White House Responds To Software Patents Petition 276
New submitter obliv!on writes "As previously discussed, the White House has started to reply to petitions on their 'We the People' website. They've now replied to the petition asking for an end to software patents. The response mentions the America Invents Act and encourages the use of the USPTO's open implementation website. Quoting: 'There's a lot we can do through the new law to improve patent quality and to ensure that only true inventions are given patent protection. But it's important to note that the executive branch doesn't set the boundaries of what is patentable all by itself. Congress has set forth broad categories of inventions that are eligible for patent protection. The courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, have interpreted the statute to include some software-related inventions.' The response goes on to denote some open source and open data initiatives in government. It's nice to hear that the administration understands 'concerns that overly broad patents on software-based inventions may stifle the very innovative and creative open source software development community.' However, the overall response redirects action to the petitioners through participating in the open implementation site and contacting Congress, instead of a promise to prepare additional legislative measures for Congress to consider on behalf of the petitioners."
I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the most politely-worded and voluminous "Fuck you, you're on your own" I've ever read.
Hear That? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
One can't help but wonder why they would ever have opened up these channels of communication. What did they expect to get as concerns? Technically the Executive has no power to do anything about any of this, so why bother with the dialogue? Every issue has to be resolved in the other two branches, so what did they hope to accomplish?
Unless of course they're just compiling a list...
My Prediction (Score:5, Insightful)
My prediction is that every "petition" will be responded to with "We hear you, but this is why its really okay as it is; you really don't want what you think you want"
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
It's just a political stunt to make it look like the Obama administration gives a shit. Obama has belatedly realized that he might actually need his base to come out and vote for him next year, so he's been putting on a big show of late. It's the same with the "Jobs Bill." He knows it stands no chance getting past the Republicans in the House (hell, he couldn't even get it through the Democrats in the Senate). But it makes it *look* like he's doing something.
He'll be our President because we put him there (Score:5, Insightful)
"He'll be our President because we put him there"... I think maybe Democracy is broken. If regardless of who you vote for the result is the same you are living in a Dictatorship. It's not just patents either - Gitmo, Iraq, Patriot Act, Health Care, seems that even when the Republicans aren't in office they are. No wonder the focus has been on security - they are gonna need it when the people find out they have been duped by the DemoRepublican Party for so long.
Expect more of this (Score:5, Insightful)
This whole move to respond to people's questions from the Executive Branch is very clearly a tactic to redirect voter ire to the Legislative Branch, where laws are made and passed. I would expect most of the replies to include some portion urging voters to contact their legislators. Recent administrations have left the American public under the impression that the executive branch can act unilaterally as long as you have Darth Vader as a vice president.
That's not the way this country is supposed to run. Things like this with the Executive communicating with voters directly are great, don't stop that, but call your goddamned lawmaker, too.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
Read the one about marijuana. Same sort of nicely worded fuck you, but with the added benefit of lies about effects and completely unsubstantiated claims!
Missing The Point (Score:5, Insightful)
'concerns that overly broad patents on software-based inventions may stifle the very innovative and creative open source software development community.'
Let me translate: I know you dirty hippies believe in utopia, and you've done some interesting things, but you are not being realistic. The real producers are Microsoft and Amazon.
Here's the thing though, knucklehead: Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, Apple, IBM, and eBay -- not one of those companies could make it out of the garage today. It's not just the dirty hippies you are harming, it is entrepreneurs -- the guys building a better mousetrap -- the icons that "America Invents" is pretending to recognize. It is the kinds of people who turned America into a superpower in the 50's and 60's. The engines of tomorrow's economic superiority. That is who patents are harming -- and their blood is running over the alter of a few extra private jets today, for an ever smaller sliver of people who did something great twenty years ago, and have been kicking everyone else off the hill ever since.
The We the People Site (Score:4, Insightful)
This is great, thanks Mr.President for this amazing simplification of the political process. In the past I would have had figure out who my Senator is and write to his office to get a condescending BS laden response, on why its so important we preserve the status quo.
Now all I have to do is post on one easy to remember website and if enough people also want to hear why a certain campaign donator needs to have their economic rent protected the White House will kindly oblige.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, Republicans control the House and will block anything he does.
So what was his excuse for his first two years in office?
Re:Missing The Point (Score:4, Insightful)
Here's the thing though, knucklehead: Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, Apple, IBM, and eBay -- not one of those companies could make it out of the garage today. It's not just the dirty hippies you are harming, it is entrepreneurs -- the guys building a better mousetrap -- the icons that "America Invents" is pretending to recognize.
You don't really think that big business campaign donors want entrepeneurs setting up competitors in their garage, do you?
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, but now those arrogant sons of whores have to actually come out and vote against a jobs bill. Instead of idiotically grandstanding about so-called "job creators" and doing FUCK-ALL about the economy.
Given the GOP's response vs. Obama's response, I'll take the Obama approach any day, thank you. Vs. the aristocratic, arrogant, self-centered ASSHOLE approach of the GOP, which is to repeatedly do the same thing that hasn't worked for over a decade, and then stand there with their insufferable smug prick-face smiles while the rest of us drown.
I guess it comes down to whose concerns you are going to listen to. The 1%, or the rest of us.
Software patents are somewhere about 1,000,000 miles down the coast from just getting a basic dialogue going in this country among the elite that JOBS GROW THE ECONOMY, NOT RICH PEOPLE.
So, I'm not sure I share the poutraged butt-hurt that the rest of slashdot does over this issue.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:4, Insightful)
Though I'm not really that pleased with the administration right now, I do respect their intent here. I think that they're essentially just experimenting with ways to use the Internet to improve communication and create dialogue. That doesn't mean that every petition will result in action by the President to do exactly what the petition asks, but the dialogue itself is something.
I especially think it's worth cutting them some slack because we're still in the early days of these things. The general public hasn't really been using the Internet for 2 whole decades yet, and this is the first administration to make genuine efforts to make use of the Internet for these sorts of things. Some of the first attempts will be clumsy.
And when you look at their page describing what this site is about, this is the only thing they're offering: "If a petition gets enough support, White House staff will review it, ensure it’s sent to the appropriate policy experts, and issue an official response."
I mean, really, did you expect that the President is going to make a huge policy shift against major corporate interests because of a petition with 14k signatures?
It's about the companies (Score:5, Insightful)
I think part of the problem is that companies don't entirely want software patents to go away.
When I first started speaking with my Senator's office (Franken - D-MN) about software patents, I gave examples how software patents are a hindrance to American companies, how patent troll lawsuits use the US court system as their revenue stream.
The Senator's office said that they had met with several large US companies (Microsoft, Google, Apple, etc) and while the companies agree that software patents are a problem that need to be curbed, they also need them to "protect their business." I'm told Bill Gates said he's never worried about the next Google, he's worried about some kid in his garage creating the "next Big Thing". So these companies use software patents to sue or threaten the little start-ups before they can become a competitor.
I pointed out that Gates started as a kid in his basement, and Apple started as a couple of guys in a garage, and Amazon started as Bezos doing mail-order from his garage. All these big tech companies started that way. And if we block the next Amazon or the next Microsoft from happening, that's not going to help the US economy. The Senator's office had to agree it was a fair point.
I think if you reduced the term for software patents, you might have a workable solution. Certainly it would be better than what we have now, and I'm prepared to accept that as a next-step. In most cases today, anyway, it may take a few years for something to pop up on the radar, and a patent troll to realize that it's using something from their portfolio.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
As if Obama is actually different from the GOP. The biggest trick the Republicans and Democrats have perpetrated, is the creation of an illusion that there is a difference between the parties. They comprise a monolithic mono-party where power is "traded" (like one would pass a ball from the left hand to the right hand - in either case you still have the ball) back and forth between them for the benefit of their benefactors.
As an astounding example, Marty Lederman excoriated the Bush Administration for using secret legal memos to justify immoral and unconstitutional behavior. Now that he is part of the Obama administration, he is writing the exact same type of secret legal memos supporting policies even more immoral and unconstitutional.
Citation [salon.com].
Welcome to Act 6534 of the onging made for TV drama and talk radio drama: "Democrats v. Republicans, Rhetorical Differences, Indistinguishable Practices"
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
It's just a political stunt to make it look like the Obama administration gives a shit.
Which is backfiring gloriously. What it actually does it prove that Obama never cared about anything but appearing to give a shit. Obama's base has realized that their real hope for change is on the streets of NYC, not the White House.
The only chance Obama has is to bank on the sheer idiocy of the Republican primary voters.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:5, Insightful)
Customers create jobs. It doesn't matter how much you give the rich, if no one can afford to buy their product they won't employ people to make that product. The fact of the matter is that wealth trickles up. If you want to jumpstart the economy, you have to start at the bottom.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:4, Insightful)
Any time a Republican blames 'the Democratic Senate', you know it's bullshit. They should be saying 'the nominally Democratic Senate that now requires a 60-40 majority on any vote, because the big baby Republicans say so'. And don't go saying 'the Democrats filibuster too' - they've never abused it to this extent.
Amazingly, Republican talking heads are allowed to get away with this on just about every 'news' show around.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:3, Insightful)
Every time you idiots get that shit passed, its shrinks the middle class. Stop it already. Seriously. Fucking stop it. Learn some fucking economics and the governments role.
Re:I've got to hand it to the administration (Score:2, Insightful)
This analysis is touted by the right, anti-debt crusaders all the time. There are two and a half problems with this analysis in the current economy:
1. There is no shortage of private monies to fund investment. Companies are sitting on record amounts of cash. Moreover, interest rates for borrowing are also at historic lows. While the issue of investment-hindering government-debt may come into play in the long term, it is not at play right now.
2. Private sector growth of the economy stopped circa 2008. There was a solid two years that private sector could not do anything to create jobs much less support private investment. Even the minimal amount of government spending from the Bush/Obama stimulus during the intervening two years seems to have avoided catastrophe and is now being rewarded with the private sector growth that has taken off in a number of industries, which brings me to issue 2.5:
2.5 While private sector employment has grown in many areas in the last year, it is being offset by huge cuts in public sector employment.
As a final point, "long term" and "over time" arguments fail to address current economic realities. At the time (2008), cutting spending (e.g., private contracts to provide government services/goods and public sector employment) and deregulation of industries was not going to revitalize the economy. On the first point, spending, I can't imagine what private companies would have done if you just learned that the only entity spending money and making investments (the government) decided to stop. On the second point, no one was investing money. Making changes to laws was not going to somehow magically get people to create new jobs.
That's just magical thinking.