Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 4th Aug 2011 21:38 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-11
...are such a grey area.
I am for them, and against them.
If I come up with a super idea that has never been thought of before, I spend a year or two perfecting it, and then release the software, then surely I should have some protection over someone else looking at all my hard work, copying it, and selling it as their own.
But can/should you patent an idea?
On the other hand, competition is a great ways to help move the industry forward and for the consumer to get products at reasonable prices.
I don't know enough about patent laws (and I'm sure a few other people here don't either), but from what I keep reading, the system is flawed. It appears you can patent to such an extent that it's near impossible to write any software anymore without being liable for something from someone.
I check MacSurfer most days. I notice that Apple gets sued as much as they sue, if not more. I am sure this is the same for most of the bigger companies.
I have no problem with a patent on an implementation of an idea however. But I would like to see a time limit placed on it, maybe 2 - 5 years. That way, the "inventor" can have a head start in building a market around the implementation, but can't hold onto that indefinitely. Maybe this is already the case.
I should read more, but to be honest, I just don't have the time. If someone can point me to a "simple" summary of how software patents work, that would be helpful. Others might find that helpful too. (Yes, I could Google "Summary of Software Patents") ;-)