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Subject: Re: More about the Gothic Vortex Program, $10,000 challenge

Author: Ed Trice

Date: 08:26:42 01/01/04

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Hello Reinhard,

And a Happy New Year to you as well.


>a) following your link you will find: "Gothic Chess was invented by Ed Trice and
>is protected by United States Patent # 6,481,716". Does this mean that chess
>programmers are restricted in distributing or selling their created programs?
>Why creating a patent?

The patent was sought to allow us time to build the organization and become the
hub of Gothic Chess related distribution. Without the patent, any corporate
entity would be able to produce the boards and pieces, selling the game without
our permission, and make a great deal of profit without incurring the startup
expenses we had incurred (marketing research to see if it would be viable to try
and sell a variant, pricepoint determination to figure out what people would be
willing to pay for a set, etc.)

Authors who create a Gothic Chess program for commercial distribution would just
need to obtain a license. The license will not be expensive at all, more of a
formality than anything else. Portions of the license will require that each
copy sold has some information about our organization and website, which I
envision to be a one page sheet that we print out and provide to authors in
whatever quantity they require.

>b) additionally what are the consequences in discussing or publishing anything
>on Gothic Chess at homesites? Why should someone start any activity concerning
>Gothic Chess, when by chance everything possibly could be illegal?

Gothic Chess is discussed on quite a few sites, this is not in the domain of the
patent. But the playing of the game (like on a game-playing site or an
play-by-email engine) is protected by the patent. There are two sites now that
have licenses for GothicChess -- one is BrainKing.com, and the other is an email
engine starting a Gothic Chess event relatively soon.

>c) your challenge in Philadelphia sounds very interesting. But for programmers
>from Germany this would not be really interesting because participating would be
>too expensive, especially for private individuals. Are you really interested in
>widly spreading your idea, e.g. including Old Europe?

With all of our current technology, we can accommodate players from any country
in the world. If you program can fit on a CD, we can arrange for an operator to
run your program. We should be able to have something like web-cam access for
realtime updates if you woudl like as well.

Or, if there are enough entrants from one particular country, you can fight it
out there, we can fight it out here, and arrange for a World Championship type
of event in someplace like London.

We can keep this discussion open and see where it goes.

>d) are there already any accepted computer protocols for Gothic Chess, or will
>programmers be forced to also develop their own individual GUI each?
>


There is nothing like a WinBoard interface, is this is what you are asking. But
you have a goodpoint, perhaps it is time to develope one.



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