Jason Earl <je...@notengoamigos.org> writes: > Which is more of a promise than Microsoft has given to Python. I am > not arguing for Mono, as I am not a fan. But if you honestly think > that Python doesn't infringe on some of Microsoft's patents you are > crazy.
It's quite true that anyone can be sued, at any time, for anything. And any program can, because of the crazy patent system in many countries, be infringing any (usually large) number of software idea patent claims, without the programmers having done anything unusual to cause that situation. Microsoft, or any other party for that matter, very well may have any number of software idea patents that could be interpreted to cover Python's code. The main difference in the case of Mono is that Microsoft has widely and repeatedly asserted that such patents do exist, their assertions seem quite plausible since they wrote the specifications on which Mono is implemented, its “Community Promise” very carefully does *not* grant any kind of binding permission to implement or use software ideas from those patents, and it has consistently wielded other such patents aggressively and maintains the willingness to continue to do so. None of that is true for Python. Which is why people aren't saying Python is a patent trap, but rather that Mono is. -- \ “Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so | `\ why should they care about it?” —Thomas Hesse, Sony BMG, 2006 | _o__) | Ben Finney -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list