IP heroes: An archive AdTI cebrates the heroes
(and chides a few miscreants)
in the protection, advance, and
perfection of intellectual property.

Return to AdTI technology page
Return to AdTI home page



"Economies and nations need intellectual property (IP) to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps. I've talked to developing nations, representatives from academia and manufacturing companies that had begun to incorporate GPL software into their products, then... found they had an obligation to deliver their IP back into the world," Schwartz said.

The GPL purports to have freedom at its core, but it imposes on its users "a rather predatory obligation to disgorge all their IP back to the wealthiest nation in the world," the United States, where the GPL originated, Schwartz said. "If you look at the difference between the licence we elected to use and GPL, there are no obligations to economies or universities or manufacturers that take the source code and embed it in [their own] code."

"I do not believe in intellectual-property colonialism."

Jonathan Schwartz
Sun Microsystems
April 5, 2004 comments
Cited in Information week, Cnetnews.com, other

Link to remarks:
UK.builder.com excerpt

Rolling Stone: David Bowie predicted that because of interent and piracy, copyright is going to be dead in ten years. You agree?

No. If copyright dies, if patents die, if the protection of intellectual property is eroded, then people will stop investing. That hurts everyone. People need to have the incentive that if they invest and succeed, they can make a fair profit. Otherwise they'll stop investing.

But on another level entirely, it's just wrong to steal. Or, let's put it another way: it is corrosive to one's character to steal. We want to provide a legal alternative. And we want to make it so compelling that all those people out there who really want to be honest, and really don't want to steal, but haven't had a choice if they wanted to get their music online, will now have a choice. And we think over time, most people stealing music will choose not to if a fair and resonable alternative is presented to them. We are optimists. We always have been.

Steve Jobs
December 3, 2003
Interview, Rolling Stone

Link to remarks:
Rollingstone.com excerpt



1