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> From: Keith Moore <moore at cs.utk.edu> > ... > basically, if you're trying to use your "ownership" of patents in order to > extort protection money out of people for developing or distributing > software, I regard this as a form of censorship, an infringement on the > right of free speech, and therefore, an act of violence. Please do a reality check. Read the 19th Century history of firearm or the late 20th Century history of ink jet printers. In both cases, canny patents were used to block or at least retard competition and innovation. Investigate any other major technical change that did not rely on Congress to stifle competition and innovation (e.g. telephones), and you'll find long pauses in innovation that were related to "blocking patents." In theory patents foster innovation, but in practice the only people who are motivated by patents to create are lawyers and related paper shufflers. In other words, if you believe that patents are necessary or even just important for innovation, then you must believe that software innovation (including the Internet) has increased in the 10 or 15 years since the advent of software patents. You would also almost certainly be poorly informed about how modern software differs from that of 20 or 30 years ago. Vernon Schryver vjs at rhyolite.com
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