From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sat, 8 Apr 1995 23:29:22 -0400 From: Berny Goodheart berny@scoucer.tandem.com.au Subject: what, me worry? Oh yes! Topicbox-Message-UUID: 0c21a99e-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19950409032922.7c-v9WpSwmIdAYurYECzc6OQhr8E9KCLqV4AJGNB4wo@z> Original attachment posted by Tom Glinos, x4302: > > What I learned was the following: > > (1) Lawyers are wonderful people who protect your position if you > can clearly state it to them. They are not to be blamed in this case. There are few individuals in the overall population of programmers who can understand the workings of an operating system, and none of them are lawyers (and if they are, they eat Quiche very badly). My experience with AT&T lawyers (mentioning no names) is that they don't have a clue what they are trying to protect. They rely solely on technical experts to tell them what *they* think should be protected. So, in this case, what is said here is correct; you can't blame the lawyers directly. But, and I say again *but*, the lawyers must justify their jobs equiped with little knowledge of what the hell they are trying to protect so they instruct the technical bods to go away and find something that they *think* should be protected. And this goes on in a vicious circle........ The results is a bureaucratic system with a licensing scheme that is almost impossible to enforce in court -- it's difficult to find a judge with a computer science degree and it's impossible to find a lawyer who knows what he is talking about in the same regard (or, in fact, any regard :-)