PR: European Patent Process Under Review in
New Study Sponsored by OSRM
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
European Patent Process Under Review in New Study Sponsored
by Open Source Risk Management; Launched at European
Software Patent Conference
OSRM Says Legal Costs Could More Than Double If EU Allows
Software Patents
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Nov. 8, 2004 -- Open Source Risk
Management (OSRM), the only vendor-neutral provider of Free
and Open Source Software (FOSS) risk mitigation and
management solutions, today announced the launching of a
study designed to assess whether current European laws
regarding technology patents achieve their stated objective
of recognizing and protecting true innovation.
Through this "Patents and Prior Innovations Project,"
volunteers in the FOSS community will be invited to help
write a history of software innovation, focused on tracing
the technical history of patents recently identified as
relevant to the City of Munich's Linux migration. The work
will be done on the Grokline website
(http://www.grokline.net/) under a Creative Commons license
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/), with the
intention of presenting the resulting report to the European
Parliament.
"This project is being launched at a critical time - just as
Europe considers whether to align its patent system closer
to that of the United States - a system that has a poor
reputation within the software community," said Brian Kahin,
Visiting Professor at the University of Michigan, formerly
Senior Policy Analyst at the White House Office of Science
and Technology Policy. "Assessing whether patent history
actually reflects intellectual history is an important test
of the value of the patent system as well as of individual
patents. Software is unique in that it may be easier and
certainly more satisfying to create than to document. This
means that it can be difficult and costly to determine just
who did what first - which is what patents are supposed to
do. In many cases, the software community has stepped
forward with prior art that has helped defeat aggressive use
of particular patents. This project is the first systematic
undertaking to examine and evaluate the patent threat over a
larger area - in this case, a major platform on which
billions of dollars in investments are riding.
"A patent system that misidentifies true innovators and
fails to allow sufficient review by outside parties is an
expensive one," said Daniel Egger, OSRM founder and
chairman. "In the U.S., the average cost of patent
litigation is about $3 million per lawsuit. Under such a
system, those to whom a patent legitimately belongs must go
to court to claim their benefits and protection - a costly
and unfair tax on those who produce beneficial innovations.
OSRM estimates that as much as fifty percent of the cost of
defending against software patents is due to patents that
never should have been granted in the first place."
OSRM's "Patents and Prior Innovations Project" will be
launched November 9, 2004, at an international software
patent conference in Brussels, "Regulating Knowledge: Costs,
Risks, and Models of Innovation," which will bring together
academics, policy makers and business leaders to assess the
global impact of software patents. The conference is timed
to help educate European policy makers as the Parliament
reconsiders whether to accept liberal European Patent Office
practice or to reassert the European Patent Convention's
clause precluding computer program patents.
"Our primary intention with this project is to offer data
and insight that we hope will help the European Union make
an educated and prudent decision regarding software patents,
and, specifically, to help prevent them from replicating
mistakes made under the United States' patent system,"
continued Egger. "At the same time, we are building a
collection of the technical community's knowledge of
innovation in software development, which can be used as a
resource for years to come by historians, legal scholars,
patent researchers and others. We hope to arrive at a
community-built resource rich with factual contributions
that are credible and in the aggregate tell a compelling
story. That story will be a history of true innovations in
software."
Structure of OSRM Patent Project
The specific focus of the project will be evaluating the
"Munich list" of patents, one by one. Participants will
contribute their knowledge of code, documents, books,
articles, theses, conference reports, working papers,
presentations, and memos, as well as personal recollections.
"Challenging and successfully debunking a single patent or
a group of patents or even a majority of patents is not the
point of this project," says Len Newman, attorney and
software developer who has joined OSRM to head the project
full-time. "The overarching research question is how patent
law, as actually applied in recent years, has measured up to
the real history of innovation in software. This is a
question the Grokline community is uniquely capable of
addressing."
More information about the project can be found on the
Grokline homepage at http://www.grokline.net/.
Software Patent Conference: "Regulating Knowledge: Costs,
Risks, and Models of Innovation"
Sponsored by the Foundation for a Free Information
Infrastructure (FFII) (http://www.ffii.org/), Maastricht
Economic Research Institute on Innovation and Technology
(MERIT) (http://www.merit.unimaas.nl/), the Confederation
Europeenne des Associations de Petites et Moyennes
Entreprises (CEA-PME) (http://www.ceapme.org/), the Open
Society Institute (http://www.soros.org/), and The Greens |
European Free Alliance in the European Parliament
(http://www.greens-efa.org/), the conference will bring
together economists, software professionals, and policy
makers to assess the global impact of software patents. The
first day will examine several important issues in depth.
The second day of the conference will be held in the EU
Parliament Building, with members of the European Parliament
in attendance, and will focus on policy issues and context.
At the conference, U.S. patent law and Free and Open Source
Software experts, including Bruce Perens (Open Source
community leader and OSRM Director), Dan Ravicher (President
and Executive Director of Public Patent Foundation), Len
Newman (OSRM patent project director), and Brian Kahin will
participate to offer their perspectives, based on experience
with the U.S. patent system. Also in conjunction with the
conference, Perens will release a white paper examining the
issue of patents and computer industry standards, which can
be found at http://perens.com/Articles/PatentFarming.html.
Economists speaking in the Parliament include Luc Soete,
Director, Maastricht Economic Research Institute on
Innovation and Technology (MERIT), University of Maastricht,
and Dietmar Harhoff, Director, Institute for Innovation
Research, Technology Management and Entrepreneurship at the
University of Munich. Additional details about the
conference can be found at
http://en.eu.ffii.org/sections/bxl0411/program.
OSRM's Patent Risk Mitigation Efforts
As part of its mission of managing financial risks for users
of Free and Open Source Software, OSRM works for reform of
the current standards under which governments grant patents.
OSRM believes the problem of non-innovative patents extends
far beyond the area of software and ultimately will need to
be addressed through legislative changes. As such, OSRM
seeks to direct efforts toward horizontal reform of the
patent system.
In August, OSRM sponsored and released the results of the
first-ever evaluation of potential patent infringement by
the Linux kernel. Patent attorney Dan Ravicher conducted
the study and found that no court-validated software patent
is infringed by the Linux kernel, but that 283 issued but
not yet court-validated software patents, if upheld as valid
by the courts, could potentially be used to support patent
claims against the Linux kernel. Ravicher's position paper
sparked widespread public discussion and has been downloaded
from OSRM's web site by the public over 10,000 times. The
paper is available at
http://www.osriskmanagement.com/linuxpatentpaper.pdf. In
response to the findings brought to light by this seminal
patent study, OSRM has expanded its risk mitigation and
insurance offerings to cover patent issues.
About Open Source Risk Management
Supported by Free and Open Source Software leaders as well
as experts in patents and copyrights law, Open Source Risk
Management (OSRM) is the industry's only vendor-neutral
provider of risk mitigation, indemnification, and management
services for enterprise Free and Open Source Software users.
OSRM helps organizations assess potential legal risks and
design risk-mitigation solutions based on a set of best
practice protocols. Additionally, OSRM provides
indemnification by underwriting copyright and patent
coverage, through its affiliates, for the Linux kernel
versions 2.4 and 2.6. Through its FOSS Legal Defense
Center, OSRM also works in tandem with highly specialized
software rights lawyers to offer coordinated legal defense
services. For more information, please visit
osriskmanagement.com.
Contact:
Karen Duffin
Bite Communications for OSRM
t: 415-365-0459
e: karen.duffin@bitepr.com
SOURCE Open Source Risk Management
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