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- From: Bill dehOra <Wdehora@cromwellmedia.co.uk>
- To: xml-dev <xml-dev@ic.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2000 18:31:12 -0000
: Contrary to popular belief, the framers of our patent system
: were well
: aware that machines embodied ideas, which is why they
: allowed only specific
: embodiments of the basic ideas to be patented and not the ideas or
: algorithms behind them. So yes, I would accept a one-click
: patent based on
: gears and Jacquard looms, if Amazon cared to try to patent
: that embodiment
: of the idea. Of course they'd have to mention Babbage's
: prior art. I might
: even accept a specific electronic implementation on a
: particular computing
: machine, but there is a level of abstraction beyond which
: you can't go
: without strangling the source of ideas.
You can't simply patent the embodiment. That way one could get around
mechanical patents by changing the materials involved. You have to patent at
a more abstract level.
: It works only to discourage small
: innovators and protect the interests of large corporations,
: who can afford the cost of initiating a patent search and application as
: well as the lawsuits.
This comes down to prior art I think, and perhaps that's why it's called
prior art, not prior idea. The cost is a result of the legal and economic
systems that are in place, not the nature of patents per se. this problem
was around before software patents became an issue.
: The fact that there are two systems of protecting
: innovation, patents and
: copyright, is the embodiment of the wisdom of the original
: framers of our
: "intellectual property" laws. If you wanted to protect a
: machine, you used
: patents and could protect and license the physical
: embodiment of the idea
: but not the idea itself. If you wanted to protect an idea, you used
: copyright to protect your specific expression of the idea
: but, again, couldn't protect the idea itself.
: Ideas were always exempted from any sort of protection
: because the purpose of both laws was to encourage the free expression of
and
: interchange of ideas.
You see, this where we part company. I don't think for a second that
algorithms are ideas, at least not in the hand waving, cafe-metaphysics
sense of the word. Algorithms are logico-mathematical descriptions, whose
described behaviour can be operationally embodied in machines. That makes
them functionally distinct from ideas (or at least a discernible subset). In
this sense, you can patent the *algorithm* fooSort, but not the *idea* of
sorting. The problem in the US seems to be lack of consensus on the legal
definition of an algorithm, or the refusal to distinguish between algorithms
and ideas.
: Copyright is an appropriate mechanism for protecting
: computer programs, not
: patent rights. But nobody bothers nowadays, since patents
: are a bigger club
: to thrash your competitors with.
That's a societal problem. The US patent office is hardly responsible for
the level of litigation witnessed in the US.
: Phrased more-or-less in that way, I
: have no doubt that one could have a jolly good try at
: patenting doorbells
: if no one at the Patent Office happened to notice the joke. Which I
: sincerely doubt they would, given their history.
You could, if there was as little prior art around as there was for Amazon's
patent.
You could possibly take the conception of a doorbell process and turn it
into a sufficiently novel way of automatically ordering goods in software
that it would be a distinct innovation out of doorbells and unlike the
algorithm of existing systems.
-Bill
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