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By Daniel Ravicher
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 5, 2004 7:38:00 PM

COMMENTARY--The patent system is in crisis--something the former Patent and Trademark Office director himself acknowledged just last year.

The system is supposed to encourage technological innovation. Instead, it rewards those who have the knowledge and resources to work it to their advantage. Although many are beginning to recognize the problem, not enough is being done to fix the broken system--to the detriment of software users.

Most of the free and open-source software community has long known all about this.

The GNU General Public License, the most widely adopted free and open-source software license, stated more than a decade ago that "any free program is threatened constantly by software patents." When the results of a comprehensive study of the Linux kernel for patent risk were announced this week, no one should have been shocked or surprised to learn this: Although no court-validated patents cover the Linux kernel, 283 issued patents may, if upheld as valid, cover it.

The response from some has been denial. They maintain there is no patent risk to Linux and that the sponsor of the study is spreading fear, uncertainty and doubt in order to profit. If they truly believed their denials, you would expect them to back their declarations up by offering patent indemnification for free.

As of yet, no vendor offers patent protection; IBM offers no indemnification at all.

The response from some has been denial. They maintain there is no patent risk to Linux.
Since no vendor offers such protection, you must assume they recognize the existence of some level of risk. But with so little available information about the extent of that risk, it is a guessing game, leaving the field open to those with an interest in spreading fear.

A study that quantifies the potential risk eliminates the guessing game by supplying users with specific information they can use to determine whether they are sufficiently prepared. Studying a threat does not create the risk; it only makes that risk easier to more accurately address. You would not accuse a weatherman of spreading fear for profit by warning of a 25 percent chance of showers and saying "tune in later for more information." Rather, such specific analysis helps those wishing to avoid or prepare for rain.

On the opposite extreme, others interpret the study's results to mean the sky is falling and Linux is doomed. Such a statement manifests little understanding of the patent system, under which the same patent risks exist for proprietary and free and open-source software alike. Users spooked by these results would gain no benefit from discarding Linux because switching to another form or software provider does not eliminate the patent risk.

However, what is unique to free and open-source software is that users are more likely to be called upon to provide their own legal defense against patent claims. Proprietary software users can expect their vendor to provide such legal defense because such legal costs are built into the price of the proprietary license.

But the price of free and open-source software is zero, and there is no ability to build in the cost of patent infringement defense. What's more, companies that might offer indemnification still refuse to offer such protection.

On the opposite extreme, others interpret the study's results to mean the sky is falling and Linux is doomed.
We need not ask whether there is a risk or whether the sky is falling. Instead, we need to know what can be done about the risk patents pose to free and open-source software. There are several answers, none of which are mutually exclusive.

The community can promote structural policy reform and it can stockpile prior art. It also should be prepared to design around patents and negotiate free and open-source software license-compliant patent licenses.

However, none of these are substitutes for the "one entity" comprehensive defense role that proprietary vendors fill. There is an opportunity for an entity to aggregate the community's risks under an insurance-like structure and make the risks financially predictable. In this way, open-source users can simply price in legal risks, just like proprietary software users do through their proprietary license fees.

Free and open-source software is not uniquely threatened by patents; but it is also not uniquely immune to the threat patents pose to all software. I, too, get upset when the weather forecaster tells me there is a chance of rain. However, I understand that rain is a natural part of the world I live in, and that moving will not necessarily make my weather any better. In the end, I enjoy the benefits of living where I want to live; and, if rain does come, I will be thankful for having been told to bring along my umbrella.

biography
Dan Ravicher is a registered patent attorney, senior counsel to the Free Software Foundation, executive director of the Public Patent Foundation and outside patent counsel to Open Source Risk Management.

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Thanks God
Thanks God the Europeans are saving us, Thanks God the EU is saving us Thanks God!!!!!!! If you know anything America could care less what the Europeans do or think.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: alstew Posted on: 08/16/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
The Sky Is Falling! The Sky Is Falling! Ahhhh!  P. Douglas | 08/05/04
Well what the hey!  Jay Cash | 08/05/04
hahahaha  ejourner | 08/05/04
The green party, Munich Linux Patents  Nigel Johnstone | 08/05/04
EP0689133 (Adobe tabbed pallettes) 27-Dec-95  Nigel Johnstone | 08/05/04
tab patent invalid  Joe Blow_z | 08/05/04
Borland's Delphi had tabs too.  enduser_z | 08/06/04
EP335638 System for coordination activities of plurality of actors (1989)  Nigel Johnstone | 08/05/04
EP501416 Document data processing method for document retrieval  Nigel Johnstone | 08/05/04
EP0807891 Stateless Shopping Carts, Sun 1997  Nigel Johnstone | 08/05/04
EP0927945 Amazon taking the 'p'  Nigel Johnstone | 08/05/04
FUD for FUD?  OhMyGosh | 08/05/04
Microsoft offers true indemnification  Mike Cox | 08/05/04
Of whom?  IT_User | 08/05/04
Users included  Anton Philidor | 08/06/04
Microsoft Offers Almost Useless Indemnification  David Mohring | 08/05/04
denial  ejourner | 08/05/04
nonsense  alstew | 08/16/04
every time i power on  ejourner | 08/05/04
9/10  Tran McNally | 08/06/04
Alarmist headlines  IT_User | 08/05/04
Alarmist conclusions  Anton Philidor | 08/06/04
Patent system SHOULD be falling  seosamh_z | 08/05/04
Yep  IT_User | 08/05/04
I read yours  seosamh_z | 08/05/04
Don't worry--IBM, Novell, Red Hat, etc. will see to it that it will  Jeff Spicoli | 08/05/04
Linux isn't the issue, Jeff  IT_User | 08/05/04
In the mean time...  hipparchus2000 | 08/05/04
Don't Worry  alstew | 08/16/04
I Agree  P. Douglas | 08/05/04
This can be applied to more than just Linux  Chad_z | 08/05/04
Yes, all of open source is at risk  Anton Philidor | 08/06/04
Already started  seosamh_z | 08/07/04
Not just open source  voska | 08/09/04
Linux plagues patents  Yen_z | 08/05/04
Open Source Is An Affront To Capitalism  chrislovesdana | 08/05/04
Monopolies are a greater Affront To Capitalism  David Mohring | 08/05/04
YES, YES a brain resides here  ejourner | 08/05/04
What sort of computer did you use to write your post?  Jay Cash | 08/05/04
Oh, I hope you're kidding...  Martin Marvinski | 08/06/04
If you believe that about Open Source and Capitalism, you will love this:  B.O.F.H. | 08/06/04
Open Source is Capitolism at it's best.  voska | 08/09/04
Excessive capitalism is an affront to democracy  techboy_z | 08/11/04
Patent system plunders Microsoft, threatens customers  David Mohring | 08/05/04
yup  ejourner | 08/05/04
microsoft, just leave  ejourner | 08/05/04
Funny, your hero says the same thing.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/06/04
but the free software communityhas been amassing patents too  hipparchus2000 | 08/05/04
And then gave everything away with the GPL.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/06/04
Try reading the GPL  voska | 08/09/04
Would like to know source of financing  donpar@... | 08/05/04
Easy, it's the Public Patent Foundation.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/06/04
Time to re-read your EULAs.  Seething Ganglia | 08/06/04
Guess all that freedom is all that free  FilledOut | 08/06/04
Proprietary protection ???  Update victim | 08/06/04
Sorry, you are wrong.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/06/04
Subject too does not mean you are the target  voska | 08/09/04
Where I disagree completely.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/06/04
Which is your right  seosamh_z | 08/06/04
The GPL has been tested in one court already  B.O.F.H. | 08/06/04
Completely different context.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 08/07/04
You want to invalidate end user/developer licences?  B.O.F.H. | 08/07/04
GPL is based upon US Copyright law  B.O.F.H. | 08/07/04
You missed the point of unique  voska | 08/09/04
You're kidding, right?  Robert Crocker | 08/10/04
Europe cures the plague  ehj | 08/09/04
Thanks God  alstew | 08/16/04

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