VoilĂ , un nouvel argument contre les brevets logiciels, respectivement
pour si on s'appelle MSFT.
Serge
-----Forwarded Message-----
From: Florian Mueller <florian(a)mysql.com>
To: 'Bxl' <bxl(a)ffii.org>
Subject: EU Software Patents Jeopardise Munich's Linux Migration; FFII Patent Search
Triggers Motion by Munich Alderman
Date: Fri, 30 Jul 2004 10:06:30 +0200
FFII Patent Search Triggers Motion by Munich Alderman
EU Software Patents Jeopardise Munich's Linux Migration
Munich, 07/30/2004 -- When the city administration of Munich decided to
migrate its IT infrastructure to the Linux operating system, it made
headline news around the world. That project is now being threatened by a
proposed European Union directive on software patents. The directive is
pushed for by the governments of Germany, the UK, France, and other
countries on the EU Council.
Software patents are considered the greatest danger to the usage and
development of Linux and other Free Software. A cursory search by FFII
revealed that the Linux "base client", which the city of Munich plans to
install on the desktop computers of approximately 14,000 employees, is in
conflict with more than 50 European software patents.
Today Jens Muehlhaus, an alderman from the Green Party, filed two motions in
which he calls on the mayor of Munich, the Social Democrat Christian Ude, to
contact the federal government of Germany on this matter and to analyse how
the EU software patent directive affects Munich's Linux project. The
politician, a supporter of open source, warns that patent infringement
assertions could take entire departments of the city administration out of
operation. He attached the preliminary result of FFII's patent search to his
motions. Mr. Muehlhaus expresses concern over the future ability of open
source software to meet the needs of the city administration if software
patents massively hinder its development. Related caveats have been voiced
by the SME association CEA-PME and by Deutsche Bank Research.
A week earlier, the chief information officer of Munich, Wilhelm Hoegner,
said it is "indispensable" to check on the consequences of the software
patent directive to open source software. Any such oversight would be a
"catastrophe for Munich's Linux migration project, and for open source in
general".
Florian Mueller, an active participant in the software patent debate, sees
the EU Council on the wrong track: "Open source is a historic opportunity
for Europe to save costs and create jobs. Schroeder, Blair and Chirac should
demonstrate leadership and stop their civil servants from sacrificing the
open source opportunity to the insatiable patent bureaucracy, lest some
large corporations will shut down open source and many SMEs." Mr. Mueller is
a software entrepreneur, and an adviser to Europe's largest open source
software company MySQL.
http://kwiki.ffii.org/Limux040730En
_______________________________________________
bxl mailing list
(un)subscribe via
http://lists.ffii.org/mailman/listinfo/bxl and
http://aktiv.ffii.org/. If you subscribed
via the latter, you can unsubscribe only by going to both.
--
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Serge Marelli, Luxembourg
E-mail : serge.marelli(a)linux.lu
----------------------------------------------------------------------
LiLux, Luxembourg LUG :
http://www.linux.lu/
Defending Innovation against Patent Inflation
http://swpat.ffii.org/