s 50 years, and can be renewed. Patents last only17 years, but cannot be renewed. With technology advancing so quickly, it is not necessary to maintainthe protection of the software for the length of the copyright, but also, it is sometimes necessary torenew them (Del Guercio 22-24), say, for a 10th sequel in a video game series or version 47.1 of Bob'sGraphic Program. With copyrighted material, one is able to write software similiar to someone else's, solong as the programming code is their own, and not borrowed from the others (Del Guercio 22-24). Thiskeeps the industry competitive, and thus results in better software (because everyone is greedy, and theydon't want to fall behind). With patents no one is allowed to create software that performs a similarfunctions. Take AutoCAD and TrueSpace 2, two 3D modeling programs. TrueSpace 2 would be a violation ofpatent laws, as it performs a very close task to AutoCADs, !which came first. Luckily for us, CAD programs are not new, they have been around for more than 10years, and no one thought to patent them.Thus, you can see the need for change in the system. The current laws regarding the protectionof intellectual material cannot adequately protect software, they are either too weak or too strict. Weneed a new category of protection. The perfect protection law would most likely last for 10 years,renewable. This is long enough to protect a program for as long as it is still useful, and allows forsequels and new versions just in case. It would also have to allow for others to make similar software,keeping the industry competitive, but it would have to not allow copying of portions of other software(because you can't 'quote' something from someone elses software like you can with a book). However,there are many who dispute this, and I can see their point. Current copyright laws have and will protectsoftware effectively, it can be just as protected as other mediums (Cosgrove). Thi...