|
|
Why Bill Gates Wants 3,000 New Patents
By RANDALL STROSS
Published: July 31, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/31/business/yourmoney/31digi.html?th&emc=th
(must register to view original article)
"EXCITING," "uninteresting" and "not exciting" don't seem like technical
terms. But they show up a lot in United States patent application No.
20,050,160,457, titled "Annotating Programs for Automatic Summary
Generation." It seems to be about baseball. The inventors have apparently
come up with software that can detect the portions of a baseball broadcast
that contain what they call "excited speech," as well as hits (what I call
"excited ball") and automatically compile those portions into a highlights
reel.
If the patent is granted, after a review process that is likely to take
three years, it will be assigned to the inventors' employer, Microsoft.
The staff of the United States Patent and Trademark Office has been deluged
with paperwork from Microsoft of late. It was one year ago that the
company's chairman, Bill Gates, announced plans to pick up the pace, raising
its goal of patent applications submitted annually to 3,000 from 2,000. The
company is right on target.
It must feel like a bit of a stretch to come up with 60 fresh, nonobvious
patentable ideas week in, week out. Perhaps that is why this summer's crop
includes titles like "System and Method for Creating a Note Related to a
Phone Call" and "Adding and Removing White Space From a Document."
I have not seen the software in use. But if I were in a position to make a
ruling, and even if I accepted the originality claim on its face, I would
process these swiftly: Rejected.
Microsoft's other pending applications - 3,368 at last count - should
receive the same treatment. And while tidying up, let's also toss out the
3,955 patents that Microsoft has already been issued.
Perhaps that is going too far. Certainly, we should go through the lot and
reinstate the occasional invention embodied in hardware. But patent
protection for software? No. Not for Microsoft, nor for anyone else.
Others share this conviction. "Abolishing software patents would be a very
good thing," says Daniel Ravicher, executive director of the Public Patent
Foundation, a nonprofit group in New York that challenges what it calls
"wrongly issued" patents. Mr. Ravicher, a patent lawyer himself, says he
believes that the current system actually impedes the advance of software
technology, at the same time that it works quite nicely to enrich patent
holders. That's not what the framers of the Constitution wanted, he said.
Earlier this month, the European Parliament rejected a measure, nicknamed
the "software patent directive," that would have uniformly removed
restrictions on those patents among European Union members.
All software published in the United States is protected by strong copyright
and trademark protection. Microsoft Excel, for example, cannot be copied,
nor can its association with Microsoft be removed. But a patent goes well
beyond this. It protects even the underlying concepts from being used by
others - for 20 years.
As recently as the 1970's, software developers relied solely upon copyrights
and trademarks to protect their work. This turned out rather well for
Microsoft. Had Dan Bricklin, the creator of VisiCalc, the spreadsheet that
gave people a reason to buy a personal computer, obtained a patent covering
the program in 1979, Microsoft would not have been able to bring out Excel
until 1999. Nor would Word or PowerPoint have appeared if the companies that
had brought out predecessors obtained patent protection for their programs.
Mr. Bricklin, who has started several software companies and defensively
acquired a few software patents along the way, says he, too, would cheer the
abolition of software patents, which he sees as the bane of small software
companies. "The number of patents you can run into with a small product is
immense," he said. As for Microsoft's aggressive accumulation in recent
years, he asked, "Isn't Microsoft the poster child of success without
software patents?"
So why didn't Mr. Bricklin file for a patent for VisiCalc in 1979? Patents
for software alone were not an option then. He consulted a patent attorney
who said that the application would have to present the software within a
machine and that the odds were long that the ploy would succeed. The courts
regarded software as merely a collection of mathematical algorithms, tiny
revelations of nature's secrets - not as an invention, and thus not
patentable.
The legal environment changed not because of new legislation, but by
accident. One important ruling here and another there, and without anyone
fully realizing it, a new intellectual-property reality had evolved by the
end of the 1980's. Now software could enjoy the extraordinary protection of
a patent, protection so powerful that Thomas Jefferson believed that it
should be granted in only a few select cases.
Making the best possible argument for Microsoft's newly acquired passion for
patents is a job that falls to Brad Smith, the company's senior vice
president and general counsel. Last week, we discussed the changing legal
landscape in the 1990's. Microsoft had not taken an interest in patents in
its early years because, as Mr. Smith said, "We thought we could rely on
copyright." The courts changed the rules, and Microsoft had to respond like
everyone else.
Why did Microsoft increase its patent-application target so sharply just
last year?
"We realized we were underpatenting," Mr. Smith explained. The company had
seen studies showing that other information technology companies filed about
two patents for every $1 million spent on research and development. If
Microsoft was spending $6 billion to $7.5 billion annually on its R&D, it
would need to file at least 3,000 applications to keep up with the Joneses.
That sounds perfectly innocuous. The really interesting comparisons, though,
are found not among software companies, but between software companies and
pharmaceutical companies. Pharma is lucky to land a single patent after
placing a multihundred-million-dollar bet and waiting patiently 10 years for
it to play out. Mark H. Webbink, the deputy general counsel of Red Hat, a
Linux and open-source distributor, said it was ridiculous for a software
company to grab identical protection for work entailing relatively minuscule
investment and trivial claims. He said of current software patents, "To give
20 years of protection does not help innovation."
If Congress passed legislation that strengthened and expanded copyright
protection to include design elements as well as software's source code,
formalizing the way the courts interpreted the law in the 1970's, we could
bring an end to software patents and this short, unhappy blip in our patent
system's time line.
Eliminating software patents would give Microsoft another chance to repair
its relationship with open-source users. Recently, the company has stooped
to what can only be labeled fear-mongering, telling its customers who may be
tempted to switch to open-source alternatives to think twice before leaving
Microsoft's protective awning.
Last year at a public briefing, Kevin R. Johnson, Microsoft's group vice
president for worldwide sales, spoke pointedly of "intellectual property
risk" that corporate customers should take into account when comparing
software vendors. On the one side, Microsoft has an overflowing war chest
and bulging patent portfolio, ready to fight - or cross-license with - any
plaintiff who accuses it of patent infringement. On the other are the
open-source developers, without war chest, without patents of their own to
use as bargaining chips and without the financial means to indemnify their
customers.
What would Jefferson think if he were around to visit Microsoft's campus,
seeing software patents stacked like pyramids of cannonballs?
|
|
|