Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Because copying software is easy and cheap, programmers need legal protection or they won’t have money to make new programs. Some people say patents are needed because software is made of algorithms—step-by-step methods like processes that can be patented—but the passage argues algorithms are general principles, not real inventions, so they shouldn’t be patentable. Instead, software is best treated as written code that copyright can protect, and small changes to copyright law could give enough protection without using patents.
Logic Breakdown
Find where the author discusses patentability of algorithms—look for statements comparing algorithms to laws of nature or logical axioms and concluding they should not be patentable.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.On the basis of the passage, which one of the following is most likely to be a view held by the author?
Correct Answer
A
The author explicitly treats algorithms as non-patentable principles analogous to laws of nature or logical axioms. Support: 'in order for any design to be patentable, it must be genuinely a product of invention (rather than, say, a law of nature or a logical axiom).' and 'software algorithms, because they represent generic principles underlying the specific processes by which tasks are to be carried out by computers, should not be considered patentable.' These sentences show the author views an algorithm as analogous to a law of nature or a logical axiom, which matches choice A.
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