William Brett, 1st Viscount Esher (1815–1899) British lawyer, judge and politician
Ungar, v. Sugg (1892) 9 RPC 113, at 116
First announcement of the iPhone, at Macworld 2006. http://www.businessinsider.com/and-boy-have-we-patented-it-2010-3 <br class="br">2000s
William Brett, 1st Viscount Esher (1815–1899) British lawyer, judge and politician
Ungar, v. Sugg (1892) 9 RPC 113, at 116
Bill Gates (1955) American business magnate and philanthropist
" Challenges and Strategy http://web.archive.org/web/20010218085558/http://bralyn.net/etext/literature/bill.gates/challenges-strategy.txt" (16 May 1991). Note that this quotation has been paired with a misattributed quotation. <br class="br">1990s
Ha-Joon Chang book Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism
Source: Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism (2008), Ch. 6, The tyranny of interlocking patents, p. 128
Context: The days are over when technology can be advanced in laboratories by individual scientists alone. Now you need an army of lawyers to negotiate the hazardous terrain of interlocking patents. Unless we find a solution to the problem of interlocking patents, the patent system may actually impede the very innovation it was designed to encourage.
Simon Phipps computer scientist
Keynote Speech at FOSDEM 2007: Liberating Java http://ftp.belnet.be/mirrors/FOSDEM/2007/FOSDEM2007-Liberating-Java.ogg
“Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?”
Jonas Salk (1914–1995) Inventor of polio vaccine
CBS Television interview, on See It Now (12 April 1955); quoted in Shots in the Dark : The Wayward Search for an AIDS Vaccine (2001) by Jon Cohen
Context: Edward R. Murrow: Who owns the patent on this vaccine?
Jonas Salk: Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?
Eric Maskin (1950) American Nobel laureate in economics
Bessen, James, and Eric Maskin. " Sequential innovation, patents, and imitation http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/indprop/docs/comp/replies/appendix1_en.pdf." The RAND Journal of Economics, 40.4 (2009): p. 611.
Richard Stallman (1953) American software freedom activist, short story writer and computer programmer, founder of the GNU project
"How to fight software patents - singly and together", Newsforge (9 September 2004)
2000s
Richard Stallman (1953) American software freedom activist, short story writer and computer programmer, founder of the GNU project
1980s, GNU Manifesto (1985)