Re: large page patch (fwd) (fwd)

Rob Landley (landley@trommello.org)
Tue, 13 Aug 2002 07:36:24 -0400


On Tuesday 13 August 2002 11:06 am, Alan Cox wrote:
> On Tue, 2002-08-13 at 09:40, Rob Landley wrote:
> > Unfortunately, the maintainer of the GPL is Stallman, so he's the logical
> > guy to spearhead a "GPL patent pool" project, but any time anybody
> > mentions the phrase "intellectual property" to him he goes off on a
> > tangent about how you shouldn't call anything "intellectual property", so
> > how can you have a discussion about it, and nothing ever gets done. It's
> > FRUSTRATING to see somebody with such brilliant ideas hamstrung not just
> > by idealism, but PEDANTIC idealism.
>
> Richard isnt daft on this one. The FSF does not have the 30 million
> dollars needed to fight a *single* US patent lawsuit. The problem also
> reflects back on things like Debian, because Debian certainly cannot
> afford to play the patent game either.

Agreed, but they can try to give standing to companies that have either the
resources or the need to do it themselves, and also to placate people who see
patent applications by SGI and Red Hat as evil proprietary encroachment
rather than an attempt to scrape together some kind of defense against the
insanity of the patent system.

Like politics: it's a game you can't win by ignoring, you can only try to use
it against itself. The GPL did a great job of this with copyright law: it
doesn't abandon stuff into the public domain for other people to copyright
and claim, but keeps it copyrighted and uses that copyright against the
copyright system. But at the time software patents weren't enforceable yet
and I'm guessing the wording of the license didn't want to lend credibility
to the concept. This situation has changed since: now software patents are
themselves an IP threat to free software that needs a copyleft solution.

Releasing a GPL 2.1 with an extra clause about a patent pool wouldn't cost
$30 million. (I.E. patents used in GPL code are copyleft style licensed and
not BSD style licensed: they can be used in GPL code but use outside it
requires a seperate license. Right now it says something like "free for use
by all" which makes the mutually assured destruction people cringe.)

By the way, the average figure I've heard to defend against a patent suit is
about $2 1/2 million. That's defend and not pursue, and admittedly that's
not near the upper limit, but it CAN be done for less. And what you're
looking for in a patent pool is something to countersue with in a defense,
not something to initiate action with. (Obviously, I'm not a professional
intellectual property lawyer. I know who to ask, but to get more than an off
the cuff remark I'd have to sponsor some research...)

Last time I really looked into all this, Stallman was trying to do an
enormous new GPL 3.0, addressing application service providers. That seems
to have fallen though (as has the ASP business model), but the patent issue
remains unresolved.

Red Hat would certainly be willing to play in a GPL patent pool. The
statement on their website already gives blanket permission to use patents in
GPL code (and a couple similar licenses; this would be a subset of the
permission they've already given). Red Hat's participation might convince
other distributors to do a "me too" thing (there's certainly precedent for
it). SGI could probably be talked into it as well, since they need the
goodwill of the Linux community unless they want to try to resurrect Irix.
IBM would take some convincing, it took them a couple years to get over their
distaste for the GPL in the first place, and they hate to be first on
anything, but if they weren't first... HP I haven't got a CLUE about with
Fiorina at the helm. Dell is being weird too...

Dunno. But ANY patent pool is better than none. If suing somebody for the
use of a patent in GPL code terminates your right to participate in a GPL
patent pool and makes you vulnerable to a suit over violating any patent in
the pool, then the larger the pool is the more incentive there is NOT to
sue...

Rob
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