On 12/29/05, Jonas Beckeman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I am not sure exactly what the penalty is for not
> > doing so, like for example loosing the ability to claim
> > damages up until the point of disclosure, or worse.
>
> Would be very interesting to hear. I'm talking to
>
> > Oh also, this is not just US patent law. Most of the laws on
> > patents have been "internationalized".
>
> As I understand it (haven't examined it in depth though), the EU's
> *software* patent law still differs significantly from the US' - there was a
> lot of buzz this autumn when a new, more US-like law, was NOT passed.
>
> I *think* I'm still free to infringe all I want as a non-US citizen, as long
> as I don't sell the product that uses the patent (at least that's my secret
> hope).
>

That is exactly right. You have to apply for patents in each country
individually. But they have streamlined this process somewhat.
Actually the changes in patent law have been on the US side to make it
more "european". For example, patent applications used to be secret
until issue. Now patent applications are public, in order to allow for
public review. This is a serious thing to consider when filing for a
patent because if the patent is rejected, you cant then keep your
invention secret.

I am sure that there are still differences in the law, but the bottom
line is that most things that are patentable in the US are patentable
elsewhere, and the basic concept is the same.  A patent is a legal
monopoly granted by a government. The patent owner's remedies include
extracting royalties and/or keeping infringing technology off the
market.

By the way, patent protection is **by far** more beneficial to the
little inventor than the big company. I agree that some patents issued
dont make sense. But the only protection a little guy has to prevent a
big company from seeing his success and stealing it is patent law.
Companies with lots of money have ***all*** the power. The people that
get sued over patents are always the big companies - who try
everything in the book to avoid paying a patent license fee. This is
because most little guys cant afford to sue. It costs at least
millions if not tens of millions to win against an infringer. So
typically a little guy sells his patent to someone who has deeper
pockets and is in the business of "collection". But this is only
because the little guy doesnt have the 10 million dollars necessary to
win the battle.

An interesting, and poigniant story about this is the guy who invented
the walkman. Sony "stole" it and fought for years. At the end of the
day the guy got a few million dollars for an invention clearly worth
probably hundreds of billions of dollars over time.

The key issue is whether a patent is a "natural course of events"
patent or a truly novel concept. It is easy to look back at an
invention and say that it was obvious. And sometimes it is true. But I
tell you, whenever I invent something really great, I am concerned
that it just seems, well obvious -even though it doesnt exist. So the
point is that many great new ideas have the hallmark of "seeming
obvious".

So, in conclusion, all this patent hating stuff is funny to me. The
big companies really are the ones that hate patent law because they
have enough money to compete and steal at will. Microsoft hates
patents. Its not the little guys that ***EVER*** get hit with the
reprocussions of patent law. No company is ever not funded over fear
of patent infringement. It is rare that a little guy will be put out
of business over a patent. And once you are big you can afford it. So
the bottom line is all of you guys that hate patents are really doing
the bidding of the huge multinational companies that hate them way
more than you do. You should all get checks from Microsoft.

Regards
Hank

>
> BTW, I think MM has patented image synthesis as well, no 5,467,443 -
> generating pixels from a set of parameters (if I decode it properly). That's
> like all image formats except pure bitmaps. Procedural textures, vector
> formats, and probably all 3D graphics as well. I wonder if they've sued
> nVIDIA and ATI yet? And Microsoft for having the WMF file format and ways of
> presenting it?
>
> /Jonas
>
> --
> No virus found in this outgoing message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.9/216 - Release Date: 2005-12-29
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> osflash mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/osflash_osflash.org
>
>
>

_______________________________________________
osflash mailing list
[email protected]
http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/osflash_osflash.org

Reply via email to