Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/03/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Fri, 7 Mar 1997, Marc James Small wrote: > At 11:27 AM 3/7/97 -0800, John wrote: > > > AS an aside a bit of interesting trivia about Japan and it's > >optical industry. During Hitler's regime, a group of German Jewish > >optical scientist's Applied to a number of different governments, thay > >wanted someplace where they could go as a group and continue working. > >They were rejected by most of the world powers, but japan gave them a > >home, and provided them with the rescoures they needed to work as a > >group. IMO this is one of the reasons that Japan today dominates the > >world optical industry. > > This is emphatically NOT true. There were a number of noted German optical > scientists of the Jewish faith, and almost all of these were protected by > their employers -- including, incidentally, the designer of the original > Contax, who was shipped by Zeiss to France and then assisted by them in > escaping to Palestine when France fell in 1940. But none of these guys > ended up in Japan. > > The Wartime Japanese optical industry was rather so-so. The time of > prominence came after the War, when the MacArthur occupation regime would > not allow Zeiss and Leitz to sue Nikon and Canon to protect their patent > rights; MacArthur felt, strongly, that it was in the US national interests > to protect the growth of the Japanese optical industry, though the US did > not agree and for several years would not permit the sale of Japanese > cameras in the 24mm by 36mm format to be sold in the US, hence the use of > the 24mm by 32mm format, and the like, by some early Postwar Japanese companies. > > By the time the US had restored sovereignity to the Japanese and the Allies > to Germany, the damage had been done, and Nikon and Canon had built from > their thieveries the reputation they continue to enjoy today. > > Marc > > msmall@roanoke.infi.net FAX: +540/343-7315 > Cha robh bas fir gun ghras fir! > > Marc, I had been told that part of the German surrender was their loss of all patents. Reason was that during WWI we fought them using the Springfield '03 rifle, which was a copy of the better Mauser used by the Germans. After the war the Germans sued the U.S. government (or manufacturer of the Springfield) for patent infringement-- and won. We were upset, to say the least and didn't want it to happen again. So, I'm told, we did them in on the patents. I believe that diffusion transfer, the basis of the Polaroid process, was also among the patents we didn't let them keep. I could be wrong on this and would welcome an expert's comment. Ed Meyers