begin Barak Pearlmutter quotation of Wed, May 23, 2001 at 05:17:12AM -0600:
> Fortunately we're not actually talking about a *contract* here, just a > warning. "Be aware, some people claim that there might be a patent > issue in some uses of this software (patents US7549857398573498, > US84973549753987538, and US2153987543895473). Use it at your own > risk. No warranty expressed or implied. You're own your own, son." This might be appropriate in some cases. But any patent policy should have promotion of patent reform, not just minimal legal compliance, as its goal. Some software patent holders, such as Unisys, have an unofficial "free sample" program, where they allow personal and educational use but take legal actions against business or public use. Participating in such programs confines free software to hobby use and class projects. In some situations, whatever the law says, it is a good idea to mess up the free sample program by refusing to infringe the patent even when the patent would not hold up in court, or if the chance of being sued is small. For example, refusing to include GIF-creating tools promotes patent-free formats, and helps make it possible to use free software in public or in business. Other patents, such as the BT patent on hyperlinking, are so ludicrous that an infringement warning would be appropriate, since it would inform users about the problems with some countries' patent systems. -- Don Marti "I've never sent or received a GIF in my life." http://zgp.org/~dmarti -- Bruce Schneier, Secrets and Lies, p. 246. [EMAIL PROTECTED] Free the Web, burn all GIFs: http://burnallgifs.org/