(I am copying this to wikien-l, since the 1-Click-Tool is relevant specifically to the English Wikipedia. However, this is a Foundation issue.)
Apparently Answers.com has filed a lawsuit against Babylon, a competitor creating an innovative (if proprietary) software product -- see atttached message. Answers.com claims Babylon violates one of its patents.
The Wikimedia Foundation has business relations with Answers.com. Answers.com, which mirrors Wikipedia content, has provided funding to Wikimania and Wikimedia, and there was an announcement last year for a new partnership about a Wikipedia-branded version of Answers.com's "One-Click-Answers": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tools/1-Click_Answers
This announced partnership, while initially controversial, as of the last message from Jimmy Wales is scheduled to go ahead: http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2006-February/006055.html
Certainly, it is not practical to only engage in business partnerships with companies whose behavior in its entirety our community in its entirety considers ethical. We are partnering with Yahoo!, in spite of their cooperation with the Chinese regime, for example. However, the proposed 1-Click-Answers partnership would go further than that, since the patents covering this exact tool are apparently at the heart of this lawsuit. From the article excerpted below:
The technology is used in one of Answers' core software products, 1-Click Answers, which can be downloaded for free from its Web site, said Jay Bailey, Answers' marketing director.
Babylon makes a one click answer tool, which as of recently integrates Wikipedia content. I am a former Babylon user; their software made huge waves when it first was released for Windows many years ago due to it being fairly clever at identifying words on the screen even in images (you then see translations, definitions, etc.). The Answers.com patent in question was only granted in 2004 according to the article, and Babylon claims they got a similar patent in 2001 already. It seems very much like a predatory bad faith lawsuit to me, and an abuse of exactly the kind of patents that software patent critics oppose, but that is my personal judgment. In general, it is considered good form in the IT industry these days to use software patents only defensively.
From the information I have seen so far, it seems to be entirely
within the realm of possibilities that Answers.com would also sue an open source project which is allegedly in violation of its patents. I have known about these patents for some time, so I have asked Jimmy months ago to ask Bob Rosenschein of Answers.com for an affirmation that they would use patents only defensively; Jimmy promised to ask, but I have not heard from him since then.
Now, our own philosophy on these matters is clear. Wikimedia is entirely running on free software and does not even allow the use of patent-encumbered file formats like MP3. It does not therefore seem proper to me to engage in a partnership with regard to the 1-Click-Answers tool. It would be like becoming friends with someone while you watch them point a gun at someone else; the next bullet might be for you. I don't have a strong opinion on the other partnerships with Answers.com, but I think this specific one should be cancelled ASAP.
This is especially true as the details of the deal -- how we highlight the existence of this tool -- were highly controversial to begin with. I have also seen no actual revenue projections which would indicate this is a compelling idea, and I doubt such projections can be made with any accuracy.
I would be interested in what others think, and in any missing pieces of information. Failing this, I strongly suggest that the issue is put before a Board vote if it is still relevant, given this fundamentally new situation.
Erik
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Mathias Schindler mathias.schindler@gmail.com Date: Mar 22, 2006 10:08 AM Subject: [WikiEN-l] [Slightly OT] Answers sues Babylon To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@wikipedia.org
(...)
http://www.newyorkbusiness.com/news.cms?id=13132
Answers.com owner sues Israeli tech firm by Amanda Fung
Answers Corp., the Manhattan-based creator of Answers.com, said Wednesday that it sued an Israeli company to stop it from using technology that links a user's computer with a central database over the Internet.
The lawsuit, filed with the Tel-Aviv District Court, claims that Babylon Ltd. infringed on Answers' Computerized Dictionary and Thesaurus Applications patent. Answers got the patent in 2004, nine years after it first applied.
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