-
Second Response to Draft National Policy on Open Standards for e-Governance
-
by
Pranesh Prakash
—
published
Jul 07, 2009
—
last modified
Jul 07, 2009 04:49 PM
—
filed under:
Open Standards,
Public Accountability,
Software Patents
Another draft (labelled "version 2", dated May 26, 2009) of the draft national policy on open standards for e-governance was made available to Fosscomm, while many software companies were speaking out against NASSCOM's position on the policy. CIS drafted a second response addressing both the allegations against NASSCOM as well as the few shortcomings we perceive in the draft policy.
Located in
Openness
/
Publications
/
Open Standards
-
Seminar on Software Patent and the Commons
-
by
Prasad Krishna
—
published
Sep 02, 2010
—
last modified
Oct 23, 2011 02:22 PM
—
filed under:
Intellectual Property Rights,
Software Patents,
Access to Knowledge
A pre-grant opposition has been filed against a software patent application filed in the patent office by Certicom, a wholly owned subsidiary of Research in Motion (RIM), manufacturers of Blackberry. The opposition was filed on August 31, 2010 by the Software Freedom Law Centre which has recently expanded its operations to India. This exciting development was announced by Mishi Choudhary from SFLC on the lines of the seminar on “Software Patents and the Commons” organised on 1 September 2010 in Delhi jointly by SFLC, the Centre for Internet and Society, the Society for Knowledge Commons and Red Hat. Filing more such oppositions to software patents in India was in the pipeline and this is just the beginning of a movement to take on monopolisation of knowledge and ideas through patenting software, the organisers said.
Located in
Access to Knowledge
/
Blogs
-
The National Public Meeting on Software Patents
-
by
Pranesh Prakash
—
published
Oct 04, 2008
—
last modified
Aug 23, 2011 03:02 AM
—
filed under:
Conference,
Campaign,
Software Patents,
FLOSS,
Openness,
Meeting
On Saturday, October 4, 2008, the Centre for Internet and Society, with the support of eighteen other organization, held a meeting on the National Public Meeting on Software Patents in the United Theological College campus. The aim of the event was to explore various issues surrounding software patents, especially from the perspective of the draft Patent Manual.
Located in
Openness
/
Blog
-
The new Guidelines for Computer Related Inventions are a big win for FOSS in India!
-
by
Anubha Sinha
—
published
Feb 23, 2016
—
last modified
Feb 24, 2016 06:30 AM
—
filed under:
Featured,
Patents,
Access to Knowledge,
Software Patents
India is one of the few countries which permits patenting of software – a monopolization that has only benefited established corporations and largely throttled innovation in the software industry, worldwide. CIS has consistently advocated against patentablity of software and in a major victory last week, software patenting in India died a little more. This happened via the newly issued Guidelines for the Examination of Computer Related Inventions, which introduces a new test to restrict software patenting – in essence the same legal test that CIS had been proposing since 2010. This post highlights the new test and other noteworthy changes in the Guidelines.
Located in
Access to Knowledge
/
Blogs
-
Time Out Bengaluru - Software Patenting
-
by
Pranesh Prakash
—
published
Jan 11, 2010
—
last modified
Jan 16, 2013 06:39 AM
—
filed under:
Openness,
Software Patents,
Access to Knowledge
An article by Akhila Seetharaman published as a precursor to the national public meeting on software patents held on 4th in Bangalore.
Located in
News & Media
-
World Day Against Software Patents
-
by
Pranesh Prakash
—
published
Jan 10, 2010
—
last modified
Jan 16, 2013 07:15 AM
—
filed under:
Software Patents,
Access to Knowledge
A global coalition of more than 80 software companies, associations and developers has declared the 24th of September to be the "World Day Against Software Patents". The Hindu, a national daily dedicated one page of its Bangalore edition to software patents and software freedom. Deepa Kurup contributed written two articles titled "Will patenting take the byte out of IT here?" and "How would it be if you read only one type of book?" which reflects some of the concerns of the Free/Libre/Open Source Software community.
Located in
News & Media