John Goerzen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Mon, Nov 17, 2003 at 10:43:01AM -0500, Glenn Maynard wrote: >> > However, this is essentially what the reciprocal patent clause is >> > requiring. >> > As part of the Apache license, you must agree not to sue any contributor >> > for any of your software patents, for as long as you continue to use >> > Apache. >> >> The only problem I see here is return fire: if I'm holding patents as a >> defense strategy, I want to be able to use them to return fire if an >> Apache contributor decides to attack me with his own patents, unrelated >> to Apache. > > This is only useful if you do not have a valid defense for the problem > already. In other words, it is only useful as a strong-arm tactic to let > your own company effectively ignore patents of others. After all, if the > lawsuit filed against you has no merit, you don't need a patent portfolio to > defend against it. > > So, its only real purpose is to let the patent holders thwart the patent > law. I don't like that one bit.
If the lawsuit filed against you has *no* merit, that's true. But in practice, given the current broken state of the American patent law system, it's much, much cheaper to countersue and work out a quick settlement -- even if both patents on both sides are bullshit -- than to slog through the courts. This isn't nice, it isn't good, it isn't right -- but it isn't Debian's fight, or Apache's, and this isn't the right way to solve it. -Brian -- Brian T. Sniffen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.evenmere.org/~bts/