ripoff
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Author | Content |
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djohnston Nov 27, 2011 3:52 PM EDT |
A true ripoff is when someone steals code and claims it as their own. This pervasive idea of claiming a UI design as a patent or copyright is nonsense. Maybe Steve never got the memo. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. |
JaseP Nov 27, 2011 8:22 PM EDT |
Don't you know that style can now be patented?!?! Everything can be now,... SCOTUS & USPTO have weakened the old rules to the point where you can get a patent for just about anything... I seriously think of taking a patent for "Method and design for aiding respiration with a rythmic oscillation, changing the internal dimension of a blood/air exchange device,"... that's right... BREATHING. |
jsusanka Nov 27, 2011 10:24 PM EDT |
wasn't the palm pre with webos on the market before android and iphone from sprint? |
tracyanne Nov 28, 2011 12:49 AM EDT |
I don't know about any of that, but Isaac Asmiov thought up the idea in a short story he wrote back in the 1940s. |
tmx Nov 28, 2011 3:26 AM EDT |
@ JaseP This is actually more true than one may think: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20755-breast-cancer-ge... "the biotech industry, which has already patented 4000 human genes" |
helios Nov 28, 2011 5:40 AM EDT |
"wasn't the palm pre with webos on the market before android and iphone from sprint?" Yes it was but not by much....my daughter needed a smartphone and the announcement of an Android release was days away. She loves her pre with WebOS btw. |
JaseP Nov 28, 2011 11:21 AM EDT |
@ tmx: I know,... that's why I posted it... Did you know the rationale for the Court upholding the breast cancer gene patent?!?! They state that the gene does not exist independently in nature, so that the isolated gene is patentable ... NO, seriously ... That IS the rationale. Not like RNA exists or anything ... And computer software patents?!?! The rationale there is that the software "changes physical pathways in the computer" (I may be paraphrasing Court's opinion, just a bit). The Court sometimes employs legal fiction to get to a desired result, one they reach for economic or political reasons. When the Court employs the legal reasoning they are supposed to, it's usually on some arcane area nobody cares about, or an established area of law. |
caitlyn Nov 30, 2011 12:35 AM EDT |
All your ideas are belong to us -- big corporate America |
ColonelPanik Nov 30, 2011 3:20 PM EDT |
OLPC is a great example of Corporate Greed. Intel and MostlySoft almost killed that wonderful machine. If three or four geeks had headed out to some Third-World country they could have done it local, faster, cheaper and with almost no restrictions. |
JaseP Dec 01, 2011 2:46 PM EDT |
You are aware that part of Negroponte's motivation in creating the OLPC project was to do exactly what has occurred in the market, to create a demand for a low cost, good-enough, class of computer devices and have "The Machine" stand up & take notice, driving the prices down??? On the cheap Chinese import market, it's almost there... That Indian tablet is another example. The ASUS netbooks were an indirect response to OLPC. Sure, OLPC has additional goals. They are; to reduce the cost barrier to third world children to be exposed to computers, to foster creative education techniques, to alter the "Net" to become more inclusive of all people (not just "the HAVES"), as well as to push networking technology in a positive and more populist direction (including its effects on culture & politics). But, making manufacturers stand up & take notice, and even compete, WAS an original goal of the project... |
Fettoosh Dec 01, 2011 4:56 PM EDT |
Quoting:and have "The Machine" stand up & take notice, driving the prices down??? On the cheap Chinese import market, it's almost there... In case you haven't seen this, I think the Raspberry PI board is going to be a major game changer. |
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