Re: Confusion
Actually a LOT more! That Microsoft isn't "squawking" about MONO IP violations right now is no guarantee that they won't squawk later, when it suits them.
This article discusses the problems facing those who create and use software today:http://cpsr.org/act/contest/4ip2/
It sure does. The stinkiest part is that those who own the Gold make the rules, or bend them with near impunity. Typically, patent applications cost $10K or more to obtain. It's a rich man's game. This is especially grievous because the USTPO does a POOR job of searching for prior art, and an EXCELLENT job of ignoring prior art when it is found. Microsoft and other corporations, and even countries like China, are patenting everything in sight related to computers and software. Things like the PgUP and PgDn keys, Smiley , the BASIC "else if", and God only knows what else. We'll find out when the patent is published.
Then read this: http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/2007/05/ippa07
Essentially, the bill would turn copyright law into something more akin to existing drug laws: The government could seize personal property, wiretaps would become legal for the first time, violators could face life in prison and, in an ambiguous and far-reaching provision, the mere attempt to violate a copyright would become a crime.
and then read this about the new PROP-IP law: http://www.nationaljewelernetwork.co...cf01f03e2efa5c
which states "... the PRO-IP Act goes too far and has the potential for punishing people who have not infringed. "
Life in prison because some IP patent holder twists court evidence into "showing" some hapless coder "attempted" to infringe their IP? Has Congress gone insane? Just consider the substitute teacher who attempted to close web pages but they were popping up faster than she could close them. The idiot investigator on the case used forensic software which showed repeated openings of porn pages, but he never looked for the malware which caused it, or knew that it could. She was found guilty in January of 2007! Two years later, to dodged felony charges she agreed to plead guilty to a single misdemeanor charge and surrendering her state teaching credentials...
http://www.alternet.org/rights/46925/
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/200...roof-porn-pop/
Notice especially how the prosecutor used a person trained for only two week on computer forensics but the defense presented a professional CS with decades of experience ... and the judge refused to let him testify completely! Luckily, she didn't get sentenced to life in prison but it cost her about everything else. You can see that scenario repeating itself many times over in the future.
There is no penalty for those who can afford to claim and pursue copyright infringement where none actually exists. Corporations are using that loophole in the law to force people who cannot afford to hire lawyers into giving up their rights to their own creations. The new law even gives them the power to bring down SERIOUS, life long punishment those who have not infringed!
Unethical corporations are also using the courts as a club to beat down those from whom they have stolen IP, merely because their victims cannot afford to respond, initiate or continue legal action and usually quit due to lack of funds, if not bankruptcy.
If a corporation wins a software IP infringement law suit the defendant can be forced to turn over the ownership of all source codes that "infringes", plus fines, penalties and court costs to the plaintiff. IF the corporation KNOWS OR BELIEVES that a product infringes their patents and blusters about it for several years but does nothing, their actions only eliminate the monetary penalties for infringement once a lawsuit is begun. In other words, they cannot "run up" the penalties by setting on their knowledge of an IP infringement, as Microsoft is currently doing. However, it does not eliminate the other fines, court costs, or the "return" of source code. The infringer does not get a "get out of jail free" card.
Therefore, besides the fact that Microsoft's "promise", even the most recent one, covers ONLY those MONO components covered by the EMCA-334 and 335 standards, the MS IP that MONO is using that is NOT in the EMCA "standard" puts into IP infringement any distro that uses a MONO dependent GNOME, contains MONO even it it isn't used, or any application that depends upon MONO, and OpenSUSE and its users.
NOVELL and SELS users are immune from an MS IP lawsuit over MONO because of that infamous "agreement" on Nov 2, 2006. The MS/Novell agreement divides GPL software into two camps: those that are free of MS lawsuit threat for the code they contribute to or because they purchased SLES, and those who use OpenSUSE or another distro or whose contributed GPL code does NOT make it into SELS, even if it is accepted into OpenSUSE.
Novell pays Microsoft a ROYALTY for each copy of SELS that it sells!. This is an interesting turn of affairs because according to Sec 7 of the GPL it is NOT LEGAL for Novell to distribute GPL applications and extend certain rights to some recipients and not to others, i.e., immunity from an MS lawsuit. These Novell ROYALTY payments to Microsoft, and its implication that Linux contains MS IP, divides the FOSS community into a different set of two basic camps: those who work for Novell or use SELS, and every one else. Since 2006 a LOT of Windows folks of all kinds (developers, PR folks, TEs) without history of or sympathy with Linux and its community have, for want of a better word, infiltrated GNOME and MONO development crews, or post, blog or campaign for MONO. They have convinced Debian and Canonical folks to accept MONO into their distros. The "MONO Position Statement" by the Canonical Technical Board says:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ub...ne/000584.html
Given the [reasons] above, the Ubuntu Technical Board sees no reason to exclude Mono or applications based upon it from the archive, or from the default installation set.
Since the Mono stack is already a dependency of the default installation set for many remixes of Ubuntu, including the Desktop Edition, there is no reason to consider a dependency on Mono as an issue when suggesting applications for the default set.
When the fact was revealed a couple weeks ago that the MS "promises" not to sue did NOT cover the parts in MONO that are NOT in the EMCA, De Icaza announced plans to divide MONO into two packages, those components in the EMCA standard and those that are NOT. Considering his excellent knowledge of MS software and software IP, the help Microsoft gave him personally, and his previous comments about the lack of MS IP in MONO, it is amazing that only now is he splitting MONO apart. All those previous "assurances" were hot air, if not an attempt to disguise an IP trap.
One pro MONO campaigner is going so far as to claim there is a "faux" and a "real" "FLOSS" Community and he'll tell you who is and who isn't "real". Hint: pro-MONO folks are real members of the Linux community and those against MONO are "faux" members.
http://discuss.itwire.com/viewtopic....t=14668#p52022
But the problem in the FLOSS community (the real community, not the faux "anti-Mono advocacy" crowd ... I'm a member of the real FLOSS community ... Sam: you're part of this "faux FLOSS community" ...
I asked "Why?" a month ago. It is still a good question.
http://www.linuxtoday.com/news_story...-OP-CY-MS-0002
Originally posted by dibl
This article discusses the problems facing those who create and use software today:http://cpsr.org/act/contest/4ip2/
Let us imagine you are developing a game. In this game, a character runs behind a tree to hide, but the tree partially obscures him. In drawing both character and tree, how do you ensure the area around the tree is transparent so that you can see the character hiding behind it? The answer may be obvious. Employing a technique using "exclusive or" operations to copy the tree onto the screen does the trick. This technique works in any situation where parts of an onscreen image must be transparent. There is just one problem with this scenario.
It is illegal. A company (Cadtrak, now NuGraphics) received a patent on the exclusive or technique. Legally using the technique requires a license from the patent holder - an expensive proposition. This implies that only the most affluent software developers would be able to satisfy this demand. Something about this stinks.
It is illegal. A company (Cadtrak, now NuGraphics) received a patent on the exclusive or technique. Legally using the technique requires a license from the patent holder - an expensive proposition. This implies that only the most affluent software developers would be able to satisfy this demand. Something about this stinks.
Then read this: http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/2007/05/ippa07
Essentially, the bill would turn copyright law into something more akin to existing drug laws: The government could seize personal property, wiretaps would become legal for the first time, violators could face life in prison and, in an ambiguous and far-reaching provision, the mere attempt to violate a copyright would become a crime.
and then read this about the new PROP-IP law: http://www.nationaljewelernetwork.co...cf01f03e2efa5c
which states "... the PRO-IP Act goes too far and has the potential for punishing people who have not infringed. "
Life in prison because some IP patent holder twists court evidence into "showing" some hapless coder "attempted" to infringe their IP? Has Congress gone insane? Just consider the substitute teacher who attempted to close web pages but they were popping up faster than she could close them. The idiot investigator on the case used forensic software which showed repeated openings of porn pages, but he never looked for the malware which caused it, or knew that it could. She was found guilty in January of 2007! Two years later, to dodged felony charges she agreed to plead guilty to a single misdemeanor charge and surrendering her state teaching credentials...
http://www.alternet.org/rights/46925/
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/200...roof-porn-pop/
Notice especially how the prosecutor used a person trained for only two week on computer forensics but the defense presented a professional CS with decades of experience ... and the judge refused to let him testify completely! Luckily, she didn't get sentenced to life in prison but it cost her about everything else. You can see that scenario repeating itself many times over in the future.
There is no penalty for those who can afford to claim and pursue copyright infringement where none actually exists. Corporations are using that loophole in the law to force people who cannot afford to hire lawyers into giving up their rights to their own creations. The new law even gives them the power to bring down SERIOUS, life long punishment those who have not infringed!
Unethical corporations are also using the courts as a club to beat down those from whom they have stolen IP, merely because their victims cannot afford to respond, initiate or continue legal action and usually quit due to lack of funds, if not bankruptcy.
If a corporation wins a software IP infringement law suit the defendant can be forced to turn over the ownership of all source codes that "infringes", plus fines, penalties and court costs to the plaintiff. IF the corporation KNOWS OR BELIEVES that a product infringes their patents and blusters about it for several years but does nothing, their actions only eliminate the monetary penalties for infringement once a lawsuit is begun. In other words, they cannot "run up" the penalties by setting on their knowledge of an IP infringement, as Microsoft is currently doing. However, it does not eliminate the other fines, court costs, or the "return" of source code. The infringer does not get a "get out of jail free" card.
Therefore, besides the fact that Microsoft's "promise", even the most recent one, covers ONLY those MONO components covered by the EMCA-334 and 335 standards, the MS IP that MONO is using that is NOT in the EMCA "standard" puts into IP infringement any distro that uses a MONO dependent GNOME, contains MONO even it it isn't used, or any application that depends upon MONO, and OpenSUSE and its users.
NOVELL and SELS users are immune from an MS IP lawsuit over MONO because of that infamous "agreement" on Nov 2, 2006. The MS/Novell agreement divides GPL software into two camps: those that are free of MS lawsuit threat for the code they contribute to or because they purchased SLES, and those who use OpenSUSE or another distro or whose contributed GPL code does NOT make it into SELS, even if it is accepted into OpenSUSE.
Novell pays Microsoft a ROYALTY for each copy of SELS that it sells!. This is an interesting turn of affairs because according to Sec 7 of the GPL it is NOT LEGAL for Novell to distribute GPL applications and extend certain rights to some recipients and not to others, i.e., immunity from an MS lawsuit. These Novell ROYALTY payments to Microsoft, and its implication that Linux contains MS IP, divides the FOSS community into a different set of two basic camps: those who work for Novell or use SELS, and every one else. Since 2006 a LOT of Windows folks of all kinds (developers, PR folks, TEs) without history of or sympathy with Linux and its community have, for want of a better word, infiltrated GNOME and MONO development crews, or post, blog or campaign for MONO. They have convinced Debian and Canonical folks to accept MONO into their distros. The "MONO Position Statement" by the Canonical Technical Board says:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ub...ne/000584.html
Given the [reasons] above, the Ubuntu Technical Board sees no reason to exclude Mono or applications based upon it from the archive, or from the default installation set.
Since the Mono stack is already a dependency of the default installation set for many remixes of Ubuntu, including the Desktop Edition, there is no reason to consider a dependency on Mono as an issue when suggesting applications for the default set.
When the fact was revealed a couple weeks ago that the MS "promises" not to sue did NOT cover the parts in MONO that are NOT in the EMCA, De Icaza announced plans to divide MONO into two packages, those components in the EMCA standard and those that are NOT. Considering his excellent knowledge of MS software and software IP, the help Microsoft gave him personally, and his previous comments about the lack of MS IP in MONO, it is amazing that only now is he splitting MONO apart. All those previous "assurances" were hot air, if not an attempt to disguise an IP trap.
One pro MONO campaigner is going so far as to claim there is a "faux" and a "real" "FLOSS" Community and he'll tell you who is and who isn't "real". Hint: pro-MONO folks are real members of the Linux community and those against MONO are "faux" members.
http://discuss.itwire.com/viewtopic....t=14668#p52022
But the problem in the FLOSS community (the real community, not the faux "anti-Mono advocacy" crowd ... I'm a member of the real FLOSS community ... Sam: you're part of this "faux FLOSS community" ...
I asked "Why?" a month ago. It is still a good question.
http://www.linuxtoday.com/news_story...-OP-CY-MS-0002
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