The IPKat has learned from his friend Pamela S. Chestek (Red Hat's Senior IP Attorney) that Red Hat just launched a website about open source and open collaboration at opensource.com ("where open source multiplies"). It has a "Law" channel, where (Pamela says) we can all discuss legal issues, which are generally IP issues, as they relate to open source and collaboration. Warns the IPKat, be careful not to confuse this site with opensource.gov,
Apple has been in the news a lot this week, with talk of the Tablet (says Merpel, "If an Apple a day keeps the doctor away, who needs to keep taking the Tablets ...?"), but the IPKat's favourite apples are Golden Delicious, withered to perfection and just about to ferment. Be that as it may, the produictive "pear" of Professor Paul J. Heald and Susannah Chapman have been at it again. This time he has produced an Apple Diversity Report Card for the Twentieth Century: Patents and Other Sources of Innovation in the Market for Apples. As he explains:
"Contrary to popular belief, the twentieth century was a good one for commercial apple varietal diversity. As measured by availability in commercial nursery catalogs, significant gains were made in both absolute number of apple varieties and the available number of pre-1900 historic varieties. In 1905, an estimated 420 different apple varieties were commercially available, approximately 390 of which dated from the 19th century or earlier. By 2000, 1469 different apple varieties were offered in commercial catalogs, at least 435 of which were pre-1900 century varieties. And, if one counts apple varieties maintained in the USDA orchards as commercially available (one can obtain scions by making a simple on-line request), hundreds more apples, including many historic varieties, can be added to the count. Most importantly, the data collected reveals the sources of diversity gains in the twentieth century, including an analysis of the percentage of varieties resulting from patented innovation, non-patented local innovation, preservation of old varieties, and importation. Although patented apples constitute a relatively small percentage of available varieties, they exhibit stunningly high commercialization rates and surprisingly low obsolescence rates. A unique list of all patented apples, their varietal names, and present availability is included in an appendix."The IPKat really appreciates this research, since it is based on real and verifiable data that shows how the patent system, properly used, can confer not merely market advantage but environmental benefit too. This paper may be accessed via SSRN here.
With the Melton Mowbray being just up the road, it would be positively churlish of me not to join you!
ReplyDeleteDoes the eupemism "serendipitous networking" for boozing during work hours really work?
ReplyDelete