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Software Patents > Events > 2002 > Brussels 20020619
2002Kiel 021126EuroParl 0211Amsterdam 020830Brussels 20020619Paris 020610Linuxtag 0206EuroParl 2002-05-15Madrid 020506EPC 20020610GUUG 020301CIP 020128

UK Patent Orifice: Software Patentability Rally Brussels 2002-06-19
Commemorate Banana Union Day

The UK Patent Office, wearing the hat of the British Government, has entrusted one of its subcontractors to organise a high profile rally in support of the proposed CEC/BSA software patentability directive. Speeches will be held by hard core patent movement activists from the European Commission, the UK Government, the European Patent Office, the IBM patent department and some well-known patent law firms. At the end of an intensive 6 hour long software patentablity propaganda firework a podium discussion will be held in which an "open source representative" will be allowed to sit at the table. The organisers' initial choice was Alan Cox. Alan has occasionally expressed deep concern about the software patent problem but, as a core developper of the Linux kernel and other key projects, he never really had the time to study the legal intricacies. This fact alongside with his long hair and beard seemed to make him particularly qualified for the role of the social romantic dissident, generously tolerated by a group of patent lawyers posing as the businessmen of the real software industry. Alan immediately understood the game and declined the invitation, handing the case over to the Eurolinux Alliance. We have meanwhile been put on the conference program, but our abstract was doctored, our criticism suppressed, our message distorted, so that now we nevertheless fit into the design of this rally.

A similarly structured patent orifice had been set up by the UK patent establishment and organised by IBC in London on 2000-10-20, with Robert J Hart acting as the chairman. However there was a slightly larger participation of dissenting views than envisaged this time.

Proposal for a Directive on the Protection of Computer Implemented Inventions

2002-06-19

Brussels

Chairman:
Roger Broadie
President TMPDF

09.00Registration and coffee
09.30Chairman's opening remarks
09.40Outline of the Proposed Directive
Anthony Howard
DG Internal Market
European Commission
10.20Coffee
10.40The EPO's Assessment of the Proposed Directive
How it differs from EPO practice
Dr. Gert Kolle
European Patent Office, Munich
11.10The UK Government's View
  • The underlying economic issues
  • Views of the software industry and business world
  • Where we go from here

Peter Hayward and Software Patents
Divisional Director
The UK Patent Office
11.40The Effect of the Proposed Directive at National Level
1. Germany
Fritz Teufel
Head of IP Department
IBM, Germany
12.002. UK
The Impact on the Software Patent Industry
Keith Beresford
European Patent Attorney, Keith Beresford & Co
12.303. FRANCE
Jacques Combeau*
European Patent Attorney
13.00Lunch
14.15Implications for BioPharma and Bioinformatics Industries
  • Current patent protection challenges
  • In silico patent infringement
  • Impact on the European Biopharma and Bioinformatics Industry's global competitiveness
  • Compliance with TRIPS

Alex Wilson
Solicitor, Bristows
15.00Tea
15.20ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
The speakers will be joined by Open Source representative (Alan Cox, Director, RedHat)
16.30Chairman's summary
16.35Close of conference

On 2002-03-11 Hartmut Pilch answered to the following request of the organisers:

I would also be grateful if you could let me have three or four bullet points outlining the main issues that you would cover. I am pasting the programme at the bottom of this email.

by suggesting the following as a discussion basis ("for the time being", cc to the eurolinux mailing list, speaker not yet determined):

The Eurolinux Alliance, representing 120000 signatories and 300 software companies and organisations from the free and proprietary software world, sees the directive proposal as a poorly crafted attempt to
  • legalise 30000 ridiculous patents illegally granted by the EPO
  • make everything under the sun patentable
  • suck the life blood out of the European software industry
  • plunge the patent system even deeper into chaos and dysfunctionality

The IBC people then changed this to

The Eurolinux Alliance, representing 120000 signatories and 300 software companies and organisations from the free software world, sees the directive proposal as a poorly crafted attempt to
  • legalise 30000 patents
  • make everything patentable
  • take the life blood out of the European software industry
  • plunge the patent system into chaos

The above version was, without any further communication, printed on a pamphlet and sent out to the potential participants, probably thousands of patent professionals, during the latter half of March.

The main differences between the versions are:

Eurolinux versionIBC versioncomments
representing ... from the free and proprietary software worldrepresenting ... from the free software worldThis turns our statement into its opposite. Indeed 1/2 of the 300 Eurolinux sponsors write proprietary software, much of which runs on MS Windows or Mac OS. Yet it is the policy of the patent establishment to portray its critics as "opensource" or "free software" advocates and thus make them look like a minority.
legalise 30000 ridiculously trivial software patents, illegally granted by the EPOlegalise 30000 patentsThis takes away our whole criticism.
plunge the patent system even deeper into chaos and dysfunctionalityplunge the patent system into chaosThis turns our statement into its opposite and makes it look ridiculously dramatic. The IBC version implies that the patent system is in order and the directive proposal has a huge impact. Our version said that it is already in chaos and the directive proposal pushes this a little further.

On 2002-03-28, when we protested against this rewriting of our text, IBC representative Anna D'Alton told us that our initial outline had to be amended because it had been too long and "too inflammatory".

It should be noted that even our first preliminary outline would not have been the longest on the program, and there was certainly room for consenting on changes, as long as our basic message was preserved.

But Anna didn't respond to Hartmut's mail. This mail also contained other questions and offers, such as an offer to bring more qualified speakers to the conference, so as to turn it into a real forum of dialogue.

It is quite clear what UK patent family is afraid of: dialogue. They must insist on conducting a virtual debate in Brussels in order to create the impression that any opposition to legalising their practise is only marginal. All the other speakers are carefully chosen to achieve this purpose, and critics are only allowed to appear in a marginalised role, carefully assigned to a minority position.

We have asked for a correction at least on the website (the thousands of leaflets alread printed and distributed will be difficult to correct), but again didn't receive a response.

?!?By changing our title and mispresenting our position, the UKPO's subcontractors may have violated UK laws concerning copyright, libel et al. Which and how?
Please find and quote the relevant law texts for us.
[ Conferences on Software Patenting 2002 | Mediatage Kiel 2002-11-21 | Europarl Hearings 2002-11-07 and 26 | Swpat Conference Amsterdam 2002-08-30..1 (Columbanus Symposium) | UK Patent Orifice: Software Patentability Rally Brussels 2002-06-19 | Information Economy and Swpat Conference Paris 20020610-1 | FFII auf Linuxtag 2002 | Europarl Hearing of 2002-05-15 | Pro-Swpat-Kundgebung Madrid 2002-05-06 | Konferenz zur Revsion des EPÜ 2002-06 | GUUG Frühjahrsfachgespräch Bochum 2002-03-01 14:45-16:30 | Konferenz über Informationelle Infrastrukturpolitik 2002-01-28 Arlington USA ]
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english version 2004/08/16 by Hartmut PILCH