On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 22:20:33 -0400 Brian Thomas Sniffen wrote: > > I'm not convinced that this is an equivalent situation... > > I could be misleaded by my opinion that software patents are an > > abuse and should not exist in the first place, but anyway I'll try > > and clarify what my position is. > > But we're talking about trademarks, too. Do you think trademarks > which cover software are an abuse? What about when those trademarks > describe functional behavior, like the shape of a car or the sound of > an engine? How about the interface of a computer, like an iPod?
I didn't think about trademarks enough to conclude... I haven't yet make up my mind about them. > > > If you offer me the MS Visual C++ source code under the GNU GPL > > license,*you* are doing something you cannot legally do. You are not > > the copyright holder: the real copyright holder didn't give you > > permission to distribute under the GNU GPL. > > Perhaps I'm a reseller -- like CompUSA or Egghead. I sell you a copy, > and attach a note saying that I license all my copyrights to the > included work under the GNU GPL. Which copyrights? (almost) none, I think... or do resellers add modifications to MS programs? [...] > > The Freeness of MS Visual C++ is indeed affected by the permissions > > granted by its copyright holder and by any holder of patents that > > are*involved* in VC++ itself. > > What's this "involved"? I don't think that has a clear definition. Well, I would think we cannot judge the Freeness of a program by looking at software patents that its *possible* modifications or uses *could* infringe. If we did, GNU bash would not be Free, because you have the possibility to write a bash script that infringes some not-freely-licensed software patent... If we did, I think that no program could be judged Free. IMHO, we must look only at (actively enforced) software patents covering algorithms that are *already* implemented in the program. This is what I meant by "involved"... > > > The Freeness of Apache is affected by the permissions granted by its > > copyright holder and by any holder of patents that are *involved* in > > Apache itself (and one-click shopping is not, AFAIK). > > How come? If it were restriction on building web sites, you'd say > that was involved, I think. If it were a restriction on frames, you'd > say that was involved. If it were a restriction on separate > menu-bars, like on Debian's own site down the side, is that involved? > Where's the line between that and a one-click shopping cart? None of the above are implemented *in* Apache: it merely serves pages. This restrictions would come into play when judging the Freeness of a website or of a web authoring tool, but not of a web server... Or at least, that's the way I would think it works: Apache has no "build separate menu-bar" feature... Or do you think that Linux is non-free because its TCP/IP implementation *can* be used to vehiculate an HTTPS e-commerce transaction featuring one-click shopping or an HTML page with frames and/or separate menu-bars? I don't think that the Freeness of the Linux kernel depends on such software patents... [...] > But I don't lose my license to Apache for murdering people with it, or > for implementing a one-click shopping license. Not even if I'm sued > for doing so. I think *that's* the difference, that Apache doesn't > run off and remove its license if I use it for these things. > > The Open Somethingorother license under discussion here recently did > so, and trademark law does so too. I'm sorry: I think I'm not understanding that last sentence. Do trademark laws state that, when I violate a trademark, I lose a license? Which license? A copyright license? A trademark license? Could you please clarify, as I'm not very knowledgeable about trademark laws (IANAL)? -- | GnuPG Key ID = DD6DFCF4 | $ fortune Francesco | Key fingerprint = | Q: What is purple Poli | C979 F34B 27CE 5CD8 DC12 | and commutes? | 31B5 78F4 279B DD6D FCF4 | A: A boolean grape.
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