On Sep 30, 2011, at 11:46 PM, Hsuan-Yeh Chang wrote:
> 
> As I said previously, the person knowing the rules plays the game better.

But that's not the same as playing the game well.  The difference is between 
understanding the patent application process and understanding the weaponizing 
of patent law that has happened in the last 20-odd years.  A programmer or 
sysadmin may have no difficulty with the former, but only patent lawyers really 
understand the latter specifically because it is patent lawyers doing all the 
weaponizing.

This is the problem.  Patents were never intended to be used as weapons.  
Patent law is supposed to be a shield, a defense against infringement, not a 
weapon used to extort license fees from innovators.  But this is what patent 
lawyers have done with patent law.  This is what patent trolls do with their 
patent portfolios.  They don't innovate and enrich the world and profit from 
it.  They beat down the real innovators and line their own pockets at the 
world's expense.


> We should thank Disney for the recent change of copyright law for the
> extended protection.  Mickey mouse is about to enter into public domain
> under the old law.  Can you image what would happen when everyone in the
> world can copy mickey mouse without paying Disney a nickel?

We've been doing it with William Shakespeare and Johann Sebastian Bach for 
centuries.  Western Civilization hasn't collapsed from it that I've noticed, so 
I don't see how Walt Disney is entitled to special dispensation.  But you see, 
just like the weaponizing of patent law, this isn't about defense against 
infringement and enriching society.  This is about the executive board members 
lining their pockets at society's expense.

So.  I first blame the greedy MBAs who've lead us into this mess.  I then blame 
the greedy patent and copyright attorneys who helped them do it.  I finally 
blame the less greedy patent and copyright attorneys who did nothing to stop it.

As a capstone to all this: Disney is releasing next year a movie adaptation of 
"A Princess of Mars", a novel that has been in the public domain in the US for 
several decades.  It is such blatant hypocrisy.  Disney can profit from the 
late Edgar Rice Burroughs' work but nobody but Disney can profit from the late 
Walt Disney's work.

--Rich P.

_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss

Reply via email to