geert lovink on Tue, 2 Oct 2001 23:33:28 +0200 (CEST)


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

[Nettime-bold] cnet: W3C plan to patent web standards draws protests


http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-7373745.html

W3C patent plan draws protests
By Margaret Kane and Mike Ricciuti
Staff Writers, CNET News.com
October 1, 2001, 1:30 p.m. PT

A new and controversial proposal under consideration by the World Wide Web
Consortium could open the way for companies to claim patent rights--and
demand royalties--on standards authorized by that body.

The W3C works with developers, software makers and others to come up with
standards for the Web, which can then be used by just about anyone to build
Web software, free of charge. To date, either those standards have not been
based on patented technology, or the holders of patents have chosen to not
enforce patents in order that the standards be widely adopted.

But a new proposal may open a few cracks in that wall, allowing companies to
enforce patents based on those technologies and to potentially charge a
royalty fee to developers who use them. The W3C's Patent Policy Framework,
more commonly referred to as the "reasonable and non-discriminatory" (RAND)
licensing proposal, acknowledges a central conflict to the standardization
process: Companies that spend serious time and effort coming up with the
technology behind the standards may be reluctant to simply give away the
rights to what they consider their intellectual property.

That proposal, written by W3C members representing large technology
companies such as Microsoft, Apple Computer, Hewlett-Packard and Philips
Electronics, has kicked off a firestorm of controversy among developers,
some of whom claim it will spell the end of innovation for the Web and could
lead to undue influence by commercial companies over the standards process.

More specifically, some developers believe the proposal calls into question
the W3C's role as the arbiter of standards related to the Web. A final
decision on the policy is expected from the W3C by February 2002.

Calls to Microsoft and other large technology companies were not immediately
returned. A W3C representative did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. "This proposal would effectively ban open-source interpretations of
these standards," said Bruce Perens, who helped write the Open Source
Definition in 1998. "We don't have royalties in open-source software. The
W3C can potentially marginalize itself with the RAND proposal."

Mike Todd, president of the Internet Society's Los Angeles chapter, said the
RAND proposal would "create a situation where users would get used to using
something that contains these sleeping copyrights, and then if they are
activated, they will cause chaos."

Todd suggests that if the W3C adopts the proposal, users of W3C standards
containing copyrights should be advised of the specific copyrighted code, so
"people are aware that there is a certain aspect (of that standard) that is
copyrighted, but if you don't use it, you are in the clear."

The W3C was founded in 1994 to "lead the World Wide Web to its full
potential by developing common protocols that promote its evolution and
ensure its interoperability," according to the organization's Web site. More
than 500 organizations are members of the W3C, which has developed more than
35 technical specifications behind the Web, such as HTTP, XML and HTML.

In the early days of the Web, the W3C set direction on many technologies key
to the Web's adoption. But as the Web has become more mainstream, and more
usable, the W3C's work has become more complex and arcane, said one analyst.
"There is a sense that the (W3C) is becoming a little too academic and out
of the mainstream and their work too esoteric," said Uttam Narsu, an analyst
with Giga Information Group.

The RAND proposal may be in reaction to that increased complexity, said
Narsu. "The W3C needs to look at streamlining the standards process by
taking something that is a de facto standard" and making it a
W3C-recommended standard. "There is considerable difficulty to come up with
a standard that does not infringe on a patent," Narsu said. While the W3C in
the past recommended standards that are patent-free, that doesn't mean those
technologies were always the best way to solve a given problem. "It may be
that the adopted standard is the second or third choice, because the
preferred technology was patented," Narsu said.

Other standards bodies already adopt standards based on proprietary
technology. And patents are not unknown to the world of standards bodies;
the Joint Electronic Devices Engineering Council, or JEDEC, for instance,
permits companies to submit patents for adoption by the group and to collect
royalties from members.

While the group prefers to adopt free patents, it will adopt for-fee patents
as well. JEDEC states that members have to disclose pending patents--the
organization can't adopt a standard with an undisclosed patent--but it can
adopt a patent into a standard if disclosed. The patent owner can also
choose to license it for free or charge everyone an equal royalty.

Narsu said typically there is pressure on the patent holder from the
community of users surrounding standards bodies to loosen up patent
requirements, which many companies do.

Specifically, the RAND proposal would require:

. That W3C working groups spell out the licensing terms for a proposal along
with the technical requirements in its charter.

. All W3C Members to disclose any patent claims they know of that may be
essential to a recommendation. Members whose contributions become the basis
for working group efforts would have an additional obligation to disclose
relevant patent claims and licensing conditions at the time of their
submission.

. All W3C Members to make a legally binding commitment to license patent
claims essential for implementing a W3C recommendation on RAND terms. If
they're not willing to license particular technology on RAND terms, they
must opt out of specific patent claims they hold, normally within 60 days
after the publication of the last-call working draft.

Some of the controversy involves not just the proposal itself, but the
timing. The period for public comment on the proposal expired Sept. 30.
Although the proposal was published to the W3C's Wet site on Aug. 16, and
news about it was posted on the W3C's site on Aug. 20, most of the comments
indicate that people were not aware of the proposal until this past weekend.
Many are calling for an extension of the public review and comment period. A
W3C representative said there "has been discussion" about extending the
comment period.

But once the proposal was publicized through postings on open
source-friendly sites including Linux Today and Slashdot.org, the criticism
was fast and furious.

"A bad policy," "Just say NO!" and "RAND is WRONG," read typical subject
lines of the comments that were submitted to the W3C.

Notable open-source proponents, including Free Software Foundation President
Richard Stallman, have urged the W3C to declare that all important standards
must have free patent licenses.

Stallman's comment also argued that the policy may not discriminate against
a specific person, but it does "discriminate against the free software
community, and that makes them unreasonable."

The W3C proposal is backed by some of the largest technology makers in the
industry. The working group that developed the proposal includes a who's who
of technology: Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, Philips, Apple, AT&T, IBM, ILOG,
Nortel Networks, The Open Group, Reuters and Sun Microsystems, along with
W3C affiliates.

And some of those companies, most notably Microsoft, have shown their
disapproval for certain aspects of the open-source movement.

In June, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates called the GNU General Public License
that governs the distribution of some open-source software "Pac-man like,"
saying it "is impossible for a commercial company to use any of that work or
build on any of that work."

One posting to a W3C newsgroup, from a person claiming to be a Microsoft
employee, defended the proposal. "Patents are a critical part of our
Intellectual Property systems and a key underpinning of our capitalist
economy," the posting read.

The authorship of the proposal didn't go unnoticed. One commentator argued
that it "has the ugly smell of a meat packer bribing the USDA."

Even if the proposal is approved, it could cause infighting among those
large businesses that are requesting the right to charge royalties.

"The fighting will not just be over royalty-free (RF) versus RAND," Bruce
Pezzlo, president of Plum Computer Consulting, told CNET News.com in an
e-mail. "The arguments will be between each party who believes they have
some patent that is related to any proposed standard. Each will jockey for a
position, monitor what the others are charging as fees, and believe they too
should be entitled to the same.

"The net effect will become standards will take too long to become adopted,
and not widely adopted should the cost of fees become prohibitively
expensive."




_______________________________________________
Nettime-bold mailing list
Nettime-bold@nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold