Google owes $338.7 mln in Chromecast patent case, US jury says::Alphabet’s Google violated a software developer’s patent rights with its remote-streaming technology and must pay $338.7 million in damages, a federal jury in Waco, Texas decided on Friday.

  • @wile_e8
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    -11 year ago

    From a certain point of view, everything is mathematics. It still takes time and effort to figure out the mathematics to make new things work. Patents guarantee that the people who figure out the math will be able to profit off of it before a whole bunch of copycats steal the work. That should apply to software too - assuming that people actually figured out the math and didn’t just patent some idea without an implementation.

    • @nivenkos
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      41 year ago

      Yeah, I think the hardest part is that distinction though.

      Like in software you have patents for one-click shopping, minigames in video game loading screens, etc. - those aren’t hard-researched algorithms, they’re ideas.

      • @wile_e8
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        01 year ago

        I agree that those shouldn’t be patented - they’re ideas, not implementations. If you have a particular ingenious implementation for one-click shopping, go ahead and patent it. But don’t sue people if they come up with a different way to do the same thing - that just means your implementation wasn’t particularly novel.

        So yes, there have been some bad software patents given out. That just means that the process for giving software patents needs to be reformed, not that we need to get rid of software patents.

      • @FantasticFox
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        01 year ago

        Yeah, I agree on those examples. They should be able to patent their particular implementation - like maybe it took a lot of R&D to work out how to get server response times fast enough for one-click to work, or to get loading times fast enough to have a mini-game in the loading screen etc.

        But they shouldn’t be able to patent the entire concept. That’s ridiculous.

        • @nivenkos
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          31 year ago

          You copyright implementations though, not patent them - that is what software copyright is.

          • @FantasticFox
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            11 year ago

            Yeah, I guess it depends if the copyright is broad enough to offer protection while not becoming too broad and stopping innovation.