BT Joins the Patent Hall of Shame
Those with good memories may recall the following amusing episode when BT wanted to sue people for daring to use its super-duper patented hyperlink invention:
On Open Enterprise blog.
open source, open genomics, open creation
Those with good memories may recall the following amusing episode when BT wanted to sue people for daring to use its super-duper patented hyperlink invention:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:45 am 0 comments
Labels: android, bt, google, hyperlinks, open enterprise, patents
QuestionCopyright has an interesting article about the role that open access might play in opening up China to new ideas. But what really caught my attention was the following section:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:30 am 0 comments
Labels: china, copyright, open access, techdirt
Trey Ratcliff is an extremely successful photographer, who specializes in HDR photography. His blog Stuck in Customs is the top travel photography blog on the internet, with over a million views each week.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:29 am 0 comments
Labels: copyright, creative commons, licensing, photography, techdirt
The latest big boost to open access has come from in UK government's "Innovation and research strategy for growth" (pdf), which says:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:28 am 0 comments
Labels: open access, techdirt, UK
The contentious nature of the "three strikes" response to unauthorized sharing of copyright materials can be seen by the legal battles being fought around it across Europe. That's particularly the case in Ireland, which has emerged as a key testing ground for the approach and its legality.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:26 am 0 comments
Labels: acta, copyright, ireland, techdirt, three strikes
At the end of last week, the Council of the European Union – which is where national ministers from each EU country meet to adopt laws and coordinate policies – had a meeting. A group of some 40 ministers for agriculture and fisheries signed off on a range of important matters, including:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:05 pm 0 comments
Labels: acta, fisheries, software patents, techdirt
Apple has been garnering quite a reputation for itself as a patent bully, for example using patents around the world in an attempt to stop Samsung competing in the tablet market, and bolstering patent trolls. But that's not enough for the company, it seems: now it wants to use patents to block open standards.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:58 am 0 comments
Labels: apple, open standards, patents, techdirt, w3c
Most people instinctively appreciate the dangers of government surveillance. But at least it's possible to be on your guard when you suspect such surveillance may be present by taking care what you write and send. You might even use some industrial-grade encryption for the important stuff.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:53 am 0 comments
Labels: email, encryption, surveillance, techdirt
It's no secret that Windows Phone is struggling desperately in the battle against the smartphone leaders, iPhone and Android. And desperate times demand desperate measures; but even so, this move by Microsoft is pretty extraordinary:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:13 pm 0 comments
Labels: android, malware, Microsoft, open enterprise, viruses
There has been a flurry of excitement about Mozilla recently. Not, as you might hope, about the latest version of Firefox; one of the unintended consequences of the rapid release approach currently adopted is that nobody really gets excited about the constant flow of new versions, which is a pity.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:20 am 0 comments
The narrative around counterfeit goods usually ends with their seizure. We rarely get to hear or see what happens to them afterwards unless some token burning or breaking is laid on for the cameras' benefit. That makes the following story doubly noteworthy: we not only find out where fake designer clothes go after they have been seized in the UK, we discover that they are put to an excellent use:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:14 am 0 comments
Labels: counterfeiting, fashion, techdirt, trademarks
The road to copyright reform is a long one, full of false starts and diversions. Those with good memories may recall the Gowers Review from 2006, which made lots of sensible suggestions, all of which were promptly ignored by the UK government. So following the good work of the Hargreaves Report, the very real risk was that it, too, would be simply filed and forgotten.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:52 am 0 comments
Labels: copyright, gowers review, open enterprise, uk government
As readers of this blog will have noticed, open data is particularly hot at the moment. Whether that will endure is another matter, but for the moment we should be grateful for all the politicians jumping on this particular bandwagon, and we should grab the open data they are releasing with both hands while we can. Here's the latest convert, the European Commission itself:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:56 pm 0 comments
Labels: european commission, Neelie Kroes, open data, open enterprise
The Vice President of the European Commission responsible for the Digital Agenda for Europe, Neelie Kroes, recently made quite a stir when she dubbed copyright "a tool to punish and withhold". Now she's back with two major projects: a pan-European open data stategy and the "No Disconnect Strategy":
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:20 am 0 comments
Labels: activists, copyright, germany, Neelie Kroes, plagiarism, techdirt, three strikes
One of the most important aspects of the UK's Hargreaves Report was that it called for copyright policy to be based on evidence. It also noted that so far that simply hadn't been the case, and that practically all of the so-called "studies" used to justify laws in this area came from the copyright industries, with missing or dubious methodologies.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:44 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, file sharing, law hadopi, techdirt
A few weeks ago I gave a talk at the South Tyrol Free Software Conference. This was the first time I'd visited Bolzano/Bozen; although I was only there fore a few hours, it was enough to appreciate its charms and wonderful setting.
For the record here's my speech:
Open Innovation, Open Data and more from SFScon on Vimeo.
As you might notice, this is not in the Queen's English; my slides, however, are, and can be found embedded below (also downloadable).
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:17 pm 0 comments
One of the favorite techniques of those pushing for ever-more severe penalties for copyright infringement is to blur the distinction between analog counterfeits and digital copies. The argument then becomes: "counterfeit drugs can kill people, therefore we must come down hard on online filesharing." This trick can be seen most clearly in ACTA, which stands for "Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement", but where the most problematic sections concern digital piracy, not counterfeits.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:22 am 0 comments
Labels: acta, chips, counterfeiting, piracy, techdirt
Last week I took part in a meeting at the European Parliament entitled “Horizon 2020: Investing in the common good”. Here's the background:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:59 pm 0 comments
Labels: galaxy zoo, open access, open data, open enterprise, open innovation, open science, open source
Of all the dysfunctional parts of the patent system, drug patents are arguably the worst, since the exorbitant prices that patent monopolies allow mean that millions of people simply cannot afford medicines that would keep them alive or would improve their quality of life substantially.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:53 pm 0 comments
Labels: drug patents, prizes, techdirt
People have started to wake up to the fact that companies like Google and Facebook hold huge quantities of data about their users. That raises questions about who owns what there, and to what extent users should be allowed access. Now Hugo Campos is asking the same question about a different kind of personal data – that being collected by a cardiac defibrillator implanted in his chest:
A recurrent refrain from the copyright industries is that you can't make money from digital goods if they are freely available online. To which Techdirt has been pointing out for years that not only are there many ways of doing precisely that, but lots of people are already coining it as a result. One of the Guardian's columnists has noticed one of them - that in a world of digital abundance, you can make money by selling associated scarcities:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 5:04 pm 0 comments
Labels: abundance, business models, guardian, madonna, scarcity, techdirt
Back in 2006, I wrote a piece for LXer called "A Brief History of Microsoft FUD". This ran through successive attempts by Microsoft to dismiss GNU/Linux in various ways. One of the better-known was a series of "Total Cost of Ownership" (TCO) studies. By an amazing coincidence, these all showed that Microsoft Windows was cheaper than that supposedly cheap GNU/Linux.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:03 pm 0 comments
Labels: fud, gnu/linux, Microsoft, open enterprise, tco
As people wake up to the full horror of what SOPA would do to the Internet and its users, an increasing number of organizations with very different backgrounds are coming out against it. Here's one more to add to that list, from the world of non-profit humanitarian groups.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:58 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, disabled, encryption, human rights, techdirt
The idea of bringing in a unitary EU patent system has been rolling around Brussels so long most people have assumed it will never happen. But there is a clear push on at the moment to realise these plans once and for all. That's hinted at in this very low-key press release from yesterday [.pdf]:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:22 am 0 comments
Labels: epo, eu, open enterprise, richard stallman, software patents
For anyone in Belgium on Wednesday, here's an afternoon event open to all that might be of interest: "'Self'-regulation: Should online companies police the internet?" If you can't make it to the European Parliament in Brussels, there's also a live video stream available.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:17 am 0 comments
Labels: Belgium, censorship, isps, techdirt
To the extent possible under law,
glyn moody
has waived all copyright and related or neighbouring rights to
this work.
This work is published from:
United Kingdom.