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From: | RJack |
Subject: | Re: The GPL and Patents: ROFL |
Date: | Wed, 08 Dec 2010 15:59:46 -0000 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.8) Gecko/20100802 Thunderbird/3.1.2 |
On 8/16/2010 10:53 AM, Hyman Rosen wrote:
On 8/13/2010 5:59 PM, RJack wrote:What say ye nowThat what you quote supports what I said, not what you said. A work is not copyrightable when it represents the only way to do something, because then its creation lacks creativity. Whether the work is subject to patent claims is relevant only to the extent that the patented process is so precise that any work embodying it would be written in the same way. It is not the patent that prevents copyright from applying, it is the precision of the description. The same might apply if a computer program implemented a precisely-described but not patented algorithm published in a journal.
As I just quoted: "For computer programs, “if the patentable process is embodied inextricably in the line-by-line instructions of the computer program, [ ] then the process merges with the expression and precludes copyright protection.” Atari I, 975 F.2d at 839–40;" If the *patent*process you wish to indemnify through the GPL license is implemented in the code you claim is covered by the GPL *copyright* license then copyright protection is precluded in that specific line-by-line embodiment. You can't have it both ways. Sincerely, RJack :)
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