No, it's not. You miss the point.
>					  Big companies with 
> big pockets are very nervous about being too closely associated with 
> Linux because of this problem. 
The point being that that is _their_ problem, and at a level that has 
nothing to do with technology.
I'm saying that technical people shouldn't care. I certainly don't. The 
people who _should_ care are patent attourneys etc, since they actually 
get paid for it, and can better judge the matter anyway.
Everybody in the whole software industry knows that any non-trivial
program (and probably most trivial programs too, for that matter) will
infringe on _some_ patent. Ask anybody. It's apparently an accepted fact,
or at least a saying that I've heard too many times. 
I just don't care. Clearly, if all significant programs infringe on 
something, the issue is no longer "do we infringe", but "is it an issue"?
And that's _exactly_ why technical people shouldn't care. The "is it an 
issue" is not something a technical guy can answer, since the answer 
depends on totally non-technical things.
Ask your legal counsel, and I strongly suspect that if he is any good, he
will tell you the same thing. Namely that it's _his_ problem, and that
your engineers should not waste their time trying to find existing
patents.
			Linus
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