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noEPatents 03-06-22EP 03-09-29Aigrain 03-09-30

Petition Initiators Thank the European Parliament
Brussels 2003/09/29
For immediate Release

Last Wednesday the Parliament voted against software patents and for freedom of publication, freedom of interoperation and other basic values of the information society, thereby reversing the thrust of a directive proposal from the European Commission, so as to basically satisfy the demands of a quarter million signatories of the "Eurolinux Petition for a Software Patent Free Europe" and 30 eminent computer scientists. The initiators of both petitions will speak before the European Parliament's Petition Committee on tuesday 18.00 to express their thanks and explore with MEPs what still needs to be done.
The Petition for a Software Patent Free Europe and the Scientists' Petition are being presented on Tue 30 Sept 2003 at 6 pm in the Petition Committee in the European Parliament Room A3G2, Spinelli Building (ASP) at Brussels by Bernard Lang and Philippe Aigrain.

On 10 Nov, software patents are possibly on the agenda for a meeting of governmental patent experts from EU member states in the European Council. The software patent owner lobby and EU Internal Market Commissioner Frits Bolkestein are now counting on the Council, whose "patent policy working party" has proven in the past to be very responsive to patent owner wishes. Bolkestein and his supporters have predicted that the Council will withdraw the directive or, if that fails, give in to anticipated US pressure. The day before the vote Bolkestein warned MEPs that they would ruin their chances of democratic participation if they voted as they did last wednesday. The US and UK governments sent warnings of similar content to MEPs earlier this month.

In this atmosphere of fear, uncertainty and distrust (FUD) launched against the European Parliament, both Mr Aigrain and Mr Lang are expected to strenghten the position of the Parliament in European legislation.

For attending the meeting, please send mail to Benjamin Henrion.

mail:
media at ffii org
phone:
FFII Munich (German, English and French): 0049/89/18979927

Benjamin Henrion (French and English): 0032/498/292771 or 0032/10/454779

Jonas Maebe (Dutch and English): +32-485-36-96-45

Dieter Van Uytvanck (Dutch and English): +32-499-16-70-10

Erik Josefsson (Swedish and English): +46-707-696567

Alex Macfie (English): +44 7901 751753

Joaquim Carvalho (Portugues and English): +35-1-93-6169633

More Contacts to be supplied upon request

The Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure (FFII) is a non-profit association registered in Munich, which is dedicated to the spread of data processing literacy. FFII supports the development of public information goods based on copyright, free competition, open standards. More than 300 members, 700 companies and 50,000 supporters have entrusted the FFII to act as their voice in public policy questions in the area of exclusion rights (intellectual property) in data processing.
The EuroLinux Alliance for a Free Information Infrastructure is an open coalition of commercial companies and non-profit associations united to promote and protect a vigourous European Software Culture based on copyright, open standards, open competition and open source software such as Linux. Corporate members or sponsors of EuroLinux develop or sell software under free, semi-free and non-free licenses for operating systems such as GNU/Linux, MacOS or MS Windows.
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[ Vote in 8 days: 2000 IT bosses ask European Parliament to say NO to software patents → Petition Initiators Thank the European Parliament | Philippe Aigrain 2003-09-30: Intervention devant le Comité des pétitions du Parlement Européen ]
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