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On 12/25/2010 10:59 AM, Tim Cook wrote:
On Sat, Dec 25, 2010 at 8:25 AM, Edward
Ned Harvey <opensolarisisdeadlongliveopensolaris@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
> bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Joerg Schilling
>
> And people should note that Netapp filed their patents
starting from 1993.
> This
> is 5 years after I started to develop WOFS, which is
copy on write. This
still
>
> In any case, this is 20 year old
technology. Aren't patents something to
> protect new ideas?
Boy, those guys must be really dumb to waste their time filing
billion
dollar lawsuits, protecting 20-year old technology, when it's
so obvious
that you and other people clearly invented it before them, and
all the money
they waste on lawyers can never achieve anything. They should
all fire
themselves. And anybody who defends against it can safely
hire a law
student for $20/hr to represent them, and just pull out your
documents as
defense, because that's so easy.
Plus, as you said, the technology is so old, it should be
worthless by now.
Why are we all wasting our time in this list talking about
irrelevant old
technology, anyway?
Indeed. Isn't the Oracle database itself at least 20 years
old? And Windows? And Solaris itself? All the employees of
those companies should probably just start donating their time
for free instead of collecting a paycheck since it's quite
obvious they should no longer be able to charge for their
product.
What I find most entertaining is all the armchair lawyers on
this mailing list that think they've got prior art when THEY'VE
NEVER EVEN SEEN THE CODE IN QUESTION!
--Tim
Well...
I've read Joerg's paper, and I've read several of the patents in
question, and nowhere around is there any real code. A bit of
pseudo-code and some math, but no full, working code. And, granted
that I'm not a IP lawyer, but it does look like Joerg's work is
prior art (and, given that the standard is supposed to be what
someone in the industry would consider obvious, based on their
knowledge, and I think I qualify). Which all points to the real
problem of software patents - they're really patents on IDEAS, not
on a specific implementation. Who the moron was that really though
that was OK (yes, I know who specifically, but in general...) should
be shot.
Copyright is fine or protecting software work, but patents?
Joerg - your paper used to be available here (which is where I read
it awhile ago), but not anymore:
http://www.fokus.gmd.de/research/cc/glone/employees/joerg.schilling/private/wofs.ps.gz
Is there a better location? (and, a full English translation? I
read it in German, but my German is maybe at 7th-grade level, so I
might have missed some subtleties...)
[As obvious as it is, it should be pointed out, I'm making these statements as a very personal opinion, and I'm certain Oracle wouldn't have the same one. I in no way represent Oracle.]
--
Erik Trimble
Java System Support
Mailstop: usca22-123
Phone: x17195
Santa Clara, CA
Timezone: US/Pacific (GMT-0800)
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