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Ciarán's free software notes

Ciaran O'Riordan's irregularly kept software freedom journal

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Do software patents exist in the EU?

Frequently Asked Question: Do software patents exist in the EU?

Answer: The problem is that software patents exist in some ways in the EU. The power of patent governance is split between a legislature, an executive, and a judiciary.

The legislature (the European Patent Convention) says that software ideas are not patentable.

The executive (the European Patent Office) ignores this and approves software patent applications.

The judiciary (the national courts) usually declares the EPO's software patents to be invalid whenever there is a court case.

So, for the most part, Europeans are safe from software patents. There are very few court cases because the patent holders are afraid their patents will be invalidated.

In 2005, after years of work, we blocked an attempt to change the legislation. That change would have made software patents valid.

Today, there are attempts being made, such as the EPLA, to remove the national courts from patent governance. The people behind the EPLA want to replace the national courts with a centralised EU court whose judges will be selected and continually reviewed by the EPO.

Further information:

-- 
Ciarán O'Riordan,
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The BBC iPlayer DRM story: Sean Daly interviews Mark Taylor

Sean Daly has just posted an interview about the BBC's iPlayer DRM scandal:

The iPlayer is a piece of proprietary software developed by the BBC which only runs on Microsoft operating systems, thus excluding GNU/Linux users from watching this publicly-funded channel. Not only that, but it seems the iPlayer also has spyware and other malware.

The good news is that the public is complaining, and maybe their action will lead to this being fixed. Some BBC viewers might want to add their support - the forums for doing so are mentioned in the interview.

Mark mentions he'll be meeting with the BBC management on the 24th (tomorrow, I guess), so there could be more on this story very soon.

(Update: Speaking of the BBC and free software, RMS recently posted an essay: Computing “progress”: good and bad, which mentions the iPlayer's DRM, among other things. Thanks for the pointer from Yavor Doganov.)

-- 
Ciarán O'Riordan,
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