I don’t think you have a reason to be proud if your name is on a software patent
8
9
2
41
Proud to have invented something new...25x actually. The thing is my employers always own my intellectual property and find it advantageous to protect it.
1
12
Wow! That's awesome. Real time scheduling in particular is something that will be imperative to future systems everywhere!
1
2
yeah, and anyone can license the right to implement it.
1
2
I am sure your work is awesome. I still maintain software patents are, in principle, a horrible idea, and no software developer (who relies on the work of countless others all the time) should support them.
1
1
It’s next to impossible to describe a software patent that is truly original without legal tricks that make sure it doesn’t obviously ignore prior art; because it doesn’t help innovation, but stifles it; because it feeds patent trolls; because it’s of no practical use.

Aug 1, 2019 · 7:49 PM UTC

2
3
I agree with what you're saying about patents, yet I'm proud to have contributed to patents for Red Hat as a)they do actively fight the patent system, e.g. sponsoring no-patent lobby in EU b)they are bound by the Patent Promise redhat.com/en/about/patent-p…
1
a) sounds good, b) only extends to FOSS, if I understand correctly, which I find sad, otherwise I’d like that too
1
The practical use is the same as for all patents: encouraging inventors to share how they achieved something novel while compensating then with a short-term monopoly on doing that thing.
1