Software patent directive adopted
Published: 07 Mar 2005 10:45 GMT
The European Council adopted the software patent directive on Monday, despite requests from Denmark, Poland and Portugal to reject the directive.
An EU Council spokeswoman said on Monday morning that the Computer Implemented Inventions Directive had been adopted, but was unable to give more details.
According to Florian Mueller, an anti-patent campaigner who watched the public part of the meeting, a minister from Luxembourg said the directive is being adopted to ensure that the Council adheres to its processes and to avoid creating problems for other directives.
"We are adopting the position for institutional reasons so as not to create a precedent which might have a consequence of creating future delays in other processes," the minister said, according to Mueller.
Last week it was reported that Denmark would attempt to have the directive listed as a B-item, rather than an A-item, allowing the text to be renegotiated. The Luxembourg minister admitted that Denmark, Poland and Portugal would have preferred the directive to be listed as a B-item, according to Mueller.
The directive will now be passed to European Parliament, which can reject or amend the proposal, for a second reading.
The Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure (FFII) accused the EU Council of ignoring the views of both the national parliaments that spoke out against the directive and the European Parliament, which demanded that the directive be restarted.
"This is a very sad day for democracy, and casts a very dark shadow over the European Constitution, which will give the Council even more power," said the FFII in a statement.
Mueller agreed that the Council's decision was "undemocratic". He said that getting the Parliament to reject or amend the proposal could be difficult
"The hurdle is very high as we need an absolute majority of every member of parliament, which means 367 MEPs for every amendment to the directive," said Mueller.
Hugo Lueders, the director of public policy at pro-patent organisation CompTIA, said he is pleased the Council has adopted the directive. He claims software patents are needed to ensure that the EU can keep to the goals set by the "Lisbon Agenda" --- that the EU will become the world's most competitive and dynamic knowledge-driven economy by 2010.
"We think this directive is overdue," said Lueders. "It's extremely urgent to proceed with the Lisbon Agenda, of which this directive is a key element."
Full Talkback thread
46 comments
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I do hope this is an error, and wishful thinking f... Patrick Sinz -
Any hope we might have had for tech innovatio... NJ -
This is ill news indeed...
And to think I adm... Pablo Santos -
Watch yourself Microsoft! You have just unleashed... ricardo -
With one hand they fine Microsoft 0.5 billion poun... Steve J -
I have just listend to the Danish "Økonomimin... Michael Reib -
A mistake? Not just developers, any computer-usin... Olav Petri -
Completly shamefull, an open attack on democracy.... Ricardo Botelho de Sousa -
Not just the fury of opensource, the fury of the f... Anonymous -
sad day. need a demonstration, our contempt and be... Anonymous -
OSS development is now going to be spearheaded in... Bill Franklin -
€C=U$A=$hit => Software patents will be adopted Anonymous -
Software patents are long overdue. The reason the... Martin Ryan -
Software development is an iterative process... Anonymous -
Mr. Ryan.
By the same logic; creating a book... Gerard ter Beke -
... but their work is fully protected by the... Geert Bevin -
The sheer ignorance of using US patent protec... Marcus Widerberg -
Mr Ryan...Its the fact that this ruling allow... Yeah -
Any proponent of software patenting under the... Jezter~ -
I hope this isn't adopted, because this... Jamie -
Outrage!!
Mr Martin Ryan, before claiming the... CD -
Let's not get overexcited - all this means is that... James Cross -
We all know that big business and government are r... Anonymous -
This is a disaster.
Not only software patents... Ernesto Alvarez -
Money beats democracy, hands down. Sad. Marek Baczynski -
I think I'll quit. Maybe I'll retrain as lumberjac... Anonymous -
Can anybody explain to me how it is possible that,... ignace saenen -
Ah yes, I can see it now...coding innovation going... Anonymous -
Mr Ryan - You are a marketing director.
How long i... Anonymous -
Very good decision.This will help the genuine... Anonymous -
To clueless Anonymous Programmer.
This w... Arthur B. -
Mr Anonymous Programmer: "unabashed plag... Chris Rankin -
I have to say that I really wonder... Anonymous -
Marketing directors live off the grabbing of ideas... Anonymous -
Isn't it that the EU commission has chosen Mi... Gaia -
Large organisations usually end up losing their cu... A Harding -
I'm dismayed at the cretinous behaviour of th... Anonymous -
What the hell are they thinkng? Anonymous -
I really, really wonder how can someone be so... The Mitch -
Bad things happen when good people do nothing... Anonymous -
When something so obviously undemocratic and corru... Mark -
English? Then write to your MEP(s) at writetothem.... Rob -
Why not music patents?
Stop the music. I've just p... Arthur B. -
This is sad and bet you money that big software co... Josh -
Until yesterday I was inclined to vote in favour... Jan Mulder -
Hey.. at least you'll get a chance to vote on... Z









