Bonjour, le message precedent est pour repondre a la consultation organisee par la Commission Europeenne sur les brevets logiciels. Vous trouverez plus d'information dans ce qui suit. Pour ceux qui ne lisent pas l'Anglais, vous pouvez repondre en Francais (comme je l'ai fait dans le precedent message).
Donc, pour ne pas que ce soit toujours les memes qui insistent, c'est a mon tour d'insister: repondez a la consultation pour que la Communaute Europeenne ne brade pas l'avenir des logiciels libres, ne vende pas Linux a Microsoft... Denis __________________________________________________________________________________ Dear Sir, Dear Madam, The European Commission is currently researching the economic impact of software patents. For quite obvious reasons, many patent attorneys and IP lawyers who earn money through the patent system are currently lobbying the European Commission in favor of a broad extension of the patent system to software, business methods, intellectual methods, etc. Unless you express your own opinion, only their opinion will be taken into account in the decision process, whatever the consequences on your business, whatever the consequences on innovation. It is therefore very important and urgent, if you consider software patents to be more harmful than useful, to send your opinion by email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] as soon as possible and, in any case, before December 15th, 2000. You can write in the official language of any member country of the European Union. Your email will then be forwarded to the European Commission and published on the EuroLinux Web in order to make sure that your point of view is taken into consideration: http://petition.eurolinux.org/consultation There is currently a consensus among economists on the fact that software patents tend to stifle innovation and harm small and medium enterprises because they create tremendous juridical uncertainty which only benefits to patent attorneys and lawyers. There is also a consensus among patent attorneys on the fact that patents on business methods are just a kind of software patents and that it is impossible to ban business method patents once software patents become legal. Please write serious (but not necessarily long) emails, with a consistent analysis based on economics, technology or real world examples from your everyday practice. Here are a few advice for your email to reach maximal impact within the European Commission: 1- NO POLITICS - Do not include in your emails any political analysis. Otherwise, certain civil servants at the European Commission will pretend that you are politically biased and claim that your arguments are irrelevant. 2- FREE MARKET RHETORICS - Use rhetorics based on free market, competition, innovation, entrepreneurship, SMEs and property, just as if you were the chief of the federation of enterprises in your country. EuroLinux has experienced that "free market economy" is currently the only common language which most civil servants at the European Commission understand. In order to let them understand your point of view and take it into account, it is compulsory to speak their language. Arguments based on epistemology, ethics or history are acceptable but have in general no positive impact on the European Commission because only few people will understand them. 3- DAVOS COMPATIBLE - Imagine that you are introducing your point of view at the Davos Economic Forum in front of CEOs who will only listen to you if your arguments mean more profits to them. Incidentally, many Commissioners at the European Commission used to be members of the steering committee of the Davos Economic Forum. 4- CONSENSUS AMONG ECONOMISTS - Always mention that there is a consensus among economists on the fact that software patents harm innovation. Please understand that our advice does not represent any political point of view of the EuroLinux Alliance and is strictly designed at helping you to present your arguments in such way that they are going to be taken into account by the European Commission. For more information on software patents, please read our knowledge database and follow the links: http://petition.eurolinux.org/consultation http://petition.eurolinux.org/pr/pr5.html If you need inspiration to write your own statement, you may also access our statements database where 100 European companies have already published position statements: http://petition.eurolinux.org/statements Best regards, EuroLinux Alliance [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://petition.eurolinux.org Linux-Azur : http://www.linux-azur.org Désinscriptions: http://www.linux-azur.org/liste.php3 **** Pas de message au format HTML, SVP ****