TuxDave
Lifer
Bad analogy.
Dysons might be amazing, but you can still clean a carpet without one. You might just have to pay more, or accept technology that is not as efficient.
If Apple is allowed to not license its patents, you might not be able to make a touchscreen smartphone unless you are them.
In a post-PC world where more and more people connect with each other with smartphones rather than computers, and a lot of the innovation is in the smartphone market for both businesses and consumers, Apple keeping their patents can cripple mobile technology and therefore developed society. Apple's patents can put developed countries at a disadvantage for innovation in the sector to undeveloped nations where Apple's patents don't apply. It is in developed society's interest to intervene.
A better analogy is when the first car company invented an air-bag, and that was licensed out to other car makers to make all cars safer. If that first company didn't want to license the air-bag and instead filed an injunction against all car makers that took the idea to try to have safer vehicles I would fully support a judge stepping in and forcing the inventing company to share for the good of us all.
Apple is the most profitable company in the mobile sector, they have huge marketshare and a solid brand name (iPhone) in that market. As far as I am concerned, they already got the benefit the system intended they got from their patents.
They don't have the right to stagnate the smartphone market just because all of that isn't enough for them or because Jobs was butthurt. At some point the law goes out the window and what is practical is what needs to happen (aka something like jury nullification but with judges).
The importance of building a smartphone has the same level of importance as a life saving mechanism? I can't agree that your analogy is much better.
I highlighted the part that I do agree with. The problem isn't patents, it's not about the right to license patents. The problem is in the duration of the patents. If Apple showed the world how a touchscreen based smartphone is the way to go, they should have have the sole right to sell this for however many years.