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Library offers up patent info

Library offers up patent info

By:  Jeff Jedras  On: 08 Dec 2005 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A new online patent library hopes to offer developers a little more confidence when they’re developing open-source applications, but one developer says he’d rather see patents done away with all together.

A new online patent library hopes to offer developers a little more confidence when they’re developing open-source applications, but one developer says he’d rather see patents done away with all together.

The Patent Commons project (www.patentcommons.org), which went live Nov. 15, was first announced by The Open Source Development Labs (OSDL), a pro-Linux industry group, at the LinuxWorld Conference in August.

The free database includes information on patents and technology pledges, including commitments by companies that want to retain ownership of their patents but will allow their use in software implementations. Backers include CA Inc., Red Hat, Novell, Sun Microsystems and IBM Corp., which pledged 500 of its own patents to the database in January.

Diane Peters, the OSDL’s general counsel, said the goal is to provide information to developers about what the pledges provide, what the rules are, and what’s available. “Just the mere fact you don’t know about the patent isn’t a defence to a claim of patent infringement,” said Peters.

IBM spokesperson Todd Martin said that in addition to the 500 U.S. patents it has pledged, IBM has also promised not to assert its intellectual property against certain standards organizations within the health care and education sectors that are creating open standards for those industries in areas like electronic forms and open document format.

Martin said IBM believes patents are an important resource in supporting innovation, but a balance must be struck between open-source and proprietary software.

“Patents should be granted based on ideas that are truly genuine scientific progress and technological innovation,” said Martin. “We would maintain intellectual property policies should be careful to require that type of innovation before granting a patent.”

Sun hasn’t contributed patents to the Commons, but Chief Open Source Officer Simon Phipps said the company has contributed something as important to protecting developers: its Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL), which includes certain patent grants, and a patent non-assert covenant.

Phipps said the existence of software patents has a “chilling” effect on open-source software development, because one of the fiats of open source is to save software developers from having to secure legal advice. He said in areas where there are strong patents, such as Web services, there is little to no open source activity.

“The existence of software patents exposes individual developers to the risk of litigation,” said Phipps.

While he sees the Patent Commons as a positive development, Milind Joshi said he would still rather see an end to software patents. Joshi is the president of Idea Technosoft Inc., a Toronto application development company specializing in data capture, extraction and forms processing, and a user of open source tools.

He said the usefulness of the Patent Commons depends on how new the patents in the database are, and their quality.


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Jeff Jedras Jeff Jedras joined CDN as a senior writer in 2007. While he was new to the channel he was no stranger to technology journalism, beginning his career in Ottawa with Silicon Valley NORTH in 1998, where he... more

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