By
Ingrid Marson
Thursday, August 11 2005 10:59 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39248246,00.htm
Open Source Development Labs revealed plans on Tuesday for a project that
will aggregate information on patents that have been pledged to the open-source
community.
Stuart Cohen, OSDL's chief executive, said the project--which is still in the
planning stages--will make it easier for the open-source community to find and
use patents that have been donated. A number of companies, including Nokia, IBM
and Sun Microsystems have recently made open-source patent pledges.
"The OSDL patent commons project is designed to increase the utility and value of the growing number of patent pledges and promises in the past year by providing a central repository where intellectual property can be held for the benefit of all of us," said Cohen in a statement.
"Our goal is to make it easier for developers and industry to take advantage of
the good works of vendors, individuals and organizations who may wish to pledge
patents and intellectual property in support of the community."
The patent commons project will include a library and database containing
information on legal offerings that cover open source, including patent pledges
and indemnification programs. More details on the project will be made available
in the coming months, according to the OSDL.
Columbia Law School professor Eben Moglen, general counsel for the Free
Software Foundation and the founder of the Software Freedom Law Center, which
offers free legal advice to those in the open-source movement, praised the
initiative and called on the community to support the project.
"OSDL is the ideal steward for such an important legal initiative as the
patent commons project. No matter what your stand on software patents, and I
oppose them, I call on developers to contribute to the OSDL patent commons
project because there is strength in numbers and when individual contributions
are collected together it creates a protective haven where developers can
innovate without fear," Moglen said in a statement.
But digital-media specialist Florian Mueller, a vocal opponent of software
patents, said the initiative is unlikely to offer much protection to open-source
developers, as the main way to protect yourself against patent infringement lawsuits is by countersuing. Companies that have pledged free use of their patents to the open-source community have not said whether open source developers can use their patents to launch legal counterattacks.
"It will only be a true protective shield if they gather patents that they
can use to countersue the enemies of open source. The software patent game is
like the Cold War: The only thing that protects you is the concept of mutually
assured destruction. The patent pledges that IBM and Sun made added absolutely
nothing to the retaliatory potential of open source. Those were just PR plays,"
said Mueller in a statement.
Ingrid Marson of ZDNet UK reported from London.