(Source: Business Wire)

Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE: RHT), the world's leading provider of open source
solutions, today announced it has filed an amicus brief with the United
States Supreme Court. In the brief, Red Hat explains the practical
problems of software patents to software developers. The brief, filed in
the Bilski case, asks the Supreme Court to adopt the lower court's
machine-or-transformation test and to make clear that it excludes
software from patentability.
The Bilski case involves the standard for patenting a process. The case
concerns a business method patent, but involves many of the same issues
as software patents.
"Red Hat continues its commitment to the free and open source software
community by taking a strong position against bad software patents,"
said Rob Tiller, vice president and assistant general counsel, IP for
Red Hat. "Our patent system is supposed to foster innovation, but for
open source and software in general, it does the opposite. Software
patents form a minefield that slows and discourages software innovation.
The Bilski case presents a great opportunity for the Supreme Court to
rectify this problem."
Patenting of software exploded in the 1990s based on judicial decisions
changing the test for patentable subject matter. Software patents now
number in the hundreds of thousands, and they cover abstract technology
in vague and difficult-to-interpret terms. Because software products may
involve thousands of patentable components, developers face the risk of
having to defend weak-but-costly patent infringement lawsuits. A new
class of business enterprise -- patent trolls -- has developed to file
lawsuits to exploit this system.
The Federal Circuit set forth a clear test to determine if a process is
patentable in stating that it must be either "tied to a particular
machine or apparatus" or must "transform a particular article into a
different state or thing." Red Hat argues that this standard is
consistent with Supreme Court case law, and that it should be applied to
exclude algorithms, including computer software, from patenting.
The scope of patentable subject matter is an issue of critical
importance to the future development of all software, including open
source. The Supreme Court's Bilski decision could clarify the law and
lessen the risks that innovation will be hindered by patents. Oral
argument is scheduled for November 9, 2009.
Red Hat has consistently supported patent reform to address problems
posed to open source and other software developers. It previously filed
an amicus brief in the Bilski case with the Federal Circuit Court of
Appeals.