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Torvalds comes out against EU patent directive

The creator of Linux opposes the practice of granting software patents
 

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November 24, 2004 (IDG News Service) -- Three prominent open-source software developers, including Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, are urging the European Union Council to reject proposed legislation that would codify the practice of granting software patents in the EU.
In a statement yesterday, the three developers argued that the legislation, called the software patent directive, would be harmful to the European economy. They argue that copyright law rather than patent law is the best way to protect software innovations.
Michael Widenius, a creator of the MySQL database, and Rasmus Lerdorf, author of the PHP scripting language, also endorsed the statement.
The patent directive is ill-advised because it unnecessarily broadens the area that could be governed by patents, Torvalds wrote in an e-mail interview. "It's not even just about software patents," he said. "Patents on ideas are wrong, whether in software or in business. You should patent some concrete machinery, not a way of doing things."
Open-source software is not any more likely to infringe on software patents than is proprietary software, he said. But patent licenses can be incompatible with open-source software licenses, and software patents themselves put a special burden on open-source developers, who are often independent contributors without the financial resources to fight off spurious patent claims. "Clearly the open source 'way of life' is much less amenable to software patents than proprietary software is," he said.
The statement was posted on the Nosoftwarepatents.com Web site, which was launched last month to advocate against software patents. The site has received financial support from software vendors Red Hat Inc. and MySQL AB, as well as Germany-based Internet service provider 1&1 Internet AG.
With the software patent directive, the EU has attempted to establish an overarching patent standard for computer-implemented inventions, including but not limited to software, and bring into line the myriad interpretations given to patent law by different European national courts.
The EU's executive body, the European Commission, submitted the directive, "Patentability of Computer-implemented Inventions," to the European Parliament, one of the EU's legislative arms, in February 2002. The parliament, whose members are directly elected, added amendments to the directive that would have barred the patenting of software. However, in May, the EU's other legislative arm, the Council of Ministers, whose members are politicians from EU member states' national governments, narrowly passed its own version of the directive, which reintroduced software patenting.
That version of the directive is awaiting final approval from the council either late this month or early in December, before the legislation goes back to the European Parliament for a second reading.
Last week, however, the Polish government withdrew its support for the measure, a move that could make it impossible for the council to muster the votes required to approve the directive, according to Florian Mueller, an independent software developer and campaign manager for Nosoftwarepatents.com.
Nosoftwarepatents.com hopes to pressure European politicians to reconsider their support of software patents, Mueller said. "We have clear indications that there are discussions going on between the member countries after Poland announced its decision last week," he said. "We think it's important to make it clear to the public ... how we view this."
Laura Rohde, of the IDG News Service, and Przemyslaw Gamdzyk, editor of Computerworld Poland, contributed to this story.


Reprinted with permission from

For more news from IDG visit IDG.net
Story copyright 2006 International Data Group. All rights reserved.


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