
[23:22:55] Malcolm Lester > controversial*
[23:23:57] George Babbitt > I don't understand the question, exactly
[23:24:23] George Babbitt > how is it random? the inventor applies for a patent to protect his intellectual property from looters
[23:24:50] Malcolm Lester > well
[23:24:58] George Babbitt > in order for someone to make a similar product they must go through the same process as the original inventor
[23:25:01] Malcolm Lester > software is a bit of a special case
[23:25:45] George Babbitt > difficult to prove your product is unique?
[23:26:26] Malcolm Lester > see it is very easy to describe something that's covered by general-purpose practice that would count as "prior art" normally, in such a convulated way so that the patent office doesn't notice
[23:26:43] Malcolm Lester > their job becomes too hard to be reasonable
[23:27:13] Malcolm Lester > patents are supposed to be a trade where you are given rights, in exchange for knowledge you provide to the public domain
[23:27:24] George Babbitt > disagree strongly
[23:27:54] George Babbitt > patents exist to protect intellectual property from people who did not create the unique or original idea
[23:27:57] Malcolm Lester > about that last part? ok then where is the interest in granting you these rights
[23:28:15] George Babbitt > the interest is in dealing rationally and justly with the world!
[23:28:32] George Babbitt > otherwise the only method of dealing with one another is through force
[23:29:25] George Babbitt > the knowledge you provide to the public domain is an irrelevant byproduct of your self-interested act of creating something new or better
[23:30:19] Malcolm Lester > well. actually its an entire discussion in its own right - how law systems came about, I think they are geared towards serving the public interest first, and justice (by whatever moral standard) second
[23:30:46] Malcolm Lester > simply because of how it works in the real world - democracy and all that
[23:30:58] George Babbitt > yeah, I think that's bull
[23:31:56] Malcolm Lester > when, the patent system came about, it was weighed whether the economical cost of conferring people these rights outweighs the benefit of technological advancement
[23:32:35] Malcolm Lester > this is a trade-off, not a decision having to do anything with morals
[23:32:43] George Babbitt > if anyone can steal your ideas and use them with impunity, then there is no technological advancement because smart people will not bother to invent things
[23:33:52] George Babbitt > the fact that Joe Sixpack gets to keep his beer cold because someone invented a refrigerator is great, but it's unimportant when compared with the fact that someone invented a refrigerator. The inventor is important, Joe isn't.,
[23:34:05] Malcolm Lester > why not? it may take alot of time before people can successfully implement "stolen" ideas, also the academy is full of smart people inventing things for very little financial incentive
[23:34:23] George Babbitt > then those people are horribly immoral
[23:34:29] Malcolm Lester > but say if we're only talking about the industry now
[23:35:36] Malcolm Lester > imagine if two or more companies develop pretty large projects that are all based in part on some common idea that is then patented by one of them, even though the development was independent
[23:35:48] Malcolm Lester > this happens quite often in software
[23:36:23] Malcolm Lester > now with patent rights in place, one of them can block out the others entirely from competing. not just having them pay, but completely shutting them off
[23:36:38] George Babbitt > not if their product is better
[23:37:16] Malcolm Lester > well they can force them to stop using this particular technology (implement it in a different way, or completely take it out of the product)
[23:37:29] Malcolm Lester > ragardless of quality
[23:37:39] Malcolm Lester > and that's ok
[23:37:44] George Babbitt > not really.... you can design a better mousetrap and patent it
[23:38:00] George Babbitt > you can even use a spring in it that's used in another mousetrap
[23:38:13] George Babbitt > it just can't be the same mousetrap with different colors
[23:39:50] Malcolm Lester > well yea, sometimes you can pull something like that off... but here's an example: force feedback joysticks are out of the market because a company holding several key patents used its rights to block all competitors. t doesn't market the product either
[23:40:59] George Babbitt > I don't see how that's possible, you just need to invent a new way to make the thing vibrate
[23:41:43] Malcolm Lester > me neither - tbh I haven't looked up the details on that one - read it in some slashdot story long ago

[23:42:40] Malcolm Lester > there was a very long read from john carmack (a software publisher) complaining about patents in software. It looks like a legitimate debate
[23:43:08] Malcolm Lester > I agree that in most areas patents are overwhelmingly helpful, such as pharma
[23:44:03] George Babbitt > yeah, I know Carmack from DOOM fame, but I still don't see how you could block a product like that, someone would just come along and make something that does the same thing differently and you'd just lose the market completely
[23:44:15] George Babbitt > and if you're not selling the product anyway, there's no point to blocking it
[23:44:20] George Babbitt > it's just not logical
[23:44:42] Malcolm Lester > do you know the story about the GIF format?
[23:44:50] George Babbitt > no
[23:44:55] Malcolm Lester > the underlying compression algorithm was patented
[23:45:20] Malcolm Lester > the format became very widely used to the point of being a standard
[23:45:59] Malcolm Lester > the company owning the patent didn't chase anyone around, until about 5 years later when the internet came about and pages were sprawling with GIF images
[23:46:44] George Babbitt > and so they told everyone to cease and desist using it?
[23:46:54] Malcolm Lester > then they suddenly remembered they had a patent on it, and told lots of site owner to pay up.
[23:47:05] Malcolm Lester > yea there was lots of headache, that's how PNG was formed
[23:47:08] George Babbitt > they're perfectly justified in doing so
[23:47:14] Malcolm Lester > you are correct
[23:48:14] Malcolm Lester > i guess it was a mistake this thing became a standard - today people are much more careful with that
[23:49:24] Malcolm Lester > but the amount of patents today is so enormous even doing a full search to see if a certain set of technologies you plan to use may infringe a patent is too expensive to be feasible
[23:49:24] George Babbitt > wasn't a mistake if it was the best algorythem at the time for rendering pictures
[23:49:58] George Babbitt > it was a mistake for the owners not to use their patent to obtain profits from their valuable invention earlier
[23:50:02] Malcolm Lester > it was, but there were several alternatives who had equivalent performance and weren't patented
[23:50:27] Malcolm Lester > in fact, that was exactly what the PNG format did, it took one of the other variants (non patented) and used that
[23:50:44] George Babbitt > those people should have patented their products, patents exist to protect inventors
[23:51:11] Malcolm Lester > see, but they didn't want to enforce patent protection while people were adapting the technology
[23:51:19] Malcolm Lester > it pays better to wait until everyone depends on it
[23:51:51] Malcolm Lester > in this example they are being paid more the more disruption they end up causing to the economy - even if it's well within their right to do so
[23:52:51] George Babbitt > yeah, but if you're a moral person you deal with people through trade
[23:53:04] George Babbitt > if someone has something I want and can't make myself, I pay him for it
[23:53:23] George Babbitt > even if he's not asking for money
[23:55:49] George Babbitt > I send money to people who make freeware software if I use their product and like it
[23:56:02] George Babbitt > I think they're foolish to make it freeware if it's good
[23:56:34] George Babbitt > shows they don't value their own intelligence
[23:56:45] Malcolm Lester > I think most freeware is the product of open source development
[23:57:28] George Babbitt > open source is good because it promotes people to make better software products so they can sell them for a profit
[23:57:35] Malcolm Lester > these are collaborative projects and almost always licensed under GPL
[23:58:17] Malcolm Lester > I don't know why but people participating in these projects tend to gravitate towards GPL/freeware licenses
[23:58:53] Malcolm Lester > even if they could sell it for a profit, though I have a theory
[23:59:57] Malcolm Lester > since it's an open source project, any developer making a contribution would (rightly) demand to get a cut of the profits, right?<br>and then, how are the percentages computed so everyone is justified? it leads to endless bickering
[00:00:00] George Babbitt > there are lots of big companies doing open source to develop ideas now too
[00:00:21] Malcolm Lester > sometimes people lose interest in the project, and then some new guys pick it up and continue
[00:00:31] George Babbitt > no, if it's open source they're basically surrendering those rights
[00:00:33] Malcolm Lester > it becomes really hard to follow who did how much of the work, and so on
[00:01:11] George Babbitt > the only reason to participate is to gain insight into solving other code problems in your other profitable products
[00:01:21] Malcolm Lester > really? why is a license such as GPL enforcable then?
[00:02:18] Malcolm Lester > i mean, if the programmers forfeit all rights when working on open source projects like you say, it doesn't make sense that they can dictate a license agreement
[00:03:29] George Babbitt > depends on how open the source is
[00:03:33] Malcolm Lester > technically they could ask you to agree to an agreement before commiting changes, where it says company such-and-such has IP rights on everything in the repository.
[00:03:37] George Babbitt > and I'm not necessarily talking about legal rights
[00:03:43] George Babbitt > I meant moral rights
[00:03:47] Malcolm Lester > oh.
[00:04:43] George Babbitt > like, if you collaborate with a few people, and don't let anyone else into the project, that's one thing
[00:04:53] George Babbitt > and the partners in that venture should work out a deal beforehand
[00:05:12] George Babbitt > but if you put something up on the internet as open source, you're basically giving up all rights to it
[00:05:25] George Babbitt > barring coercion, of course
[00:07:58] George Babbitt > been a good discussion, but I need to get something to eat
[00:08:11] George Babbitt > want to continue later?
[00:08:16] Malcolm Lester > wow, it's late
[00:08:21] Malcolm Lester > 3 am here (gmt+2)
[00:08:36] Malcolm Lester > i had better leave now
[00:09:05] Malcolm Lester > we'll talk some other time
[00:09:10] George Babbitt > ok