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RE: References to Redphone's "patent"

2009-02-13 16:17:08
Chuck Powers wrote:
+1

That is a legal quagmire that the IETF (like all good standards
development groups) must avoid.

Chuck is not alone in saying that, as you have just seen.

These are the very people who refused to add "patent policy" to the charter
of the previous IPR WG, and who controlled "consensus" on that point last
time.

Shall we ask the FSF members of IETF also to comment on the need for IETF to
develop a comprehensive policy toward patents so that encumbrances to
Internet standards can be understood and avoided in the future?

/Larry



-----Original Message-----
From: ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org 
[mailto:ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org] On Behalf Of
Powers Chuck-RXCP20
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2009 12:36 PM
To: Thomas Narten; Noel Chiappa
Cc: ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
Subject: RE: References to Redphone's "patent"

+1

That is a legal quagmire that the IETF (like all good standards
development groups) must avoid.


Regards,
Chuck
-------------
Chuck Powers,
Motorola, Inc
phone: 512-427-7261
mobile: 512-576-0008


-----Original Message-----
From: ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org 
[mailto:ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org] On
Behalf Of Thomas Narten
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2009 2:31 PM
To: Noel Chiappa
Cc: ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
Subject: Re: References to Redphone's "patent"

jnc(_at_)mercury(_dot_)lcs(_dot_)mit(_dot_)edu (Noel Chiappa) writes:

    > From: "Lawrence Rosen" <lrosen(_at_)rosenlaw(_dot_)com>

    > the previous IPR WG .. refused even to discuss a
patent policy for IETF.

I thought the IETF sort of had one, though (see RFC mumble)?

I definitely agree that the IETF could use some sort of permanent
legal IPR consulting board that WG's could go to and say 'we have
this IPR filing, what does it mean, and what is the likely impact on
our work'.

Please don't go there.

IPR consultation is all about risk analysis. And risk to the IETF
vs. risk to me personally vs. risk to my employer vs. risk to somebody
else's employer, etc. All are VERY different things.

I don't see an IPR consulting board as being helpful at all. It will
still come down to someone else trying to tell *me* (or you) that I
(or you) shouldn't worry about something, yet it might well be *my*
(or your) skin if things go awry.

The IETF absolutely and fundamentally needs stay out of evaluating the
merits of potential IPR and what the associated risks are. This is
fundamentally an individual decision that every implementor needs to
make on their own.

This principle has been a bedrock of the IETF's IPR policy for a very
long time, and for good reason.

Oh, and another important point, even when we have IPR disclosures,
they are often for patent applications, which are not public, nor have
they been issued (so they are only potential patents). In such cases,
there is precious little an advisory board could tell us, other than
"we don't know"...

Thomas
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