To patent or not to patent, that is the (only) question.
Posted: Sun Apr 09, 2017 4:55 pm
To patent or not to patent, that is the (only) question.
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Most of this is misguided and/or wrong.mikegonta wrote:To patent or not to patent, that is the (only) question.
I believe in most jurisdictions that the use of patented material must be BOTH private AND non-commercial for the exemption to apply. Therefore at the point where you 'give or sell' you have a problem.If I give you or sell you software (either text to be compiled or an
already compiled binary executable) which contains features of the
patented "machine" no patents have been violated.
When you install this software on a PC (which constitutes the
manufacturing of the patented machine), for your own personal use no
patents have been violated since you are freely permitted to do so.
It is only when you install it on a device which you sell commercially,
that you require a patent agreement with the patent holder (which will
then involve the payment of royalties, etc).
I think you have to distinguish between immoral and illegal. Crossing a red light is illegal but not immoral, and one could claim the opposite for torture.iansjack wrote:The emphasis on "commercial" use is completely wrong in UK law, as I understand it. Violation of a patent, whether for commercial or private use, is still a violation. In practice, the chances of a civil action being taken against an individual who violates a patent purely for his own use is unlikely. So, it is much like copyright in that respect. But the fact that you are unlikely to be prosecuted does not alter the immorality of unauthorised use.
If you want to violate someone's patent rights then do so, but don't try to justify it here.
mikegonta wrote:To patent or not to patent, that is the (only) question.