Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 4th Aug 2011 21:38 UTC
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Member since:
2007-01-13
Patent law originally developed to protect physical inventions which typically sold in very small numbers and were very expensive to develop.
It took John Harrison more than 20 years and around a million dollars in today's currency to develop his H5 marine chronometer in the 18th century. [Luckily the British government funded his work through bounties.]
A few were sold each year at a price equivalent to about $100,000.
Now a programmer can develop some code in a relatively short time and sell a 100 million copies in a year.
Why should the programmer get the same period of patent protection for trivial idea as someone who spends a decade or and millions of dollars?
Software patents are acceptable if non-trivial and granted for a very short period eg 2-3 years to recover costs.