If you thought Novell partnering up with Microsoft was shocking news, then you probably dont want to read the rest of this story. Just remember, we warned you.
The (SFLC) Software Freedom Law Center, a nonprofit organization that provides pro-bono legal services to protect and advance open-source software, filed a brief Dec. 15 with the U.S. Supreme Court in support of Microsofts appeal of a software patent decision.
Yes, Microsoft.
In the case of “Microsoft v. AT&T,” the SFLC is asking the Supreme Court to decide against U.S. patents applying to software that is copied and distributed overseas. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, a specialized patent court known for allowing patents on software and business methods, originally decided in favor of AT&T.
In that decision, the court said that U.S. software patents applied even if the violations happened outside the U.S.
Microsoft appealed the decision and the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case.
The SFLC explains in its brief that its unlikely championing of Microsofts cause in this case is because the “SFLC has an interest in this matter because the decision of this Court will have a significant effect on the rights of the Free and Open Source Software developers and users.”