Bilski II: Red Hat Appeals to Supreme Court over Software Non-Patentability
The U.S. is known for its patent friendliness. But a Supreme Court decision in 2008 overturned a patent application by Bernard L. Bilski and Rand A. Warsaw for a risk mitigation process. Now Red Hat is using the so-called Bilski case in support of software non-patentability.
"One Small Leap for Open Source, One Giant Leap for Mankind" is how Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst titled his press release related to Red Hat's recent appeal to remove pantentability for software. Motivation came from the Bilski case that the U.S. Supreme Court will reopen in the next few weeks. While software patent advocates want to use the opportunity to reverse the 2006 decision and continue to make algorithms patentable, Red Hat is going in the opposite direction by requesting software to be unpatentable. According to Whitehurst:
- What if you could develop software without risking a patent infringement lawsuit?
- What if open source innovation was unencumbered by lurking patent trolls?
- What if there were no software patents?
The most important question is obviously the last one. To present the case to the Supreme Court to reevaluate Bilski and provide them with supporting evidence, Red Hat filed an amicus curiae brief. The brief presents their standpoint: "The Court should adopt this test and make clear that it excludes software from patenting."
The 28-page brief summarizes Red Hat's goal and that of free software altogether in three arguments:
1. The Court has already made a prior decision establishing that abstract ideas are not patentable, and that software patents fall into this category.
2. Software patents can cause dramatic harm to the innovation process in software.
3. An abstract idea does not become patentable merely by implementing it in computer software.
Even if chances are relatively low that software patents are completely wiped away, a re-affirmation of the Bilski case would afford software patent opponents some clear support.
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters
Support Our Work
Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.
News
-
New KDE Slimbook Plasma Available for Preorder
Powered by an AMD Ryzen CPU, the latest KDE Slimbook laptop is powerful enough for local AI tasks.
-
Rhino Linux Announces Latest "Quick Update"
If you prefer your Linux distribution to be of the rolling type, Rhino Linux delivers a beautiful and reliable experience.
-
Plasma Desktop Will Soon Ask for Donations
The next iteration of Plasma has reached the soft feature freeze for the 6.2 version and includes a feature that could be divisive.
-
Linux Market Share Hits New High
For the first time, the Linux market share has reached a new high for desktops, and the trend looks like it will continue.
-
LibreOffice 24.8 Delivers New Features
LibreOffice is often considered the de facto standard office suite for the Linux operating system.
-
Deepin 23 Offers Wayland Support and New AI Tool
Deepin has been considered one of the most beautiful desktop operating systems for a long time and the arrival of version 23 has bolstered that reputation.
-
CachyOS Adds Support for System76's COSMIC Desktop
The August 2024 release of CachyOS includes support for the COSMIC desktop as well as some important bits for video.
-
Linux Foundation Adopts OMI to Foster Ethical LLMs
The Open Model Initiative hopes to create community LLMs that rival proprietary models but avoid restrictive licensing that limits usage.
-
Ubuntu 24.10 to Include the Latest Linux Kernel
Ubuntu users have grown accustomed to their favorite distribution shipping with a kernel that's not quite as up-to-date as other distros but that changes with 24.10.
-
Plasma Desktop 6.1.4 Release Includes Improvements and Bug Fixes
The latest release from the KDE team improves the KWin window and composite managers and plenty of fixes.