Time Out Bengaluru - Software Patenting
An article by Akhila Seetharaman published as a precursor to the national public meeting on software patents held on 4th in Bangalore.
Original article on Time Out Bengaluru website
In August this year, the US Patents and Trademarks Office granted
Microsoft ownership of “page up” and “page down”. So in theory, no
other company can scroll without permission and acknowledgement to
Microsoft in monetary terms.
A number of seemingly ubiquitous
software ideas have been patented: the use of tabs to shift from one
hyperlink to another on a web page, the “Add to Shopping Cart” function
that appears on every online store, automated online loan requests, and
even reducing image size to make a webpage load faster.
“Most
companies register defensive patents to protect themselves, not
offensive ones,” said Sunil Abraham of Centre for Internet and Society.
“Not many actively pursue patent infringement, but it is still very
scary for a small-time entrepreneur.”
At a time when the Indian
Patent Office is in the process of putting together a new Manual of
Patent Practice and Procedure, the Centre for Internet and Society is
holding a one-day consultation on the issue of software patenting in
the city. Participants include the Delhi Science Forum, RedHat, IT for
Change, Open Space, as well as the Alternative Law Forum.
From
mobile phone technology to pacemakers in healthcare, everybody is
dependent on software. “Each software patent is a 17-year monopoly on
an idea,” said Anivar Aravind of the Free Software User Group Bangalore.
“If
formulaic Hindi films were protected by patent laws, we would be able
to make only one film,” joked Abraham. The system of software patenting
wipes out smaller businesses and innovation, he said. “Software, like
poetry and literary works, is already protected by copyright. After
all, Bill Gates made his fortunes from copyright and not patents. But
many software companies are trying to get additional protection.”
Copyright
and patents are both part of intellectual property rights, but
copyright restricts the expression of an idea while patents restrict
the idea itself, according to Abraham. Under a patenting regime, even
before a kid writes one line of code he has to read many patents.”
Kiran
Patil of Turtle Linux Lab agreed. “If every little thing is patented,
there’s nothing a developer can do.” He cited Richard Stallman, founder
of the Free Software Movement and the GNU (a recursive acronym for
GNU’s Not Unix) Project, who likened patents to explosive devices:
“Software patents are the software project’s equivalent of land mines:
each design-decision carries a risk of stepping on a patent, which can
destroy your project.”
Worst of all, the world sees those with patents as the innovators, said Patil, which, according to him, is a big misconception.
While
corporate giants like Microsoft and IBM fix exchange deals through
cross-licensing, smaller companies get left out of the loop entirely.
Despite not having many patents of their own, several Indian software
companies support software patenting because they have huge contracts
with the large software companies in the United States and Europe who
do.
The Indian Patent Act of 1970 did not allow for software
patents until 2002 when an amendment, which ironically excluded
“computer programmes per se” from the scope of patenting, was
introduced.
The amendment implied that while computer
programmes themselves were not eligible for patents, programmes used in
combination with hardware were. The Act was further amended through an
ordinance in 2005 to narrow the scope of software excluded, but the
ordinance was rejected by the Indian
Parliament and the Act
effectively reverted to what it was after the 2002 amendment. “The law
has left it somewhat ambiguous,” said Abraham. “Nobody is sure what can
or cannot be patented. Many people are using the clause “computer
programmes per se” to get pure software patents.”
This occurs
either due to incompetence among patent officers or by accident, he
said. “While many of the patent officers have expertise in the area of
industrial inventions or medical inventions, very few know enough about
software patents at the moment.”
-- Akhila Seetharaman

