- From: John McDermott <jjm@jkintl.com>
- Date: Tue, 02 Oct 2001 15:28:50 -0600
- To: www-patentpolicy-comment@w3.org
I run a small business. Resonable costs for me are much lower than those for, say, Microsoft. I base my business on Open Source and open standards -- it is the only way I can compete. What if a company comes to W3c and says "I have a great technology for the web. It will revolutionize everything. Anyone can use it if they pay us the reasonable fee of USD5000/server." It might be a boon to those who have IT budgets of millions, but the many small businesses would be left out in the cold. Free and open standards have been the foundation of web services. There are expensive products and there are free products. People should be allowed to charge for software, if they wish. Developers should be allowed to give it away, too, without having to pay to use standardized protocols. Yes, free software is competition to large businesses. Surely they want to eliminate free software and their small competitors, but they should compete on quality of product and features of that product; not by convincing standards bodies to make all users pay them to use a protocol. We have already seen legislation in the US make it harder to compete with free software: we do not need this on the *World Wide* Web. The web should remain as free a market as possible. It seems to me that RAND is a way for large companies to dominate the web at the expense of small business. Open standards help equalize the playing field. --john -- John McDermott, Writer and Consultant J-K International, Ltd. jjm@jkintl.com
Received on Tuesday, 2 October 2001 18:24:13 UTC