Madison Kelly wrote:
> Brian Mathis wrote:
> >I also am NAL, but I know enough about the patent system (in the US) to 
> >know that ignorance *IS* a defense.  If you are ignorant of the patent, 
> >you only have to pay the damages.  If you knew about the patent and did 
> >it anyway, you have to pay *triple* damages.  Ignorance will save you 
> >lots of money.
> >
> >You may not like it, but that's the way it is.
> >
> 
> I got that part. :) If you _do_ end up in court, plausible deniability 
> helps.
> 
> My position though is that it is better, in the long term, to be aware 
> of the patents and take the time to work around them so that *no* 
> damages need to be paid. Or, as might be that chance in this case, to 
> get a written "okay" from the patent holder for the use of the methods 
> protected by the patent in a given program.
> 
> Colour me funny, but wouldn't staying out of the courts in the first 
> place not be the best option?

Yeah.  I invite you to do all the extra (useless) development work
required.  But please do not charge other people with it.  Whoever
investigates patents and lets pgsql-hackers know about them, is charging
the Postgres community with that work.  We sure don't need it.

-- 
Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
PostgreSQL Replication, Consulting, Custom Development, 24x7 support

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