1994-03-17 - US Patent & Trademark Office Web server online

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From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>
To: comp-org-eff-talk@cs.utexas.edu (eff.talk)
Message Hash: 2ebb93128587febf9dab9a5ae01ceaff6489db8d135533c285d97cbd2f2209a5
Message ID: <199403171713.MAA17260@eff.org>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-03-17 17:15:27 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 17 Mar 94 09:15:27 PST

Raw message

From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>
Date: Thu, 17 Mar 94 09:15:27 PST
To: comp-org-eff-talk@cs.utexas.edu (eff.talk)
Subject: US Patent & Trademark Office Web server online
Message-ID: <199403171713.MAA17260@eff.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


A friend from the USPTO mentioned that he'd set up a PTO WWW server at 
http://www.uspto.gov/

Went and had a look, not a whole lot of stuff yet, but there's some probably-
important material here, including transcripts of the Arlington and San
Jose hearings on software patents.  These can now be found also at 
ftp://ftp.eff.org/pub/EFF/Policy/Intellectual_Property/
gopher://gopher.eff.org/00/EFF/Policy/Intellectual_Property/
http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Policy/Intellectual_Property/

The www.uspto.gov site has the benefit of having html versions up, so that
you can find specific testimony, which is quite handy:

http://www.uspto.gov/text/pto/hearings/arlington.html
http://www.uspto.gov/text/pto/hearings/san_jose.html

There are also Unix ASCII, DOS ASCII, compress'd ASCII, gzip'd ASCII,
Adobe Acrobat Exchange PDF, and MS-Word for Mac (BinHex'd StuffIt archive) 
formats available at the PTO site.  

Also available (at both the USPTO and EFF paths) is a file containing the
collected written testimony submitted to both hearings.

-- 
Stanton McCandlish * mech@eff.org * Electronic Frontier Found. OnlineActivist
"In a Time/CNN poll of 1,000 Americans conducted last week by Yankelovich
Partners, two-thirds said it was more important to protect the privacy of
phone calls than to preserve the ability of police to conduct wiretaps.
When informed about the Clipper Chip, 80% said they opposed it."
- Philip Elmer-Dewitt, "Who Should Keep the Keys", TIME, Mar. 4 1994




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