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At 09:37 PM 2/4/97 -0500, Rick Osborne wrote:
The original poster was talking about the UniSys GIF patent, and this was the reply:
Broaden your view. I can do anything I want with the GIF format without asking _anyone_, and so can almost everyone in the world - except those poor americans who chose to live under a "broken" patent law which allows protecting _algorithms_. Totally silly.
Not true, of course - other countries also have broken patent laws that permit patenting algorithms. For instance, IDEA is patented in places besides the US. The differences in the US are that perhaps our patent people became stupid earlier, and that US patent law allows you to apply for a patent up to one year after publishing, while European patent laws don't let you patent anything that's been disclosed to the public.
a philosophical note, why *do* we allow the government to regulate algorithms? (Implementations, I can understand, but *algorithms*?)
Because they're bigger than we are and better-armed? Because there's lots of money to be made by people patenting things? Because big companies can use it to interfere with competition? Because it's good for the economy because it encourages inventors of algorithms to publish them and make money by doing so? (I'll take the first three of those arguments :-) # Thanks; Bill # Bill Stewart, +1-415-442-2215 stewarts@ix.netcom.com # You can get PGP outside the US at ftp.ox.ac.uk/pub/crypto/pgp # (If this is a mailing list, please Cc: me on replies. Thanks.)