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Date:      Tue, 30 Sep 1997 17:11:32 -0500 (CDT)
From:      Tony Kimball <Anthony.Kimball@East.Sun.COM>
To:        dan@math.berkeley.edu
Cc:        freebsd-chat@freefall.freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: supermicro p6sns/p6sas
Message-ID:  <199709302211.RAA00363@compound.east.sun.com>
References:  <199709302148.OAA12717@math.berkeley.edu>

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Quoth Dan Strick on Tue, 30 September:
: > The fault for that would lie squarely on the shoulders of the patent
: > office.  Obviousness is *supposed* to be a prima facie criterion for
: > denial of patent. 
: 
: The patent office has a very high tolerance for obviousness and lack
: of innovation.  It often functions more to suppress competition in the
: marketplace than it does to foster innovation.

I think there are two possibilities: Incompetence or conspiracy, where
conspiracy is taken not in the sense of organized planned intent of
manipulation, but rather in the sense of an ad hoc cabal of agents in
positions of public trust who exploit that trust on behalf of a
constituency or a personal interest.

The problem this represents to the free development community is quite
serious, in either case, at least for software.  I don't have any
solutions, either.  The best I can propose is that free developers
should invent as much as possible, establishing prior art.
Unfortunately, there is so much infrastructure to build that the
potential for invention is largely redirected...

The problem this represents to society as a whole, in terms of its
effect in retarding technological advance, isn't really a freebsd
topic at all, but I can easily imagine that many of the readers
would support an effort to correct it by enforcing more stringent
requirements on patent grants.

It seems there is hardly a day that goes by without my reading
something in an industry rag or usenet regarding new legal controls
being placed in order to protect the interests of creators of
intellectual property (an oxymoron in itself, by my ethical standards)
against the interests of information freedom activists (which I
believe to be approximately coequal to the interest of the species!)
International trade and copyright agreements, industrial intellectual
property trusts, expansions of the patent domain, reductions in the
public domain...  I get mad/ill thinking about it.




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