Here's Another Inventor Who Willingly Gave Away His Greatest Idea In Order To Establish It As A Global Standard
from the true-generosity dept
Beyond the fact that you are using it to read these words, the Web has undeniably had a major impact on a large part of the world's population. It's certainly one of the greatest inventions of recent times, and as Techdirt has noted before, one of the reasons it has taken off in such an amazing way, and led to so many further innovations, is because Sir Tim Berners-Lee decided not to patent it.
Few would argue that the when Smith collaborated with a handful of Japanese companies -- including Roland and Yamaha -- to bring MIDI into the world 30 years ago, he skipped the licensing fees, instead offering up his idea for the world to steal. "We wanted to be sure we had 100% participation, so we decided not to charge any other companies that wanted to use it," says Smith.
What's noteworthy here -- aside from the ridiculous use of the word "steal" -- is that letting people use the MIDI standard for free was not some accident or oversight: well before the example of Berners-Lee, Smith understood that it was the best way to get his standard widely adopted. That's not to say that he hasn't occasionally hankered after the riches he might have received had he charged for a license, but in the end he recognizes the "obvious" rightness of the move:
Smith at times questions his decision to forgo licensing fees for MIDI, but ultimately comes back to the same conclusion. "It seemed like an obvious thing to do at the time," he says, "and in hindsight, I think it was the right thing to do." In the world of technology, that makes Smith a different kind of legendary.
Indeed: thanks to that far-sighted decision 30 years ago, he joins Berners-Lee as one of the true benefactors of humanity. Let's hope that in the coming years there are many more with vision enough to join them.
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Filed Under: adoption, dave smith, innovation, inventions, midi, patents, tim berners-lee
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A story with philanthropic bent
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I never knew this guy's name before, but I think he's my personal hero now. Or at least second in line after Lawrence Lessig.
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Shame
I am not a patent fan and think there are too many crazy patents but for a system that is so good and has lasted for so long there could have been a little compensation for him, no?
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Re: Shame
What you're saying sounds an awful lot like what was done with H.264 when the HTML5 video codec debate first started to heat up. Something that is gratis only for personal use is not truly free at all.
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Re: Shame
I was watching bushcraft videos and this one guy said this one thing that will be with me until the day I die.
Quote:"Knowledge is free, weights nothing and can save your life"
He said that after forgetting to bring things, instead of getting all grumpy he relied on his ability to produce the same outcomes no matter what other pre-made tools he had.
Holders of knowledge are masters of their lifes, so I am sure that he got everything he needed.
Also there is an area where there is no need for IP law and is the ultimate goal of a society based on the proxy called money to function. Services.
The oldest professions in the world, no I am not talking about the nice ladies on the corner, are all services from what I can tell.
Carpenters, handyman, weavers, accountants, we all have basic needs and we can't do it all by ourselves is exhausting, there will always be a need for the services of others.
I can build a chair or a sofa, but I buy those, I made basketball nets for the hoops out of grass so children could play, but I bought plastic cordage to make a new one, more colorful.
What do you think he didn't got in life that he should have got?
If he is happy I am happy although music is not my thing, but I do enjoy building instruments, and even find others who do too.
Black Sabbath - Ironman on home made bottle bass guitar
That guy started a frenzy on Youtube.
This one is more like what I do though.
Youtube: Ukulele project intro by Matthias Wandel.
So the only shame I see is we not celebrating this guy and his contribution to the pie.
Maybe we should make a MIDI day where we all collect some money and give it to him there is nothing stopping anybody from doing that so he can produce more things or take a vacation somewhere, now that would be brilliant, but even if people don't want or don't have money to give away he still can and should be remembered always and if he ever really need I am sure people will help.
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He is probably no poorer for having done this, and has made the world richer as a result. Definitely the right choice.
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Re: Shame
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no doubt ridiculous use of the word steal! Like me putting a plate of cookies out at work with a sign that says "Free cookies!" then having the cops arrest anyone who takes one for larceny. If someone is "giving" something away for "free" than it is impossible to "steal" it.
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Employee Inventions
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Cassette
From Wikipedia:
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Re: Employee Inventions
That is part of the rule written in a typical contract, however the true situation is typically much more complex.
Two scenarios exist:
1. The work is done as part of a project set up by the employer with pre-defined expectations in respect of patent rights. The will have been spelled out in advance - and the decision about whether to patent will have been made before the invention. If that had been the case then CERN would have patented it regardless of TBL's opinion.
2. The work is an independent initiative by an employee whose contract gives some freedom to work on whatever he thinks will be useful. The decision to patent then belongs to the inventor (because only he is aware that something patentable exists). Typically in those cases, although the organisation would own the patent by default, they would usually make some agreement to pay royalties and/or give some control to the inventor.
I believe that the WWW fell under category 2. Hence, although TBL would not have owned the patent the decision would have been his and he would have benefitted from any royalties.
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Two words
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Re:
I find it interesting that it is actually copyright and IP laws that make stealing an idea possible. Without that you simply have sharing or flattery by imitation. Wouldn't freedom from (or greatly reduced) copyright and IP law make for a much nicer world? (With liberty and better cookies for all!)
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Re: Re:
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Re:
It's interesting to note that although MIDI is free, some have found roundabout ways of monetizing it, such as selling soundfonts (which are like sound libraries, often with real samples, which can be loaded into your sound card and/or virtual memory), MIDI interfaces to enhance music production and a host of other products and software.
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Documents
Many manufacturers used to treat the MIDI specification of their instruments as totally proprietary. (The American companies were much worse that the Japanese.)
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Re: Shame
First of all: MIDI has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with MP3. MIDI data is not audio data, but "control" data (e.g. "Turn on note X at pitch Y" or "Use synth patch X for this voice"). MIDI predated MP3 by about a decade.
Second of all: what you are suggesting did, in fact, happen with MP3's. Officially, MP3 is patented by Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft. Originally, you only had to pay a license if you encoded MP3's, and decoders didn't require a license. Of course, once the MP3 format was fully established, they changed the license, and now every piece of software that uses the MP3 format is supposed to pay royalties to Fraunhofer (through Technicolor, its licensing arm).
So, in reality, what happened? Two things. First, most users simply pirated the MP3 codecs. Second, there was a huge push for more open formats. OGG came out of this push, and is completely open source.
LAME is an MP3 implementation, which is distributed only in source code (not binary) form, so can be downloaded without paying the patent royalties. You can only compile and run it in countries (like the U.S.) where Fraunhofer's patent on MP3 technology has expired.
Of course, nobody really pays attention to that legal requirement, so lots of people are technically "pirating" the MP3 technology by either distributing the LAME binaries, or compiling and using the LAME source code.
In other words - what you described has only led to a huge mess.
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MDID standard
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Re: Re: Shame
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Re: Re: Shame
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Re: Re: Shame
I do not know who graced you with your information, but you seem somewhat misinformed
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great argument for patents
Patents protect philanthropic efforts.
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another biased article
His contribution to what the Internet has become is unknown at this time. It takes years or even decades to fully understand who contributed what. Whatever his contributions were and to what extent they were patentable, it is his right to forfeit them. He may have had no choice as at the time he worked for a government entity in Europe.
These are mere dissemblings by huge multinational thieves and their paid puppets -some in Congress, the White House and elsewhere in the federal government. They have already damaged the US patent system so that property rights are teetering on lawlessness. Simply put, their intent is to legalize theft -to twist and weaken the patent system so it can only be used by them and no one else. Then they can steal at will and destroy their small competitors AND WITH THEM THE JOBS THEY WOULD HAVE CREATED. Meanwhile, the huge multinationals ship more and more US jobs overseas.
Do you know how to make a Stradivarius violin? Neither does anyone else. Why? There was no protection for creations in his day so he like everyone else protected their creations by keeping them secret. Civilization has lost countless creations and discoveries over the ages for the same reason. Think we should get rid of patents? Think again...or just think.
Most important for many is what the patent system does for the US economy. Our founders: Jefferson, Franklin, Madison and others felt so strongly about the rights of inventors that they included inventors rights to their creations and discoveries in the Constitution. They understood the trade off. Inventors are given a limited monopoly and in turn society gets the benefits of their inventions (telephone, computer, airplane, automobile, lighting, etc) into perpetuity and the jobs the commercialization of those inventions bring. For 200 years the patent system has not only fueled the US economy, but the world’s. If we weaken the patent system we force inventors underground like Stradivarius and in turn weaken our economy and job creation. Worse yet, we destroy the American dream -the ability to prosper from our ingenuity for the benefit of our children and communities. Who knows who the next Alexander Graham Bell will be. It could be your son or daughter. It could be you. To kill or weaken the patent system is to kill their futures.
For the truth, please see http://www.truereform.piausa.org/
https://www.facebook.com/pi.ausa.5
http://piausa.wordpress.com/
http://www.hoover.org/publications/defining-ideas/article/142741
http://cpip.gmu.edu/2013/03/15/t he-shield-act-when-bad-economic-studies-make-bad-laws/
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semantic reality smokescreen
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Re: another biased article
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Would MIDI be a successful universal standard without such initial boost given by the original inventor? Maybe not, possibly unlikely. Its only a control language and as such can be easily worked around. The likely crime of needless industry segregation would be committed and instead of a very usable universal music generation/control-language/playback-recording-sequencing-control-method we would have instead twenty different music control languages and only some popular (and expensive) and some usable (most likely open sourced).
Some things are just not reasonable to patent. A good example would be the WWW. (Wide World Web) Tim Berners-Lee should deserve the Economic Nobel Prize for his contributions to world peace and prosperity. The economic advantage and spread of knowledge is incalculable and runner up or next years ENP should be David Smith for his MIDI contributions to the spread of Art cultural growth through music. Honestly.
There should be more nationally recognized, significant monetary, awards for such valuable contributions to culture and society.
MP3 and MPEG are good examples of (bad examples. Hahah) the bastardization of technology. The outright prohibitive licensing have forces dozens of splinter and separate codecs/encode formats worldwide. (LAME, OGG, Vorbis, etc.) Such various obscure formats lends to compatibility problems that lead to loss of valuable data and media. (Think of the lost family holiday videos/music recorded on unsupported formats.)
A lot of good ideas are lost when licensing schemes wanting just a few cents each use quickly expand/grow greedily into fortune building forced fee monopoly empires (I remember some bar-code scamlike operation/patents using patent renewal-updating nonsense) charging hundreds of dollars for each program/license/use.
Am not totally against patents or copytight (what? Right? Wrong!) but each must be reigned in drastically (both in term length and scope) to preserve US growth through innovation and new technology developed by using older technology in new ways with new materials and such.
For the cultural explosion we all can taste and feel (can you?) in our bones it is copyright that must be castrated before any such cool type of social revolution can occur.
Capitalism is a powerful concept that I wholeheartedly endorse but that is contrasted by the very real need to prevent monopolies from taking advantage of it also. Both paten and copyright law are by definition monopolies and as such must be neutered at birth. Atm me thinkds that both should be limited to terms of 14 years. (less?) If more then only be some sort of creative commons type method.
Reactionary;
I like the cookies analogy. Better MIDI cookies for all!
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Re: another biased article
He is a total nutcase. No actual facts are ever given, he constantly slings ad hominem attacks, and he presents anyone who wants to reform the patent system (to any degree) as "huge multinational thieves and their paid puppets - some in Congress, the White House and elsewhere in the federal government."
There's a compendium of his nutty proclamations here:
http://ronaldjriley.blogspot.com/
Ironically, in 2008 Riley was sued by John Dozier, who is perhaps the only person on the planet to have even more extreme views on IP than Riley (but about copyrights, rather than patents).
The text of the complaint is an interesting read:
http://www.dozier-internetlaw.org/
Is any of this true? Beats me. But considering how Riley portrays himself on the Web, it wouldn't surprise me in the least.
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Re: Shame
/s/mp3/midi
Also you're wrong, if he had patented it, all those companies would have made their own standards and we would have dozens upon dozens of different formats that all refer to the general idea of the MIDI.
Just like what happens today with video and audio codecs and even programming languages. Closing up the system to ANYONE only means that someone is going to find a way around your system. Building a wall doesn't open a pathway.
We likely wouldn't have this article if he were to do that because MIDI as a standard likely would have died out in favor of dozens of other formats.
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Misplaced attention
Perhaps you may wish to understand the technology further before commenting as to its patentability.
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Re: another biased article
Not quite reactionary enough, needs more "FOR THE BABIES, FREEDOM, CHILDREN, AND APPLE PIE, PROTECT PATENTS TO PROTECT APPLE PIE".
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Re: Misplaced attention
Correct about one thing, completely incorrect about it's patentability, perhaps you should take your own advice.
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So just 1 thing you can show case, in 30 YEARS !!!!!
it was also not an invention, it is a standard, to make it a standard you need people to adopt it.
it's just an interface standard, like 'centronics' or TCP/IP or RS-232. For them to become an adopted standard, that is what is required.
It's not an invention, all the technology for MIDI was already in place, he standardised it that is all.. and it was 30 years ago..
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Re: Misplaced attention
But your average TD reader (and writer) has trouble with technical things.
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What would the title of the patent for MIDI be
such as "a method to catch and kill mice".
MIDI is NOT A METHOD to achieve anything.
It is a STANDARD, a defined interface, but it is not an invention.
nothing had to be invented for MIDI to be created, just an agreement between manufacturers on a common (standard) interface.
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Musical Instrument Digital Interface
Pianola rolls, meets that criteria, it's digital (hols or 1's no hols for 0's), It's a musical instrument interface.
that was developed in the 1800's.
and technologies relating to the pianola were patented, just as the technology relating to MIDI are also patented..
But not MIDI itself.
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MIDI was and is also basically a FLOP
and yet for musicians it has been hugely important in providing a common standard for playing and composing digital music.
So NO.. it's not really.. it is in fact that very important at all.
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Alessandro Volta
we invented something, that (a generation later) because a very important thing.. THE BATTERY
he invented the Voltaic pile, (the battery), we wrote an article to the Royal Society and told everyone about it. He did not patent it..
At that time the battery had no practical application, but today there are quite a few application for batteries.. if he had of patented it, he would have made no money off it, as there were no applications for it.
MIDI by itself is nothing, you cannot create any sounds with a 'midi' you need other equipment and inventions for it to be functional. .
but MIDI by itself is as useful as a battery by itself you need them to make something else work.. something else that needs to be invented and sold.
again, you never go to a music shop and say "can I have one midi please"
also, the 'internet' is not an invention, it is a standard for communications between computers, communication between computers happened well before the internet. You also don't go and say "can I buy one internet please".
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The real thing is to get your name associated with the invention. Once there the rest comes naturally.
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Re: Re: Re: Shame
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Re: A story with philanthropic bent
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Re: Shame
He did get well-compensated, by designing some of the most popular synthesizers of his time.
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Re: Re: Re: Shame
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Re: A story with philanthropic bent
MIDI is one of those things that was the perfect tool at the right time... and no I don't think we would have ended up with a single standard for connecting musical instruments together if someone hadn't come up with a free (or very inexpensive) standard.
I think the lack of comments comes more from the fact that people simply don't know what MIDI is and don't fully appreciate how useful it is in the music studio. After all, nobody jumps up and sings the praises of USB, even though we all use USB devices every day.
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Re: Re: Shame
Look at the "standards" for remote controlling TV's and home theater equipment: rather than getting together and developing a single standard, every manufacturer has something different - so a Sony TV can't share remote control signals with a Pioneer receiver which can't control a Panasonic DVD player.
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Re: Cassette
And, of course, it's why Sony did everything they could to win the format wars between HD-DVD and Blu-Ray.
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Re: MIDI was and is also basically a FLOP
Tell that to every composer ever who uses sequencers to put together music for an entire orchestra, then transcribe the whole thing automatically.
Or did you think that people still have to write out music by hand and imagine it in their head like Beethoven did?
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