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Re: Strawmen and Urban Legends
From: |
Alexander Terekhov |
Subject: |
Re: Strawmen and Urban Legends |
Date: |
Mon, 18 Dec 2006 10:02:16 +0100 |
Ciaran O'Riordan wrote:
>
> An informative read is "The Dangers of Software Patents":
> http://www.ifso.ie/documents/rms-2004-05-24.html
"The advocates of software idea patents ask you to take for granted
that no matter what harm or trouble or nuisance these patents may
cause, they must be promoting progress and surely that justifies
whatever, whatever trouble they may impose on you. But this is not
so. You can look at the economic modelling to show it's not so.
In www.researchoninnovation.org/patents.pdf, I warn you, it's rather
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
mathematical, but it shows how, in a field with incremental innovation,
a patent system can retard progress. The assumption that they want us
to take for granted is false."
Now,
http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/indprop/docs/comp/replies/eicta_en.pdf
-------
We trust that the Commission fully understands that, despite statements
to the contrary in some quarters, there is no consensus among economists
that patents inhibit innovation in the software sector. The study most
often cited by proponents of this argument (Sequential Innovation,
Patents and Imitation; J. Bessen/E. Maskin, 1997/1999) is inconclusive
at best and flawed in many respects. It relies largely on data from the
1970s and 1980s. In this dynamic and rapidly changing industry, public
policy for the 21st century should not be based on inconclusive results
drawn from data from an earlier era of information and communications
technologies.
The authors claim that standard arguments would predict that R&D
intensity and productivity should have increased among patenting firms
during the period studied and that this increase did not occur,
consistent with their model, for several samples of software-related
industries and firms after 1986. They conclude that this is an effect of
an extension of patent protection to many software ideas by a series of
court decisions in the early 1980s, although there is no causal link
demonstrated in thepaper.
Moreover, R&D intensity is defined in the paper as R&D spending
relative to sales (page 18, para 3). As one can easily understand,
the proposition that R&D intensity should increase among patenting firms
may be valid for one firm or a sample of firms only within narrow
limits. At some stage, a steady state of R&D spending relative to sales
will necessarily be reached.
A constant increase of R&D spending relative to sales would result in
losses and finally in bankruptcy of one firm or of all firms in a sample
when the R&D intensity continues to rise, finally eating up any
profits.
Responsible management, therefore, must ensure that the R&D intensity
is kept relatively constant after a starting phase. To increase profits
the management should further tend to increase the R&D efficiency, that
is the R&D output relative to R&D spending, with the aim to decrease
R&D intensity. This principle applies whether there are patents or not.
Therefore, the effects shown in Figures 5 to 8 of the Bessen/Maskin
study seem to be explainable by the activities of responsible management
in firms regardless of the existence of patents for software related
inventions.
-------
Care to comment, GNUtian ciaran?
BTW, are you working/lobbying for free at Brussel?
Are you an unpaid volunteer?
regards,
alexander.
--
"Don't Buy Harry Potter Books"
-- http://www.stallman.org
- Strawmen and Urban Legends, rjack, 2006/12/17
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- Re: Strawmen and Urban Legends,
Alexander Terekhov <=
- Re: Strawmen and Urban Legends, Alexander Terekhov, 2006/12/18
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- Re: Strawmen and Urban Legends, Rui Miguel Silva Seabra, 2006/12/28
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- Re: Strawmen and Urban Legends, Alexander Terekhov, 2006/12/29