Those who want to allow software patents say that
they only wanted to codify the granting practice of the
European Patent Office "in an effort to prevent that it
extends even further".
The untrue part is that the legalization of
software patents had any limiting effect.
Without
a directive that allows software patents, the European
Patent Convention of 1974 would still apply. Compared to
the legislative proposals that the proponents of software
patents support, the European Patent Convention actually
has a more limiting effect. The only way to limit
patentability more than in the past is to disallow
software patents in an absolutely waterproof fashion.
Apart from that, the idea of lawmaking is to
define legislation that benefits the public.
The objective should not be to provide legal backing to
any form of questionable conduct. The European Patent Office
has granted many software patents although the European
Patent Convention of 1974 does not make software patentable.
The European Union is not bound to whatever the EPO has been
doing over the years but has a responsibility for Europe's
economy and society.
The question is not what the European Patent Office
has been doing, but what it should be doing in the interest
of Europe.
If the concept of legalizing someone's
practice became a leading principle of lawmaking, then we'd
be in trouble. In a different area but with that sort of
logic, the USA could have decided to simply allow torture
by military officers instead of launching an investigation
and taking precautions for the future.
Click here to read about the lie that software patents
did not cause many legal problems to open source and SMEs