Software patents are weak at best, for instance, say if Europe looses this battle and somebody patents the GUI, what will germany, who went totally ope source do? Will they be forced to go back to Macrosuck, or will they pay royalties to the cock-sucking company that tries to patent this. The problem with this is that the patenting of software should have been settled long ago, when the first software programs were being written. How many pieces of software are running around now? The answer: Thousands; hell, millions. How are we supposed to define who owns what, or who came up with what? What does it mean for companies who lost suits on this, who could suddenly reverse the decesions made. Software patens are so vague, so fucking crazy that there would never be anyway to rationalize who owns what, and who has the right to copy this, or distribute that. What if Linus suddenly decided to patent linux, which he could legally do if these software laws came into effect? He could litirally eliminate all distrobutions of linux at his will. Although he would never do that because it goes against the GPL, it is a scary reality. What of UNIX and the SCO lawsuit against IBM. The compnay name has changed so many times, and the ownership and copyrights and possibly PATENTS have shifted so many times that it is impossible to tell he should legally have tyhe rights to it. If laws like this become commonplace, I suggest picking up a career as a law attorney, because those guys would be making the most moolah in the years to come over software battles. Software patents are wrong, nuff said. *end constant rambling*