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EU reopens software patent debate

McGreevy!

EETimes - The European Union Commissioner for the Internal Market and Services, Charlie McGreevy, launched an initiative on Monday (Jan. 16) to establish a consistent European patent system, a move which would re-open the debate on the desirability of software patents.

As a part of his inititative, the commissioner launched a public consultation on how future action in patent policy to create an EU-wide patent system could take in account “stakeholder’s needs”.

With his thrust, McGreevy invited private citizens as well as commercial enterprises to participate in an internet consultation that will run until March 31, 2006. The results of the internet debate are set to be the basis for a hearing on the issue scheduled for June 13.

Many large international enterprises have voiced their interest in software patents, saying it would provide for consistency across the technology domain and provide protection to software firms. And in the past, McGreevy has lobbied for the patentability of software.

However, a draft directive related to this issue was dismissed by the European Parliament last summer.

Opponents of software patents have said they would not be in the public’s best interest and could result in a multitude of dubious process and software patent claims and litigation. They now fear that McGreevy’s latest approach is an attempt to establish software patents by the back-door.

But in reality, stakeholder means stakeholder and the questions are essentially forumulated to extol the virtues of patents and those holding them. Not those that suffer from them. But then again McGreevy and his cohorts have always been bending over backwards for big business.