The highest priority in the fight against software patents is
that we increase the number of people who are aware of the
problem.
A lot more people can understand the problem if we tell
them about it.
Obviously, software patents will never be
debated as much in the general public as tax policy or the war
in Iraq. However, the consequences of software patents concern
everyone, and together we can make many more people understand.
Lay the emphasis on the consequences of
software patents.
If you talk too much about the philosophical aspects of why software
should be patentable or not, then people won't understand unless they
are programmers themselves. If you get into details of the legislative
proposals, then the fewest will be familiar with them. Focus on what
everyone can understand, such as the fact that large corporations
want to use software patents to control the software market.
Make people understand that software patents would also
affect them.
Discuss with them the fact that software
is everywhere. It not only runs on computers but also in mobile
phones and today's television sets. We often pay for software
when we don't even know that we're doing it because it is
included in something else. Software is a key industry, and
if software gets more expensive, then even your automobile
insurance or your breakfast can become more expensive. That's
something most people will understand.
Highlight the fact that it would be irresponsible for
Europe to shoot itself into its own foot.
People must know
that Europe would waste a historic opportunity to make its
information technology infrastructure more independent from
a few large American companies than ever before. We have the
chance at hand, and we must not sacrifice it to the patent
establishment.
If there is time, then security is an important
aspect.
As the related
page of this website explains, software patents
will result in insecure software. Someone's personal
E-mails, or even the SMS on their mobile phones, may be
read by a personal enemy because of that. Someone's
online banking password may be stolen by a criminal. Such
things could happen only because software patents
make the software market less competitive. This is not
a wild fantasy. The Technical University at Berlin conducted
research on this and found out that software patents
breed the development and mass distribution of insecure
software.
And of course we'd appreciate if you could
recommend this website to many people!
That way you don't even have to tell them everything
yourself.
Click here to read how to refer people to this website