> Op 11 aug. 2020, om 02:30 heeft Mauro Mozzarelli <[email protected]> het 
> volgende geschreven:
> 
> On 10/08/2020 10:08, Adrian Schmutzler wrote:
> 
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: openwrt-devel [mailto:[email protected]]
>>> On Behalf Of Mauro Mozzarelli
>>> Sent: Montag, 10. August 2020 10:36
>>> To: [email protected]
>>> Subject: Re: Policy on BUILD_PATENTED
>>> 
>>> On 09/08/2020 12:44, Bjørn Mork wrote:
>>>> Mauro Mozzarelli <[email protected]> writes:
>>>>> On 09/08/2020 03:35, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>>> I believe OpenWrt should not even *consider* placing its umbrella
>>>>>> organization(s) -- which are based on the U.S. -- in legal risk
>>>>>> without at least contacting them first and getting their approval.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Has anyone asked SPI about it yet?
>>>>> Who/What are these "umbrella" organizations? What is their
>>>>> relationship with OpenWrt?
>>>> This is answered by the FAQ:
>>>> https://openwrt.org/faq/general
>>>> 
>>>>> And what is the "legal risk"?
>>>> I guess that's the question you should ask the SPI.
>>>> 
>>>> This is not a technical or a political discussion.  It's about not
>>>> putting your friends at unnecessary risk, even if they happen to live
>>>> under some regime you don't like or respect.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Bjørn
>>> Although I respect other's opinions and rules, I do not think it is right 
>>> to limit
>>> everyone's freedom, just to appease some.
>> That's why we allow you to use BUILD_PATENTED and not just remove that stuff 
>> entirely.
>> 
>>> If there is a minority who is unable to use parts of this software, we can 
>>> make
>>> it easy for that minority to be able to strip those software components (or
>>> they can propose and implement changes that achieve that themselves), but
>>> in no way limit or prevent everyone from making use of it.
>> But still, OpenWrt as a project/organization in embedded in an environment 
>> it has to care about.
>> And that of course includes caring about the interests of important 
>> stakeholders (or at least ask them about those), and not make our decisions 
>> based on how we would like the world to be.
>> 
>> I think Bjørn put that in a nutshell nicely.
>> 
>> Best
>> 
>> Adrian
> 
> Citizens of the European Union are major contributors to OpenWrt and other 
> Open Source projects, The European Union, after several years of debate. 
> listened to its citizens, not corporations, and has put into law that freedom 
> from software patents that allows us all to contribute to the community 
> without fear of litigation nor constraints imposed from monopolistic 
> organizations.
> 
> The EU and its citizens are too important stakeholders. EU law, and EU 
> citizens' will must too be respected.
True as this may be - probably is - still it is not really relevant to the 
question at hand.

Besides, the EU **does** allow for software patent, or more precisely, the EU 
Patent Office (based in Rijswijk Netherlands) does, though quite a lot of 
jurists do object to the policies on software patents of the EUPO, the FSFE of 
course among those. As long as a patent isn't negated by a court it is 
considered valid. Luckily many holders of such patents do not dare to uphold 
these in court in order to avoid the risk of it getting negated, even if 
getting a patent negated is quite difficult (as these are assumed to be valid).

> 
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