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Two Great Videos for Your Creationist Friends

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My friend Richard is very passionate about software patents, and he’s in the
process socializing an open letter he recently wrote to a number of outlets.
He asked if I’d post it here as well, so here it is.

—

5 Reasons the US Supreme Court should explicitly deny patent protection to
software.

  1. Software is simply a solution to a problem. Patenting the solution is
    pointless since it’s protected under copyright. So what we end up with
    are patents that cover a conceived problem. Of course the problem does
    not exist until it’s conceived, and thus it’s abstract. Abstract ideas
    are not patentable subject matter and neither are algorithmic solutions.
    Software patents have nothing to do with software, rather the purely
    imaginary problems that they solve. What we’re left with is technical
    process or method patents. I will refer to these as Software patents
    throughout this document since thats what they were originally billed
    as. Applying exclusivity to a process (regardless of whether it involves
    a computer or not) is tantamount to oppressing creative freedoms.

  2. The arguments in favor of software patents are based on a series of
    assumptions regarding innovation that do not translate to modern,
    digitally creative arts. Innovation in technology companies that are
    effected by such patents obviously do not require industrial
    infrastructure to acquire market share. Their goods and services are
    essentially inexhaustible. Patent protection was intended (in spirit) to
    grant a “head start” to inventors so that they might establish market
    presence on their own inventions, before having to compete with
    established companies with an existing industrial infrastructure; thus
    ensuring the incentive of upward mobility. The alternative was thought
    to be loosing domestic markets to non-continental sources. If this
    renders notions of horse and buggy then you see where I’m going with
    this. Todays technology juggernauts started in garages without patent
    protection and most are less than a decade old. These patents have in
    fact, hindered innovation through resource transference. For example:
    MySpace and facebook both developed without the protection of patents.
    Both are constantly assaulted with multiple concept patents from
    companies that innovated nothing. Essentially the industry has enormous
    incentive to innovate, without patents. The industry is analogous to an
    arms race and oneupmanship is the rule. Software protections are
    absolutely unnecessary.

  3. The people filing amicus briefs on this case are primarily people and
    organizations that benefit from monopolies on ideas. The reason that
    Microsoft, IBM and other patent laden Goliaths reason for the benefit of
    patent protectionism on software is obvious. However Bill Gates famously
    said: “If people had understood how patents would be granted when most
    of today’s ideas were invented, and had taken out patents, the industry
    would be at a complete standstill today.… The solution to this is patent
    exchanges with large companies and patenting as much as we can. ” .
    Others that argue are at some level reaping the benefit of software
    patents through “donations” , licenses or litigation fees. If you want
    to know how innovation is really effected, ask software engineers and
    startups what they think. With assured anonymity they would provide
    honest unbiased feedback without fear of legal retaliation. They usually
    side with common sense rather than special interests.

  4. The length of time that software patents remain valid render them
    oppressive. By granting a twenty year monopoly to companies in an Eco
    system where consolidation is the rule, you’re ensuring that the top 1%
    of tech companies will hold the vast majority of the IP in the industry.
    This means that the state reinforces corporate monopolies with state
    granted monopolies furthering their power to crush opposition. How does
    that foster innovation? I don’t think this point needs to be expounded
    upon. It’s just common sense. The constitution clearly never envisioned
    a scenario where someone could simply imagine the future and stake a
    claim on it without action or liability of failure. Then upon either
    success or failure (through acquisition or bankruptcy or liquidation)
    the inventors intellectual assets wind up in the hands of the very
    companies that they were intended to protect against.

  5. One point that makes most proponents of software patents cringe, is
    international enforcement of software patents. It is simply impossible,
    impractical and unethical to deny countries access to concepts that are
    simply standards of modern computing. The patents that are filed in the
    US are generally considered to be ludicrous and overly obvious by the
    international patent community. There will be no global consensus on
    software patents anytime soon if ever. Quality standards in nations that
    have allowed software patents vary greatly and are difficult to enforce
    even within the EU. At the end of the day it comes down to this: one
    person or company on the planet Earth owns the exclusive rights to a
    concept. They then attempt to divert revenue from companies around the
    world into their coffers. This is obviously not going to benefit
    countries that are charged with enforcement. Developing countries with
    little IP have no incentive whatsoever to render verdicts favorable to
    foreign companies that lay claim to broad concepts. International
    enforcement of idea patents is pure fantasy. What were really left with
    is a massive disadvantage for tech companies in the US. If you want to
    see this in practice print out ten random technical process patents. Now
    imagine that you are presiding over an infringement hearing on these
    patents one at a time. Most would be eliminate in US courts, but presume
    that you’re in a country with no laws to cover patentable concepts (most
    expressly prohibit idea patents) and see how many you find in favor of.

In closing I would like to point out that if you affirm software/technical
processes as patentable a firestorm of litigation will ensue, resulting in a
massive and unjust transfer of resources. The resulting effect on innovation
in the US would lead to the inevitable question: Why would we expose our
company to the risk of crushing litigation in the United States when it’s
market’s are just as accessible through the Internet?

–Richard Corsale

May 23, 2025

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