Posted on 10/26/2011 7:30:09 AM PDT by ShadowAce
Pablo Picasso is supposed to have said that all art is theft. The assertion may be controversial, but the intention is clear the creative process, which relies on the evolution of techniques, observation and criticism, is an assimilation of that which has gone before, and all creativity, whether artistic, technological or scientific, walks a thin line between innovation and originality, plagiarism and parody. Even the idea that art is theft is a common place among artistic communities. Andy Warhol took this concept a few stages further. During a 1966 interview he told his interviewer; Why dont you ask my assistant Gerard Malanga some questions? He did a lot of my paintings.
Linus Torvalds himself noted in another context, when rebutting arguments against open source by Craig Mundie, Microsofts senior vice president in May 2001, I wonder if Mundie has ever heard of Sir Isaac Newton? [Newton] is not only famous for having basically set the foundations for classical mechanics (and the original theory of gravitation, which is what most people remember, along with the apple tree story), but he is also famous for how he acknowledged the achievement: If I have been able to see further, it was only because I stood on the shoulders of giants.
Newtons remark was intended as a derogatory comment in the margins of a letter to his diminutive contemporary, the scientist Robert Hooke, and was not an original observation, but tells a wider truth, that the creative process and the discovery of ideas is very seldom the product of one mans work in isolation, but an accumulation of what has gone before.
Much of modern intellectual thought has defined itself by questioning the rites of authorship, authenticity and identity. This paradox lies at the heart of the debate about Intellectual Property Rights and the ownership of ideas a debate in which the Linux and free software movement has found itself embroiled, directly through the patents crisis and the convolutions of copyright law, and less directly through its relationship with the Net.
Free software has been successful way beyond the expectations of its proponents and its detractors, appealing to a far wider audience than might have been predicted, but as Richard Stallman is quick to remind us, there is still some way to go: The only reason we have a wholly free operating system, he has said, is because of the movement that said we want an operating system that is wholly free, not 90 per cent free. If you dont have freedom as a principle, you can never see a reason not to make an exception. There are constantly going to be times when for one reason or another theres some practical convenience in making an exception.
By its very nature free software challenges modern conventions of ownership, and its continuing existence and the blossoming of ideas that free software represents, is directly threatened by the extension and proliferation of trivial and contestable patents over the last two or three decades.
Software uses language as a means of interacting with the millions of on and off switches that comprise a computer. The sets of instructions that are contained in a computer language, or any other computer program, rely on basic structures that are common to all computer languages, and have evolved over half a century of shared development.
The most famous expression of this truth was provided by Bill Gates in a Microsoft internal Challenges and Strategy memo, dated May 16,1991. If people had understood how patents would be granted when most of todays ideas were invented and had taken out patents, he wrote, the industry would be at a complete stand-still today.
Rather more revealingly, Gates concluded that the solution to the problem of patents was patenting as much as we can A future start-up with no patents of its own will be forced to pay whatever price the giants choose to impose. That price might be high: Established companies have an interest in excluding future competitors.
Just one of the many compelling arguments against patents for software, as in other parts of our lives, is that invention and innovation in software is cumulative, and depends entirely on the efforts of others who have gone before and that this will continue to be the case with every small development in the field of programming. Good programmers invent new processes every day, and other good programmers use these processes to make further inventions. That is, and always has been, the nature of the job. To assign patents to these small inventions, which are effectively expressions of speech, is to stop innovation in its tracks. This matters because code runs our lives. As Lawrence Lessig puts it: These machines run us. Code runs these machines. What control should we have over this code?
If necessity is the mother of invention, patents are its delinquent offspring, providing stumbling blocks to innovation and progress, inhibiting the free exchange of ideas, and restricting our knowledge of how things work.
They have the intended effect the founders envisioned, that being the promotion of the useful arts and sciences.
Hardcore socialists believe intellectual property, like physical personal property - should be abolished.
That is not typically the American view.
Franklin freely gave many of his inventions to the world but he did not seek to force others to do the same.
By MICHAEL CRICHTON
YOU, or someone you love, may die because of a gene patent that should never have been granted in the first place. Sound far-fetched? Unfortunately, its only too real.
Gene patents are now used to halt research, prevent medical testing and keep vital information from you and your doctor. Gene patents slow the pace of medical advance on deadly diseases. And they raise costs exorbitantly: a test for breast cancer that could be done for $1,000 now costs $3,000.
Why? Because the holder of the gene patent can charge whatever he wants, and does. Couldnt somebody make a cheaper test? Sure, but the patent holder blocks any competitors test. He owns the gene. Nobody else can test for it. In fact, you cant even donate your own breast cancer gene to another scientist without permission. The gene may exist in your body, but its now private property.
This bizarre situation has come to pass because of a mistake by an underfinanced and understaffed government agency. The United States Patent Office misinterpreted previous Supreme Court rulings and some years ago began to the surprise of everyone, including scientists decoding the genome to issue patents on genes.
Humans share mostly the same genes. The same genes are found in other animals as well. Our genetic makeup represents the common heritage of all life on earth. You cant patent snow, eagles or gravity, and you shouldnt be able to patent genes, either. Yet by now one-fifth of the genes in your body are privately owned.
The results have been disastrous. Ordinarily, we imagine patents promote innovation, but thats because most patents are granted for human inventions. Genes arent human inventions, they are features of the natural world. As a result these patents can be used to block innovation, and hurt patient care.
For example, Canavan disease is an inherited disorder that affects children starting at 3 months; they cannot crawl or walk, they suffer seizures and eventually become paralyzed and die by adolescence. Formerly there was no test to tell parents if they were at risk. Families enduring the heartbreak of caring for these children engaged a researcher to identify the gene and produce a test. Canavan families around the world donated tissue and money to help this cause.
When the gene was identified in 1993, the families got the commitment of a New York hospital to offer a free test to anyone who wanted it. But the researchers employer, Miami Childrens Hospital Research Institute, patented the gene and refused to allow any health care provider to offer the test without paying a royalty. The parents did not believe genes should be patented and so did not put their names on the patent. Consequently, they had no control over the outcome.
In addition, a genes owner can in some instances also own the mutations of that gene, and these mutations can be markers for disease. Countries that dont have gene patents actually offer better gene testing than we do, because when multiple labs are allowed to do testing, more mutations are discovered, leading to higher-quality tests.
Apologists for gene patents argue that the issue is a tempest in a teapot, that patent licenses are readily available at minimal cost. Thats simply untrue. The owner of the genome for Hepatitis C is paid millions by researchers to study this disease. Not surprisingly, many other researchers choose to study something less expensive.
But forget the costs: why should people or companies own a disease in the first place? They didnt invent it. Yet today, more than 20 human pathogens are privately owned, including haemophilus influenza and Hepatitis C. And weve already mentioned that tests for the BRCA genes for breast cancer cost $3,000. Oh, one more thing: if you undergo the test, the company that owns the patent on the gene can keep your tissue and do research on it without asking your permission. Dont like it? Too bad.
The plain truth is that gene patents arent benign and never will be. When SARS was spreading across the globe, medical researchers hesitated to study it because of patent concerns. There is no clearer indication that gene patents block innovation, inhibit research and put us all at risk.
Even your doctor cant get relevant information. An asthma medication only works in certain patients. Yet its manufacturer has squelched efforts by others to develop genetic tests that would determine on whom it will and will not work. Such commercial considerations interfere with a great dream. For years weve been promised the coming era of personalized medicine medicine suited to our particular body makeup. Gene patents destroy that dream.
Fortunately, two congressmen want to make the full benefit of the decoded genome available to us all. Last Friday, Xavier Becerra, a Democrat of California, and Dave Weldon, a Republican of Florida, sponsored the Genomic Research and Accessibility Act, to ban the practice of patenting genes found in nature. Mr. Becerra has been careful to say the bill does not hamper invention, but rather promotes it. Hes right. This bill will fuel innovation, and return our common genetic heritage to us. It deserves our support.
I’m a software engineer, so I have a particular view on this.
What I always wonder is “who feeds all this free labor?”.
Think about it.
Its not surprising that a lot of it is European.
Anyway, it makes for some interesting business models.
One thing I notice, and this is probably unavoidable, is that a lot of open source stuff is not wel documented from the user’s persepctive. It’s one thing to get people willing to donate time in the hope of making a name f or themselves. But there aren’t so many volunteers when it comes to the glory-free chore of documentation.
I do, however, have a problem with the length of time for which they are granted.
Sounds like just another liberal that isn’t making much money on his software and wants to blame everyone else for it.
A Patent is a hunting license for investment capital, not a reward for scientific achievement.
Rather broad brush you have there!
Let’s get rid of copyrights, too.
How about land ownership and home ownership?
All depend on the principle of “I got here first and worked to make this idea/place/thing better.”
The left loves “artists, writers & musicians” and grants them intellectual property rights far exceeding those given to the more plebeian mechanics, builders & engineers.
A copyright is for the lifetime of the author plus 70 years. A patent is for 20 years from the filing date of the patent application. Not much time to develop an industry & market your product.
If the author opposes patents just let him develop freeware only. With intellectual property which can easily be copied & distributed for little or no cost, he will have to depend on philanthropy for his income.
Plant an orchard. Prune it & tend it. Come harvest time, let anyone walking by pick (and sell) as much as they want. Great idea? Probably not.
Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the United States Constitution, known as the Copyright Clause, empowers the United States Congress: To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”
As usual, the Founders were prescient. This was, I believe, the first time in history when an ordinary person could routinely receive a patent or copyright for the exclusive use of his invention or writings. Previous patents and copyrights had largely been given as an act of favor by a king to nobles or others with connections.
As you might imagine, it has contributed greatly to the advancement of knowledge and invention.
However.
It has been stretched well beyond anything the Founders envisioned. As others have pointed out, patenting business processes and genetic codes found in nature is not what they had in mind.
Nor is granting copyright beyond any reasonable definition of “a limited time.” As one example, Mickey Mouse is coming up on his 100th birthday. His creators are long dead. Yet the image is still protected by copyright.
I disagree. Hard-core socialists would believe that all intellectual property belongs to the state. There are,though, many hard-core capitalists who agree with the author of this article.
I haven't made up my mind on the matter yet, but the abuse of patents is obvious. We see, now, situations in which companies are patenting common programming algorithms. And it is true that new companies with an offshoot of an existing idea are often crippled with expenses by an existing patent-holder.
Abolishing intellectual property rights would be a radical move, but it is one that is not without some merit. And, besides, I'd love to stick it to Hollywood :)
The reason western civilization has flourished is because people believed that if they worked hard and came up with an idea and brought it to fruition that they would actually get paid for the effort by appreciative customers. Otherwise, why bother.
Patent law is what creates that environment. Don’t get me wrong, like unions, it can be over-applied, but it has a real function and is very valuable in ensuring people are incented to innovate.
“Yet the image is still protected by copyright.”
So? That image is someone else’s property. At what point should any property become public domain? After 5 years can I simply move into your house?
Never thought of a patent that way, I like it. This is an interesting thread. The author makes a mistake cayong All Patents are theft. Patenting improvement to a mechanical device,a computer program, a drug, and a gene are all such different things that it is incredibly complex to try to apply patent law to them. Not impossible, just difficult.
another whiner article to attack success
I own 1 patent, a second is pendin and my 3td is on the drawin board
While I may agree that patents for limited time for innovations and technologies can somewhat impede the progress of useful arts, technology, and science (not as much as it assists it in my opinion) I refuse to accept that another company should be free to use the licensed trademarks of another company - even after 100 years.
The estates of many an author protect the characters and places the author created from economic exploitation without regard to the intent or long term viability of the character.
If anyone, not just D.C. comics, could make a “Batman” movie - do you think the numerous cashing in projects would not have muddied the water and made it worth much less for the people who created the character?
Copy-write is a different issue - it only impedes the progress of cash in artists looking to be a parasite upon a profitable image or character someone else created.
Sorry to see such little respect for intellectual property on this forum!
Pure rubbish.
picasso is a bad example to illustrate this point.
after he’d worked with braque, mingling ideas, and
borrowed from miro, his fellow countryman;
he disparged other artists, especially miro, to dealers
for the purpose of advancing his, picasso’s, sales
and thwarting their sales.
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