As there are tendencies in Europe to
use Software patents much the same way as it in the USA, there are interesting campaigns now starting against patenting of Software of Europe.
Do your best to support the issue, or did you know there is a patent at Quicksort for lists of cursors for sorting of objects (5175857), or the use of a diagram to show the length of sessions in a calendar tool (5247438).
Or the patent for a texteditor do use
different colors to show changes from one version to the next (4965765).
If you want to use one of this rather simple program
routines or similar in your own applications, you have to expect to pay license fees, or worse, have to chancel your application.
The number in clauses are US patent numbers you can
check at
http://patent.womplex.ibm.com/patquery if you do not believe it.
This madness is proposed to be imported to Europe
during this year- so it is time now to do something against it.
This also concerns publishers of Open Source Software.
Learn more about this topic and what you can do at
http://www.freepatents.org There is also another petition to save Software
Innovation in Europe:
NO ePATENTS
A Petition to Save Software Innovation in Europe
EuroLinux Alliance
petition.eurolinux.org
The Eurolinux Alliance of European
software companies and Open Source associations launches a pan-European petition to keep Europe free from software patents.
This petition is receiving growing support from commercial software
publishers in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain and Sweden.
Together with this petition, the EuroLinux Alliance publishes "The EuroLinux File on Software Patents" a document which lets everyone understand in less than 15 minutes the dangers posed by software patents. This document, based on thorough economical and legal analysis, exhibits clear evidences of the negative impact of software patents on innovation and competition. It shows that the European Commission has mainly taken into account the point of view of patent attorneys, dominant players in the electronic industry and recent rulings of the United States Patent Office, leaving away the point of view of innovative European software publishers. Also, the decision making process at the European Commission does not seem to implement provisions of the Rome Treaty calling for a high level of competition, consumer protection, public safety, industrial growth and cultural diversity in Europe.
This campaign comes as a response of IT associations and software companies to recent ideological speeches from the Directorate for the Internal Market at the European Commission, which indicate that the European Commission will likely issue a directive to extend the scope of European patents to software and intellectual methods, completely ignoring the concerns raised by leading software companies, refusing to study the general economic effects of software patenting, and even rejecting without explanation arguments raised by other General Directorates of the European Commission.
Previous campaigns on this subject had quickly reached more than 10,000 signatures from software developers. This petition is just the beginning of a new campaign based on (hopefully not yet patented) advanced e-techniques to let volunteers participate in the lobbying effort. It will be formally filed within three months at the European Parliament.
Read the full press release, sign the petition, get more information at:
The EuroLinux Petition for a Software Patent Free Europe -
http://petition.eurolinux.org The EuroLinux File on Software Patents -
http://petition.eurolinux.org/reference Intellectual Property Law in a Global Economy, the hidden patent agenda of the European Commission -
http://www.eurolinux.org/news/agenda/
Wolfgang
.wolf Bromberger has been around online since 1996. He started to get into web design after he and some other students developed a concept for the online presence of their home town,
Salzburg in Austria, a site Bill Gates used years later as a good example of e-government (as still not nearly all points of the concept have been made reality, .wolf disagrees).
Being interested in search engines and information systems, .wolf specialized in search engine optimization, online promotion and analysis.
.wolf was one of the founding fathers of evolt.org
He is working for
Kreiseder.com and can also be reached there.
He is always interested in learning new programming or other web related skills, when time permits.