The 2013 StackExchange post [1] describes what is now commonly called an “archetype” based ECS architecture that was implemented as compile time archetypes in the author’s open source project in Feb 2018 [2]. A similar ECS model was described later in the June 2018 patent filed by Unity [3] and active since 2020.
It’s useful to bring visibility to the issue for the inevitable patent trolling that will occur in the future.
References:
Don’t forget the perk of forcing others to license the technology if they want to use it themselves.
They did that to Parsec. Their SDK was once an openly accessible and amazing alternative for Steam Remote, which (In my experience) worked better and was easy to integrate into Unity.
Then Unity bought them, closed-sourced, and if you want access to the SDK, you have to ask for it and they have to approve it.
We tried that three years ago, mentioning that we’re just a team of students working in school on a two-player only coop project that could really use a multiplayer we can’t implement.
This is their response, and I’m still salty about it to this day:
This is the point of patents. Privatize technology that would benefit all and then ask rent from people using it. Then make money without doing shit, except for the odd enforcement (through lawsuits). Just feudalism updated to the modern age.