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- _______________________________________________________
- | |
- | PROGRAMMING FREEDOM - online edition |
- | |
- | November 1992 -==- Number 6 |
- | |
- | The Electronic Newsletter of |
- | The League for Programming Freedom |
- | 1 Kendall Sq #143, POBox #9171, Cambridge MA 02139 |
- | Send email to: lpf@uunet.uu.net |
- | Voicemail phone number: 617-243-4091. |
- | Leave your message and we'll return your call. |
- | Editor: Spike R. MacPhee (spiker@prep.ai.mit.edu) |
- | Assistant Editor: Andy Oram (oram@hicomb.hi.com) |
- | Reproduction of Programming Freedom via all |
- | electronic media is encouraged. |
- | To reproduce a signed article individually, |
- | please contact the author for permission. |
- |_____________________________________________________|
-
- /\/\/\/\/\ TABLE OF CONTENTS /\/\/\/\/\
-
- LPF News - New email address: lpf@uunet.uu.net; phone works again
- LPF publicity efforts at COMDEX - by Chris Hofstader
- LEGALLY SPEAKING: DEVELOPMENTS ON THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY FRONT
- - by Pamela Samuelson, Michel Denber, and Robert J. Glushko
- Norwegian LPF chapter activity - by Haakon W. Lie
- LPF Boutique: Materials Available from the League
-
- --==--
-
- LPF NEWS - The LPF has a new email address: lpf@uunet.uu.net. If you
- mention the LPF in your signature, please update the address. The LPF
- phone is working again and also takes faxes now. Please send in your
- election ballot to ensure a legal quorum at the annual meeting, which
- is Sunday Dec. 20 at 8PM in the 7th floor lounge at 545 Tech Sq. (MIT
- NE43), Cambridge, Mass. /\/\/\
-
- --==--
-
- The LPF at Fall COMDEX 1992 - by Chris Hofstader (cdh@gnu.ai.mit.edu)
-
- For the first time in the LPF's history we will be running a booth at
- the largest convention in our industry. In fact COMDEX is the largest
- convention of any kind in the world. There will be over 300,000
- professionals and others from all aspects of the computer industry in
- attendance. It is being held in Las Vegas Nov. 16-20.
-
- COMDEX offers a unique opportunity for the LPF to have access to both
- computer corporate executives, their employees and perhaps most
- importantly the entire international technology press corps. Having
- our own booth at this convention will provide the LPF with a single
- focal point where all of these people can find us and find out more
- about our issues. This is the fourth year that the LPF has been at
- COMDEX with officials and volunteer members.
-
- This COMDEX also marks one of the rare occasions that Jack Larsen,
- Steve Sisak, Gordon Schantz and I will all be available to discuss LPF
- issues with both our members who attend the convention and the public
- at large. It will also offer us an opportunity to meet and plan for
- the future of the LPF.
-
- If any LPF members plan on attending COMDEX and would like to help the
- LPF there or would like to meet any or all of the LPF leaders who will
- be in attendance there are a number of things that you can do:
-
- 1. Send me some mail or call the LPF telephone before the convention
- and we can add you to the LPF guest list. Purchasing a booth at
- COMDEX allows us to give out a fair number of guest passes at no
- charge to the LPF but a 75 dollar savings to the members who take
- advantage of this offer.
-
- 2. Call us at COMDEX. There are a number of things that a volunteer
- can do to help us there and of course we would like to meet and
- talk to any members who are interested. Jack Larsen, Steve Sisak
- and I will all be registered at Circus Circus throughout the
- convention.
-
- 3. Visit the LPF booth. Our booth is located in the Riviera
- convention center located adjacent to the Riviera Hotel on Las
- Vegas Blvd. We will have plenty of LPF materials there as well as
- being there ourselves throughout the week.
-
- 4. Send other people to the LPF booth. We would love to talk to your
- friends and coworkers about he importance of our issues and about
- the LPF.
-
- Whether you choose to volunteer at COMDEX or just stop by to talk we
- would enjoy seeing you there. If you cannot attend but have friends
- or coworkers attending please tell them to drop by and find out what
- we're all about. /\/\/\
- --==--
-
- LEGALLY SPEAKING: DEVELOPMENTS ON THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY FRONT
- by Pamela Samuelson, Michel Denber, and Robert J. Glushko
-
- [This column was first published in the June 1992 issue of
- Communications of the ACM. It may be reproduced only for
- noncommercial purposes. Due to length, we have edited the article
- from nine to six pages.]
-
- The rift between what computing professionals think the law of
- intellectual property rights in computer programs ought to be and what
- intellectual property professionals (mainly lawyers) think it ought to
- be is growing wider every day. At the moment, it appears that the
- intellectual property professionals are outmanuevering the computing
- professionals by working toward establishing their vision of the
- proper rules on software intellectual property rights as "the law"
- before the computing professionals even know that the rules that will
- govern their conduct are being decided.
-
- While there are unquestionably pros and cons to the software
- patent and other intellectual property controversies, the unfortunate
- fact of current U.S. policy on intellectual property rights for such
- an important product as computer programs is that the policymaking
- seems largely to be occurring either behind closed doors or in
- courtrooms across the country in cases in which the court papers are
- filed under seal. This effectively precludes those whose work will be
- substantially affected by the resolution of these controversies from
- having any meaningful input into the process of shaping the law in a
- manner that would make sense to them. Exclusion of computing
- professionals from the policymaking process also means that the
- opportunity to persuade them of the merits of proposals eventually
- adopted has been lost. This, in turn, may have serious consequences
- for the enforceability of the proposals if they become the law.
-
- This column will report on this rift by bringing CACM readers up
- to date on some national and international developments in the
- intellectual property rights arena and by reporting the results of a
- survey on intellectual property rights conducted in August 1991 at the
- SIGGRAPH conference in Las Vegas. The SIGGRAPH survey results are
- much the same as the CHI '89 survey results reported in the May 1990
- "Legally Speaking" column. Both surveys show strong support for
- copyright protection for source and object code, but little support
- for copyright or patent protection for most aspects of user interfaces
- and internal structural features of computer programs. If anything,
- the SIGGRAPH survey results show even stronger opposition to copyright
- protection for "look and feel" than did the CHI '89 survey, as well as
- stronger opposition to patent protection for algorithms.
-
- Further evidence of significant opposition to patent protection
- for computer program-related inventions can also be found in a large
- number of letters sent by computing professionals in response to last
- summer's call for public comment by a U.S. Advisory Commission on
- Patent Reform that was ostensibly created to address questions about
- patent protection for software innovations, among other issues. The
- Commission's recently released draft report dismisses concerns raised
- by software patent opponents, and urges, if anything, broadening the
- role of patents for software innovations. That the Commission should
- be preparing to make these recommendations is not surprising to those
- who knew the composition of the subcommittee in charge of the computer
- program-related invention issues. This aspect of the Commission's
- work seems to be a thinly disguised effort to prevent a more
- democratic public debate on software patent issue in which the views
- of computing professionals could be considered.
-
- Other events happening outside the realm of public debate include
- the recent release of a draft agreement on intellectual property
- rights being considered for inclusion as an addendum to the General
- Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Although the draft doesn't
- directly say so, one of its provisions can be read as requiring member
- nations to provide patent protection for software innovations. This
- aspect of the GATT-related draft agreement would seem to implement
- another recommendation of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Patent
- Reform draft report which urges the U.S. to strongly encourage other
- countries to broaden patent protection for program-related inventions.
-
- THE SIGGRAPH SURVEY
-
- ...After the panelists spoke and responded to questions, the
- audience was asked to respond to a survey nearly identical to the
- survey on intellectual property rights conducted at CHI '89. There
- were 345 respondents to the SIGGRAPH intellectual property rights
- survey. As with the CHI '89 survey (which had 667 respondents), the
- SIGGRAPH survey was filled out by people who mainly worked for firms
- that develop software for commercial purposes (only one in five of the
- respondents to these surveys worked for universities)...
-
- AN OVERVIEW OF THE FINDINGS ON PROTECTION OF VARIOUS ASPECTS OF
- SOFTWARE
-
- There were three aspects of programs that enjoyed significant
- support for intellectual property protection among the SIGGRAPH survey
- respondents. Like the CHI '89 respondents before them, SIGGRAPHians
- overwhelmingly supported copyright protection for the source code of
- computer programs. Although a strong majority also supported
- copyright protection for object code (as had the CHI survey
- respondents), support for copyright protection for object code was
- nonetheless lower among both SIGGRAPH and CHI respondents than was the
- support for copyright for source code. The other aspect of software
- enjoying strong support for copyright protection from SIGGRAPH
- respondents was computer generated images (a subject about which no
- inquiry was made on the CHI survey)...
-
- ... nearly four out of five of the SIGGRAPH respondents were against
- patent or copyright protection for algorithms, whereas the CHI
- respondents were almost evenly split on the issue...
-
- STRONGER OPPOSITION TO "LOOK AND FEEL"
-
- Opposition to copyright protection for the "look and feel" of
- computer programs was also stronger among the SIGGRAPH respondents
- than among the CHI '89 survey respondents. More than three-quarters
- of the CHI respondents had expressed opposition to protection for the
- look and feel of computer programs. Ninety-four percent of SIGGRAPH
- respondents, however, were opposed to look and feel protection...
-
- SIMILAR RESULTS CONCERNING OTHER USER INTERFACE FEATURES
-
- Apart from the stronger opposition to look and feel protection,
- the SIGGRAPH survey yielded quite similar results to the CHI '89
- survey concerning other aspects of user interfaces. Ninety-two
- percent of SIGGRAPH respondents opposed protection of user interface
- commands, as had 88 percent of the CHI respondents. Ninety-one
- percent of SIGGRAPH respondents opposed patent or copyright protection
- for user interface functionality, as had eighty-three percent of CHI
- respondents. There was somewhat less support among the SIGGRAPH than
- CHI respondents for protection of user interface screen layouts (79%
- opposition among SIGGRAPH and 69% among CHI respondents) and for user
- interface screen sequences (90% opposition among SIGGRAPH and 79%
- among SIGCHI respondents for this). Icons, however, were thought
- deserving of protection by almost equal percentages of SIGGRAPH (44%)
- and SIGCHI (43%) respondents...
-
- DEVELOPMENTS ON THE PATENT FRONT
-
- About two years ago, after some National Research Council
- workshops aired conflicting views on software intellectual property
- issues, a Congressional hearing was held on software intellectual
- property issues. At this hearing, software developers Mitch Kapor and
- Dan Bricklin, among others, expressed a number of concerns about
- patent protection for software innovations. Some of the concerns
- pertained to problems with how the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
- (PTO) was implementing its policy on computer program-related
- inventions (e.g., problems arising from the PTO's ignorance of the
- prior art and too low a standard as to what software innovations were
- inventive enough to be patented). Some concerns were more fundamental
- in nature (e.g., whether patent protection for software innovations
- might significantly raise the barriers to entry to the software
- industry, especially worrisome because small software firms have been
- at the forefront of innovation in this industry).
-
- At about the same time, the United States began to consider
- proposals to change its patent law to make it more like the patent
- laws of other industrialized nations. To address questions that had
- arisen concerning patent protection for computer program-related
- inventions (including those raised at the Congressional hearing) and
- to consider the patent harmonization proposals and some other issues,
- the U.S. Department of Commerce established an Advisory Commission on
- Patent Law Reform.
-
- Although one important set of issues to be addressed by the
- Commission concerned software patents, no effort was made to find a
- prominent computing professional who had no stated position on the
- issues to serve on the Commission. The person appointed to serve as
- the chairman of the Commission's working group on the computer
- program-related inventions was Howard Figueroa, an IBM executive who
- had publicly spoken in favor of patent protection for computer program
- innovations before his appointment to the Commission. (Interestingly,
- twenty years ago IBM was one of a number of computer firms who
- submitted an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court in the Gottschalk
- v. Benson case arguing against patent protection for algorithms and
- other program-related inventions because of their mathematical
- character. The nature of program algorithms hasn't changed at all in
- the past two decades, but IBM's position on the patent issues has
- completely reversed itself.)
-
- The "public interest" representative on the Commission's working
- group on the computer program issues was William Keefauver, the lawyer
- who argued the Benson case before U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of AT&T
- (the assignee of Benson's patent rights). Keefauver has made no
- secret of the fact that he regards the Supreme Court's ruling that
- Benson's algorithm for converting binary coded decimals to pure binary
- form was unpatentable was wrongly decided. With Figueroa and
- Keefauver on the working group on the computer program-related issues,
- along with three other lawyers specializing in patent law (and an IBM
- attorney as an alternate member), it was widely expected that the
- group would conclude that patents were appropriate for computer
- program-related inventions. Indeed, any other conclusion would have
- been extremely surprising. (Samuelson has yet to meet a patent lawyer
- who has doubts about the advisability of patent protection for
- software innovations.)
-
- Last spring the Commission published a set of questions for
- comment from the public. Most of the questions dealt with patent
- harmonization and other issues, but the first group of questions
- focused on the computer program-related issues. Even the manner in
- which the Commission stated its questions on the computer program
- issues suggested something other than an open mind on the issues. One
- of the questions, for example, asked whether there was any reason why
- patent protection should be "removed" for computer program-related
- inventions. This way of stating the question suggests that the law
- already clearly provided patent protection for computer program
- innovations when, in fact, the case law is in considerable disarray on
- this subject.
-
- The Commission has acknowledged receiving 545 letters in response
- to this set of questions. Nearly eighty percent of the letters
- addressed the computer program-related questions; sixty percent
- addressed only the computer program-related issues. The Commission
- has not provided further information about the letters, such as the
- numbers of respondents who opposed or supported patent protection for
- computer program innovations. Electronic versions of some of these
- letters were posted on electronic bulletin boards. From these, it is
- clear that quite a number of the letters were critical of software
- patents and quite a number came from computing professionals.
-
- The draft report of the Commission's working group on the
- computer program-related issues was released in January of 1992.
- Unsurprisingly, it concludes that patent protection for computer
- program-related inventions is well- established in the law and should
- be continued. By endorsing the view expressed some years ago by
- patent scholar Donald Chisum that algorithms and other computer
- program related inventions are patentable because they are processes
- and have a technological character, the draft report seems to to call
- (as Chisum also did) for the overruling of the 1972 Gottschalk v.
- Benson decision in which the U.S. Supreme Court decision ruled that
- computer program algorithms were unpatentable on account of their
- mathematical character.
-
- The draft report states that it considered all the letters
- submitted in the response to the request for public comments. But the
- report mainly mentions potential objections to the patenting of
- software innovations as a prelude to dismissing them. (This part of
- the report follows the form: "A" is not a problem because of X; "B" is
- not a problem because of Y; and so on.) The draft report does,
- however, recommend a number of changes in PTO procedures for dealing
- with program-related inventions. For example, it states that the
- Office should have better access to the prior art for software
- innovations and better ways of classifying software so that people can
- search more effectively for what has been patented before.
-
- The draft report also asserts that Europe and Japan now strongly
- support patent protection for the patenting of computer
- program-related inventions, and that the major patent offices around
- the world are operating in substantial harmony concerning patent
- protection for software innovations. It further urges the U.S. to
- press those nations that don't provide patent protection for software
- innovations to modify their policies to make program-related
- inventions patentable, saying that the U.S. competitive edge in
- software depends on the availability of patent protection. (It would
- take an entire column to explain why the report's assertions about
- other nations' patent standards aren't completely accurate, but it is
- worth noting that the competitive edge that the U.S. software industry
- currently enjoys was achieved in a legal environment in which patent
- protection was not available for most computer program-related
- inventions.)
-
- GATT-RELATED DEVELOPMENTS
-
- For the last several years, negotiations have been underway to
- reach agreement on international norms on intellectual property rights
- within the framework of the GATT. In mid-December 1991, a draft
- agreement on Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) aimed
- at achieving this goal was distributed. It is now under consideration
- by member nations. Negotiations about it are expected to continue for
- some time. It is far from clear that this draft will be adopted,
- mainly because third world and industrialized nations have not yet
- resolved some longstanding disagreements on a number of its provisions
- (such as those requiring patent or patent-like protection for new
- species of plants).
-
- Only a few of the provisions of the draft TRIPS agreement deal
- with computer software issues. The main provision of the TRIPS
- agreement concerning intellectual property rights in computer programs
- is that which would require member nations to protect computer
- programs as "literary works" under copyright law. The patent section
- of the draft TRIPS agreement does not directly mention computer
- software, but the provision does say that patents are to be available
- without regard to the "field of technology" to which they pertain.
- Since it is difficult to dispute that computer programming pertains to
- a "field of technology," this provision can be interpreted as
- requiring member nations to protect software innovations by patent law
- (notwithstanding the statutory provisions that many nations have
- excluding many program-related inventions from patents and judicial
- interpretations in many nations that have tended to limit the extent
- of patent protection for software innovations).
-
- Those who support this expansive interpretation of the draft
- TRIPS agreement, like those who wrote the Patent Advisory Commission
- draft report, tend to assert that there is already a significant
- consensus, at least among Industrialized nations, in favor of patent
- protection for software innovations (when, in fact, there is not).
- They also tend to ignore significant differences in patentability
- standards employed by those nations that do provide some degree of
- patent protection for software innovations. At an international
- conference on software intellectual property rights sponsored by
- Japan's Software Information Technology Center held in Tokyo in
- December, the head of the EC Directorate which issued the EC Directive
- on Copyright Protection for Computer Programs, after listening to
- discussion of British, German, U.S. and Japanese patent caselaw on
- patent protection for computer program-related inventions, stated that
- the discussion had convinced him that it was premature to say that
- there was sufficient consensus on this set of issues to make it part
- of the GATT framework.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The SIGGRAPH intellectual property rights survey, like the CHI
- '89 survey before it, demonstrates that there is strong support for
- copyright protection for source and object code, but strong opposition
- to extending copyright protection to such things as "look and feel"
- within these segments of the technical community. Those surveyed
- expected negative consequences for their own work and for the industry
- and community of which they were a part if the look and feel lawsuits
- established strong copyright protection for user interfaces. The
- survey also suggests that there is significant opposition within these
- communities concerning patent protection for software innovations.
-
- Neither the SIGGRAPH or the CHI '89 surveys purport to be
- anything more than what they are: interesting sets of data about what
- people in these communities think about the legal issues that affect
- their field...
-
- Intellectual property rights are, of course, not a popularity
- contest. What people in a particular field think the law should be on
- a particular issue, even if by substantial margins, doesn't
- necessarily mean that the courts or the legislature will or should
- agree with that group's assessment. But what people think about the
- norms that will govern their work and the industry as a whole ought to
- matter, if for no other reason than that if there is a substantial gap
- between what people in the field think the rule should be and what the
- rule is, they may not respect the rule, or may devise strained
- interpretations of it that may lead to more litigation. Resentment at
- being excluded from the process of shaping the rule can also undermine
- the effectiveness of a rule.
-
- ...Computer programs are unquestionably an important item of
- commerce, not only in the United States, but in many other nations.
- Given the international nature of commerce of this product and its
- associated services, it is understandable that the U.S. and other
- exporters of software products would press other nations for adoption
- of relatively uniform rules for protecting intellectual property
- rights in software. But it is a bad way for the U.S. (or any other
- country) to make public policy by pushing for adoption of an
- international treaty requiring member nations to give patent
- protection to software innovations and then use that requirement as a
- basis for asserting that the U.S. (or other country) has to patent
- software innovations in order to comply with its treaty obligations.
-
- Computing professionals rely on the strength of the software
- industry, both for their employment and for the tools with which they
- conduct their work. They have a strong and abiding interest in the
- success of this industry, and in the existence of intellectual
- property rights that provide needed incentives for investment in the
- industry. In addition, they have a strong sense of professional
- responsibility and they care very much about the norms that govern
- their work. By virtue of their experience in the field, computing
- professionals also have some insights about what kind and what extent
- of intellectual property protection for software is appropriate that
- those who are making policy in this area would do well to heed.
-
-
- Pamela Samuelson is a Professor of Law at the University of Pittsburgh
- School of Law. Michel Denber is a researcher at Xerox Corporation's
- research facility in Rochester, New York. Robert J. Glushko is the
- President of Hypertext Engineering, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
-
- --==--
-
- /\/\/\LPF email lists - who and what they are for/\/\/\
-
- These lists are for LPF members only, although you may, of course,
- redistribute postings to your friends in the hopes of getting them to
- actively support the LPF by joining.
-
- The moderated mailing list:
- league-activists@prep.ai.mit.edu
-
- and its two sub-lists:
- league-activists-boston@prep.ai.mit.edu
- and league-activists-remote@prep.ai.mit.edu should be used only
-
- for members' requests for assistance in league projects, local or
- nationally, or for announcements from LPF.
-
- These lists are filtered by a moderator to:
- - insure this use;
- - minimize the number of messages;
- - remove items meant for the list's -request address;
- - forward items that should have been sent to another list.
-
- There may be a delay of up to 3 days for your message to be sent on
- L-act, so plan ahead for volunteer requests.
-
- League-tactics@prep.ai.mit.edu is for discussion of LPF directions and
- is not moderated.
-
- If you want to subscribe, change your eddress (email address), or be
- removed from either list, please use:
-
- league-activists-request@prep.ai.mit.edu
- or league-tactics-request@prep.ai.mit.edu
-
-
- General questions about the LPF, and administrative questions about
- your membership or your email copy of the newsletter should still go
- to: lpf@uunet.uu.net
-
- --==--
-
- LPF Norwegian chapter activity - by Haakon W. Lie (Haakon.Lie@nta.no)
-
- On June 22, the computer science elite of Norway celebrated the 25th
- anniversary of Simula, a pioneering object-oriented language. Among the
- invited speakers were Alan Kay (formerly of Xerox Parc, now an Apple
- fellow) and Larry Tesler (formerly of Xerox Parc, now VP at Apple).
- Among the more innocent VIPs were Bjarne Stroustrup and C.A.R. Hoare.
-
- The Norwegian chapter of the League for Programming Freedom used this
- opportunity to express our position on user interface copyright and
- software patents. The 300 participants received handouts describing
- the current threats to programming freedom. both Alan Kay and Larry
- Tesler received a copy of the handout, and Tesler acknowledged our
- existence in his presentation (before he showed the demo tape of
- Apple's forthcoming Newton he said he hoped the LPF representatives
- would not copy the user interface. I presume he intended to make a
- joke).
-
- The leading computer newspaper in Norway (Computerworld) covered the
- event and presented the the views of LPF in two following articles.
- Pictures of LPF members with banners ("Object-oriented programmers,
- beware!", "Defend Programming Freedom") and handouts were featured and
- the total LPF coverage exceeded that of the jubilee itself.
-
- The Norwegian chapter received several new members as result of the
- action. To my knowledge, we didn't make any immediate enemies -- we
- were careful to sympathize with the theme of the conference. The
- handout started like this:
-
- Object-oriented programmers -- beware!
-
- The League for Programming Freedom salutes the creators of Simula
- and Object-Oriented Programming. Object-oriented programming has
- given programmers powerful techniques to express themselves for
- the benefit of the users. Today, the freedom of expression for
- programmers is threatened by software patents and interface
- copyrights.
-
- LPF is a very American organization using a very American symbol [the
- Statue of Liberty] and this may alienate some people. therefore, some
- of the text on the handouts and banners were in Norwegian, and we
- tried to modify the arguments to suit the law of the land.
-
- --==--
-
- /\/\/\ LPF Boutique: Materials Available from the League /\/\/\
-
- Please send your order to the League address on the first page.
- We don't take credit cards yet, but do take US currency in cash,
- checks, money orders, or any of the brands of Travelers Checks.
- Buttons
- We have reprinted the famous ``fanged apple'' buttons. These
- buttons show the symbol of Apple computer with an alien snake's body
- and face. You can buy buttons by mail from the League, for $2 each,
- in quantities of at least three. We give out buttons at events, but
- ask for a donation.
- Stickers
- We also have stickers showing Liberty Empowering the Programmer,
- with the League's name and address. You can order stickers by mail
- from the League at $5 for 10 stickers; for larger orders, phone us to
- discuss a price. We hand them out free when it is convenient, such as
- at our events, but since mailing packages to individuals costs money,
- we want to make it an opportunity to raise funds.
- Post stickers at eye level and separated from other posted
- articles, to make them easy to see. The stickers are not made to
- survive rain.
- Liberty Postcards
- We also have postcards showing Liberty Empowering the Programmer,
- with the League's name and address. Same terms as the stickers.
- Large Liberty Posters
- We have a few posters with the same image that is on the
- stickers, approximately 2.5 ft by 1.5 ft. They are $4 each and $4
- total shipping and handling in the US for the first one to five
- posters, and $2 shipping/handling for each additional five.
- Coffee Mugs
- Our coffee mugs have the Fanged Apple design in full color on one
- side and ``League for Programming Freedom'' on the other. They hold
- twelve ounces and are microwave safe. You can order a mug for $15,
- nonmembers $17, plus $3.00 shipping and handling. They are now in
- stock. Note the price increase.
- T-Shirts
- Michael Ernst has produced t-shirts with Liberty and ``League for
- Programming Freedom'' on the front and ``Innovate, Don't Litigate'' on
- the back. (The back slogan will change from time to time.) You can
- order shirts by mail from the League for $10, nonmembers $12, plus $2
- for shipping and handling. Available colors are yellow, light blue
- and ecru; if you specify a color, we will assume you would rather have
- another color than no shirt. If you want a chosen color or nothing,
- say so explicitly. Please specify the shirt size! (M, L or XL.) We
- are sold out of XL shirts with this back-slogan.
- We have printed the next version of the LPF t-shirt. The new
- back-slogan is "You'll pay for this", with an XORed cursor over the
- word "this", and "League for Programming Freedom" underneath. The
- front is the same as the older shirt, and the colors are yellow, light
- blue, and off-white in M, L, and XL sizes.
- Position Papers and Memberships
- We will send anyone a copy of the League position papers. If you
- want other copies to hand out at an event, we'll send you as many as
- you need. Please discuss your plans with us. One-year memberships
- are $42 for professionals, $10.50 for students, and $21 for others.
- The dues are $100 for an institution with up to three employees, $250
- for an institution with four to nine employees, and $500 for an
- institution with ten or more employees. For $5000, an institution can
- be a sponsor rather than a member.
- League Papers Online
- You can retrieve LPF written materials in TeXinfo format by anonymous
- ftp from prep.ai.mit.edu in the directory /pub/lpf. These include the
- position papers, all back issues of our newsletter Programming Freedom
- membership form, handouts, friends of the court briefs, and articles
- about the LPF's issues of concern. In addition to the above, Joe Wells
- has PostScript, DVI, plain text, and Info format versions of the
- papers "Against User Interface Copyright" (look-and-feel) and "Against
- Software Patents" (patents) available for FTP from the location:
- cs.bu.edu:pub/jbw/lpf/
- League Video Cassettes
- We have a four-hour video tape of two of Richard Stallman's speeches
- for the LPF. If you'd like to give LPF speeches, we can send you a
- copy of this tape to give you an example to learn from. If you'd like
- copies for another purpose, we can send them for $20 each (includes $4
- shipping and handling.) They are now available in VHS/NTSC format
- only. /\/\/\
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- League for Programming Freedom
- 1 Kendall Square #143
- P.O.Box 9171
- Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
-