Join us next Friday, July 27th, at 3:00 for:
Duane Valz
PATENTLEFT: Are patents
inherently disruptive, or can they play a meaningful role in supporting
innovation and incentivizing quality contributions to Open Source and Open Standards
projects?
ABSTRACT:
Open source projects and the "Copyleft" movement have made their mark
on the software and Internet industries. To the question "Can there be
viable and self-sustaining software and technology development outside
the proprietary framework of copyright law?" – the past decade has
shown us that the answer is a resounding "Yes"! An ongoing tension in
open source and open standards projects, however, is the role that
patent rights should or should not play. Microsoft's recent patent
license deal with Novell around Linux products raised a firestorm of
controversy. In light of both this license deal and other concerns, the
"last call" draft of GPL v3 goes further than prior versions in its
attempt to neutralize the effect of patent rights on open projects.
This tension is playing out in a larger dialogue regarding the proper
role of patents in the software and Internet industries generally, and
during an era of radical patent reform. In this talk, I will discuss:
the role of patents in structuring markets and fostering innovation in
those markets, how patents are used beneficially in for-profit standard
setting organizations around hardware and networking technologies and
explore some of the fits and misfits of patents for open development of
software and Internet technologies.
BIOGRAPHY:
Duane Valz, a graduate of UCB's Boalt Hall School of Law, is VP &
Associate General Counsel for Global Patent Strategy at Yahoo! In that
role he leads a team of attorneys and engineers responsible for the
company's worldwide invention harvesting, patent filings and portfolio
management. Additionally, Mr. Valz advises on IP-related litigation,
licensing, regulation and strategic corporate development matters.
Among his present areas of interest and research are the intersection
of the copyright, trademark and patent law regimes in the creation and
distribution of digital content, and evolving frameworks for
distributed technology development, including the open source movement.
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