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(erielack) Model Railroad Software



http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2006/09/stakes_small_bu.html

Stakes Small, But Outcome Huge, In Model Railroad Software Fight
By Charles Babcock
Sep 6, 2006 at 08:35 PM ET

Who owns exclusive rights to model railroad software? On March 11,
2003, the U.S. Patent Office came up with the answer to that question
when it issued patent 6,530,329 to Matthew Katzer of Portland, Ore.
There's something worrisome about that decision. Model railroads work
on a scale whose complexity we ought to be able to grasp.

If we can't get this case right, what are we going to do when the
opportunists flock in to claim patents on nuclear power plant
operation and supply chain management?

But no, the U.S. Patent Office didn't know anything about "prior art"
in model railroad software. That is, to deny the patent claim, it
needed to know what Katzer was patenting had in fact existed for a
year or more as a set of commonly discussed ideas. If it had looked,
it would have found that for the 11 months preceding his application,
an open source code project lead by Berkeley physics professor Robert
Jacobsen was busy implementing those ideas.

How might the Patent Office have discovered that? By consulting the
National Model Railroad Association Digital Command Control Working
Group, a standards setting body. Both Katzer, who sells model
railroad software through his KAM Industries, and Jacobsen are
members. Its membership could have explained what ideas were
"obvious" and subject to repeated, shared discussion for developing
command station controls; how Jacobsen and others were writing model
railroad control code; and how Jacobsen's Java Model Railroad
Interface open source project telegraphed its intentions by posting
its architecture on a SourceForge Web site. The Patent Office could
then have discovered that what others considered community property,
Katzer was seeking to patent as private property.

But that's not how the undermanned U.S. Patent office operates. When
called upon to do so, it issues a patent for a claimed unique piece
of software, unless it, or someone opposed to the application, finds
documentation showing the ideas behind the software were the common
knowledge of those well versed in the field. In order to reject, the
patent examiner has to find documentation of the obvious. That can be
hard to do. Software developers, by their peculiar nature, are
interested in documenting what's not obvious.

Too late to worry about that now. Katzer, through his attorneys, sent
Jacobsen a bill last year for $29 for each download of the open
source Java Model Railroad Interface code, a bill that came to
$203,000. The bill hasn't been paid, but the JMRI project experienced
"a chilling effect. Several developers have cut back their
involvement and some of the remainder are spending most of their time
developing the defense against Mr. Katzer's assertions," said
Victoria Hall, Jacobsen's attorney.

This is the first case that I know of where a patent has stifled an
open source code project. And in this case, the stakes were small.
What's going to happen as millions or billions are at stake through
skillful exploitation of software patents?

We need as a society to decide on the purpose of software patents.
Are they meant to guarantee each claim of software ownership,
regardless of whether it represents a true breakthrough? That's close
to the practice today. Or should they be granted sparingly, with the
obligation of proof on the applicant, not the patent examiner? That
would take a new set of court decisions, perhaps
even=http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=192501175>
a Supreme Court decision.

Without such a determination, it's not going to be safe to invest
volunteer effort in open source code projects. What gets produced may
be functional, accomplished code, widely used in the marketplace, but
after years of work, there's little defense for the developers
against an obscure patent holder popping up to claim to own it.d

Gary R. Kazin
DL&W Milepost R35.7
Rockaway, New Jersey

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