okay the alliance thing was in reference to all the software companys banding together. What you are talking about I don't know.<
Okay this message is seriously what I think.
You think EU would violate a treaty over this...
No, they would not immediately violate the treaty. They would simply pressure the US through diplomatic channels. This would work. It would be a few years before any respectable government entity would violate major trade agreements to help a small sector of the economy.
Patenting of simple mathmatical algorithms is truly stifling. Which is why they are unpatentable. As far as the IS-NOT operator it might have been rejected outright.
What you don't understand I am trying to say is that every application, every computer program, no matter how large, is an algorithm. It is a process of steps. According to you, no matter how complex or how inventive the program is in its innovations, the creator is not entitled to anything but a copyright. This would mean that any other person company could use the process verbatim in a different language and it would be fair use. This is unreal. This is why I would say that Doom 3 is an algorithm. It is a very complex one but it is still an algorithm. Further, according to what you are saying literally copyright holds back progress because it protects the algorithms word for word implementation. You have to ask at what point an algorithm stops being a mathmatical fact and become a useful, patentable process. All computer software is essentially one huge set of mathmatical instructions.(hence functional computer languages Haskel to name one). At what point does the ban on patents for software stop being a protection of mathmatical algorithms and become a stifling of inventors rights to thier creations. No one would question the patentability of a process to make a new chemical. This all boils down to a mathmatical formula. The system is supposed to make these distinctions. No basic algorithm that you have mentioned is patentable. They have existed for decades. IS-NOT has been published for over a year hence it is unpatentable.
I truly believe that simple math is unpatentable. However, innovations that create whole new ways of looking at something in computers might be patentable. A new security encryption algorithm, a tertiary computing algorithms(three state: true, false, don't know) that is new, or a biologic CPU and its algorithms might be patentable. These are not just simple mathmatical concepts they involve serious conception and invention.
Further, I have been trying to tell you this since this all began. Patents do not stop progress where the patentee left off. The public can have anything that is not a literal infringment and does not fall in the doctrine of equivalents. You may not be able to patent things quite that close to the patent claims, but you can sure as hell exploit it.
In other words, a slightly different biologic CPU would be non-infringing and actually in that case patentable itself if it was patentably distinct.
There is a harder test to get a patent than to show non-infringment. Things that are not patentably distinct may not be infringing either.
Back to politics.
Antagonizing the US is one thing. Believe me someone should tell the better part of the US citizenry to open their eyes. Most US citizens seem to think the world revolves around US. I know it does not.
Literally putting in trade barriers and cutting off diplomatic relations because of a small sector of the economy is so far past overkill. You are referring to breaking some of the worlds most profitable trade agreements over a few things.
If any country in the world is dumb enough to cut off relations without at least asking a foreign country to act to fix the problem, I would have a heart attack. It has taken decades to get the fragile world trade situtation where it is. George Bush has already hurt it enough. Why would a country destroy what is left for less than $1,000,000,000.
Anyway, my fiance is home.
