W3C and the Promotion of Fee-based Standards for the Web
On 16 August 2001 the W3C made public a proposal to substantially change their patent policy framework. Amongst the changes is support for a new licensing model (called RAND) that legitimises the W3C's role in developing and promoting standards that could require the payment of royalties. This is a substantial shift in the philosophical direction of the W3C and should be of extreme concern to anyone who values being able to implement W3C standards in a royalty-free manner. In particular this has profound implications for the support and implementation of future W3C standards by the free software community. It is likely to extinguish free software development and deployment in the areas where the payment of royalties is required. full story with options for action here http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2001-09-30-001-20-NW-CY
+-------[ kapil thangavelu ]---------------------- | | On 16 August 2001 the W3C made public a proposal to substantially change | their patent policy framework. Amongst the changes is support for a new | licensing model (called RAND) that legitimises the W3C's role in developing | and promoting standards that could require the payment of royalties. This is Most standards bodies require payment to get access to standards in some shape or form. It was only a matter of time. A lot of people aren't happy with the way W3C has been going on various items. Of course if they're getting money from somewhere else maybe they can free themselves of the influence of some of the places the money is coming from now. -- Totally Holistic Enterprises Internet| | Andrew Milton The Internet (Aust) Pty Ltd | | ACN: 082 081 472 ABN: 83 082 081 472 | M:+61 416 022 411 | Carpe Daemon PO Box 837 Indooroopilly QLD 4068 |akm@theinternet.com.au|
On Sun, Sep 30, 2001 at 05:18:42PM +1000, Andrew Kenneth Milton wrote:
+-------[ kapil thangavelu ]---------------------- | | On 16 August 2001 the W3C made public a proposal to substantially change | their patent policy framework. Amongst the changes is support for a new | licensing model (called RAND) that legitimises the W3C's role in developing | and promoting standards that could require the payment of royalties. This is
Most standards bodies require payment to get access to standards in some shape or form. It was only a matter of time. A lot of people aren't happy with the way W3C has been going on various items. Of course if they're getting money from somewhere else maybe they can free themselves of the influence of some of the places the money is coming from now.
Just in case the sarcasm of the above statement doesn't get through: That practice was justified in the times (before 1990) when the services of standard bodies were actually an economically scarce resource (think of the type-setters, printers, secretaries sending physical documents and newsletters to clients and libraries all over the world). Especially it is not a valid argument for the W3C as of today with bandwidth coming from the public institutions DARPA and EU and personnel being housed in the public institutions MIT, INRIA (French Research Institute) and Keio Univ (Japan). This design as a ''virtual'' (post 1990) standards body has been the W3Cs source of reputation and its unique selling point. For the purists: The issue with the W3C patent's policy is not paying for *accessing* standards, but paying for *implementing* them, but the resulting market distortion is similar. Numerous responses have been coming in today at: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-patentpolicy-comment/2001Sep/ -- Holger Blasum <holger@blasum.net> GnuPG 1024D/1CCA6604639C07F5146A
Andrew Kenneth Milton <akm@theinternet.com.au> writes:
+-------[ kapil thangavelu ]---------------------- | | On 16 August 2001 the W3C made public a proposal to substantially change | their patent policy framework. Amongst the changes is support for a new | licensing model (called RAND) that legitimises the W3C's role in developing | and promoting standards that could require the payment of royalties. This is
Most standards bodies require payment to get access to standards in some shape or form. It was only a matter of time. A lot of people aren't happy with the way W3C has been going on various items. Of course if they're getting money from somewhere else maybe they can free themselves of the influence of some of the places the money is coming from now.
The problem with the W3C proposal is actually different. They are considering endorsing standards that are encumbered by patents. If Zope were to support those standards, someone (Zope Corporation?) would have to pay royalties. I can see this might have a slight deterrent effect on free software development. --- Alastair
participants (4)
-
Alastair Burt -
Andrew Kenneth Milton -
Holger Blasum -
kapil thangavelu