Patent and Web Standards Town Hall
In recent months, the W3C has released a working draft of new
framework governing the potential use of patented technology in W3C
Recommendations. As the working draft of 16 August states, "the root of the
challenge posed by patents in any standards arena is that participants in a
standards body will be unwilling and unable to work collaboratively if, at the
end of the process, the jointly-developed standard can only be implemented by
meeting licensing terms that are unduly burdensome, unknown at the beginning or
even the end of the design process, or considered unreasonable." There has been
an unprecedented response to the proposed policy, indicating that there is
widespread disagreement in the Web community on the desirability of
incorporating patented technology and on what terms are "reasonable."
This Town Hall forum will be open to the public as well as XML 2001
attendees and will provide an opportunity to listen to speakers describe the
issues at stake in this controversy and to participate in the debate over the
best way for the Web community to respond. The forum will concentrate on the
W3C patent policy and how it can be defined to be practical and workable in the
current legal environment.
1. Town Hall
As Town Hall meetings are open discussion forums, there are no
proceedings for them.
Michael Champion
Michael Champion is a Research and Development Specialist at
Software AG, working out of Ann Arbor, Michigan. He graduated from the
University of Michigan and did graduate study specializing in data analysis and
computer simulation of international conflict. He has been a software developer
in the U.S.A. for 20 years, working primarily in the area of middleware for
client-server document and image management systems. He has been active in the
World Wide Consortium’s Document Object Model (DOM) Working Group for more than
three years and was a principal author of the core XML portion of the DOM Level
1 Recommendation.
Champion joined Software AG in early 1999 and now works in the
Technology Enablement group, focusing on technical business development
activities, writing articles on XML technology, and building example
integrations between XML applications and Software AG’s database and enterprise
integration products. He continues to be active in the W3C DOM working group as
well as the W3C XML Protocols working group.
Daniel WeitznerTechnology and Society Domain Leader
World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
Cambridge
Massachusetts
U.S.A.
Email:
djw@w3.org
Daniel Weitzner is Director of the World Wide Web Consortium's
Technology and Society activities. As such, he is responsible for development
of technology standards that enable the web to address social, legal, and
public policy concerns such as privacy, free speech, protection of minors,
authentication, intellectual property and identification. He is also the W3C's
chief liaison to public policy communities around the world and a member of the
ICANN Protocol Supporting Organization Protocol Council. As one of the leading
figures in the Internet public policy community, he was the first to advocate
user control technologies such as content filtering and rating to protect
children and avoid government censorship of the Intenet. These arguments played
a critical role in the 1997 US Supreme Court case, Reno v. ACLU, awarding the
highest free speech protections to the Internet. He successfully advocated for
adoption of amendments to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act creating
new privacy protections for online transactional information such as Web site
access logs. Weitzner holds a research appointment at MIT's Laboratory for
Computer Science and teaches Internet public policy at MIT.
Before joining the W3C, Mr. Weitzner was co-founder and Deputy
Director of theCenter for Democracy and Technology, an Internet civil liberties
organization in Washington, DC. He was also Deputy Policy Director of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation. Mr. Weitzner has a degree in law from Buffalo
Law School, and a B.A. in Philosophy from Swarthmore College. His publications
on communications policy have appeared in the Yale Law Review, Global Networks,
MIT Press, Computerworld, Wired Magazine, Social Research, Electronic
Networking: Research, Applications & Policy, and The Whole Earth Review. He
is also a commentator for NPR's Marketplace Radio.