jducoeur: (device)
jducoeur ([personal profile] jducoeur) wrote2016-04-17 05:44 pm
Entry tags:

You know you've been around the block a few times...

... when your internal monologue goes something like this:

"A-ha!  Yes, that looks like the right solution to the problem."

(Smug.)  "Oh, I like that -- it's pretty innovative, and I think it's even a good user workflow."

(Dismay.)  "Oh, crap -- that means I probably have to write an effing patent..."
ETA: folks, I appreciate that you're trying to help with the comments, but you're not -- you're making an extremely difficult and painful decision much worse. I've been studying this question at *least* as long as any of you, I understand it quite deeply from all sides, and quite frankly, you're not in my shoes and don't understand the sheer number of issues I'm juggling here. Please stop.

[identity profile] serakit.livejournal.com 2016-04-17 09:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Because if you do something innovative and don't patent it someone else will steal it and patent it and make you not use it anymore?
mindways: (Default)

[personal profile] mindways 2016-04-17 10:43 pm (UTC)(link)
...why? With public commits, proving prior art if someone else tries to patent it later ought to be trivial, I'd think?

[identity profile] herooftheage.livejournal.com 2016-04-18 12:44 am (UTC)(link)
Do you have either shareholders, or investors? If it's a privately held business, isn't your duty to the company pretty much what the private owners want? You might decide you need to patent stuff so you can attract investors, but that seems fundamentally different from a responsibility to patent.
dsrtao: dsr as a LEGO minifig (Default)

[personal profile] dsrtao 2016-04-18 01:29 am (UTC)(link)
Pros and cons.

Pro: a patent might be useful as a visible proof of the company's asset.

Pro: a patent might be useful to sue a competitor

Pro: ...I think that's all.

Con: publishing is much, much cheaper

Con: having a patent won't save you much in a defensive lawsuit. Establishing that a patent covers what you think it covers versus a publication covering the same technique will come out even.

Con: publishing benefits other programmers. Most of them will not be in competition with you.

Con: owning a patent that other programmers want to use forces them to buy licenses and hire lawyers, which are not things that other programmers enjoy.

But mostly I could just point you at

http://jducoeur.livejournal.com/845505.html

and

https://jducoeur.dreamwidth.org/265450.html

and https://jducoeur.dreamwidth.org/528071.html?thread=3962055#cmt3962055