DocumentCode
9453
Title
Embodied Software: Patents and the History of Software Development, 1946-1970
Author
Con Diaz, Gerardo
Author_Institution
Yale Univ., Yale, CT, USA
Volume
37
Issue
3
fYear
2015
fDate
July-Sept. 2015
Firstpage
8
Lastpage
19
Abstract
In the late 1960s, attorneys and programmers used the term "embodying software"\´ in reference to a patent-drafting technique for software inventions. This strategy consisted of claiming a computer in which a program served as the control system instead of claiming the program itself. If the application was successful, this machine would receive patent protection in lieu of the program. This article argues that the histories of embodied software and software patenting are constitutive of, and inseparable from, one another. It traces the origins of embodying software to Bell Laboratories in the late 1940s and studies the flowcharting program Autoflow to illustrate how and why firms embraced this technique. The history of embodied software demonstrates that software patenting predated the birth of the software industry, and it invites a revision of how we account for the history of software patents.
Keywords
DP industry; flowcharting; patents; software engineering; Bell Laboratories; computer program; embodied software; flowcharting program; patent protection; patent-drafting technique; software development; software industry; software invention; software patenting; Computer languages; Computers; History; Patents; Programming; Software development; Technological innovation; hardware patents; history of computing; intellectual property rights; software development; software patents;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1058-6180
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MAHC.2015.45
Filename
7155426
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