- From: Alice Corbin <ali@axian.com>
- Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2001 18:53:31 -0700
- To: www-patentpolicy-comment@w3.org
In the past, the W3C has greatly helped communication over the internet by producing standards that everyone could use. Browser developers might experiment with extensions, but they had to provide code to render all of the tags in the standard, or people wouldn't use them. And web developers, by adhering to the standard, were assured that their pages could be read by any browser. But that's about to change. Once patented protocols are incorporated into the standard, the web will begin to fragment. Web sites that use patented protocols will no longer be readable by those browsers whose licenses prohibit the inclusion of patented code. This will have the same effect as web sites that use IE or Netscape extensions and cannot be read by any other browsers, with the remarkable thing being, that these new browser-specific "extensions" were blessed by the W3C. -- ---- _____ _ Ali Corbin /, |_ __(_) ___ _ __ Axian, Inc. //| |\\/ /| |/ _ \| '_ \ Phone: (503)644-6106 #205 _____//_| | / / | | |_| | | | | e-mail: ali@axian.com (( // |_|/_/\\|_|\_/|_|_| |_| http://www.axian.com/ ``-'' ``-''
Received on Sunday, 7 October 2001 21:53:39 UTC