Difference between revisions of "Patent Absurdity/Italiano (Italian)"
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Il risultato della causa avrà profonde | Il risultato della causa avrà profonde | ||
− | ricadute | + | ricadute per il software |
15 | 15 | ||
00:01:17,020 --> 00:01:22,190 | 00:01:17,020 --> 00:01:22,190 | ||
− | - | + | - Il caso Bilski stesso à così: qualcuno ha chiesto un brevetto su un metodo o software per il commercio,- |
− | |||
16 | 16 | ||
00:01:22,440 --> 00:01:27,396 | 00:01:22,440 --> 00:01:27,396 | ||
− | - | + | - e l'ufficio brevetti l'ha rifiutato. E adesso questa persona sta facendo causa all'ufficio brevetti, dicendo - |
− | |||
17 | 17 | ||
00:01:27,396 --> 00:01:30,390 | 00:01:27,396 --> 00:01:30,390 | ||
− | -" | + | -"Mi dovete concedere questo brevetto." |
18 | 18 | ||
00:01:30,640 --> 00:01:34,140 | 00:01:30,640 --> 00:01:34,140 | ||
− | + | Questa causa riguarda cosa si intende con procedimento brevettabile. | |
− | |||
19 | 19 | ||
00:01:34,390 --> 00:01:38,913 | 00:01:34,390 --> 00:01:38,913 | ||
− | + | Quindi, visto che i brevetti sui software rientrano nella categoria dei procedimenti, poiché non sono - | |
− | |||
20 | 20 | ||
00:01:39,163 --> 00:01:43,166 | 00:01:39,163 --> 00:01:43,166 | ||
− | - | + | - la macchina, né una composizione di materie, che sono alcune tra le altre categorie |
− | |||
21 | 21 | ||
00:01:43,413 --> 00:01:47,357 | 00:01:43,413 --> 00:01:47,357 | ||
− | - | + | di cose brevettabili - questa causa definirà cosa significa l'essere un procedimento brevettabile. |
− | |||
22 | 22 | ||
00:01:52,257 --> 00:01:54,276 | 00:01:52,257 --> 00:01:54,276 | ||
− | <i>- | + | <i>- E cosa ne è del giudice Roberts? Egli ha detto,</i> |
23 | 23 | ||
00:01:54,468 --> 00:01:57,452 | 00:01:54,468 --> 00:01:57,452 | ||
− | <i> | + | <i>"In fondo il vostro brevetto implica che alcune persone prendano il telefono e chiamino altra gente."</i> |
− | |||
24 | 24 | ||
00:01:57,770 --> 00:02:03,065 | 00:01:57,770 --> 00:02:03,065 | ||
− | - | + | - La cosa si potrebbe riassumere così,quanto a certi atti che vengono compiuti. Ma si tratta di molto di più. |
− | |||
25 | 25 | ||
00:02:03,365 --> 00:02:08,438 | 00:02:03,365 --> 00:02:08,438 | ||
− | + | Si tratta di vendere un bene a un prezzo fisso a una persona, e venderla ad un'altra | |
− | |||
26 | 26 | ||
00:02:08,738 --> 00:02:12,706 | 00:02:08,738 --> 00:02:12,706 | ||
− | + | a un prezzo fisso diverso, identificando la posizione anti-rischio. | |
− | |||
27 | 27 | ||
00:02:12,956 --> 00:02:18,668 | 00:02:12,956 --> 00:02:18,668 | ||
− | + | La quarta rivendicazione del brevetto - abbiamo cose chiamate rivendicazioni (claims) che descrivono la natura dell'invenzione - | |
− | |||
28 | 28 | ||
00:02:18,668 --> 00:02:25,318 | 00:02:18,668 --> 00:02:25,318 | ||
− | - | + | -comprende una lunga formula matematica che non esisteva nella natura o in nessuna parte della letteratura, |
− | |||
29 | 29 | ||
00:02:25,502 --> 00:02:28,110 | 00:02:25,502 --> 00:02:28,110 | ||
− | + | e che queste persone molto ingegnose hanno inventato. | |
30 | 30 | ||
00:02:28,352 --> 00:02:32,052 | 00:02:28,352 --> 00:02:32,052 | ||
− | <i>- | + | <i>- Un tempo la matematica non era brevettabile, ma oggi possiamo avere qualcuno -</i> |
− | |||
31 | 31 | ||
00:02:32,302 --> 00:02:37,812 | 00:02:32,302 --> 00:02:37,812 | ||
− | - | + | - come Bilski che spunta fuori e dice "Sapete, io ho lavorato tanto su questa equazione matematica-" |
− | |||
32 | 32 | ||
00:02:38,012 --> 00:02:41,564 | 00:02:38,012 --> 00:02:41,564 | ||
− | "- | + | "- e quindi dovrei ottenere un brevetto su questo metodo per elaborare l'informazione." |
− | |||
33 | 33 | ||
00:02:41,814 --> 00:02:45,249 | 00:02:41,814 --> 00:02:45,249 | ||
− | <i>- | + | <i>- Nella sua rivendicazione, lei dice che dentro, c'è un calcolo molto lungo.</i> |
− | |||
34 | 34 | ||
00:02:45,464 --> 00:02:50,710 | 00:02:45,464 --> 00:02:50,710 | ||
− | <i> | + | <i>Lei pensa che un calcolo robusto o un buon uso della matematica siano una base per un brevetto?</i> |
− | |||
35 | 35 |
Revision as of 16:51, 24 April 2010
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1 00:00:08,776 --> 00:00:14,314 Queste persone si sono riunite per assistere alla discussione della prima causa di brevetto su software portata dinanzi alla Suprema Corte in quasi 30 anni
2 00:00:14,564 --> 00:00:16,990 - Potete presentarvi e scandire i vostri nomi?
3 00:00:17,882 --> 00:00:21,729 - Certo, uh, uh, Bernie Bilski. B - I - L - S - K - I
4 00:00:24,180 --> 00:00:30,302 - Rand - R - A - N - D, Warsaw - W-A-R-S-A-W
5 00:00:30,552 --> 00:00:33,268 - Potete dirci in breve cosa avete inventato?
6 00:00:33,318 --> 00:00:39,498 - L'invenzione è una fattura dell'energia garantita, che è come un bilancio senza aggiustamenti,-
7 00:00:39,748 --> 00:00:46,768 - ed è un metodo per tutelare entrambe le parti di una transazione. Così, anziché dare ai consumatori,-
8 00:00:47,018 --> 00:00:50,518 -consumatori di energia, una fattura energetica garantita. Ci sono un sacco di meccanismi.
9 00:00:50,768 --> 00:00:54,468 E questi coinvolgono transazioni finanziarie tra consumatori d'energia,
10 00:00:54,718 --> 00:00:58,218 o clienti, e fornitori di energia.
11 00:00:58,468 --> 00:01:03,830 QUEST'UOMO SPERA DI ACQUISIRE UN BREVETTO SU UN METODO FINANZIARIO PER LA TUTELA DEL RISCHIO
12 00:01:04,066 --> 00:01:08,994 E questa è l'invenzione in breve. E' un metodo per generare fatture garantite-
13 00:01:09,244 --> 00:01:12,744 -per i clienti e, anche, per proteggere i guadagni delle aziende di energia.
14 00:01:12,994 --> 00:01:16,743 Il risultato della causa avrà profonde ricadute per il software
15 00:01:17,020 --> 00:01:22,190 - Il caso Bilski stesso à così: qualcuno ha chiesto un brevetto su un metodo o software per il commercio,-
16 00:01:22,440 --> 00:01:27,396 - e l'ufficio brevetti l'ha rifiutato. E adesso questa persona sta facendo causa all'ufficio brevetti, dicendo -
17 00:01:27,396 --> 00:01:30,390 -"Mi dovete concedere questo brevetto."
18 00:01:30,640 --> 00:01:34,140 Questa causa riguarda cosa si intende con procedimento brevettabile.
19 00:01:34,390 --> 00:01:38,913 Quindi, visto che i brevetti sui software rientrano nella categoria dei procedimenti, poiché non sono -
20 00:01:39,163 --> 00:01:43,166 - la macchina, né una composizione di materie, che sono alcune tra le altre categorie
21 00:01:43,413 --> 00:01:47,357 di cose brevettabili - questa causa definirà cosa significa l'essere un procedimento brevettabile.
22 00:01:52,257 --> 00:01:54,276 - E cosa ne è del giudice Roberts? Egli ha detto,
23 00:01:54,468 --> 00:01:57,452 "In fondo il vostro brevetto implica che alcune persone prendano il telefono e chiamino altra gente."
24 00:01:57,770 --> 00:02:03,065 - La cosa si potrebbe riassumere così,quanto a certi atti che vengono compiuti. Ma si tratta di molto di più.
25 00:02:03,365 --> 00:02:08,438 Si tratta di vendere un bene a un prezzo fisso a una persona, e venderla ad un'altra
26 00:02:08,738 --> 00:02:12,706 a un prezzo fisso diverso, identificando la posizione anti-rischio.
27 00:02:12,956 --> 00:02:18,668 La quarta rivendicazione del brevetto - abbiamo cose chiamate rivendicazioni (claims) che descrivono la natura dell'invenzione -
28 00:02:18,668 --> 00:02:25,318 -comprende una lunga formula matematica che non esisteva nella natura o in nessuna parte della letteratura,
29 00:02:25,502 --> 00:02:28,110 e che queste persone molto ingegnose hanno inventato.
30 00:02:28,352 --> 00:02:32,052 - Un tempo la matematica non era brevettabile, ma oggi possiamo avere qualcuno -
31 00:02:32,302 --> 00:02:37,812 - come Bilski che spunta fuori e dice "Sapete, io ho lavorato tanto su questa equazione matematica-"
32 00:02:38,012 --> 00:02:41,564 "- e quindi dovrei ottenere un brevetto su questo metodo per elaborare l'informazione."
33 00:02:41,814 --> 00:02:45,249 - Nella sua rivendicazione, lei dice che dentro, c'è un calcolo molto lungo.
34 00:02:45,464 --> 00:02:50,710 Lei pensa che un calcolo robusto o un buon uso della matematica siano una base per un brevetto?
35 00:02:50,910 --> 00:02:51,714 - It can be.
36 00:02:51,964 --> 00:02:57,710 - The basic process of writing software is that you take a broad algorithm of some sort, you know, -
37 00:02:57,960 --> 00:03:01,760 -some means of doing something with abstract data, and then you apply variable names.
38 00:03:02,010 --> 00:03:05,910 - So for our first derivation let's start with a simple matrix, a matrix of values.
39 00:03:06,160 --> 00:03:11,830 And we'll find the mean of each column, mu one, mu two, mu three.
40 00:03:12,030 --> 00:03:21,184 And we're gonna define Y to be X minus mu for each column.
41 00:03:21,434 --> 00:03:29,468 Now if we have some other factor, X, we can take X dot S and find the projection of X onto this space.
42 00:03:29,718 --> 00:03:31,950 This is called the singular value decomposition (SVD).
43 00:03:32,200 --> 00:03:41,609 Now, here's the trick. Here's the great part. Let's say that this first row, X1, equals sexuality.
44 00:03:41,859 --> 00:03:45,359 Let's say X2 equals "Do you own cats?"
45 00:03:47,126 --> 00:03:51,836 And X3 equals, I dunno, affection.
46 00:03:55,022 --> 00:04:05,502 Ok, so, now we'll also say that, let's take a factor J1 equals Jane's responses on this survey.
47 00:04:05,752 --> 00:04:10,086 Let's say J2 equals Joe's responses.
48 00:04:10,336 --> 00:04:21,308 Now let's do the same projections as we did before. We're gonna take J1 dot S subtract J2 dot S.
49 00:04:21,558 --> 00:04:27,062 We're gonna find the distance between these two points, and we're gonna call that compatibility.
50 00:04:28,414 --> 00:04:35,901 And in that simple step, we've derived patent number 6 735 568.
51 00:04:37,750 --> 00:04:44,286 The trick of our derivation was that before with the SVD, we had abstract numbers.
52 00:04:44,536 --> 00:04:49,974 What the guys at eHarmony did to get this patent, was to assign names to our variables.
53 00:04:50,224 --> 00:04:55,870 So instead of an abstract X1 we have sexuality, instead of X2 we have a preference for cats.
54 00:04:56,120 --> 00:04:59,948 And by making those assignments, by setting variable names in this matter, -
55 00:05:00,198 --> 00:05:05,390 -they were able to take an abstract concept and turn it into a patentable device.
56 00:05:06,440 --> 00:05:13,569 - What we want to do according to the heads of our patent institutions, is take mathematics and
57 00:05:13,819 --> 00:05:18,246 slice it up into as many slices as possible, and hand those slices out. And, say, if you do a
58 00:05:18,496 --> 00:05:26,238 principle component analysis, if you multiply matrices for dating sites, we'll give that to eHarmony.
59 00:05:26,488 --> 00:05:31,532 If it's for equities we'll give that to State Street. And so on and so forth.
60 00:05:31,782 --> 00:05:39,718 And what we're giving out is basically exclusive rights to use mathematics, -
61 00:05:40,083 --> 00:05:44,883 -to use a law of nature, in whatever context. And what we get in return is basically nothing.
62 00:05:45,733 --> 00:05:52,121 - The patents is a government grant, in the US it arises out of the constitution.
63 00:05:52,471 --> 00:05:58,721 - The Framers included the provision for granting exclusive rights to inventors in our constitution,
64 00:05:58,971 --> 00:06:06,093 and the belief was that that was important in order to reward people who had made technological -
65 00:06:06,243 --> 00:06:09,343 - advances that would benefit society.
66 00:06:13,272 --> 00:06:18,156 - The rights that they are granted are not the rights to do the things that they invent, -
67 00:06:18,406 --> 00:06:21,409 -but the right to exclude others from doing that thing.
68 00:06:21,659 --> 00:06:28,345 - So the idea was you have a machine or a thing, which is not previously described in any literature, -
69 00:06:28,595 --> 00:06:34,449 -and which no skilled mechanic could figure out how to make given what is described in literature, -
70 00:06:34,699 --> 00:06:36,457 -and for that you get a patent.
71 00:06:36,707 --> 00:06:42,550 - The basis for determining what is patentable subject matter has continued to evolve -
72 00:06:42,800 --> 00:06:46,300 - over the last 200 years of our national existence.
73 00:06:46,550 --> 00:06:54,588 - In 1953 the Patent Act was modified by Congress, to add the words "or processes" to the word -
74 00:06:54,838 --> 00:06:57,697 - "product" in describing what could be patented.
75 00:07:04,760 --> 00:07:10,833 The Congress which did that was plainly thinking of processes of industrial manufacture. Processes -
76 00:07:11,083 --> 00:07:19,481 - that produced something at the other end. Float glass on molten tin, and it'll become flat, or whatever.
77 00:07:19,731 --> 00:07:25,065 - And it's unlikely that anybody thought of process at that time in terms of computer software, -
78 00:07:25,315 --> 00:07:33,748 -because we didn't have applications on computer software for many years after that last revision -
79 00:07:33,998 --> 00:07:36,998 - of the Patent Act.
80 00:07:46,267 --> 00:07:52,282 - Back in the late 70s the patent law was interpreted such that you couldn't patent software. It was -
81 00:07:52,532 --> 00:07:55,449 - considered a mathematical algorithm, a law of nature.
82 00:08:01,821 --> 00:08:09,430 The legal world changed. The environment was quite different starting with some decisions by-
83 00:08:09,649 --> 00:08:11,254 - the Supreme Court, like Diamond v. Diehr.
84 00:08:11,504 --> 00:08:17,905 - The patent applicant was coming in with a new process for curing rubber. The temperature, and-
85 00:08:18,155 --> 00:08:23,873 - the preciseness of the temperature is essentials in curing rubber well. And the innovation -
86 00:08:24,123 --> 00:08:30,753 -that was being patented in this case was an algorithm to monitor a thermometer -
87 00:08:31,003 --> 00:08:37,038 - that was basically in the process and determined when the rubber needs to be released and cooled.
88 00:08:37,288 --> 00:08:42,505 - And they said "Processes for curing rubber are patentable, there's nothing new about that, -"
89 00:08:42,755 --> 00:08:47,526 "- the fact that they use a computer in implementing it shouldn't change anything."
90 00:08:55,602 --> 00:09:00,070 - The Supreme Court makes it clear that you can't patent software, because it's only a set of -
91 00:09:00,320 --> 00:09:09,300 - instructions, or an algorithm. Abstract laws of nature, algorithms, are unpatentable in the US itself.
92 00:09:09,550 --> 00:09:17,209 However, then there was the creation of the Court of Appeals of the Federal Circuit.
93 00:09:17,459 --> 00:09:24,657 - The problem being solved, in some sense, begins with the fact that trial court judges always -
94 00:09:24,907 --> 00:09:27,180 - hate patent cases.
95 00:09:27,430 --> 00:09:35,310 And the reason they hate patent cases is, for a single trial judge, a lawyer who has spent his/her life-
96 00:09:35,560 --> 00:09:43,914 -doing litigation, a patent case in which she/he is going to be required to find detailed facts about how paint is-
97 00:09:44,164 --> 00:09:52,713 -made or how computers work or how radio broadcast- ing operates, is an opportunity just to made into a fool.
98 00:10:00,133 --> 00:10:05,369 - Congress is attempting to change the system in which patent cases are litigated.
99 00:10:05,619 --> 00:10:11,934 But instead of changing who tried patent cases, Congress left a non-specialist district judge-
100 00:10:12,184 --> 00:10:17,326 -in charge of the trial. And then created a new court of appeals called the Federal Circuit,-
101 00:10:17,576 --> 00:10:22,081 -who's job it was to hear all appeals from patent cases.
102 00:10:22,331 --> 00:10:25,313 Rapidly, of course, this court filled up with patent lawyers.
103 00:10:25,563 --> 00:10:32,622 And the patent lawyers then made the law in the court of appeals that applied to all those district judges-
104 00:10:32,872 --> 00:10:37,556 -who were still making non-specialist decisions of which they were afraid.
105 00:10:37,806 --> 00:10:42,721 Naturally the Federal Circuit turned out to be a place which loved patents.
106 00:10:42,971 --> 00:10:49,537 And it's chief judge, Giles Rich, who lived to be very very old and died in his late 90s,-
107 00:10:49,787 --> 00:10:53,068 -was a man who particularly loved patents on everything.
108 00:10:53,318 --> 00:11:00,273 The Federal Circuit court under Giles Rich sort of broke Diamond against Diehr lose from it's original meaning,-
109 00:11:00,523 --> 00:11:05,068 -and came to the conclusion that software itself could be patented.
110 00:11:05,318 --> 00:11:09,609 - The Supreme Court basically left everything to this court to decide.
111 00:11:09,859 --> 00:11:16,473 - The PTO actually used to reject patents on software, like in the early 1990s, and they did not allowed them.
112 00:11:16,723 --> 00:11:20,223 And the applicants would appeal those rejections to the Federal Circuit.
113 00:11:43,280 --> 00:11:46,798 - In the world of machines you show the Patent Office the machine,-
114 00:11:47,048 --> 00:11:51,697 -and you've got a Patent Office who's claims were "I claim this machine."
115 00:11:52,946 --> 00:11:56,636 In the world of computer software there was no way of defining what the unit was.
116 00:11:56,886 --> 00:12:03,777 I don't claim a program, I claim a technique that any number of programs doing any number of things could-
117 00:12:04,027 --> 00:12:11,492 -possibly use. The consequence of which is very rapidly we began to build up as real estate that somebody-
118 00:12:11,742 --> 00:12:19,014 -owned and could exclude other people from a whole lot of basic techniques in computer programming.
119 00:12:19,314 --> 00:12:24,516 - What happened was, starting in the mid-90s, the number of patents on software started soaring.
120 00:12:24,766 --> 00:12:27,806 An industry attitude started changing too.
121 00:12:28,056 --> 00:12:32,558 So you had Microsoft, which originally didn't deal with software patents very much at all,-
122 00:12:32,808 --> 00:12:36,885 -I guess they got sued in the early 90s by Stac and lost a, uh,-
123 00:12:37,085 --> 00:12:40,817 -significant judgment against them, they started patenting.
124 00:12:41,067 --> 00:12:43,932 - They're gonna have their own set of patents.
125 00:12:44,182 --> 00:12:49,116 So that if a major patent holder threatens them, they can fire back.
126 00:12:49,366 --> 00:12:55,382 - Gradually companies like Oracle were forced to set up patent departments just for defensive reasons.
127 00:12:55,632 --> 00:13:00,481 They had to patent their stuff so that they had some- thing to trade with the companies that had patents.
128 00:13:00,731 --> 00:13:10,945 Mark Webbink: - And so the arsenal started to develop. By year 2001 Microsoft now holds thousands of software patents.
129 00:13:11,195 --> 00:13:15,350 Oracle was probably approaching a thousand software patents. Adobe...
130 00:13:15,600 --> 00:13:19,713 James Bessen: - All of them become more and more aggressive. Patenters and some of the ones who were against-
131 00:13:19,963 --> 00:13:25,516 -software patents ended up suing other companies, and so what you had is an explosion of patenting first-
132 00:13:25,766 --> 00:13:27,729 -and then an explosion of litigation.
133 00:13:32,484 --> 00:13:37,404 By the late 90s about a quarter of all patents granted were software patents.
134 00:13:38,551 --> 00:13:44,233 About a third of all litigation, patent litigation, involves software patents.
135 00:13:44,483 --> 00:13:50,329 About 40% of the cost of litigation is attributable to software patents.
136 00:13:50,579 --> 00:13:52,631 And those numbers have been going up.
137 00:13:52,881 --> 00:13:59,270 So Charles Freeny invented a kiosk that goes in retail stores, and the idea is you'd come in,-
138 00:13:59,520 --> 00:14:05,306 -you could select the music selection, swipe your credit card, put in a blank 9 track tape,-
139 00:14:05,556 --> 00:14:10,917 -and this is is how long ago this patent was, and it would write that music selection onto the tape-
140 00:14:11,167 --> 00:14:13,988 -and you could go away with it.
141 00:14:14,238 --> 00:14:21,649 The patent was drafted in a very vague language so there were terms like "point of sale location",-
142 00:14:21,899 --> 00:14:25,060 -and "information manufacturing machine".
143 00:14:25,310 --> 00:14:32,902 And Freeny eventually sold this patent to somebody who wanted to interpret those terms very broadly.
144 00:14:33,352 --> 00:14:36,652 To basically cover e-commerce.
145 00:14:36,902 --> 00:14:44,956 So here was this very limited invention for this kiosk, and he wanted to interpret those terms in such a-
146 00:14:45,206 --> 00:14:50,102 -broad way so that it would cover transactions that took place over the Internet,-
147 00:14:50,352 --> 00:14:56,228 -you could make them in your office, in your bedroom, in your house, anywhere.
148 00:14:56,478 --> 00:15:00,817 And so it covered virtually all of e-commerce.
149 00:15:01,067 --> 00:15:08,382 The courts initially didn't agree with that interpretation but they appealed it, and the appellant court largely-
150 00:15:08,632 --> 00:15:16,254 agreed with them, and they were able to extract some settlements out of well over a hundred companies.
151 00:15:16,504 --> 00:15:23,452 But the significant thing is, here is this patent you can't tell what it's boundaries were until you get to-
152 00:15:23,702 --> 00:15:29,236 -the appellant court. What most people thought it's boundaries were turned out to be wrong.
153 00:15:29,486 --> 00:15:32,644 - One of the key properties of programming languages is they're very very precise.
154 00:15:32,894 --> 00:15:39,292 You can look at any program language in any language, in C, Python, any language like this,-
155 00:15:39,542 --> 00:15:43,910 -and you know exactly what it's doing. You can look at two pieces of service code and you can say-
156 00:15:44,160 --> 00:15:48,662 "Are this doing the same thing or different things?" And we do this because computers are very picky-
157 00:15:48,912 --> 00:15:53,801 -and we need to tell the computer exactly what we need to do in order to accomplish some task.
158 00:15:54,051 --> 00:15:57,551 The language of patents is almost the opposite.
159 00:15:57,801 --> 00:16:03,001 There's an advantage in being vague, and being broad, being non-specific, because the broader your language-
160 00:16:03,251 --> 00:16:06,751 -the more things you, sort of, catch in your net.
161 00:16:07,001 --> 00:16:12,361 - So it is a large problem in our patent system just defining simply what is the context or the borders-
162 00:16:12,611 --> 00:16:16,148 -of the patent. And what does it cover, and what does it not cover.
163 00:16:16,398 --> 00:16:21,658 And that ambiguity causes a lot of chilling effects, because people are going to avoid doing anything-
164 00:16:21,908 --> 00:16:27,013 -that could possibly be covered by the patent, even if in reality the patent wouldn't cover what they wanna do.
165 00:16:27,263 --> 00:16:33,406 - Let's imagine that in the 1700s the governments of Europe had decided to promote the progress of-
166 00:16:33,656 --> 00:16:41,162 -symphonic music, or as they thought, promote it. Will a system of musical idea patents, meaning-
167 00:16:41,412 --> 00:16:48,306 -anybody who could describe a new musical idea in words could get a patent which would be a monopoly-
168 00:16:48,556 --> 00:16:54,998 -on that idea and then he could sue anybody else that implemented that idea in a piece of music.
169 00:16:55,248 --> 00:17:09,121 So a rhythmic pattern could be patented, or a sequence of chords, or a set of instruments to use together,-
170 00:17:09,371 --> 00:17:17,212 -or any idea you could describe in words. Now imagine it's 1800 and you're Beethoven, and you want to write-
171 00:17:17,462 --> 00:17:23,748 -a symphony. You're gonna find it's harder to write a symphony that you won't get sued for, than write-
172 00:17:23,998 --> 00:17:29,102 -a symphony that sounds good. Because to write a symphony and not get sued you're gonna have to-
173 00:17:29,302 --> 00:17:34,638 -tread your way around thousands of musical idea patents.
174 00:17:34,888 --> 00:17:40,388 And if you complained about this, saying it's getting in the way of your creativity, the patent holders would-
175 00:17:40,638 --> 00:17:44,484 -say "Oh, Beethoven you're just jealous because we had these ideas before you."
176 00:17:44,651 --> 00:17:46,873 "Why should you steal our ideas?"
177 00:17:47,123 --> 00:17:52,634 - People has been making music for thousands of years. There were never any need for patents in-
178 00:17:52,884 --> 00:18:01,148 -the field of music. And since the computer industry has made programming possible, people have been-
179 00:18:01,398 --> 00:18:07,054 -developing software as well, since right from the beginning, there was never a need to have patents-
180 00:18:07,304 --> 00:18:10,516 -in this field in order for the activity to happen.
181 00:18:10,766 --> 00:18:20,582 - Almost everything we were doing back before 1980, 1981, those things, patent played no role in it.
182 00:18:20,832 --> 00:18:30,324 Cut & paste, the embedded ruler in a word processing, word wrapping, a lot of the things that are real-
183 00:18:30,574 --> 00:18:37,566 -important and we take for granted, and that are much more innovative in many ways than patents we have-
184 00:18:37,816 --> 00:18:44,198 -today, 'cos patents can be on some very minute things, that's the way the law works.
185 00:18:44,448 --> 00:18:49,841 Those things happened, we had great advances without patents.
186 00:18:50,091 --> 00:18:54,100 - One of the worlds most respected computer scientists,
187 00:18:54,350 --> 00:19:02,422 Donald Knuth, has said that if software patents had been available in the 1960s and 70s when he was-
188 00:19:02,672 --> 00:19:07,084 -doing his work, that it's probably the case that computer science wouldn't be where it is today.
189 00:19:07,334 --> 00:19:15,164 There would be blockades on innovation that could've seriously prevented the kinds of technical solutions-
190 00:19:15,414 --> 00:19:17,942 -that we take for granted today.
191 00:19:18,192 --> 00:19:24,137 - The programmer writing a long program might conceivably need to check whether 500 or-
192 00:19:24,387 --> 00:19:28,622 -thousand different techniques are patented, and there is no way that she possibly could.
193 00:19:28,872 --> 00:19:35,590 - The Patent Office issues hundreds of software patents all the time. Every Tuesday they issue 3,500 patents-
194 00:19:35,790 --> 00:19:41,032 -and a large number of those relate to software. It's just impossible to review all those patents every week-
195 00:19:41,232 --> 00:19:43,580 -to make sure you're not doing something that could infringe them.
196 00:19:43,830 --> 00:19:53,505 - So there's a provision in the US patent laws that basically holds patent infringers, ahem, at I guess-
197 00:19:53,755 --> 00:20:01,117 -a greater liability if they are shown to willfully infringe. So basically the idea is that if you knew-
198 00:20:01,367 --> 00:20:07,094 -about a patent and you infringed on it, you should have a stricter penalty than if you didn't know about it.
199 00:20:07,344 --> 00:20:14,356 Ma il risultato a cui porta cio' e' una situazione dove c'e' un disincentivo nel seguire quali brevetti vengano registrati-
200 00:20:14,606 --> 00:20:21,228 -e quali nuove invenzioni ci siano state attraverso un brevetto, perche' se leggi ogni brevetto oppure-
201 00:20:21,478 --> 00:20:28,070 -c'e' un'evidenza che dimostra che lo hai fatto, allora diventi colpevole di infranzione volontaria, sapevi-
202 00:20:28,320 --> 00:20:32,737 -del brevetto e lo hai infranto lo stesso, e la pena viene triplicata.
203 00:20:32,987 --> 00:20:39,137 - Un buon numero di persone ha suggerito che il software debba essere rimosso da-
204 00:20:39,387 --> 00:20:40,760 -un'ottica di brevettabilita'. Puoi commentare su cio'?
205 00:20:41,010 --> 00:20:45,894 - Bene, io non sono ovviamente d'accordo con questo; e non credo che il software debba mai esser rimosso.
206 00:20:46,144 --> 00:20:51,441 E' una delle maggiori sorgenti di innovazione tecnologica in questo stato; e uscire con un test che vorrebbe-
207 00:20:51,691 --> 00:20:55,230 -in qualche modo eliminare il software, sarebbe, penso, un disastro per l'economia.
208 00:20:55,480 --> 00:21:01,852 [lo sarebbe davvero?] - Io e Mike stimiamo che al di fuori di quelli farmaceutici e chimici, i brevetti portino qualcosa come-
209 00:21:02,102 --> 00:21:10,454 -un 10 o 20 % in tasse. Sai, il piccolo sviluppatore sviluppa qualcosa, per strada, deve pagare-
210 00:21:10,704 --> 00:21:18,892 -quella tassa. Ed ogni piccola compagnia di software che conosco, appena sta per un po' in giro e arriva sul-
211 00:21:19,142 --> 00:21:26,950 -mercato, qualcuno tira fuori un brevetto contro di essa, e questa finisce in potenziali difficolta'.
212 00:21:27,200 --> 00:21:31,609 Molto spesso sono obbligate a ottenere loro stesse dei brevetti per potersi difendere.
213 00:21:31,859 --> 00:21:40,646 Quindi tutta quest'attivita' e' una tassa. Non e' qualcosa che aiuta lo sviluppo, e' un'attivita' inutile.
214 00:21:40,896 --> 00:21:47,313 - La cosa principale che facciamo e' un sistema di tracciamento delle richieste, RT o Request Tracker, quindi e' un servizio ai clienti,-
215 00:21:47,563 --> 00:21:53,506 -help desk, ricerca bachi, operazioni di rete, qualsiasi cosa dove tu abbia una serie di operazioni delle quali-
216 00:21:53,756 --> 00:21:58,089 -serve tener traccia. E ti serve sapere cosa e' successo, cosa no, chi lo ha fatto,-
217 00:21:58,339 --> 00:22:04,609 -chi non lo ha fatto, quando. E' una sorta di lista TODO con steroidi progettata per una grande organizzazione.
218 00:22:04,859 --> 00:22:10,297 Praticamente e' tutto Open Source o Free Software, sotto una licenza o un'altra.
219 00:22:10,547 --> 00:22:18,009 Faremo consulenza o supporteremo i clienti che aggiungono linguaggi ai nostri contratti standard-
220 00:22:18,259 --> 00:22:27,038 -o a cui serve che firmiamo i loro. E come si dice in legalese, dira' qualcosa del tipo-
221 00:22:27,288 --> 00:22:34,324 -li rendiamo immuni e li teniamo con cura e pagheremo le loro spese legali e sacrificheremo il primogenito, se-
222 00:22:34,574 --> 00:22:41,468 -capitera' qualcosa e qualcuno scopre che il nostro software viola un brevetto di altri.
223 00:22:41,718 --> 00:22:46,276 Difficilmente firmeremo qualcosa che ha dentro scritto un tipo di linguaggio del genere.
224 00:22:46,526 --> 00:22:48,476 Ma costa un sacco di spese legali.
225 00:22:48,726 --> 00:22:59,648 - Rivolgiti alle persone innovative nel software nell'ICT, a chiedi "Sarebbe meglio se il sistema dei brevetti software-
226 00:22:59,898 --> 00:23:03,161 -venisse abolito?" La risposta probabilmente sara' "Si'".
227 00:23:03,411 --> 00:23:11,472 - Chi ne trae beneficio? Gli avvocati sui brevetti, al primo posto. Al secondo, ci sono un tot di cosiddetti-
228 00:23:11,722 --> 00:23:17,822 -troll che ne traggono vantaggio, ma non e' ben chiaro che molti di loro ci facciano molti soldi.
229 00:23:18,072 --> 00:23:25,580 Recentemente puoi vedere, negli ultimi 4 o 5 anni, compagnie come Intellectual Ventures e fondi-
230 00:23:25,830 --> 00:23:32,364 -di investimento che acquisiscono grossi volumi di questi brevetti spazzatura e li usano per estorcere centinaia-
231 00:23:32,614 --> 00:23:38,129 -di milioni di dollari dalle compagnie. Ne traggono beneficio, forse sono quelli che ne traggono di piu'-
232 00:23:38,379 --> 00:23:42,872 - C'e' tanta cattiva stampa negli ultimi anni riguardo ai danni causati dai brevetti software.
233 00:23:43,122 --> 00:23:49,268 e pensiamo che abbia avuto un'infuenza politica sul PTO per far si' che diminuissero le registrazioni e iniziassero-
234 00:23:49,518 --> 00:23:51,444 a rifiutarle, e questo e' quello che ha portato al caso Bilski.
235 00:24:00,270 --> 00:24:07,630 - Orbene, la piu' grande, prima cattiva storia di stampa fu quella dei brevetti Blackberry, dove tutti i rappresentanti-
236 00:24:07,880 --> 00:24:12,228 -del congresso avevano i loro Blackberry e ci fu una compagnia chiamata NTP che fece causa al produttore di-
237 00:24:12,478 --> 00:24:17,425 -Blackberry, dicendo che tutti i BB violavano il suo brevetto. Bene, NTP era una compagnia composta di-
238 00:24:17,675 --> 00:24:22,532 -una sola persona, non produceva alcun prodotto, ne' forniva servizi per proprio conto, e cosi'-
239 00:24:22,782 --> 00:24:29,764 -questo suscito' molta attenzione da parte del Wall Street Journal e del Washington Post, e le persone del congresso erano molto-
240 00:24:30,014 --> 00:24:34,039 -arrabbiate che potessero perdere i loro Blackberry e non potessero essere in grado di comunicare efficentemente.
241 00:24:34,289 --> 00:24:40,950 Questo aveva attirato molta attenzione, e poi ci sono stati tutti quei brevetti sui metodi bancari e sulla gesitone immagini per gli assegni,-
242 00:24:41,200 --> 00:24:44,188 -quei detentori di brevetto stavano andando contro l'industria bancaria, che ha molta-
243 00:24:44,438 --> 00:24:47,686 -influenza su Capitol Hill, e cosi' erano andati lassu' dicendo "Guardate, questo tipo di"-
244 00:24:47,936 --> 00:24:52,553 -brevetti ci stanno causando un sacco di rogne". Poi aggiungici quel grosso fenomeno troll sui brevetti nel-
245 00:24:52,803 --> 00:24:58,457 -Distretto Est del Texas, con piccole compagnie detentrici di brevetti che fanno causa a grosse compagnie IT come Google, Microsoft-
246 00:24:58,707 --> 00:25:04,293 -IBM e Hewlett Packard, e anche tutte queste compagnie hanno influenza legislativa, e hanno detto-
247 00:25:04,543 --> 00:25:08,612 -"Questo tipo di brevetti stanno causando un reale danno al nostro business, ci costano lavoro, stanno aumentando-
248 00:25:08,862 --> 00:25:13,881 -il prezzzo dei prodotti e servizi che offriamo ai clienti, e dovete far qualcosa riguardo a cio'."
249 00:25:21,620 --> 00:25:27,428 - La situazione in cui ci troviamo e' che la Lower Court, La Corte degli Appelli del Circuito Federale,-
250 00:25:27,678 --> 00:25:32,140 -e' praticamente una Corte per i brevetti, per ascoltare cause sui brevetti.
251 00:25:32,390 --> 00:25:40,741 E questa e' la prima volta in cui la Corte Suprema ha preso in considerazione quest'aspetto di brevettabilita'.
252 00:25:40,991 --> 00:25:47,852 E nello specifico questo test che e' stato implementato dalla Lower Court, parla ai brevetti software.
253 00:25:48,102 --> 00:25:55,724 e cosi', c'e' praticamente una storia di 20 anni di brevetti software rilasciati a causa della Lower Court.
254 00:25:55,974 --> 00:26:01,286 E quindi, speriamo che la Corte Suprema pulira' il macello che la Lower Court ha creato.
255 00:26:01,536 --> 00:26:06,065 E che ristabilisca la sua autorita' che sostanzialmente dice che non si possono avere brevetti software.
256 00:26:06,315 --> 00:26:12,078 - Quando hai visto gli argomenti che furono presentati dall'avvocato di Bilski, il banco dei brevetti e' in certo qual senso-
257 00:26:12,328 --> 00:26:21,238 -una lobby organizzata. E un'oggetto in espansione che sia possibile brevettare e' nel loro interesse.
258 00:26:21,488 --> 00:26:26,406 Ed e' chiaro che cio' e' stato frustrante nei confronti dei giudici. Alcuni di essi erano frustrati per quanto-
259 00:26:26,656 --> 00:26:28,685 l'argomento sui brevetti fosse in espansione.
260 00:26:28,935 --> 00:26:34,553 - Sembravano in qualche modo liquidare l'idea che tu potessi brevettare questa particolare idea.
261 00:26:34,803 --> 00:26:40,169 - Penso che le persone abbiano difficolta' sull'idea che tu possa brevettare la gestione dei rischi-
262 00:26:40,419 --> 00:26:45,580 -delle materie prime. Ma se ora come ora guardi le richieste e guardi cosa c'e' dentro, e' un processo e non e'-
263 00:26:45,830 --> 00:26:50,080 -diverso da qualsiasi altro processo. Puo' solo essere che il modo di pensare alle leggi sui brevetti-
264 00:26:50,330 --> 00:26:51,817 -sia diverso che in passato.
265 00:26:52,067 --> 00:26:56,321 - Siamo stati incoraggiato dai commenti dei giudici che hanno mostrato il loro scetticismo-
266 00:26:56,571 --> 00:27:02,630 -e che suggeriscono che abbiano capito che il software sia poco piu' che una sequenza di passaggi,-
267 00:27:02,880 --> 00:27:08,441 -che possono essere scritti come una formula matematica, o scritti su un pezzo di carta, o, come e' stato-
268 00:27:08,659 --> 00:27:11,638 -citato da uno dei giudici, battuto su una macchina da scrivere.
269 00:27:11,809 --> 00:27:17,117 - I brevetti software su un computer di utilizzo generico non sono mai stati esplicitamente approvati da questa corte.
270 00:27:17,367 --> 00:27:23,798 E questa corte non ha monstrato alcuna vergogna riguardo le regole di reversibilita' portate avanti per lungo tempo.
271 00:27:24,048 --> 00:27:27,662 Hanno chiaramente pensato che i firmatari della petizione stessero cercando di brevettare qualcosa di fondamentale,-
272 00:27:27,912 --> 00:27:29,924 -di alcune forme di base dell'attivita' umana.
273 00:27:30,174 --> 00:27:34,861 NEGLI STATI UNITI SONO STATI RILASCIATI PIU' DI 200.000 BREVETTI SOFTWARE
274 00:27:35,611 --> 00:27:42,489 I PROGRAMMATORI TROVANO DIFFICOLTA' CRESCENTI NELLO SCRIVERE PROGRAMMI PER CUI NON VENGANO CITATI IN GIUDIZIO
275 00:27:42,739 --> 00:27:46,239 ORA IMMAGINATE...
276 00:28:36,908 --> 00:28:42,257 Transcript version 2.2 by Martin Karlsson. Licensed under CC-BY 3.0
277 00:28:42,908 --> 00:28:46,257 Italian Translation by ..., PaulTT Licensed under CC-BY 3.0