By Troy Wolverton, CNET News.com
Friday, March 10 2000 11:25 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,13026422,00.htm
Under fire for patenting some of Amazon.com's Web site features, chief executive Jeff Bezos called for patent reform in a letter posted Thursday on the company's Web site.
Bezos said the company would not stop the use or enforcement of its patents.
But he called for lawmakers and industry leaders to examine the issue of
software- and business-method patents and to work toward limiting the number
issued and their duration.
"I strongly doubt whether our giving up our patents would really provide
much of a stepping stone to solving the bigger problem," Bezos said in his
letter.
"But I do think we can help. As a company with some high-profile software
patents, we're in a credible position to call for meaningful (perhaps even
radical) patent reform," he added.
An Amazon representative confirmed Bezos' letter.
In recent months, Amazon has received patents on its 1-Click ordering
feature and its affiliates
program. The company sued Barnesandnoble.com in October, claiming that it had
illegally copied Amazon's 1-Click technology; Amazon has since won a
preliminary injunction against its chief rival.
Amazon's patents have raised the ire of Net advocates because the features
the patents would protect have been widely adopted by other companies. Many
advocates argue that the features are not only obvious, but Amazon's
enforcement of patents for them could harm Net commerce.
"I urge Amazon to give up on this patent," wrote Tim O'Reilly in a column on the
O'Reilly Web site. O'Reilly, who is president of Net book publisher O'Reilly
& Associates, continued: "I am confident that it will eventually be
overturned in any case. And in the meantime, Amazon will not only reap a
harvest of ill will, they will erode the soil of innovation on the Web.
"What's more, they are a fierce competitor who has already established a
dominant market position. They can win without resorting to cheap tricks."
Despite the criticism from Net advocates such as O'Reilly, Amazon can't
simply give up its patents, said Rich Gray, an attorney with Outside
General Counsel of Silicon Valley. Doing so would open up the company to
lawsuits from shareholders--and from other companies that might step in
and take over Amazon's patents, he said.
Gray applauded Bezos' call for patent reform, calling it a "legitimate
and appropriate response to the criticism they've been getting."
"Being a lawyer in Silicon Valley, this is one of the things I've been
on my horse about," Gray said. "This is a whole category of patents
that's going to create a lot of problems for a lot of people down the
road."
In his letter, Bezos called for software- and business-method patents to be
limited from the current 17 years to three to five years. He also called for
the limitation to be retroactive so that current patents would be
enforceable for only three to five years.
In addition to the time limit on patents, Bezos proposed a public comment
period before a patent is issued to allow Net users the chance to show
previous examples of the potential patent.
"If done right, we'll end up with a patent system that produces fewer
patents, fewer bad patents and even the good patents won't last longer than
is necessary to give the innovator a reasonable return," Bezos wrote.
Bezos said in his letter he had been influenced by "several hundred" letters
sent to Amazon about the issue and by O'Reilly's column.