- From: Jonathan Borden <jborden@mediaone.net>
- Date: Tue, 9 Oct 2001 18:12:58 -0400
- To: "Bullard, Claude L (Len)" <clbullar@ingr.com>, "Steven R. Newcomb" <srn@coolheads.com>
- Cc: <www-patentpolicy-comment@w3.org>, <xml-dev@lists.xml.org>
Bullard, Claude L (Len) wrote: > Let me try this in very plain language: > > -----Original Message----- > From: Jonathan Borden [mailto:jborden@mediaone.net] > > Bullard, Claude L (Len) wrote: > > >> Mine is the objectivist position with respect > >> to that politic. > > >I still have no idea what you are saying. Ahh the Ayn Rand reference, how apropos this discussion :-)) I haven't read that 'philosophy' since my college days, so you will forgive me if I was a bit slow on the uptake. > > You are gelding the W3C; for the non-doctors, > cutting off their nuts. With a RAND policy, > the patent owner has to publicly refuse to > offer reasonable and non-discrimanatory terms. Hah! My question is whether the W3C has anything possible to geld. If so, it ought stick to its public mission statement. > With only RF, they simply refuse and will not > be publicly held up in a bad light as they are > the IP owner. With RAND, you have a chance > to get reasonable and non-discrimanatory terms > in those cases in which use of the IP is > highly desirable. Without it, you are completely > and wholely subject to the owner's good will. > You have in effect, given the WWW to the BigCos. Look, anyone with real IP worthy of a real patent probably wouldn't waste their time sitting in W3C working groups. If you had really invented a better mousetrap, why waste one's time trying to specify the mouse? The point about internet specifications and WGs is that the _vast_ majority of so-called IP is really minor modifications to what has already been done, specifications for little connectors that connect different pieces of technology. Take an XPointer: an XPointer itself does _nothing_, rather it is used by a program in order to do _something_. We ought spend our effort on writing and perfecting and perhaps patenting/copyrighting such programs, not preventing others from creating and using XPointers by whatever means they choose. I am _not_ calling to mandate that every program written to implement a W3C specification be open source, rather that if the W3C is standardizing the _language_ with which we choose to speak to eachother, that the _language_ be freely usable. W3C recommendations are most often _languages_ that specify means of communication between programs/agents etc. Ever see two Chinese native speaking people conversing to eachother in broken English? I have on many occasions -- its because each speaks English as their _second_ language instead of the particular Chinese dialect of the other. As I've said before, if France were to charge one penny evertime anyone were to speak a French word, then even fewer people would speak French than do today. Same for English. English is hardly the best designed language, yet it has become the de facto standard language of business because it has widespread usage. The value of Internet/WWW protocols are not that they are necessarily the _best_ in a technical sense, rather that they are used in a widespread fashion. I don't want to see an Internet where people are taxed for speaking, nor do I want to see an Internet where we have 1000 dialects and speach is incomprehensible. Go make your business case. Jonathan
Received on Tuesday, 9 October 2001 18:12:42 UTC