Patent on searchword-based hyperlinking encumbers W3C XPointer standard
In Jan 2001 people at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) found that their new generation of hypertext markup language was infringing on a patent from Sun Microsystems. By a decree of the US patent office, Sun has become the owner of the idea of adding a search word to a link in such a way that the browser will scroll to that word. The developpement of the XPointer concept of the XML standard seemed in jeopardy. Sun's license terms are quite generous: they require than any competitor using this concept obliges himself in return to publish the concepts that he builds on it. Thus Sun supplies the W3C a weapon against "embrace and extend" tactics. But even if based on good intentions, this requirement may restrict the development of the new standard, and people at the W3C experts question whether a trivial software patent really gives Sun the right to impose such restrictions.