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Ben Klemens

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Name
  
Ben Klemens


Role
  
Author

Ben Klemens httpsmedialicdncommprmprshrinknp200200p

Education
  
California Institute of Technology

Books
  
21st Century C: C Tips fro, Modeling with Data: Tools and, Math You Can't Use: Patents

21st Century C


Ben Klemens (born April 10, 1975) is an Australian economist and author. He works for the US Treasury Department and was previously a nonresident fellow at the Brookings Institution's Center on Social and Economic Dynamics. He holds a PhD in Social Sciences from Caltech.

Contents

Statistical computing

In the realm of statistical computing, Klemens has done extensive work on statistical analysis for large data sets and non-traditional models such as agent-based models. He developed an innovative library of statistics functions for C, named Apophenia, and has written a textbook on statistical computing, Modeling with Data.

Software patent policy

Klemens has also worked on the policy aspects of computing, and in particular the issue of software patents. He has argued in a book entitled Math You Can't Use (ISBN 0815749422) and a law review article that intangibles such as computer code and mathematics should not be patentable subject matter.

Klemens was previously the executive director of End Software Patents, an advocacy group that has lobbied to eliminating software patents and has organized around the Bilski v. Kappos case that was decided by the Supreme Court in 2010. He is a featured expert in the documentary Patent Absurdity: How Software Patents Broke the System (2010). His writings on the subject have appeared in the op-ed sections of The Wall Street Journal, the San Francisco Chronicle, and The Washington Post. He has occasionally commented on broader issues of technology policy and patent law.

References

Ben Klemens Wikipedia