Linked by weildish on Sat 24th Jan 2009 22:44 UTC
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Member since:
2007-09-06
Nice of you to through China in there. That should get the US folks good and riled.. well.. with the number of replies here already.. it did.
I agree that Apple or any other company has a right to protect there patents but no one outside Apple and Palm's legal teams know how valid those patents really are. It could even be simple scare tactics to scare sales away from the competition or simply posturing to keep the shareholder's happy.
But in reply to your point about looking east for how a market with no patent or copywrite laws functions; I think patent and copywrite law need to be reformed not removed. Patents on software is an obsurdity:
- software is a complicated math formula; math formulas are not patentable
- software is the written form of business processes; business processes are not patentable
- software patents are more often used to limit the evolution of computing which does not in any way help the "little guy" or end user
- software is easily duplicated at minimal cost unlike the physical goods that patents where intended to cover; sharing your (if license allows) shoftware with a second party does not deprive you of the software
- we already have something that protects written and other forms of art; copywrite
What was once created to protect independent inventors from having there creations stollen by big business has evolved into an arms race between big businesses and barrier to competition through chilling effects.