Originally posted by ramlambmoo
And this is the how many\'th time it gets rejected? So, now they are going to change some words once more, make it even worse for european software companies[1], and reintroduce it.
[1] At the moment it basically says \"All your code are belong to Microsoft\".
Get real. The bill isnt even about code. Code is already protected, and is the property of whoever makes it. The bill is about making software protected in the same way code is protected. And since microsoft dosnt write all the software, then not all the software belongs to them.
It\'s
you who needs to get real. The bill was about patenting ideas, software is just part of it as it is written ideas, whether it is in source code or in any form of compiled code. It is about indirectly removing, or rather, outlawmaking, article 52 of the European Patent Convention which clearly and unmistakingly excludes software, scientific theories, art, etc. from patentability, for very good reasons, which I can state here if anyone wishes me to do so.
So while Microsoft may not write all software, it may very well patent all ideas. This way, you are not allowed to write software anymore, which effectively will
make them write all software, because they\'re the only ones allowed to!
As for the bill reapparing:
This bill will not resurface. Instead, the patent lobby will try to sneak in unlimited patentability by way of the so called \"community patent\" bill, which has been in the workings but stalled. The UK seems to be trying to push it back in motion, and they will receive plentiful support by the big corporations and the European Patent Office.
@ Efflixi: I have been thinking of swapping my sig, yes. However, since the main problems, namely the utter lack of democracy in the EU, and the determination of the EU council to sell the information society to the global players, are by far not solved, I cannot.
And yes, this bill was only in Europe. In the USA and other countries, such bills are law already, and they are already showing their detrimental effects. See
This page for some examples.