This shows it is possible for an inventor of a culturally significant
technology to receive recognition and compensation without patent
protection.
Harry

"It changed everything"
The Daguerreotype: Photographic Processes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmm90yhhuJM

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daguerreotype

Since the late Renaissance, artists and inventors had been looking for
a mechanical method of capturing visual scenes.[17] Previously, using
the camera obscura, artists would manually trace what they saw, or use
the optical image in the camera as a basis for solving the problems of
perspective and parallax, and deciding color values. The camera
obscura's optical reduction of a real scene in three-dimensional space
to a flat rendition in two dimensions influenced western art, so that
at one point, it was thought that images based on optical geometry
(perspective) belonged to a more advanced civilization. Later, with
the advent of Modernism, the absence of perspective in oriental art
from China, Japan and in Persian miniatures was revalued.

Previous discoveries of photosensitive methods and
substances—including silver nitrate by Albertus Magnus in the 13th
century,[18] a silver and chalk mixture by Johann Heinrich Schulze in
1724,[citation needed] and Joseph Niépce's bitumen-based
heliography[17] in 1822[19]—contributed to development of the
daguerreotype. In 1829 French artist and chemist Louis J.M. Daguerre,
contributing a cutting edge camera design, partnered with Niépce, a
leader in photochemistry, to further develop their technologies.[17]

After Niépce's 1833 death, Daguerre continued to research the
chemistry and mechanics of recording images by coating copper plates
with iodized silver.[17] Early experiments required hours of exposure
in the camera to produce visible results. In 1835 Daguerre
discovered—after accidentally breaking a mercury thermometer,
according to traditional accounts—a method of developing the faint or
invisible images on plates that had been exposed for only 20 to 30
minutes.[17] Further refinement of his process would allow him to fix
the image—preventing further darkening of the silver—using a strong
solution of common salt. An 1837 still life of plaster casts, a
wicker-covered bottle, a framed drawing and a curtain—titled L'Atelier
de l'artiste—has been claimed to be the first daguerreotype to
successfully undergo the full process of exposure, development and
fixation.[17]

The French Academy of Sciences announced the daguerreotype process on
January 9, 1839. Later that year William Fox Talbot announced his
silver chloride "sensitive paper" process.[20] Together, these
announcements mark 1839 as the year photography was born.[21]

Daguerre did not patent and profit from his invention in the usual
way. Instead, it was arranged that the French government would acquire
the rights in exchange for a lifetime pension. The government would
then present the daguerreotype process "free to the world" as a gift,
which it did on August 19, 1839. However, on August 14, 1839, a patent
agent acting on Daguerre's behalf filed for a patent in England.
Consequently, Britain became the only nation in which the purchase of
a license was legally required to make and sell daguerreotypes.[22]

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