Microsoft proposed patent: Monopoly or Capitalism?

RaDragon

Diamond Member
May 23, 2000
4,123
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Full Article here

Microsoft Patents Ones, Zeroes
Gates attempts to patent everything software


EDMOND, WA--In what CEO Bill Gates called "an unfortunate but necessary step to protect our intellectual property from theft and exploitation by competitors," the Microsoft Corporation patented the numbers one and zero Monday.

With the patent, Microsoft's rivals are prohibited from manufacturing or selling products containing zeroes and ones--the mathematical building blocks of all computer languages and programs--unless a royalty fee of 10 cents per digit used is paid to the software giant.

"Microsoft has been using the binary system of ones and zeroes ever since its inception in 1975," Gates told reporters. "For years, in the interest of the overall health of the computer industry, we permitted the free and unfettered use of our proprietary numeric systems. However, changing marketplace conditions and the increasingly predatory practices of certain competitors now leave us with no choice but to seek compensation for the use of our numerals."

A number of major Silicon Valley players, including Apple Computer, Netscape and Sun Microsystems, said they will challenge the Microsoft patent as monopolistic and anti-competitive, claiming that the 10-cent-per-digit licensing fee would bankrupt them instantly.

"While, technically, Java is a complex system of algorithms used to create a platform-independent programming environment, it is, at its core, just a string of trillions of ones and zeroes," said Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy, whose company created the Java programming environment used in many Internet applications. "The licensing fees we'd have to pay Microsoft every day would be approximately 327,000 times the total net worth of this company."

"If this patent holds up in federal court, Apple will have no choice but to convert to analog," said Apple interim CEO Steve Jobs, "and I have serious doubts whether this company would be able to remain competitive selling pedal-operated computers running software off vinyl LPs."

...for full article, see link above
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I sincerely hope this doesn't happen... However, this article does sound a bit hokey.
 

SVTPower

Senior member
Dec 8, 2000
646
0
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What I never got was how did "American Dream" and "Monopoly" ever get mixed up??

If it was the owner of sun who became as rich as Gates from massive slaes of a good solution he would be some devil.
 

Hamburgerpimp

Diamond Member
Aug 15, 2000
7,464
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This is a joke. You cannot patent numbers! Ever wonder why the Pentium came about? Because Intel couldn't patent the name 586 for the processor!
 

RaDragon

Diamond Member
May 23, 2000
4,123
1
71
"Because all integers and natural numbers derive from one and zero, Microsoft may, by extension, lay claim to ownership of all mathematics and logic systems, including Euclidean geometry, pulleys and levers, gravity, and the basic Newtonian principles of motion, as well as the concepts of existence and nonexistence," Yale University theoretical mathematics professor J. Edmund Lattimore said. "In other words, pretty much everything." :D
 



<< This is a joke. You cannot patent numbers! Ever wonder why the Pentium came about? Because Intel couldn't patent the name 586 for the processor! >>



What about the 286, 386, and 486?