One big problem I have with software patents is that they rarely contain any actual implementation. The whole point of a patent is that society grants you a temporary monopoly and you give society the intricate details of your invention.
Many patents these days get the best of both worlds. We give them that monopoly and they give not a thing back. I say if we're to have software patents, they need to all include working code. If the code doesn't produce your patentable idea, no patent.
Many patents these days get the best of both worlds. We give them that monopoly and they give not a thing back. I say if we're to have software patents, they need to all include working code. If the code doesn't produce your patentable idea, no patent.