Amazon has obtained a US patent (5,960,411) on an important and obvious idea
for E-commerce: the idea that your command in a web browser to buy a certain
item can carry along information about your identity. (This works by sending
back a "cookie", a kind of ID code that your browser received previously
from the same server.) Amazon has sued to block the use of this simple idea,
showing that they truly intend to monopolize it. This is an attack against
the World Wide Web and against E-commerce in general.

The idea in question is that a company can give you something which you can
subsequently show them to identify yourself for credit. This is nothing new:
a physical credit card does the same job, after all. But the US Patent
Office issues patents on obvious and well-known ideas every day. Sometimes
the result is a disaster.

Today Amazon is suing one large company. If this were just a dispute between
two companies, it would not be an important public issue. But the patent
gives Amazon the power over anyone who runs a web site in the US (and any
other countries that give them similar patents)--power to control all use of
this technique. Although only one company is being sued today, the issue
affects the whole Internet.

Amazon is not alone at fault in what is happening. The US Patent Office is
to blame for having very low standards, and US courts are to blame for
endorsing them. And US patent law is to blame for authorizing patents on
computational techniques and patterns of communication--a policy that is
harmful in general. (See lpf.ai.mit.edu for more information about this
issue.)

Foolish government policies gave Amazon the opportunity--but an opportunity
is not an excuse. Amazon made the choice to obtain this patent, and the
choice to use it in court for aggression. The ultimate moral responsibility
for Amazon's actions lies with Amazon's executives.

We can hope that the court will find this patent is legally invalid, Whether
they do so will depend on detailed facts and obscure technicalities. The
patent uses piles of semirelevent detail to make this "invention" look like
something subtle.

But we do not have to wait passively for the court to decide the freedom of
E-commerce. There is something we can do right now: we can refuse to do
business with Amazon. Please do not buy anything from Amazon until they
promise to stop using this patent to threaten or restrict other web sites.

If you are the author of a book sold by Amazon, you can provide powerful
help to this campaign by putting this text into the "author comment" about
your book, on Amazon's web site. Please send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] when you
do this, and please tell us what happens afterward.

Richard Stallman
President, Free Software Foundation
MacArthur Fellow

Copyright 1999 Richard Stallman Verbatim copying and redistribution of this
entire article is permitted provided this notice is preserved.


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