based ones.
Many examiners will also search normal search engines like Google, though this can be tricky for legal reasons. If the application was not published yet then examiners are not allowed to get very specific in the search and other search engines as that could release confidential information to the search engine. The USPTO has agreements with the subscription databases to keep the searches confidential but no such agreement exists with Google.
In my view making new search tools like https://www.priorartarchive.org/ would not help the situation too much. It would be better to integrate more databases into the existing USPTO tools, as they are designed for serious power-searchers, and would make the new databases more visible. The internal search tool is much faster than the alternatives and operates by keyboard. Point-and-click search is much slower by its nature. Speed really is critical when time constrained and I think that is something not appreciated outside of patent organizations.
What I'm reading in your description is that the process is designed to find cases where someone has patented the same thing before, but not designed to find things that should be fundamentally unpatentable ('obvious before the effective filing date of the claimed invention to a person having ordinary skill in the art') and many other people are doing the similar thing in their products but not trying to patent it (because it shouldn't be patentable) and not explicitly writing it up in public blog posts with the exact same keywords.
Presuming that "ways to wirelessly share photos online such as through social media" has not been patented before, the best place to look for prior art would be the actual existing social media products which have ways to wirelessly share photos online instead of historical patent data; an effective search would have to be for actual prior art (i.e. products and solutions), not descriptions of prior art (patents and webpages).
Why is the secrecy required if the patent is going to end up public anyway? If you could pre-publish to the public (with a verifiable timestamp) then anyone could submit a challenge and the patent would be only be granted if it’s actually novel and remains unchallenged for some time. IDK I must be missing something because this seems too obvious a solution...
Not all US patent applications will be published. The applicant can pay extra to keep it secret unless it is granted.
As for why the applications aren't published as soon as possible, I'm not sure. I suspect people might want some time before publication to test the market. If there is no market demand, I know that some law firms will abandon the application. But if it's worthless, then why not publish it?
It's likely that Yahoo Photos in 2000 did not do it --== Wirelessly ==-- (imagine Spongebob rainbow meme https://imgflip.com/i/6e8qvo there) and thus wouldn't be prior art.
Easy solution would be to reject inventions that narrow down their claim in a way that crosses two layers in the OSI stack. That would instantly kill all claims of doing X…on a computer, or doing X…wirelessly.
Another way to put it is that integration should not be patentable. Everybody knows images can be serialized to a bitstream and that bitstreams can be sent wirelessly, each on their own is novel, but combining them no. Otherwise I could patent delivery of pepperoni pizza on a electric scooter, even if someone else patented pizzas and scooters already.
Why wouldn't they? They make their moneyy from Patent Fees. If they stopped granting Patents their revenue stream dries up. They have no incentive not to approve patents.
I'm wondering why companies don't sue the Patent office when the patent used against them is invalidated (often some companies are still paying fees because they settled. )
The heading is somewhat misleading, in that one might read it as "the troll lost all rights to any patents, ever." If you (correctly) didn't read it that way, you can ignore the rest of this.
What they actually lost is that patent. It was reexamined and all its claims were cancelled. Reexamination is a standard tactic against a patent infringement suit, and we did it all the time at Google. A reexamination is a mini-trial, with no jury; just a bunch of patent law experts. It costs less than a full trial but still can be $500,000 or so.
A troll will offer to settle for a small amount rather than risk getting their patent cancelled. I think it's fair to call it "irresponsible" if you pay them that ransom, but of course, it's cheaper for you that way.
> A troll will offer to settle for a small amount rather than risk getting their patent cancelled. I think it's fair to call it "irresponsible" if you pay them that ransom, but of course, it's cheaper for you that way.
Re "irresponsible."
Most business legal matters are about money. Settling can save the company money. It's just a business decision. Those who take it personally often end up spending more time and money than is needed.
Well obviously it was a "business decision". Are we supposed to be moved by the fact that the ultimate decision was based on greed?
Companies can care about their bottom line while serving their community in a responsible manner. Companies going carbon neutral are doing it to improve their image, etc. but the consequences have net benefits for the society. No one's going to call that irresponsible. Feeding the patent troll market with the money that was donated to fight them off? Irresponsible.
1. Buy patent (after due diligence)
2. Sue lots of easy marks (companies like OP's that will just write a check)
3. Use that money to fund suits against the tougher targets
4. Go for the big payday (a large jury verdict against a major company)
Where am I getting this? We had a talk by a former troll when I was in Google Legal.
This seems like a loss. Gnome and other companies had to pay money (as I understand) for an invalid patent, a patent lawyer had to pay for re-examination and a patent troll lost nothing except for a patent that was invalid anyway.
Are vaguely worded patents legal? For example, if someone in the age of black-and-white TV would patent an idea that "colors can be transmitted wirelessly or by wire, decoded or not decoded by a TV or other electronic or non-electronic device and displayed or not displayed on a screen or other medium". Would this idea without any research count as a valid patent application? Please explain, knowledgable people.
There needs to be anti-SLAPP style legislation for patent trolls. I honestly don't understand why there isn't: it seems like an easy PR win for legislators. Who would be against this (except patent trolls)?
> There needs to be anti-SLAPP style legislation for patent trolls. I honestly don't understand why there isn't: it seems like an easy PR win for legislators. Who would be against this (except patent trolls)?
The American Intellectual Property Law Association, for one.
It isn't too hard to look up who supported and opposed the Patent Reform Acts of 2005, 2007, and 2009. Wikipedia has pretty good summaries.
I suspect lots of large companies that do make things but also hold many, many patents would object.
Patents can a potent weapon, especially if you have a lot of them in a specific area. So to answer your question, I would expect opposition from anyone with a big portfolio who wants unencumbered range of motion to use them offensively.
So for specific examples from the little corner of the world focused on here, I suspect and easy ones are Qualcomm and IBM. Probably Microsoft, probably Apple, but they've both surprised on some things recently.
They "hold many, many patents" (usually worthless) to have an "unencumbered range of motion to use them offensively" against similar entities.
If the whole idea of using bullshit patents to defend against someone's threat of some other bullshit patents gets buried at last, then everyone wins because not having to trade "portfolios of bullshit patents" back and forth lowers costs of business for everyone.
This was obvious at least 30 years ago, where have you been?
Can someone ELI5 what this the RPI patent (US9936086B2) even tried to patent? Their claims look like the description of just any digital camera and a connected web service (Google Photos).
The claims basically say the system is a device with wireless input and wireless output (think a computer with WiFi in/out connections). The device receives a bunch of photos from the wireless input, filters the photo based on some criteria, and sends the filtered resulting photos to another mobile devices via the wireless output.
Shotwell's feature kind of fits the description is that it downloads photos from a WiFi connection, organizes the photos by theme/date/etc (filtering), and shares the photos to FB/Twitter/etc (sending via WiFi). Basically any network connected photo editing/organizing software is in dangerous.
The patent obviously lacks innovation and slipped through the approval process. The court agreed and invalidated the patent.
Software patents and patents on business processes should not be allowed. Period.
An idea has no cost and society does not benefit from granting monopolies on ideas.
Note that I am referring specifically to patents, not Copyright.
Copyright protects a specific _expression_ of an idea and is an important concept. This is true for both proprietary and open source software.
Also other areas where research is an enormous cost factor (for example medical research) patents are essential to protect the cost of such research (or nobody would do it).
Come on. This is not helpful.
I am well aware of how these patents are phrased (apparatus, etc, etc) to work around the fact that just software cannot be patented, having been involved with quite a few of them.
I mean, to the author, thank you. Can't believe it cost $150,000+ for the open source community to go through that litigation...
Dorsey, and all the SV billionaires who made money off open source, perhaps it's time you "contribute back" by financing the fight against patent trolls...
I doubt any of them made any significant money off of the GNOME stack, defending it would be pretty... odd. If someone litigated the OpenSearch, Yarn or Homebrew devs, then yeah, I think it would be reasonable to expect Big Tech to step in. But why GNOME? They've long gone their own way, even making a big deal of their "my way or the highway" development stance. If I was $(MULTIMILLIONAIRE_CORP) I would probably just be laughing, so long as my name wasn't Red Hat.
Come to think of it, why didn't Red Hat step in here? Afaik, their entire raison d'être is keeping lawyers on retainer for these express purposes. Have the GNOME maintainers really burned that many bridges?
I understood that it cost Gnome $150k for Gnome to settle and obtain their own exclusive right of usage instead of doing the right thing and fight the patent.
> I understood that it cost Gnome $150k for Gnome to settle and obtain their own exclusive right of usage instead of doing the right thing and fight the patent.
That's what I meant by "going through", they obviously couldn't fight it in court, would have cost a lot more...
Not sure why you’re advocating private, rather than company funding (by companies who have benefited greatly from open source). Also don’t understand, how naming one specific individual adds to the quality of the suggestion.
> I mean, to the author, thank you. Can't believe it cost $150,000+ for the open source community to go through that litigation...
150k isn't much. Probably doesn't get you through initial motions against a well funded adversary.
> Dorsey, and all the SV billionaires who made money off open source,
I wouldn't know about his actions in other open source areas, but Dorsey specifically has directly funded defense against patent and vexatious litigation around Bitcoin and against open source developers. https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022...
In particular, a billionaire funded party filed a lawsuit against a dozen current and former developers (including myself!) alleging that we owned him some $6 billion dollars in damages for failing to grant him bitcoins that he claims he lost due to a 'hack' (which sounded like something out of a bad movie plot). The plaintiff alleged that the software's MIT license was irrelevant and that the people wrote the software owe a fiduciary duty to make whole users who lost funds through no fault of the developers. ... a conclusion that would probably mark the end of volunteer contributions in open source generally since no sane person would voluntarily subject themselves to unlimited liability due to publishing some free code.
Fortunately, at considerable cost we were able to convince the court that they failed to establish that their action had more than a fanciful potential for success and got it dismissed in initial motions (though presumably they'll appeal). It also sounds like the same party intends to launch a multitude of additional lawsuits on other basis including patent infringement (which they've been filing 3-4 patents per week in furtherance of, in an apparent attack via sheer volume), and has already filed defamation lawsuits against several journalists and community members ( https://cswarchive.info/ ). Direct defense costs across all parties and actions is in the millions now, without counting the man hours and stress of the defendants, and continuing to grow without a clear end in sight. And all this is just trouble created by a single entity.
Support from those who benefit from open source systems is crucial but because of the astronomical cost of defending even laughable lawsuits attackers will continue to have an upper hand without public policy changes.
We benefit substantially already from the 2010 SPEECH act, which protects US persons from the UK's abusive libel regime. The EU is apparently considering similar legislation with respect to the UK that if in place would likely have protected at least one of the people currently being sued. But the abuse of lawsuits for coercion and extortion aren't limited to libel or the UK-- rather, attackers will use the easiest path and with that one closed they'll use others.
> Perhaps it's time for the law to adjust to the point where the stakes for the troll are high enough to make it less appealing as a business?
No, that's just polishing the brass on the Titanic.
Patents on software just shouldn't exist. At all. We already have established laws where you can't patent maths. An algorithm is just a function. It should be covered by the maths disqualifier.
The fact that a smartphone could could contain and potentially violate literally thousands of patents is a complete anathema to the original intent of the system and it should be a huge red flag to the entire idea of software patents.
If IP is real property, it should be taxed. The tax system I like for IP works for hire is this: each year you owe 1/4% * N (where N is the age of the IP) in taxes on the IP. Whatever you pay, the "public" (anyone/everyone else) can pay the balance to the USPTO (or LoC) to move that IP in to the public domain.
Non-works-for-hire last for some fixed time, or until all the authors/inventors are dead, whichever comes first. A principal distinction between "works-for-hire" and "private works" is that a private owned work gives any of the authors/inventors unilateral rights to rescind contracts without contractual repercussion.
As someone who thinks that the underlying concept of a patent is worthwhile (giving an independant inventor a bit of lead time for their invention against huge companies who could easily copy-cat), I seriously love that idea! Bonus point for somehow scaling the taxation based on real sales vs. lawsuits.
Darn straight. IP values could be self-assessed: you tell the IRS (or equivalent) how much they're worth. However, if you're suing over a violation, that's the official value of the asset. You can't claim $100M in damages on an asset if you're only paying taxes on $30,000 worth of property.
I agree that software patents shouldn't exist. I think the taxation is on leveraging your brain to prevent others from using concepts you've learned to be useful.
With some clever legalese it should even be possible to minimally harm individuals with brains while adding a non negligible cost to those who would (and are) abuse the system
If we're doing something stupid, the correct course of action is to stop doing the stupid thing, not to refine the stupidity. Software patents are stupid.
Surely it is taxed already by profit related taxation eg corporation tax in the UK and I'm sure most other countries have a similar one. Also any sales tax or VAT will capture some loot back to your friendly local Exchequer or equivalent.
OK let's get down to brass tacks: What you seem to be asking for is that if someone can be allowed exclusive rights to something then they should pay for that privilege in some way. That seems fair enough to me but you need to define what exclusivity really means and what sort of return should be sought by the authority involved. If we look a little deeper still: what on earth is IP? You also seem to advocate that if the IP is important enough then it can be purchased by the authority and that authority could release the IP to the commons or a form of commons.
You give away where you are from with the abbreviation USPTO. So we are going to need an internationally agreed definition of IP, if we are even going to begin this discussion (which has already happened and is enshrined in ... some international agreement that I can't recall).
Back in the day there was a somewhat backward colony belonging to a super power, located to the left of the Atlantic ocean. That colony grew, expanded and exploited its natural resources. That colony also had a pretty fast and loose approach to notions like copyright and patents. That colony only acknowledged their own local notion of patent and largely ignored any objections from the right hand side of the Atlantic for quite a while. OK, I'm taking the piss but not much. There's another modern equivalent to my "left pond country" these days - more than one.
So, let's start again: What exactly is IP and how does it get enforced, paid for or protected or whatever?
In the US, IP rights are not a natural right. Instead, they are a limited monopoly granted by the people through their agent (the US government) to inventors and authors. The problem is that there are bad actors "patent trolls" (formally: NPEs: non-practicing entities) who use the court system to make money by suing real companies. There is no income that can be taxed by the government: there's only legal settlements.
The problem is that the monopoly is "very cheap" — think of it as analogous to email being free? By adding a very modest tax to the IP we force NPEs to pony up (make a product) or drop the patent into the public domain.
Notice that it is the owner who determines the IP's value.
Either patents have a place and value, and they should be taxed (even when you are not using them to actually build anything). Or they shouldn't exist.
If you're asking the government to protect your property from people encroaching on it, provide court systems to address disputes over it, or accept other government services to maintain it, you should be taxed on it.
I need to investigate this "maths disqualifier" because it completely blows my mind that companies are actively patenting the application of statistical machine learning models to their domain.
For example Xometry has successfully patented "METHODS AND APPARATUS FOR MACHINE LEARNING PREDICTIONS OF MANUFACTURING PROCESSES"[0]. To me there is literally nothing novel here, they are just describing the results of using an existing stats tool in the "manufacturing" domain, preventing other companies from sharing how they do stuff like this for fear of being sued.
I read that patent as saying if you work for a CNC machine shop you can't run random forest on a CSV of your own data unless you get granted a license to by a potential competitor.
Currently there exists a widely used "being used with hardware" hoophole that allows taking pure maths and adding a bit of hardware in there "a memory unit" "a processing unit" "I/O unit" and have a valid patent.
Algorithms are not patentable. Alice v. CLS Bank Int’l, Supreme Court 2014, holds that abstract ideas "merely requiring generic computer implementation fails to transform that abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention.”
But at the same time, just because a patent includes an algorithm, it is not necessarily invalidated.
Alice only matters if you can afford to get your case before SCOTUS (i.e., both money and political influence). The federal circuit has demonstrated they have no problem whatsoever with ignoring Alice and thumbing their nose at SCOTUS.
Nearly all of those histories about patent trolling are for code running in a general purpose computer, with your standard I/O peripherals and the only effect on the real world being changing pixels on a screen.
AFAIK those patents are illegal on every single country. But it doesn't stop honest people from losing fortunes over them.
Patents have served society significantly. Without them, companies would develop new technology and keep it secret, forcing others to guess or reverse-engineer the process -- at which point they would likely keep it secret as well.
So many governments give people a limited (usually <20 year) guaranteed monopoly on an idea in exchange for a full, public description of what the new idea is.
If you look through the US patent archives, there are instructions for all sorts of manufacturing and construction technologies that would have never become public knowledge had patents not existed.
The problem comes when a company successfully patents an idea that's already publicly known, or an idea that is strictly mathematical or abstract enough to be used against others but not concrete enough to be turned into a successful product.
They still keep it secret though. The patent system didn't allow us to work out how all the proprietary microcontrollers and SoCs work so we have projects like the one trying to reverse engineer the M1. And the publish this reverse engineering for free without the help of the patent system.
Half of the patents are on absolutely trivial stuff that reverse engineering means looking at it for 1 minute.
the penitent of the 21st century.. zero income and rightous statements to the other miscreants.. MSFT took in nine figures this year on software patents alone? while they re-process GPL code and sell it? where are the market forces for individual authors? death by starvation with a tombstone that says "I was right" I am still looking for realistic responses here, two+ decades later
What isn't math tho? A lawnmower is just an assemblage of laws of physics. In this case, software is just an assemblage of laws of boolean algebra or something.
Why should the idea of a lawnmower be patented? There are already enough protections for IP. Design patents, trademarks and copyright (to some degree).
Giving an inventor of something a monopoly on its creation should be extremely limited.
Quite famously, the Wright Brothers original patent on the flight control mechanism successfully stifled any American company from making a plane, which became a real issue when the US entered World War One. The US quite famously had to buy planes from Europeans. This was such a huge problem that Congress passed laws to create a patent pool for aviation to stop this happening again.
Patents are unnecessary and they stifle innovation in almost all cases.
I’m really scratching my head over this one not gonna lie. Are you being serious or being somewhat provocative with an example designed to take the logic to an illogical extreme?
Man, where was McCoy Smith in the days of the Amiga CD32, which was banned from sale in the USA because of a patent on (I'm not making this up) the XOR bitwise operation?
How about we make "non-practicing entity" a defense in a patent lawsuit? That, if you can prove that the owner of the patent is an NPE (and doesn't reasonably license or innovate or even try to innovate, only sue or unreasonably license), case tossed...
Let's say I'm some random individual, and I have a great idea, and I patent it. Let's say it's the patent on interval wipers on cars. But I'm not an auto company, so what I do with it is, I try to license the patent to auto companies. But they say, hey, this guy is a non-practicing entity, so we can invalidate his patent on that grounds alone, so why would we license it?
That gets us a world without patent trolls, and without interval wipers (and everything else invented by an individual inventor who wasn't in a position to start a company to implement the idea). Is that a strictly better world?
If you're only suing different parties that independently also discovered your invention, that's a different thing than trying to sell your patent to an entity that is actually going to produce the invention and make use of it.
Maybe patents should indeed only be enforceable by those that produce the invention (practicing entities as it was called above, not sure if that's an official term or something they came up with) and if you want royalties then you should put that in the contract when you sell the patent rather than sitting on patents without doing anything useful. That way we can have individual inventors (they are rewarded by what they make from the patent's sale) without also allowing trolls to claim to be inventors (because "NPEs" can't actually sue for infringement).
Or perhaps this should be a software thing, I don't know enough about how well this stuff worked for other fields honestly. I've only ever heard bad stories but then I also hang out with open source communities.
Edit: I realized one might think this makes the patent useless. If you can't sue for infringement as entity that doesn't produce the invention itself, any company could produce it and ignore you. Correct. However, I'm sure that if EvilCorp ignores your patent sale offer and produces GreatInvention without a license, MegaCompetitor would love to take the GreatInvention patent off your hands and license it to EvilCorp (or not and just block further use by EvilCorp). Thus the inventor can still be rewarded for the sale (incentivizing inventions), the new owner gets benefits of exclusivity for the parent's remaining duration, and it forces the invention to be available on the market (it can't only be locked away uselessly).
There's something to say for gjsman-1000's idea, or shall we say, invention
In your absurd hypothetical, how could MegaCompetitor block further use without a lawsuit (which could result in an injunction)?
You are now advocating for only MegaCorps to own patents. Pretty wild to see HN users say that startups should not be allowed to compete with incumbents.
> Pretty wild to see HN users say that startups should not be allowed to compete with incumbents.
Pretty wild to be so misinterpreted. Of course startups should be able to use a patent. The point is just that an entity that does not make use of it also does not get to make use of the exclusivity granted.
A "startup" that only exists to enforce patents would be the definition of a patent troll afaik, hence me liking the idea that one needs to use the patent to make use of its rights. (Edit, Wikipedia: "Patent trolls often do not manufacture products or supply services based upon the patents in question.")
> how could MegaCompetitor block further use without a lawsuit (which could result in an injunction)?
Who said anything about "without a lawsuit"? See the part where I said that patents should perhaps only:
>> be enforceable by those that produce the invention
So when MegaCompetitor makes wipers from the example above, they can enforce that EvilCorp doesn't make wipers during the patent's validity period. Since the government has a monopoly on force, that means they need a lawsuit with an injunction as goal. (I'm not a lawyer though, nor natively English, hope I'm understanding and using the word injunction correctly.)
Many for example Universities invent something patentable that's broadly useful but don't want to start a company to make the thing. You're throwing out the baby with the bathwater in this proposal. It also doesn't solve the entire problem as many companies are practicing entities that also use bullshit patents against other practicing entities.
Egregious cases of patent trolling often involve NPEs that are also not the original applicants. i.e., they buy patents just to use them for trolling. It might be possible, and would make a real difference, to target such actors. Once a patent is in the secondary market, an NPE shouldn't be allowed to attempt enforcement.
Either we build open source, decentralizing, individual empowering, tech, or we work in support of our own enslavement. I know; we all wish it weren't so. It does not matter.
Wireless image distribution system and method
Abstract
A system and method for distributing at least one digital photographic image is presented, the system and method comprising at least one capturing device and at least one receiving device disposed in a communicative relation with one another via at least one wireless network. In particular, the capturing device is structured to capture the at least one digital photographic image via, for example, a capture assembly, whereas the receiving device is cooperatively structured to receive the digital photographic image via, for example, the at least one wireless network. In addition, the capturing device(s) and receiving device(s) may be disposed in a selectively paired relationship via one or more common pre-defined pairing criteria. Further, the at least one digital photographic image may be filtered via at least one pre-defined transfer criteria disposed on the capturing device and/or receiving device.
I lean towards this sentiment - I think the patent and copyright structures limit innovation. The concept that an idea is worth anything without successful implementation is flawed in my opinion.
However, has any research been done on the actual implications of patent and copyright removal? I may be naïve in my thinking.
If patents exist as a legal form of intellectual property, they should be able to be purchased and exchanged in a commercial market. Authors, composers and other creators of works with intellectual property rights can transfer or sell those rights and there is no obligation for the purchaser to do anything with the work other than own it and collect royalties.
In the case of a song or a book, it is simple (in most cases) to know that someone is performing your song or publishing your book without consent. This isn't the case with patents. There is an involved process to determine if a given entity is violating another's patent rights. This friction in determining right from wrong is the mechanism that allows patent trolls to extract a toll from anyone who isn't able or willing to fight the claim. This puts an asymmetric amount of leverage in the hands of the patent trolls. Some mechanism/legislation needs to be put in place to balance the power so that there is a higher cost to the patent owner who brings spurious claims.
> none is as powerful as challenging the nefarious patents directly
Why don't we see this deployed against competitors? I get why the big boys wouldn't want to rock the boat. But hiring a patent lawyer to go through a competitor's patents and challenge the ones they think could be flimsy sounds like a decent way to, at the very least, distract them.
"It's a poor atom blaster that won't point both ways.". There are all sorts of competitive attacks that don't happen because they can go both ways. You also don't see companies having their competitors corporate executives followed by PIs and then sending pictures showing their adultery to the tabloids.
Besides, if you try and fail you effectively strengthen the patent. Better to wait to try to undermine the patents they specifically try to assert against you-- 75% percent of patents lose claims on re-exam, so the patent holder knows they will likely have their scope narrowed which makes them more likely to agree to license or not enforce at all against a wealthy competitor (e.g. one that could afford to go after their patents preemptively). If the patent has already been re-examined the patent holder would have reason to be more aggressive and less compromising.
> Perhaps it's time for the law to adjust to the point where the
stakes for the troll are high
Take that further. The stakes should be high against all adjacent
patent holders. Ultimately if we want to keep a working patent system
it's too much work to rely on piecemeal independent cases like this,
albeit a great success. The system has to self-police to be fair, and
perhaps the best people to keep trolls and mischievous opportunists on
a leash are the bigger players with legitimate patents. They must be
fiven a motivated interest in eliminating trolls.
If you sell a gun to an unstable crazy who shoots up the neighbourhood
then some blame lies with you. While the transfer of patents between
concerned partner companies and subsidiaries seems okay, the market
for trading patents simply as value assets needs destroying.
Ultimately its probably better if we move to a world where a lot of
"intellectual property" expires with it's holder and passes into the
public domain.
To apply a leverage point analysis, it's probably time to reexamine
and change the rules about the transferability of patents. Does the
purchaser have a legitimate justification to hold the patent? If no,
it forfeits.
> Ultimately its probably better if we move to a world where a lot of "intellectual property" expires with it's holder and passes into the public domain.
I fully agree with you (and it's one of the few strongly held opinions of mine), but I'm not really sure why you would bring this up within the context of patent trolls. Patents do run out, rather quickly even.
It's other intellectual property -- namely copyright -- that needs to run out way faster. The trademark system that we have right now is alright imo and doesnt need to be "fixed".
Not to get off-topic with copyright despite being an "older author",
notwithstanding the sibling comments, I'd agree it's too long.
Now, it's nice that patents time-out quite quickly, and indeed that
motivates for useful development, but what I'm talking about is adding
serial (AND) conditions that require they're capable of being used.
Alice has a fresh patent on a method for manufacturing a drug. She can
sell it to Bob who also runs a pharmaceutical company and is in the
process of expanding his portfolio of medicines. If Alice sells it to
Charlie who runs a hair salon and fashion company, because Charlie,
who is not in the business of making medicines, she cannot sue or
leverage using that patent in any way or it's immediately null and
void. Charlie doesn't have an "interest" in the patent and so loses
the patent by misusing it, without any further need to prove the
patent invalid. Crazy as that may sound to some, I think its a
reasonable amendment to present law.
I like the spirit of this idea but wouldn't this just incentivize mega conglomerates to acquire patents? Or are you hoping that they will act in better faith than the pure trolls?
The marginal cost of writing and creative artwork is even lower than software, not being able to profit from Mickey Mouse doesn't create significant harm to society.
Many authors do some of their best work late in their lives and it would be a sad society if we stopped funding the art projects of those who got ill or aged because of inability to generate profits from them. The right interval for copyrights is larger than the zero years after death that many advocate for. It's certainly less than 75 years after death though, so there is massive room for improvement.
This is at the root of a broader problem with the judicial system, which is that it systematically fails to do its job in a timely manner. But that's okay with the actors, because they bill by the hour. That's not exaggeration or hyperbole; I've never seen a class of people do less for more than attorneys and judges, who go out of their way to be pleasant and accommodating to each other, with total disregard for the matters at hand. And so we have even simple matters drag on for months or years.
At the end of the day, "justice" is what we buy with our conformance to society. When nations fight over systems of government, it's really a fight over what justice means. The current system is broken, but it's owned by old, rich, intelligent people who know what power is and how to use it, how to keep it, how to rationalize it. Even the good ones fall, when they see how goodness and self-restraint is rewarded by their peers, lest they lose their power.
I do not think there is a realistic path to reform. The US justice system should be replaced, entirely, with something closer to the German system, which is far less concerned with where evidence comes from, for example, and far more concerned with whether its true. Things happen much faster, and most argumentation is done in writing. Attorneys are forbidden from advertising - which used to be the case in the US, too. But of course they got that changed. It's also remarkable how often a German attorney refers to the law - they treat it as a rulebook as for a board game, whereas in the states the judge, in practice, has absolute power over all participants and is free to ignore the law, or invent new law. (Well, they aren't supposed to be, but the process for holding a judge to account is, if you can imagine it, even worse than the rest of the system. Gee whiz, I wonder how that happened?)
While I assume this comment was mostly a joke - most of these cases are covered by either the GOA or the Senate/House Ethics Committees - but partisanship has caused these tools to be de-toothed: @see continued insistence by elected officials that the 2020 election was rigged and the lack of consequences.
> If you sell a gun to an unstable crazy who shoots up the neighbourhood then some blame lies with you.
I'm not required, thankfully, when selling something to do deep background on the person purchasing it. Further, you'd have to prove that my knowledge of this person included the fact that they intended to do something bad with the gun I sold them before I sold it to them.
Finally.. I may have just sold them the gun. Perhaps it's more important to ask this question of the person who sold him the bullets. In this analogy, I suppose that would be the patent law firm.
> Ultimately its probably better if we move to a world where a lot of "intellectual property" expires with it's holder and passes into the public domain.
You move from a high premium on participating in a market, which by some arguments, is my right to participate in to having no participation in it at all. I think more harm than good comes from this.
> To apply a leverage point analysis, it's probably time to reexamine and change the rules about the transferability of patents. Does the purchaser have a legitimate justification to hold the patent? If no, it forfeits.
You'll trade outright patent transfers for shell company transfers, and the small inventor takes a back seat in all of this.
This situation is unfortunate, but I don't think improvements come from hamstringing everyone.
> If you sell a gun to an unstable crazy who shoots up the neighbourhood then some blame lies with you.
Aside from everything else in your argument, this is a really bad point to lean on - in America laws are specifically structured to leave the selling party blameless in all but the most extreme circumstances.
As a more general response:
I also think the thing that makes anti-troll legislation difficult is that making it harder to attack patents, and making it harder to defend patents makes it harder for smaller businesses trying to defend their property from larger businesses. If we start leveraging personal penalties on the attorneys of bad faith suites we need to have confidence that that also won't be turned into a tool to silence legitimate claims from small parties...
If we decided, for instance, to fine every bad faith attorney for 1 million dollars we'd need to make sure that large companies can't use the threat of that fine to strong arm small businesses into compliance.
This is a really complicated question and, at the end of the day, it's why we need to be really careful about maintaining a high quality in our federal judges - bad judges cause extreme harm by making justice inaccessible.
Just to be clear, my suggestion has absolutely nothing to do with
attorneys.
But this is more interesting;
>> If you sell a gun to an unstable crazy who shoots up the
neighbourhood then some blame lies with you.
> bad point to lean on - in America laws are specifically structured to
leave the selling party blameless
True perhaps. But I did not raise a point of law. This is an ethical
chestnut that traces back to at least Plato. Perhaps unclear from my
wording I'm implying you know the buyer to be a killer, and so it
would be irresponsible to sell. Anyway, my suggested legal revision
doesn't rely on whether the seller knows or not, but on the buyers
legitimacy to hold the patent.
As depressing as this may be - we're talking about the legal system so ethical standards aren't really relevant. America (and well, everywhere mostly) has historically had a lot of extremely unethical laws. Currently on the ground most weapon sales don't require extensive background checks which frees the seller of any legal liability - it is illegal to sell a gun to a dangerous person, but it's not illegal to clamp your hands over your eyes and ears and never run a background check in the first place... thus, legally, remaining ignorant of the individual's fitness to own a firearm.
This is an extremely divisive topic in America so I'd really just suggest avoiding any gun or self-defense related analogies whenever possible.
>If you sell a gun to an unstable crazy who shoots up the neighbourhood then some blame lies with you
From the context it seems like a more common analogy would be better to illustrate, rather than using an example of something that almost never happens.
A "use it or lose it" model to defang patentholders who don't manufacture their patents is a good idea, as well as using them as assets.
"use it or lose it" that's what I was looking for! Thanks. I see that
open-carrying firearms analogies around here I'm likely to shoot
myself in the foot.
Every once in a wile I get baffled by how american justice system is broken, lacks common sense and cannot be reformed. Aren't the judge able to spot such abusive and predatory patent trolls that attacks only small and weak companies that have no means to defend themselves?
Here where I live each time I discuss US justice system I get reminded of this probably false story of the woman that sued and won against a microwave company because they didn't state in the manual that you cant dry your pet in the microwave, and killed her dog or whatever.
Such inhuman system rewards just stupidity and greed.
Its crazy that this didnt hit the front page of HN before the verdict.
> That prompted over 4,000 Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) community members to rally in defense of the GNOME Foundation, raising over $150,000 to defend against the bogus claim
I had this idea on how to stop prior art being patented. Require the patenting entity put some money in escrow for say one year and if anyone in the public supplies prior art to invalidate that patent, they get the money as a reward.
The title is misleading RPI has lost patent claims on the "Rothschild '086", which is the one that they used to sue GNOME. But they still have the right to pursue other patent claims that they have in their portfolio.
I often come across bogus patents when i come up with small business ideas, but the cost for reexamination is so high as to bar entry into some domains (from $13000).
Why are the costs so high to point out a mistake in the decision to grant a patent? Is the reexamination fee reimbursed should the patent be found invalid?
Here's something that would work, maybe, eventually. It IS simple; it's just not easy. You have to realize that lawyers and politicians don't want to fix problems; they want to make a living off them.
Who wants to lead this effort (and don't say "you" because I'm retired)?
1. Get someone with legal training to write legislation fixing this situation. Personally, I think just declaring software as not patentable subject matter is the core of the solution, but that's to be decided.
2. Get a Congressman to introduce it into the House or Senate. Let's say it becomes "H.R. 666" or some other number.
3. For every Congressional candidate, ask them "Do you support H.R. 666?" Make it clear that your support depends on a Yes answer. That's a language they can understand.
Will this work? Well, it stands a chance. Comments on a thread like this don't have much chance at all of effecting any change.
More like the judge ought to award damages in terms of the time and means required for setting up that fundraiser and all other extra-legal expenses on top of the lawyers whose pro bono work could have been better spent. If the troll, or its parent, has to pay that out of pocket, in addition to losing the patent, maybe that makes an impression.
No, because while the foundation could 'escape software patents' the software itself can't, an adverse patent-related USA court decision would then make that software illegal to distribute and use in USA which is probably not satisfactory to the Gnome foundation so they still would have to fight it in court.
The story reads to me like GNOME spent $150k on a legal defense that saved themselves and carved out a little niche for FOSS projects, but otherwise allowed the patent troll to continue profiting from this patent.
> Of course, that’s little comfort to the 20+ victims attacked after GNOME with the now-proven-worthless Rothschild ‘086 patent, or the 50+ companies targeted with related patents that haven’t yet been re-examined.
Meanwhile, it looks like Mr. Smith basically did what the GNOME defense team should have done from the start and got the patent invalidated, with no funds to speak of.