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------- Forwarded message follows ------- Date sent: Mon, 25 Sep 2000 13:47:57 -0700 To: politech@politechbot.com From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com> Subject: FC: Software patent debate in Washington DC, October 2 Send reply to: declan@well.com
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>From: "Skip Gain" <mail@sgain.com> >To: <declan@well.com> >Subject: Software Patent ISOC Meeting >Date: Sun, 24 Sep 2000 22:13:46 -0400 > >Mr. McCullagh, > >I'm helping to promote the next DC ISOC meeting on software patents >and I wondered if you could send a notice out on the Politech mailing >list. The speakers are going to be Commissioner Dickinson, Tim >O'Reilly, and Lawrence Lessig. It's somewhat of a continuation of >the debate Dickinson and O'Reilly had last May on the O'Reilly >network >(http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/patents/2000/05/24/PizzoFiles.html). > >I pasted the meeting announcement below, and any advice you have >concerning promotion would be appreciated. > >Thanks, > >Skip Gain >mail@sgain.com > > > >MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT >Washington, DC Chapter -- The Internet Society > > >PATENTS AND THE INTERNET: >Protection for, or roadblock to, innovation? > > >SPEAKERS: >Q. TODD DICKINSON: Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual >Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark >Office > >TIM O'REILLY: founder and president of O'Reilly & Associates, a >pioneer in the popularization of the Internet, and an activist for >Internet standards and for Open Source software. > >LAWRENCE LESSIG: one of the nation's leading authorities on Internet >law, author (Code, and Other Laws of Cyberspace), and Professor of >Law at the Stanford Law School, > > >The October meeting of The Internet Society, DC Area Chapter will >bring together three special authorities to address the U.S. Patent >Office and its attempts to keep in step with the increasing pace of >technology, a topic that has significant short and long term impacts >on the Internet. > >Many feel the Internet has become a world wide marvel because of an >open environment with minimal regulation. Others feel patent >protection is needed in order to have continuous innovative >development. Are patents being granted for old ideas in "new >clothing"; how easy is it to determine "prior art" vs uniqueness? >Hear why patents for Internet related business processes and software >have generated so much controversy. Listen to what these experts >have to say; ask your questions; do some networking. > > >WHEN: >Tuesday, October 3rd >7:00-9:00 p.m. >6:00-7:00 p.m. for sign-in and networking > > >LOCATION: >Booz-Allen at Tysons Corner >Allen Building, 8283 Greensboro Drive >McLean, VA 22102 >Telephone: 703-902-5000 > >Directions are at: http://www.dcisoc.org/trav0001.html >A map is at http://www.dcisoc.org/map0001.html > >There is no charge to attend this event, which is open to the public. > While not required to attend, please RSVP to Terry Weigler >tweigler@isoc.org if you plan to come. > >If your organization would like to sponsor this meeting, contact >Marty Burack <burack@isoc.org>, tel.: 703-645-2468, cell: >703-599-4344 > > >SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES: > >Q. TODD DICKINSON was appointed by President Clinton as Under >Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the >United States Patent and Trademark Office on March 29, 2000. >Dickinson had served as Assistant Secretary of Commerce and >Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks since November 10, 1999, as >Acting Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Acting Commissioner of >Patents and Trademarks since January 1, 1999, and as Deputy Assistant >Secretary of Commerce and Deputy Commissioner of Patents and >Trademarks since June 18, 1998. In addition to managing the United >States Patent and Trademark Office's (USPTO) operations, Dickinson >serves as principal policy advisor to the Clinton Administration and >Congress on all domestic and international intellectual property >matters. He also serves as co-chair of the National Intellectual >Property Law Enforcement Coordination Council, which coordinates >domestic and international intellectual property enforcement issues. > >Under Dickinson's leadership, the USPTO is implementing the most >sweeping reform in patent law in a half-century and is restructuring >itself into a performance-based organization. Other initiatives he >has undertaken include making more than two million patents and all >registered trademarks and applications freely available on the >Internet; implementation of the electronic filing of trademark and >patent applications; creation of the Office of Independent Inventor >Programs; and the establishment of the Office of Quality Management. > >Previously with the Philadelphia-based law firm of Dechert, Price and >Rhoads and having served as Chief Counsel for Intellectual Property >and Technology at Sun Company, Inc., Dickinson has more than twenty >years of experience in the private sector representing a wide-range >of clients, from individual inventors to major corporations, on >intellectual property protection matters. > >A native of Pennsylvania, Director Dickinson earned a B.S. degree in >Chemistry from Allegheny College in 1974 and a J.D. from the >University of Pittsburgh School of Law in 1977. He is a member of the >bars of Pennsylvania, California and Illinois. > > >LAWRENCE LESSIG is a Professor of Law at the Stanford Law School. He >is a renowned constitutional scholar and one of the nation's leading >authorities on Internet law. Lessig teaches and writes in the areas >of constitutional law, contracts, comparative constitutional law, and >the law of cyberspace. His book, Code, and Other Laws of Cyberspace, >published by Basic Books, explores how the architecture of computer >networks affects basic liberties, and the implications of the use of >code to either suppress or promote freedom. Lessig has paced the >field in research about the development and regulation of the >Internet. He recently served in an advisory capacity to Judge Thomas >Penfield Jackson on the Microsoft antitrust case, and his work has >been cited in numerous media reports about societal issues raised by >the Internet and electronic commerce. In 1999-2000, he was a fellow >at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin. > >Before coming to Stanford, Lessig was the Berkman Professor of Law at >Harvard Law School. From 1991 to 1997, he was a professor at the >University of Chicago Law School. He graduated from Yale Law School >in 1989, and then clerked for Judge Richard Posner of the 7th Circuit >Court of Appeals, and Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court. > > >TIM O'REILLY is founder and president of O'Reilly & Associates, >thought by many to be the best computer book publisher in the world. >O'Reilly has also been a pioneer in the popularization of the >Internet. O'Reilly's Global Network Navigator site (GNN, which was >sold to America Online in September 1995) was the first Web portal >and the first true commercial site on the World Wide Web. > >O'Reilly continues to pioneer new content developments on the Web via >it's O'Reilly Network affiliate, which also manages sites such as >www.perl.com and xml.com. O'Reilly's conference arm hosts the popular >Perl Conference, the Open Source Software Convention, and a Java >Enterprise Conference. > >Tim has been an activist for Internet standards and for Open Source >software. He has led successful public relations campaigns on behalf >of key Internet technologies, helping to block Microsoft's 1996 >limits on TCP/IP in NT Workstation, organizing the " summit" of key >free software leaders where the term "Open Source" was first widely >agreed upon, and, most recently, organizing a series of protests >against frivolous software patents. Tim received Infoworld's Industry >Achievement Award in 1998 for his advocacy on behalf of the Open >Source community. > >Tim has written numerous books on computer topics. He has served on >the board of trustees for both the Internet Society and the >Electronic Frontier Foundation, two organizations devoted to making >sure that the Internet fulfills its promise. He is on the boards of >Collab.Net, ActiveState Tool Corp, Epit, Invisible Worlds, and >IntellectMarket. > >Tim graduated from Harvard College in 1975 with a B.A. cum laude in >Classics. His honors thesis explored the tension between mysticism >and logic in Plato's dialogues. >
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