Coyote Gulch

 



















































































Subscribe to "Coyote Gulch" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

e-mail John: Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

 

 

  Thursday, March 20, 2003



Lawrence Lessig on Software Patents

Below is a post from Lawrence Lessig on software patents:

patents: bitch here. I had dinner last night with an extraordinary group of computer scientists. As always in such contexts, the discussion moved quickly to patents. I've been a skeptic about software and business method patents for a long time (while a supporter of, e.g., drug patents), but what always strikes me in these contexts is how violently opposed people in the industry are to software and business method patents while the legal system remains oblivious.

I had thought there was some hope in the new administration. An article by LA Times reporter David Streitfeld quoted the new Patent Commissioner, James Rogan, saying smart and skeptical things about the patent system. I wrote a piece for the FT based in part on that interview, only to have his office call me to tell me that I had gotten it wrong. The "crisis" that Commissioner Rogan sees is not the "crappy patents" (their words) issued by the patent office; the crisis, I was told, is that the office is not issuing patents fast enough.

But the more frustrating response to my article was the follow-up by Professor Epstein. He called my "indictment" "harsh." As he says, "to my knowledge" there is "no fundamental signs of breakdown." He points to "OS X by Apple" as evidence that "strong intellectual property rights [have not] Balkani[z]ed the intellectual universe." "One looks," Epstein writes, "for fundamental flaws in the underlying institutions only when the progress starts to grind to a halt."

My initial (and uncharitable) response to reading this was that Professor Epstein was not looking very far. But after dinner last night, I recognized that there is a fundamental gap in understanding. Most lawyers and policy makers do not understand what technologists believe; most technologists don't understand that (at least some) lawyers believe that what technologists believe about the system should matter.

So here's an idea. I'd like to construct a page of views of technologists who have experience with the system. The aim will not be to evaluate the system as a whole, but instead to collect credible testimony about the burdens the system imposes. Policy makers should be evaluating whether the benefits outweigh the burdens. My aim is not to do that weighing. My aim is simply to collect stories and evidence about the burdens.

If you have experience and a view, then email me and describe both. I will collect them and verify the source, and then make the results available here. The aim is not to conduct a poll; this will not be a representative sample of anything. But it would help immensely to have a place where people could go to read what technologists say to me all the time. [Lessig Blog]
7:04:22 AM     



Weblog in Baghdad

Dave Winer has a link to a weblog in Baghdad. [Scripting News]
6:49:50 AM     



2003 Denver Mayoral Election

John Hickenlooper is first out of the gate with Television according to the Denver Post. Here's a companion article from the Rocky Mountain News. He is trying to build name recognition amongst the voters. Most of the mayoral candidates have run for office before so they have a head start in some ways. Why doesn't he post a link to the ad on his website? Many would download the ad and watch it. This has worked great for Apple computer and their switch ads. If someone sees one on TV they are able to watch it again on their computer on their timetable. Make sure you post your ad in a cross platform file format John.

The Post is also running an in-depth piece on Phil Perington, candidate for Mayor. The article focuses on his past clashes with party leaders. They also mention that he's been successful in real estate and in managing a couple of campaigns, including Jerry Brown's campaign in Colorado. Perington resigned from the Democratic party in December and says, "party politics and city government don't mix." Good luck with that one Phil.

The Rocky Mountain News is reporting that Jeremy Stefanek, Dwight Henson, Phil Perington, and Thomas Spear will all have to wait at least another day to find out if they made the ballot. The blizzard still has city offices closed. Stefanek is much more confident of making the ballot than he was last week due to what he called the, "Boigon Break." Boigon was allowed on even though her campaign did not follow the letter of the law regarding signatures.
6:24:05 AM     



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2009 John Orr.
Last update: 3/14/09; 6:02:56 PM.

March 2003
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          
Feb   Apr

Google


e-mail John: Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.