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Series

2006

Boston University School of Law

Software

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

A Comment On 'Do Patents Facilitate Financing In The Software Industry?', James Bessen Jun 2006

A Comment On 'Do Patents Facilitate Financing In The Software Industry?', James Bessen

Faculty Scholarship

'Do Patents Facilitate Financing in the Software Industry?' by Ronald J. Mann contributes empirical evidence to our understanding of how software startups use patents. However, a close examination of the actual empirical findings in this paper points to rather different conclusions than those that Mann draws, namely: few software startups benefit from software patents and patents are not widely used by software firms to obtain venture financing. Indeed, among other things, the paper reports that 80% of venture-financed software startups had no acquired any patents within four years of receiving financing.


An Essay On The Challenges Of Drafting A Uniform Law Of Software Contracting, Maureen A. O'Rourke Jan 2006

An Essay On The Challenges Of Drafting A Uniform Law Of Software Contracting, Maureen A. O'Rourke

Faculty Scholarship

This Essay, originally presented at Lewis & Clark Law School’s 2006 Distinguished Intellectual Property Visitor lecture, discusses the challenges involved in developing a uniform law of software contracting. Technology and the law have developed since 1995, when the first efforts to codify such a law began. These earlier efforts were largely unsuccessful, and substantial uncertainty still exists in transactions involving software. In this Essay, Dean O’Rourke discusses the American Law Institute’s Principles project that seeks to identify approaches courts could use in adjudicating disputes involving software agreements. The challenges of developing the Principles include the same theoretical, practical and political …


Chapter 3: Open Source Software: Free Provision Of Complex Public Goods, James Bessen Jan 2006

Chapter 3: Open Source Software: Free Provision Of Complex Public Goods, James Bessen

Faculty Scholarship

Open source software, developed by volunteers, appears counter to the conventional wisdom that private provision of public goods is socially more efficient. But complexity makes a difference. Under standard models, development contracts for specialized software may be difficult to write and ownership rights do not necessarily elicit socially optimal effort. I consider three mechanisms that improve the likelihood that firms can obtain the software they need: pre-packaged software, Application Program Interfaces (APIs) and Free/Open Source software (FOSS). I show that with complex software, some firms will choose to participate in FOSS over both "make or buy" and this increases social …