If software patents are legalized, then that will result
in significant costs to all IT companies. It's more efficient
to spend money now to influence the political
process and solve the problem.
The success of the political efforts to prevent the
legalization of software patents is also a question of money.
Those who want software patents spend many millions of Euros.
It's time for those companies that are against software patents
to contribute money to such initiatives.
Preventing the legalization of software patents
is the first and most efficient line of defense.
If software patents do get legalized, then all IT companies
will have to somehow deal with the problem. They will spend
money on "defensive patenting" but they'll never have enough
defensive patents to really deter a large corporation from
an attack. Even if they amassed a large number of patents
over time, those would be absolutely useless against
productless profiteers.
The mere cost of defense against any
patent infringement allegation is very high.
You can quickly
spend hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of Euros just
trying to prove that some patent should never have been
granted. So all other defensive measures are of limited
value, and they may work well for a number of years but
then you finally face a patent assault that you can't fend off.
Only a political decision against software patents can
solve the problem reliably.
If you're ready to spend some money on political
patent defense now, then there are two possibilities for that.
You can make a donation
to the FFII or contact us at "nsp-help at ffii dot org".
You may consider saving money on organizations that
lobby for software patents.
If your company is a member of
some industry association or whatever other group that lobbies for
software patents, then you should seriously consider leaving them.
You will save membership fees, and that money is much better spent
on the fight against software patents. It's unlikely that there will
be any political issue of such significance to our industry again
in the near term. So if an organization doesn't help you to prevent
software patents but works for your larger competitors that want
to crush you, then they certainly don't even deserve a single cent
from you.