<span>I've found an interview [1]</span><span> at the DOT </span><span>to Eirik Eng,</span><font color="#333333"><font color="#333333" face="arial,helvetica" size="4"><b> </b></font></font>president of Trolltech in 2004. At the end of the interview, Eirik is asked about the position of Trolltech and software patents.<br>
<br>This is his answer:<br><br>"Trolltech is against software patenting. We think it is a bad thing and we see with horror what is happening to the US software market because of the patent policy over there. From my limited understanding of the subject, US patent law isn't that bad, it's the actual application of that law by the US patent office which is the problem. We sincerely hope that we will not get a parallel situation in Europe and we think that would be a catastrophe to the software industry in Europe. We think that we are well protected by copyright laws and other laws. we think that software is a very different product from other types of commercial production products. And we think that it is very important for innovation that people can continue to share ideas and
that companies are not allowed to patent things which are very obvious."<br>
<br><br>Will this still be the position of Trolltech when acquired by Nokia? I don't think so. I'll belive it when I read it, straight in <a href="http://nokia.com">nokia.com</a> signed by them, and when they join forces with the FFII and enter in campaings like <a href="http://nosoftwarepatents.com">nosoftwarepatents.com</a>. Working in favor of software patents means working against open source and against the community.<br>
<br>--<br>[1] <a href="http://dot.kde.org/1081772638/">http://dot.kde.org/1081772638/</a><br>