[occi-wg] Unlocking the formats deadlock

Alexis Richardson alexis.richardson at gmail.com
Tue May 26 05:02:22 CDT 2009


Sam,

Since you mention AMQP, yes the whole thing is based on patent grants
royalty free, from inventors, to implementers and users.  This is
similar to but stronger than how the W3C deals with patent grants
(which I take it is why you bring up RAND).  So I am not sure what
your point is about having a business model that is incompatible with
something.

Nonetheless it is not at all obvious to me why the IETF is not a
perfectly good model for internet protocols.  And the IETF license is
very explicit about patent grants not being made.

In any case, the issue of which licensed works the OGF may derive work
from, is a question for the OGF.

alexis




On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 10:39 AM, Sam Johnston <samj at samj.net> wrote:
> On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 11:01 AM, Alexis Richardson
> <alexis.richardson at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> If the IETF are happy with it, then I am.
>
> I hate to be the one to break it to you but even RAND is completely and
> utterly incompatible with your business model as well as those of many of
> the participants on this list. Are you sure AMQP doesn't tread on any
> patents, possibly "conveniently overlooked" by your competitors? Need I
> remind you of the OpenSEMP debacle at the CCIF goat rodeo?
>
> The patents that litter the IP wasteland are like land mines - if we fail to
> exercise our duty of care to our users and end up stepping on one then the
> licensing fees will be determined by lawsuits, not "reasonable and
> non-descriminatory" fees (which typically only apply to large scale
> standards like MP3).
>
> I'm surprised this topic was deemed worthy of discussion... if we were doing
> something hard like standardising autonomic scaling algorithms then fair
> enough, but we're not.
>
> Sam
>
>



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