Sign it here <http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition>

Considering that

   1. *Software patents are too
slow<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:tooslow>
   *. Examination takes 4 years or more. Patents limit competition for up to
   20 years. The software life cycle and amortization of investments are much
   shorter.
   2. *Software patents ruin
investment<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:ruininvestment>
   *. A typical software can violate hundreds of patents. Established
   players shoot down emerging competitors with a single patent and delay
   creative destruction of their markets. Entrepreneurs refrain from the risk
   of entering a 'mined' market. Legal ambushes deter investment in the next
   generation by the market leaders of tomorrow.
   3. *Software patents are overly broad
rights<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:toobroad>
   *, as opposed to precise rights such as software copyright. Broad,
   intricate and clumsy rights are damaging for the market while at the same
   time more valuable for their holders. 'Inventors' may deliberately phrase
   their applications very broadly and negotiate with the patent office over
   breadth of the grant.
   4. *Software patents deprive authors of the fruits of their
work<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:overlap>
   .* Patent regimes dilute your ownership over copyrighted works because
   they overlap with the realm of copyright. Software patenting closes an
   alleged copyright 'protection gap', which was preserved by the legislator
   for reasons that advise against patenting, too.
   5. *Software patents are not economically
justified<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:notjustified>
   .* Insufficient economic evidence supports an application of the patent
   system on software. On the contrary, most studies hint that software patent
   regimes restrain innovation.
   6. *Software patents reward 'hot
air'<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:hotair>
   *. Ideas are not scarce but cheap. Their disclosure barely justifies to
   grant rights to prevent them happening. Developers who read software patents
   consider them an offence: they disclose nothing useful.
   7. *Software patents are difficult to
research<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:complex>
   *. Patent databases, software and patents are complex. Patent attorneys
   can do unreliable research for you. Only courts can decide if you infringe a
   patent. You take all risks and bills. Patent Offices admit it is impossible
   to find prior art in source or binary code.
   8. *Software patents are useless for defensive
purposes<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:defensive>
   *. Your own patents are useless against 'patent trolls', since they do
   not have any product which could infringe a patent of yours. When your
   business bankrupts a troll will buy your 'defensive' patent and terrorise
   your competitors.
   9. *Software patents discriminate small
players<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:small>
   *. They are forced to bow into cease-and-desist letters about
   questionable patents or settle out of court as litigation is too expensive
   and takes a long time. As a small player you can either pull or cut your
   software or take a license if available. You are excluded from fair
   cross-licensing deals, since you do not have enough patents to
   cross-license.
   10. *Software patents are like 'cold war' for large
companies<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:large>
   .* Large companies view positively the potential to nuke competitors from
   the market. With cross-licensing deals they recreate a level playing field
   that resembles the situation without a patent system for members of the
   club. But weight in trolls, litigation costs, damages, royalties, product
   removal risks, and a shift of resources from the R&D (Research&Development)
   to the P&L (Patents&Litigation) department.
   11. *Software patents do not fit for service-oriented
markets<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:services>
   .* The software market is about providing services. Patenting suits
   service markets badly. Patents were designed for the classic industrial
   sector.
   12. *Software patents are not written by (and for)
developers<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:developers>
   .* 'Inventors' can write patent applications without skills in software
   development and sue software developers who independently 'recreated' their
   'inventions'.

We ask our parliaments and governments to do the following:

   1. *Pass legal clarifications to substantive patent
law<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:law>
   .* Such clarifications comprise negative and positive tests for patent
   examiners to assess what is eligible to merit a patent. We made proposals
   and remain open to alternatives that contribute to the end of software
   patenting worldwide. Two major ones are:
      1. A claimed object that consists only of instructions for use of
      generic data processing hardware (universal computer), also
called “program
      for computers” or “computer-implemented solution”, is not an invention in
      the sense of patent law, *regardless of the form in which it is
      claimed*.
      2. A claimed object can be an invention in the sense of patent law
      only *if it contributes knowledge to the state of the art in a field
      of applied natural science*.
   2. *Overcome a patent reform discussion trapped into
"non-obviousness"<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:obviousness>
   * The 'American disease' of patent law requires a return to real steering
   instruments. The patent community has been using that obviousness filter to
   distract reforms and to get industry backing for dismantling of more
   meaningful examination filters.
   3. *Apply sound economical justifications and impact assessments in a
   democratic legislative
process<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:assessment>
   *.
   4. *Apply democratic reforms of patent
institutions<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:democratic>
   .* Patent offices have to stay neutral and abstain from lobbying. They
   must let patent examiners contribute their first hand experiences.
   Persuasion for patenting based on the assumption that small enterprises just
   lack awareness puts preconceptions over the rationale of market choice.
   5. *Provide for non-infringement declarations which override enforcement
   of patents <http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:certificate>*. Rather
   than you taking the risk to research patents, patent holders should declare
   upon you request if your product or standard infringes one of their patents.
   Such estoppal provides legal certainty and standard confidence.
   6. *Get patent professionals out of policy
making<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:unbiased>
   .* Increase the influence exercised by economists on the governance of
   innovation policy. The quality of professional judges cannot be exchanged
   for 'technical judges' without legal training and eligibility to a judicial
   office or administrative 'case law'.
   7. *Keep substantive patent law harmonisation away from Free Trade
   Agreements <http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:harmonisation>*.
   8. *Start an open debate about the patent
crisis<http://stopsoftwarepatents.org/petition:stop-education>
   * aimed at finding solutions. Economists can easily explain to you why *free
   rider effects* make patent opposition suboptimal. Other institutional
   unbalances pressure patent examiners to grant permissively. Let's review the
   institutional incentives and start reform.
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