Rich Freeman via plug on 9 Oct 2023 15:30:09 -0700 |
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Re: [PLUG] Places to learn Linux and C around Philadelphia? |
On Mon, Oct 9, 2023 at 6:04 PM Lynn Bradshaw <readyready15728@gmail.com> wrote: > > "Algorithms are just theorems and therefore can't be patented"; it's actually been mentioned in legal cases before: > I didn't say that algorithms couldn't be patented. I said that they couldn't be copyrighted. Going to the articles you linked: As far as differentiation between ideas that are invented vs discovered, I think that is a rather dubious distinction. It seems equivalent to trying to hold to both Platonic realism and nominalism at the same time. Literally everything that exists can be reduced to combinations of fundamental laws of nature. You can argue that the laws of physics always existed and we're just figuring out what they are. Or you can argue that the expression of the law was an act that required creativity. Trying to say that addition and integration are discovered and the FFT was invented will inevitably lead to having to try to draw some kind of arbitrary line based on complexity. I think that it makes far more sense to just say that most practical math can't be patented simply due to it already having prior art. Certainly a ton of patents exist around things like 5G modulations and such, and that's just math. Video codecs are routinely patented, and they're just math as well. All that said, judges generally aren't great scientific philosophers (most scientific philosophers probably aren't great ones either), so it doesn't surprise me at all that they try to make distinctions like these. We've seen courts decide that APIs can be copyrighted, for example. Programmers make arguments that I think are equally dubious, like the idea that dynamically linking to a library creates a derivative work of that library (the whole GPL vs LGPL distinction). Dynamic linking is nothing more than the insertion of cross-references, so this seems equivalent to arguing that embedding a hyperlink in a document makes it subject to the copyright of whatever it is linked to. Or if I reference page 5 of some book I might need to pay royalties to the author for simply making mention of it. In the end I think courts end up being guided more by the consequences of their rulings, trying to come up with rationales that seem to lead to the most desirable result. If an interpretation leads to people who commercialize an idea having to share some of their profits, and people who maintain libraries not having to pay huge fees, then arguments get stretched however they need to be in order to make that the final policy. Consistency of interpretation across different scenarios isn't as important as consistency within a single scenario. -- Rich ___________________________________________________________________________ Philadelphia Linux Users Group -- http://www.phillylinux.org Announcements - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-announce General Discussion -- http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug