Ask HN: Would a "union" of programmers work to end patent trolls?
Programmers are not marginalized except in the most link-baity of articles.
I would have no problem, as a programmer, of swearing allegiance to some list of facts that could easily be improved upon but might look something like this:
* Math should not be patentable * If you have a math patent and use it defensively, that is okay. * If you have a math patent and you use it aggressively, that is decidedly NOT okay. * Features and ideas should not be patentable. * It is okay for specific implementations of features to be protected by law, maybe by patent, maybe by copyright.
If you or your company conflicts with /any/ of the above statements, you are declared evil. If you are evil I will NOT work for you and will work within the law; primarily by whining on the internet, to assure that you lose your capital, your programmers, and thus your ability to do harm to the world.
Signed, eof and 100k other hackers.
Something like this?
8 comments
[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 28.7 ms ] threadIf that group, in a united front, decided they wanted to do away with software patents, that's the direction DC would head accordingly.
The bargaining power of a union would be that eg Microsoft would lose its talent and would rot accordingly, if the best engineers refused to go to work for them.
Bill Gates circa 1998, asked about starting over from scratch and his thoughts on that concept, responds in part by noting that Microsoft's success could be dramatically altered by removing just perhaps 30 people (and the follow-on talent that would want to leave with those people):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldPh0_zEykU&feature=player_de...
Microsoft is a bigger beast today, in terms of employees (by a factor of roughly four fold), but he's probably spot on that you can dramatically alter the course of a software company such as Microsoft by removing some key talent pillars.
Of course, you give it a title like that, you almost have to turn it into a PAC at some point...
Long term one can aim for fundamental reform of our political system. Short term, a PAC might just be a big help. And on the upside, programmers have three great things going for them right now: high incomes and great jobs; well organized, with highly active communities online; countless of the most successful companies in America cease to exist tomorrow morning without them.
There are probably 10,000 programmers (less?), that if they chose to not show up to work over the next year, it would materially damage companies like Google / Facebook / Microsoft / Apple. The influence is plainly there to stop software patents, it simply needs to get organized.
Create a github account/repo on this. Write the initial draft. Discussions goes into issues. Changes in pull request. Signing by staring the repo.
[1] http://www.acm.org/about/se-code