Last week, the Free Software Foundation announced an important new
initiative called End Software Patents whose goals are pretty
evident from the project's name. So far, the initiative is backed by the
FSF, the Public Patent Foundation, and the Software Freedom Law
Center.
There are several organizations who are taking on specific bad patents
but ESP is unique in that it is activitely working toward the
abolition of software patents in the United States. While the
organization is focused on work in the US, it's deeply important
globally -- much of the world's patent law is "exported" from the US.
The FSF is stretching extremely limited resources in backing ESP
to help it get off the ground because we believe two things:
- First, software patents are a fundamental threat to free and open
source software (but not just to free and open source software).
The FSF must oppose software patents because they provide a
fundamental threat to free software's continued success. That sounds
like hyperbole but is unfortunately not.
- Second, we can win this fight. For a whole set of reasons, the
successful abolition of software patents is a goal that, while extremely
ambitious, is also within grasp. These issues, of course, are much
bigger than free software. Companies spend billions of dollars in
litigation over software patents that are not novel and that should
not exist. ESP can reach out farther than the FSF alone and build a
coalition that can destroy software patents for the good of much more
than the free software community.
Please read the new ESP report on the state of software patents
written by the ESP Executive Director Ben Klemens to understand why we
are optimistic. And please, support ESP financially in this fight.
ESP's continued work is not ensured past the immediate future. Your
support will help endow a bright future for the next generation of
software developers and users.