The work and personal lives of technical communicators are often conducted through the medium of software, and so the intellectual property (IP) laws that concern software’s composition and international distribution affect the way we write and live. Copyright is the IP regime most often discussed in the field of technical communication, but patent law has a potentially greater effect on composition in, of, and with software because the monopoly rights granted through patents can be more powerful than the distribution rights afforded by copyright. Patent protection for software has become more readily available through recent court decisions, international treaties, and changes to guidelines for patent examiners in the United States, Europe...
516-525 The paper discusses the issues related to software patenting and their implications for soft...
Software, and not hardware, forms the interface between computer users and the machines those users ...
Computer software is somewhat of a problem child for intellectual property law. Courts and legislatu...
Computer programs (more generally, software) have become an essential part of the contemporary (soci...
This book is a study of how computer programs have challenged the thinking about and the actual use ...
What is the best form of protection for software has been and still is a most unsettled and vexing -...
The author approaches the problem of software patents from the perspective of copyright, where the d...
Software is a global business. Patents are increasingly the protection of choice; as a consequence, ...
Intellectual property law has been interacting with software for over sixty years. Despite this, the...
For historical reasons, there is an overlap between patent coverage for software as a technology and...
Software patents have received a great deal of attention in the academic literature. Unfortunately, ...
Suppose you have written a program that is better than any other available software. There may be a ...
The debate on which intellectual property (IP) paradigm would be best suited to protect software in...
160-164The moment software was created was also the starting point of heated debates over software ...
A Winter 2004 article by Bradford L. Smith and Susan O. Mann of Microsoft published in The Universit...
516-525 The paper discusses the issues related to software patenting and their implications for soft...
Software, and not hardware, forms the interface between computer users and the machines those users ...
Computer software is somewhat of a problem child for intellectual property law. Courts and legislatu...
Computer programs (more generally, software) have become an essential part of the contemporary (soci...
This book is a study of how computer programs have challenged the thinking about and the actual use ...
What is the best form of protection for software has been and still is a most unsettled and vexing -...
The author approaches the problem of software patents from the perspective of copyright, where the d...
Software is a global business. Patents are increasingly the protection of choice; as a consequence, ...
Intellectual property law has been interacting with software for over sixty years. Despite this, the...
For historical reasons, there is an overlap between patent coverage for software as a technology and...
Software patents have received a great deal of attention in the academic literature. Unfortunately, ...
Suppose you have written a program that is better than any other available software. There may be a ...
The debate on which intellectual property (IP) paradigm would be best suited to protect software in...
160-164The moment software was created was also the starting point of heated debates over software ...
A Winter 2004 article by Bradford L. Smith and Susan O. Mann of Microsoft published in The Universit...
516-525 The paper discusses the issues related to software patenting and their implications for soft...
Software, and not hardware, forms the interface between computer users and the machines those users ...
Computer software is somewhat of a problem child for intellectual property law. Courts and legislatu...