The Case of the Compressed Image
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The Case of the Compressed Image
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
Forgent Networks from Texas wants to collect a royalty every time someone
compresses an image using the JPEG algorithm. It urges third parties to
negotiate with it separate licensing agreements. It bases its claim on a 17
year old patent it acquired in 1997 when VTel, from which Forgent was
spun-off, purchased the San-Jose based Compression Labs.
The patent pertains to a crucial element in the popular compression method.
The JPEG committee of ISO - the International Standards Organization -
threatens to withdraw the standard altogether. This would impact thousands
of software and hardware products.
This is only the latest in a serious of spats. Unisys has spent the better
part of the last 15 years trying to enforce a patent it owns for a
compression technique used in two other popular imaging standards, GIF and
TIFF. BT Group sued Prodigy, a unit of SBC Communications, in a US federal
court, for infringement of its patent of the hypertext link, or hyperlink -
a ubiquitous and critical element of the Web. Dell Computer has agreed with
the FTC to refrain from enforcing a graphics patent having failed to
disclose it to the standards committee in its deliberations of the VL-bus
graphics standard.
"Wired" reported that the Munich Upper Court declared "deep linking" -
posting links to specific pages within a Web site - in violation the
European Union "Database Directive". The directive copyrights the "selection
and arrangement" of a database - even if the content itself is not owned by
the database creator. It explicitly prohibits hyperlinking to the database
contents as "unfair extraction". If upheld, this would cripple most search
engines. Similar rulings - based on national laws - were handed down in
other countries, the latest being Denmark.
Amazon sued Barnes and Noble - and has since settled out of court in March -
for emulating its patented "one click purchasing" business process. A Web
browser command to purchase an item generates a "cookie" - a text file
replete with the buyer's essential details which is then lodged in Amazon's
server. This allows the transaction to be completed without a further
confirmation step.
A clever trick, no doubt. But even Jeff Bezos, Amazon's legendary founder,
expressed doubts regarding the wisdom of the US Patent Office in granting
his company the patent. In an open letter to Amazon's customers, he called
for a rethinking of the whole system of protection of intellectual property
in the Internet age.
In a recently published discourse of innovation and property rights, titled
"The Free-Market Innovation Machine", William Baumol of Princeton University
claims that only capitalism guarantees growth through a steady flow of
innovation. According to popular lore, capitalism makes sure that innovators
are rewarded for their time and skills since property rights are enshrined
in enforceable contracts.
Reality is different, as Baumol himself notes. Innovators tend to maximize
their returns by sharing their technology and licensing it to more efficient
and profitable manufacturers. This rational division of labor is hampered by
the increasingly more stringent and expansive intellectual property laws
that afflict many rich countries nowadays. These statutes tend to protect
the interests of middlemen - manufacturers, distributors, marketers - rather
than the claims of inventors and innovators.
Moreover, the very nature of "intellectual property" is in flux. Business
processes and methods, plants, genetic material, strains of animals, minor
changes to existing technologies - are all patentable. Trademarks and
copyright now cover contents, brand names, and modes of expression and
presentation. Nothing is safe from these encroaching juridical initiatives.
Intellectual property rights have been transformed into a myriad pernicious
monopolies which threaten to stifle innovation and competition.
Intellectual property - patents, content libraries, copyrighted material,
trademarks, rights of all kinds - are sometimes the sole assets - and the
only hope for survival - of cash-strapped and otherwise dysfunctional or
bankrupt firms. Both managers and court-appointed receivers strive to
monetize these properties and patent-portfolios by either selling them or
enforcing the rights against infringing third parties.
Fighting a patent battle in court is prohibitively expensive and the outcome
uncertain. Potential defendants succumb to extortionate demands rather than
endure the Kafkaesque process. The costs are passed on to the consumer.
Sony, for instance already paid Forgent an undisclosed amount in May.
According to Forgent's 10-Q form, filed on June 17, 2002, yet another,
unidentified "prestigious international" company, parted with $15 million in
April.
In commentaries written in 1999-2000 by Harvard law professor, Lawrence
Lessig, for "The Industry Standard", he observed:
"There is growing skepticism among academics about whether such
state-imposed monopolies help a rapidly evolving market such as the
Internet. What is 'novel', 'nonobvious' or 'useful' is hard enough to know
in a relatively stable field. In a transforming market, it's nearly
impossible..."
The very concept of intellectual property is being radically transformed by
the onslaught of new technologies.
The myth of intellectual property postulates that entrepreneurs assume the
risks associated with publishing books, recording records, and inventing
only because - and where - the rights to intellectual property are well
defined and enforced. In the absence of such rights, creative people are
unlikely to make their works accessible to the public. Ultimately, it is the
public which pays the price of piracy and other violations of intellectual
property rights, goes the refrain.
This is untrue. In the USA only few authors actually live by their pen. Even
fewer musicians, not to mention actors, eke out subsistence level income
from their craft. Those who do can no longer be considered merely creative
people. Madonna, Michael Jackson, Schwarzenegger and Grisham are businessmen
at least as much as they are artists.
Intellectual property is a relatively new notion. In the near past, no one
considered knowledge or the fruits of creativity (artwork, designs) as
'patentable', or as someone's 'property'. The artist was but a mere channel
through which divine grace flowed. Texts, discoveries, inventions, works of
art and music, designs - all belonged to the community and could be
replicated freely. True, the chosen ones, the conduits, were revered. But
they were rarely financially rewarded.
Well into the 19th century, artists and innovators were commissioned - and
salaried - to produce their works of art and contrivances. The advent of the
Industrial Revolution - and the imagery of the romantic lone inventor
toiling on his brainchild in a basement or, later, a garage - gave rise to
the patent. The more massive the markets became, the more sophisticated the
sales and marketing techniques, the bigger the financial stakes - the larger
loomed the issue of intellectual property.
Intellectual property rights are less about the intellect and more about
property. In every single year of the last decade, the global turnover in
intellectual property has outweighed the total industrial production of the
world. These markets being global, the monopolists of intellectual products
fight unfair competition globally. A pirate in Skopje is in direct rivalry
with Bill Gates, depriving Microsoft of present and future revenue,
challenging its monopolistic status as well as jeopardizing its
competition-deterring image.
The Open Source Movement weakens the classic model of property rights by
presenting an alternative, viable, vibrant, model which does not involve
over-pricing and anti-competitive predatory practices. The current model of
property rights encourages monopolistic behavior, non-collaborative,
exclusionary innovation (as opposed, for instance, to Linux), and
litigiousness. The Open Source movement exposes the myths underlying current
property rights philosophy and is thus subversive.
But the inane expansion of intellectual property rights may merely be a
final spasm, threatened by the ubiquity of the Internet as they are. Free
scholarly online publications nibble at the heels of their pricey and
anticompetitive offline counterparts. Electronic publishing poses a threat -
however distant - to print publishing. Napster-like peer to peer networks
undermine the foundations of the music and film industries. Open source
software is encroaching on the turf of proprietary applications. It is very
easy and cheap to publish and distribute content on the Internet, the
barriers to entry are virtually nil.
As processors grow speedier, storage larger, applications multi-featured,
broadband access all-pervasive, and the Internet goes wireless - individuals
are increasingly able to emulate much larger scale organizations
successfully. A single person, working from home, with less than $2000 worth
of equipment - can publish a Webzine, author software, write music, shoot
digital films, design products, or communicate with millions and his work
will be indistinguishable from the offerings of the most endowed
corporations and institutions.
Obviously, no individual can yet match the capital assets, the marketing
clout, the market positioning, the global branding, the sales organization,
and the distribution network of the likes of Sony, or Microsoft. In an age
of information glut, it is still the marketing, the media campaign, the
distribution, and the sales that determine the economic outcome.
This advantage, however, is also being eroded, albeit glacially.
The Internet is essentially a free marketing and - in the case of digital
goods - distribution channel. It directly reaches 200 million people all
over the world. Even with a minimum investment, the likelihood of being seen
by surprisingly large numbers of consumers is high. Various business models
are emerging or reasserting themselves - from ad sponsored content to
packaged open source software.
Many creative people - artists, authors, innovators - are repelled by the
commercialization of their intellect and muse. They seek - and find -
alternatives to the behemoths of manufacturing, marketing and distribution
that today control the bulk of intellectual property. Many of them go
freelance. Indie music labels, independent cinema, print on demand
publishing - are omens of things to come.
This inexorably leads to disintermediation - the removal of middlemen
between producer or creator and consumer. The Internet enables niche
marketing and restores the balance between the creative genius and the
commercial exploiters of his product. This is a return to pre-industrial
times when artisans ruled the economic scene.
Work mobility increases in this landscape of shifting allegiances, head
hunting, remote collaboration, contract and agency work, and similar labour
market trends. Intellectual property is likely to become as atomized as
labor and to revert to its true owners - the inspired folks. They, in turn,
will negotiate licensing deals directly with their end users and customers.
Capital, design, engineering, and labor intensive goods - computer chips,
cruise missiles, and passenger cars - will still necessitate the
coordination of a massive workforce in multiple locations. But even here, in
the old industrial landscape, the intellectual contribution to the
collective effort will likely be outsourced to roving freelancers who will
maintain an ownership stake in their designs or inventions.
This intimate relationship between creative person and consumer is the way
it has always been. We may yet look back on the 20th century and note with
amazement the transient and aberrant phase of intermediation - the Sony's,
Microsoft's, and Forgent's of this world.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self
Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East.
He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI)
Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central
East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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