Robert Bunsen, Open Source Pioneer? 127
cygtoad writes "Today marks Robert Bunsen's 200th birthday. I found this interesting factoid on the man: 'Bunsen and Desaga did not apply for patent protection on their burner and it was quite soon that others began to produce their own versions. Some even went so far as to claim the invention as their own, including one person who was granted a patent on the device. Both Bunsen and Desaga were involved in writing letters to the proper authorities to refute these claims.' Does anyone have an older example of such an open information pioneer? In my book he deserves some honor." Benjamin Franklin famously chose not to patent the design of the stove that bears his name, too; you can read all about it.
Makes business sense, probably... (Score:4, Insightful)
When you have a system where you can actually make more money suing for patent infringement and protecting "intellectual property" than you can for actually creating a product, what do you think businesses will do? It probably wasn't the case back then.
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except that is a very rare event.
Early cave man (Score:2)
Discovered fire... and didn't patent it.
And the business methods patent on "religion" (Score:2)
Think of all the royalties and rent-seeking potential for "heaven", "hell", indulgences, salvation, etc.
and for those who would add [citation needed] - look up L. Ron Hubbard + religion
Fire (Score:2)
The inventor of fire never got a patent on it. Think of all the royalties he missed out on!
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Not to mention all of the many uses for fire that could be marketed. I mean for one, do people want fire that can be fitted nasally?
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I'm going to apply for a patent for "fire, on the internet,"
Let the flamewar begin. I'll sue you all for patent abuse!
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I'll see your "fire on the Internet" and raise you "fire in a crowded theatre".
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I'll see your "fire on the Internet" and raise you "fire in a crowded theatre".
and I will raise it to "fire for various uses in a consumer environment"
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I'll see your "fire on the Internet" and raise you "fire in a crowded theatre".
and I will raise it to "fire for various uses in a consumer environment"
I will raise it to "Orangish-Red fire with a bit of blue in the middle".
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I'll see your "fire on the Internet" and raise you "fire in a crowded theatre".
and I will raise it to "fire for various uses in a consumer environment"
I will raise it to "Orangish-Red fire with a bit of blue in the middle".
Then I will have to raise to "Heat generating source with mutable uses in an open world environment"
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Stuff that, I bags WIreless FIre.
Fire was patented and the patent was enforced (Score:5, Funny)
Fire. The inventor of fire never got a patent on it. Think of all the royalties he missed out on!
Untrue. Zeus held the patent, there was even enforcement. Prometheus paid quite a high price for his infringement.
Re:Fire was patented and the patent was enforced (Score:5, Funny)
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No, it was George Flint, a young man from Wales. The lore is that he was banging rocks around 842BCE, and sparks flew, catching his little pile of pine needles on fire. George ran to Uck, who said, "do it again". Bang, George went. Uck killed George, then claimed to invent fire and got 72 virgins. Uck's decendants include Edison and Sarnoff.
Re:Fire was patented and the patent was enforced (Score:4, Funny)
No, it was George Flint, a young man from Wales. The lore is that he was banging rocks around 842BCE, and sparks flew, catching his little pile of pine needles on fire. George ran to Uck, who said, "do it again". Bang, George went. Uck killed George, then claimed to invent fire and got 72 virgins. Uck's decendants include Edison and Sarnoff.
Obvious nonsense. It's never dry enough to light anything with a flint in Wales. Besides which if a welshman invented fire it would be much more likely to involve friction and wool than flint and pine needles.
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Besides which if a welshman invented fire...
Nice! Wish I had mod points today :-)
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Did Al Bundy patent the Bundy Fountain? Of course not..
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Fire is naturally occurring, so can't be patented. What he should have tried to patent is a method for starting fires. No wonder it got thrown out - the USPTO were a bit more clued up back then.
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The inventor of fire never got a patent on it. Think of all the royalties he missed out on!
Actually Mr Ug did patent fire, but since Mr Errga had the patent on Money things were a bit moribund until both patents expired.
Credit (Score:3, Informative)
Whatever, everyone knows Robert Bunsen plagiarized everything from his brother Honeydew. Beaker, you see, was his lover.
Everything was open source (Score:3)
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Everything was open source before patents.
Everything was not patented, but not open source. People were motivated to keep stuff closed source (well you know what I mean). Patents were invented to stop the problems that this caused: people developed some awesome new way to do something cheaper and better, but then kept it a secret (closed source) so only they could profit from the final product. And if the info wasn't shared before such person kicked it, the knowledge was lost.
I hate patents as much as the next guy, they just didn't end open source.
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I have to wonder if Bunsen didn't patent the burner because of ideology or did he just screw up. There are countless examples of people not patenting stuff due to sheer naivete. Now we have 2 options:
1) Research the story*, get the details and see what his opinions about the subject were. OR
2) Forget facts, the guy is a open-source god!
I would admit that the Wikipedia article says that "On a point of principle, he never took out a patent.". However, there is no citation there, and if anyone can find a bette
Not open source (Score:1)
Man up and go public domain or you're just a lot of hot air.
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Man up and read a dictionary. Open source means open source. It has nothing to do with software licensing.
Doesn't the source in open source come from source code?
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Of course it does, which is why spraying the phrase on everything from dance steps to bread recipes is retarded.
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Unless the dictionary in question is up on its jargon, I doubt it would be useful. Open source movement has been about the source code being open and available for everyone to see. Source code didn't exist in the time of Bunsen.
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Then provide a citation, dating from the time before computers, where they were referred to by that precise term.
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Like you're doing when you misapply a phrase?
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fortunately most of the copiers had problems with the "embrace" part of fireplace design...
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Santos Dummont - inventor of the air plane
No, that's an attempt by Brazil to pump up a national hero.
The Wright brothers didn't use a catapult in the 1903 flight, and the claim you just made would be wrong even if they had.
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Dozens of people around the world contributed to the early development of powered flight, and even though the Wright Brothers were (probably) first, their excessive and draconian use of patents ensured their work was largely irrelevant to the development of the aeroplane. A lot of other people shared what they learned, which is why many of their machines quickly started to look like our modern idea of an aeroplane rather than the tail-first pusher-prop wing-warping monstrosity that was the Flyer.
I have no
Faraday (Score:4, Insightful)
I thought Michael Faraday [wikipedia.org] came up with the original gas laboratory burner. Bunsen merely improved on the design. I guess, like the telephone or television, no person can claim to be the sole inventor.
So like the steam engine then (Score:2)
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> Yeah, I came up with the paper clip, the safety pin, and the
> ballpoint pen just last week. They were all perfectly
> obvious--once I'd seen them.
If the mere sight of something is enough to replicate it, then it's hardly very inventive is it?
This especially goes for something that is more complex than a safety pin.
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I can often whistle a tune after I've merely heard it--that doesn't make me a composer.
I would argue that the simple, obvious-in-retrospect, inventions are the hardest. Complex inventions are frequently piles of simpler things organized in a new way. The stirrup, by contrast, is almost painfully simple,and is trivial to duplicate once seen, but men rode horses for some thousands of years before some gifted inventor thought of that simple, ground-breaking device.
There comes a point at which we tend to fo
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No. Just because something is obvious once you see it doesn't mean it wasn't inventive to come up with it in the first place.
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Consider: x does y with the assistance of z using revolutionary technique u.
I must ask you to cease and desist. I have a patent on revolutionary technique u.
My guess... (Score:2)
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I have never heard of anyone poor who managed to defend his patents.
... Therefore it has never happened?
Electronic Components (Score:1)
Can I patent this? (Score:1)
Can I patent this [thedailywtf.com] abuse of a thumb drive?
Pierre and Marie Curie ? (Score:2)
It is too bad that this kind of dedication in the research field is obscured by IP discussions.
There needs to be an "anti-patent" (Score:2)
There needs to be an "anti-patent" that you can file that says "I invented this first, but I choose not to patent it". Something that would be legally binding and prevent later patents from people who look for things and ideas without patents and then file the patents for themselves.
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I'm not sure exactly what it's called but I'm pretty sure there is something like this...
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There is, but unfortunately it's called a "patent". You do what Google did with WebM [webmproject.org] -- obtain all the patents you can, then grant a "perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable ... patent license". Then it's effectively open to everyone, and cannot be patented.
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See the BT "hyperlink" patent [zdnet.co.uk].
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Which will cost you money. There you have it. You would have to file these SIRs world-wide (or the patent comes in through the backdoor via treaties with other countries). Just publicizing would not help either, as patent offices do not read all publications. So this is just another way of making the small inventors powerless and handing their imaginary properties to the big IP-warriors.
I agree with the original poster that there should be a real "anti-patent". I mean, you just do the work of the patent off
Wrong day, Bunsen born on 31 March, not 1 April (Score:1)
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Nobody cares about your shitty timezone.
Joseph Priestey (Score:1)
Besides being a brilliant political philosopher and theologian Priestley invented "impregnated water" but abhorred the idea of patents and the monopolies they grant. Josiah Schweppes was the dude who commercialized the product. Thank Joseph Priestley every time you enjoy American democracy, liberal Christianity, or carbonated beverages.
Dead Guys Birthday? (Score:1)
Am I the only one who finds the passion for celebrating the birthdays of dead guys to be somewhat inexplicable? I mean sure, he was born; so what? Most of us manage that. And he's not getting another year older anymore, nor can you congratulate him on that fact, so the idea of celebrating a birthday seems fairly pointless. If you want to commemorate a famous dead person, celebrate on a day they did something for which you particularly respect them; such as the date Bunsen first published his designs, in
Patents only last 20 years (Score:2)
So even if this would have been patented in 1855, the patent would have expired in 1875. And Bunsen could have made some money. That doesn't seem like a problem. I welcome inventors making some money off their inventions.
I contend that... (Score:5, Insightful)
I contend that, if you were to abolish patents completely tomorrow, people would still want to create and invent and solve problems. The pace of innovation would not slow down but increase, because no firm could ever rest on its laurels.
The arguments that clever people do not work unless paid very highly; that people do not express themselves unless given copyright protection; that people do not invent unless they can win a patent - all these arguments are oft repeated and rarely proven. IME all the cleverest people want is an environment where they can dedicate their time to their art.
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Patents aren't always welcome by inventors. The Brompton folding bike isn't patented because they don't want people to copy their design.
See: http://www.theengineer.co.uk/in-depth/interviews/brompton-managing-director-will-butler-adams/1007592.article [theengineer.co.uk]
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Yes, because most of those 19th century scientists were either of upper or upper middle class birth which is why they could devote all their time to science. Very few of the greats were of working class status.
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feodalization in the form of allowing ownership of ideas and concepts to parties, kills that fundamental of societal dynamics. and nothing can bring it back. thousands of patents are rotting right now
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They're patented, which means that the details are out there for anyone to look at. In 20 years, when those patents expire it will be a free for all of people doing what they like with them.
An alternative involves people not sharing what they've done, then dieing, having told no-one the of the secrets they learned.
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After all, how often have we seen this formula:
1) Inventor invents something new and revolutionary and is marketing it
2) Right before the product goes on the market a patent troll sues the company that is marketing it
3) By the time the case is truly resolved, some other way of solving a problem was created leaving the inventor of the product nothing but a long time spent in court.
The idea that patents make the inventors money so they can continue to invent and cr
What if you don't patent something (Score:1)
and then put it into the public domain. Does that make it impossible to patent?
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See the BT "hyperlink" patent [zdnet.co.uk]
IANAL.
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It makes it harder to patent yes. The trick is making sure you disclose enough details in a published form that the USPTO will easily find should someone else apply for something similar. The primary source for the USPTO is other patents and published applications.
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So, basically, unless you're there the day they review the patent to rub their noses in it like a dog that shit on the carpet while you were out, they'll have no idea your invention ever existed if it's not already in the patent database.
Name any science pioneer. (Score:2)
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First to File (Score:2)
This is the kind of awesomeness that won't be possible anymore under First to File, which some asshats are very keen on switching to.
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If you don't know anything about Patent Law best to keep your mouth shut rather than make a fool of yourself. Public sales of the burner and publication of Poggendorffs Ann. Physik, 100, p. 84-5. count as prior art you idiot.
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You must be rather special to have failed to realize I am not talking about the burner.
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Umm, you provided no context to the comment you made in a discussion about the Bunsen Burner. If not having telepathic abilities makes you class someone as special, then you must think you're surrounded by idiots.
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but under "first to file" that actually doesn't matter. If you didn't FILE you'd have to prove the other party KNEW you invented the app... "failure to file" is not a defense to suddenly finding yourself in trouble for something you were already doing. So many patents are written as "black box" documents anyway. Now that the "working model" is done away with anybody can rationalize after they see something that looks like what they might have thought of.
Fact, not oid (Score:1)
Reminds me of an old comic in OMNI (Score:2)
I think it was OMNI magazine that had the cartoon:
"Bunsen, your work on chromatography is excellent. But what really impresses me is that cute little burner you have there."
The Davy Lamp (1815) (Score:5, Interesting)
After a series of deadly methane explosions in British coal mines, Sir Humphrey Davy (1778-1829) invented an oil lamp with a metal mesh-encased wick, which became known as the Davy lamp. He released it without patent, and the design quickly spread. Humphrey determined through experimentation that methane only exploded at a certain mixture with oxygen, at a certain (high) temperature. The metal mesh dissipated the heat of the wick below the ignition point, which alerting the miners to the presence of methane ("fire damp") by burning at a different color. It was considered an early triumph of the application of the scientific method to a critical public need.
For a fascinating read on the era, I can't recommend Richard Holmes' recent book The Age of Wonder highly enough.
Open air source? (Score:1)
Just watch Connections (Score:2)
If you ever want to present the best argument for abolishing patents, just watch Connections with James Burke. All the episodes are available on YouTube:
Starting here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcSxL8GUn-g [youtube.com]
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Why would you think that? Ben Franklin's comment on why he contributed the design of his stove patent free has pretty obvious roots in the teachings of Timothy about not being in love with money. Read the cited articles and seefor yourself.
The fact that this post was marked offtopic tells me that perhaps your avg SL reader ought to get out a bit more. Not everything of worth comes from the left side of the brain...
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