- From: Alexandre Oliva <aoliva@redhat.com>
- Date: 30 Sep 2001 17:02:32 -0300
- To: www-patentpolicy-comment@w3.org, comment@openphd.net
It appears to me that a RAND license could require fees not only from companies that introduce a technology into say their web browser, but also from every user of such browser. The situation is already bad enough with the number of web developers that only care about MSIE. Should MS's big pockets be able to license a standard that becomes relevant in the web picture while open-source browsers, developed by groups of volunteers, are left out of the picture, this would only get worse. Now, what if the patent holder decides to demand a fee from every user of the browser that contains the feature covered by the patent? GNU GPL-licensed browsers just couldn't implement the feature, because the patent would turn the software non-distributable because of the conflict between the GNU GPL and the limitations imposed by the patent. And what about proprietary browsers? Even if the user were willing to give up that feature, s/he could have no way to disable it in a proprietary browser (and would the patent holder care if there were?), so the user would be forced to pay the licensing fees even if the browser itself were totally free of charge. But could it be made available for free download, like most browsers these days? Hmm... Perhaps letting patented technology into the W3 standards is not such a bad idea, after all? :-D Go, Mozilla, Go! -- Alexandre Oliva Enjoy Guarana', see http://www.ic.unicamp.br/~oliva/ Red Hat GCC Developer aoliva@{cygnus.com, redhat.com} CS PhD student at IC-Unicamp oliva@{lsd.ic.unicamp.br, gnu.org} Free Software Evangelist *Please* write to mailing lists, not to me
Received on Sunday, 30 September 2001 16:02:43 UTC