Since 2001 the FSFE has been enhancing users' rights by abolishing barriers for software freedom. For 20 years we have been helping individuals and organisations to understand how Free Software contributes to freedom, transparency, and self-determination.

For the next two decades we need your help. We want everyone to be able to control their technology. Free Software and its freedoms to use, study, share, and improve are the key to that goal.

Our Work

Software Patents in Europe

We are working towards a world where software does what software users want it to do. For this, software users must be able to participate in the development and distribution of the software. Software patents block this goal by adding legal and financial risks to software development and distribution and by giving the patent holders legal power to completely prohibit software developers from using the patented ideas.

To understand how patents work, it is important to realise that they have almost nothing in common with copyright. While copyright is granted on the the work of an author, such as a computer program, patents are granted on ideas that could be used inside a computer program. So when thinking of patents, think of "symphony combining wind and string instruments" and not "Beethoven's 2nd symphony."

A problem for everybody

Software patents are a problem for everybody , no matter if big or small companies, individual software developers, users, non-free or Free Software.

The current status

The European Patent Convention states that software is not patentable. But laws are always interpreted by courts, and in this case interpretations of the law differ. So the European Patents Office (EPO) grants software patents by declaring them as "computer implemented inventions". We will continue to work with our sister organisations , our associated organisation FFII, and others to inform people about the dangers of software patents. We will explain the legislative that they have to make the laws more precise so that the patent offices have to act as intended. We will continue to get rid of that problem.

In the US our sister organisation is working to build awareness to the harm caused by software patents and in New Zealand the government understood the problem and recommended in April 2010 to include computer programs amongst inventions that may not be patented.

Selected FSFE actions

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