BSA Sends Ridiculously Bogus Letter To European Commission
from the the-lies-the-bsa-tells dept
Is it just me, or is the BSA becoming a bigger and bigger joke each time it does just about anything these days? For years, the organization has put out its yearly bogus stats on "piracy," which have been debunked over and over and over again. They're about the only trade group that still has the gall to equate a single unauthorized copy to a single lost sale (even the RIAA and MPAA have moved away from that claim). They've also been known to simply make up survey numbers, rather than actually ask people in certain countries. And then, even on news stories, they seem to make it clear that they have no clue what's going on -- such as last week's announcement that ACTA was a treaty already signed by 37 countries, when it's neither a treaty, nor has it been signed by anyone.The latest is equally as ridiculous and makes the BSA look even more uninformed than usual. As a whole bunch of you have sent in, the BSA apparently sent the European Commission a letter, objecting to the proposed "European Interoperability Framework for European Public Services." You can read the letter below:
The BSA argues that "[m]any of today's most widely-deployed open specifications incorporate patented innovations that were invented by commercial firms...including WiFi, GSM , and MPEG."It really does make you wonder why anyone takes the BSA seriously these days, as it's even more ridiculous and unbelievable than your average protectionist industry trade association. What's amazing is that the folks at the BSA actually think such buffoonery is a good idea, when all it's really continued to do is sap the organization of pretty much any credibility.
This is an attempt to create a false dichotomy between "commercial" companies inventing patented technology, in contrast to "non-commercial" inventions which are not patented. In reality a great wealth of unpatented modern technology originating in commercial companies constitute globally implemented standards (such as HTML5), whilst continuing to provide their creators with revenue. There is no such divide, either economical or ideological, between hardware and software technologies which are patented, and those which are not. Yet the BSA divisively implies there is a difference between conventional and accepted business methods, which they associate with patents, and un-businesslike non-commercial organisations, which they associate with patent-free technology. Given the increasing prevalence of Free Software in Europe's IT service market, such a claim is plainly false.
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Filed Under: commercial, free, intellectual property, software, standards
Companies: bsa
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Why the BSA is taken seriously?
Greetings,
Drizzt
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FSFE and others misrepresent the patent problem
I don't want to comment on the BSA letter other than pointing out that I fought hard against them over the question of software patents in Europe. But concerning the European Interoperability Framework, I don't subscribe to the claim made by FSFE and IBM/Oracle/Google fronts in Europe that free and open source software can't handle patented standards. It's certainly possible, even with GPLv2, for a company to publish and distribute software on FOSS terms but obtain patent licenses from third parties. Note that I don't like the fact that such patents exist -- but it's dishonest to say that they can't be licensed due to FOSS licensing rules.
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Re: FSFE and others misrepresent the patent problem
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The problem isn't so much the bogus-ocity of the letter
And that number could be scarily high. :(
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Funny they could not even get the Wi-Fi BRAND right.
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Two wrongs do not make a right
We are trying to reduce the insanity, not increase it.
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Paraphrase of the BSA letter
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Re: Paraphrase of the BSA letter
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Desperation
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BSA tactics:
step 2. say something ridiculously stupid
step 3. ..
step 22,406,312 say something ridiculously stupid
step 22,406,313 make the other partners insane demands seem reasonable by comparison........
Its a common trick:
if you try to pass a law saying "all babies must be insulted and swore at on sight"..no one will pass it.
instead try to pass a law saying "all babies must be thrown into the nearest incinerator on sight" and during the outcry, "reduce" your demands to simply making everyone swear at babies.....
This trick is how the DMCA got passed, its also how the Digital Economy Act got passed in the UK (original draft said long-term prison sentences for SUSPECTED infringers and everyone was quite pleased when it just said "possible future action"....)
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