Slashdot is reporting that Time Warner Cable has got plans to roll out a VoIP phone service. Which got me wondering whether if this becomes a steady trend for ISPs, it’ll go someway to reducing the debate about whether ISPs should have common-carrier status. Not that this would carry much weight with the technically-ignorant, of course…
Archive for December 2003
I’m not a huge fan of Andew Orlowski – while he comes up with a fair amount of interesting stuff in The Register, he’s also not above the occasional troll blog-wards. OK, the signal-to-noise ratio isn’t always brilliant, but the same goes for magazines.
But this got me thinking – if something is an open standard, at what point does it cease to be possible to slap a patent on the technology and shut down its adoption or use by punative licensing fees?
And more to the point, what’s to stop someone – e.g. Micro$oft – with infinitely deep pockets and a market share under threat from legislating its competition out of business? It wouldn’t exactly be out of character, after all. But if I can go back and patent something as blatently covered by prior art as applet plug-ins in browsers, what’s to stop the good guys doing the same thing, and turning the patent over to the public domain?
Update – someone’s thought of this…
Yet more timewasting fun – what Flash is for…
I had to read the article before the headline made sense…
…or maybe I’m just noticing it more. Anyway, why copyright may be obsolete…
(via Techdirt)
- an opinion from Kamil Idris, head of the World Intellectual Property Organisation:
“Piracy is like terrorism today and it exists everywhere and it is a very dangerous phenomenon.”
It’s never a good sign when the word ‘terrorism’ creeps into a debate like this – it smacks of an appeal to the knee-jerk reaction reflex rather than an attempt to win an argument on it’s merits. And even more worrying coming from someone in a position to affect the outcomes.
Copyright and licensing issues and the whole SCO versus Linux argument isn’t something that grabs me particularly, so a lot of the recent noise has passed me by. But then I came across this piece of dissembling crap from the CEO of SCO – a sample:
“Despite the raw emotions, however, the issue is clear: do you support copyrights and ownership of intellectual property as envisioned by our elected officials in Congress and the European Union, or do you support “free” – as in free from ownership – intellectual property envisioned by the Free Software Foundation, Red Hat and others? There really is no middle ground. It is no understatement to say that the future of the global economy is in the balance.”
To which I can only say ‘phooey’, or rather stronger words to that effect. If it wasn’t for open-source software, and the people who’ve put time and effort into it for (at times) uncertain reward, then we (as in current company) wouldn’t be in a position to do what I’m doing with the company – a) because it’s doubtful that the web would exist in its current form, and b) because we sure as hell wouldn’t be able to afford software written by the likes of SCO to power the site. Which means we wouldn’t have started the business in the first place, at a net loss to the economy (and us). The idea that there’s no middle ground between the rampant capitalism of SCO and Stallman-esque ‘property is theft’ positions is an intellectually backrupt position that reduces the debate to yelling “commies!” at anyone who doesn’t share their opinion. It’s not often that I rant out loud at something I read on a screen, but this one had me spluttering.
But fortunately, there’s more intelligent people than me taking an active interest, and this counterblast is one result. It would be great to think that the weight of the arguments will be what decides this issue, but I suspect that’s being niave.
…this got blogged from the train enroute to Leeds…
If it means he’s going there, I’m all for it…
Only this time, it’s created on the P800 via Remote P800 – sort of a VNC for the phone.
Which is of course in many ways completely pointless – here I am sat in front of a 1024×768 screen, and I’m typing this onto a P800. But then who ever said this computing game had to be logical?
