Mateo Aboy, PhD (c) Mateo Aboy, PhD - Aboy & Associates, PC

Similar documents
Bilski Guidance to Examiners; What Attorneys Should Know. Stuart S. Levy Of Counsel Sughrue Mion, PLLC

Factors That May Weigh In Favor Of, Or Against, Patentability

Note concerning the Patentability of Computer-Related Inventions

2008 Patently-O Patent Law Journal

Software patenting in a state of flux

pìéêéãé=`çìêí=çñ=íüé=råáíéç=pí~íéë=

Patent Eligibility Trends Since Alice

Patent protection on Software. Software as an asset for technology transfer 29 September 2015

11th Annual Patent Law Institute

How Bilski Impacts Your Patent Prosecution and Litigation Strategies. MIP Inaugural China-International IP Forum June 30, 2010, Beijing

Before : MR JUSTICE PATTEN Between :

Software Patentability: A Comparative Analysis

Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding.

PTO Publishes Interim Examination Instructions for Evaluating Subject Matter Eligibility Under 35 U.S.C. 101 in View of In Re Bilski

Summary of AIA Key Provisions and Respective Enactment Dates

MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER

The European Patent Office

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT. In re Lewis Ferguson et al (Appellants)

How patents work An introduction for law students

The EPO approach to Computer Implemented Inventions (CII) Yannis Skulikaris Director Operations, Information and Communications Technology

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER. Patentable Subject Matter (Docket No. 190). After considering the parties briefing and BACKGROUND

Uncertainty for computer program patents after the Astron Clinica and Symbian judgments of 2008

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS MARSHALL DIVISION

U.S. District Court [LIVE] Eastern District of TEXAS

No IN THE Supreme Court of the United States. ALICE CORPORATION PTY. LTD., Petitioner, v. CLS BANK INTERNATIONAL, et al., Respondents.

US Bar EPO Liaison Council 29th Annual Meeting Munich, 18 October EPO practice issues

The Wonderland Of Patent Ineligibility As Litigation Defense

Computer-implemented inventions under the EPC in the light of the Opinion of the EBA G 3/08

MICROSOFT CORPORATION, Petitioner, v. AT&T CORP., Respondent.

Patent Prosecution Update

Computer Internet. Lawyer. The. Patent attorneys practicing in the computerrelated. Bilski v. Kappos : Back to 1981

2015 WL Only the Westlaw citation is currently available. United States District Court, E.D. Texas, Marshall Division.

(SUCCESSFUL) PATENT FILING IN THE US

2012 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. 1

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS MARSHALL DIVISION. Plaintiff, v. CASE NO. 2:12-CV-180-WCB

US Supreme Court Issues Important Opinion on Patent Eligibility of Computer- Implemented Inventions

JS-6 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA. Hemopet, CASE NO. CV JLS (JPRx) Plaintiff, vs.

Suzannah K. Sundby. canady + lortz LLP. David Read. Differences between US and EU Patent Laws that Could Cost You and Your Startup.

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA I. INTRODUCTION

Patent litigation. Block 1. Module Priority. Essentials: Priority. Introduction

Patenting Software-related Inventions according to the European Patent Convention

Panel Session VI: Computer implemented technologies: patentable?

134 S.Ct Supreme Court of the United States. ALICE CORPORATION PTY. LTD., Petitioner v. CLS BANK INTERNATIONAL et al.

COMMENTS OF THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION REGARDING CROWDSOURCING AND THIRD-PARTY PREISSUANCE SUBMISSIONS. Docket No.

Stephen Walsh [prepared for Patenting People, Nov , 2006, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law]

Seeking Patent Protection for Business-Related and Computer-Related Inventions After Bilski

In The Supreme Court of the United States

Before : LORD JUSTICE JACOB LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY and LORD NEUBERGER OF ABBOTSBURY Between :

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS HOUSTON DIVISION. v. CIVIL ACTION NO. H MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL MINUTES GENERAL

THE PATENTABILITY OF COMPUTER-IMPLEMENTED INVENTIONS. Consultation Paper by the Services of the Directorate General for the Internal Market

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION CASE NO ARTHUR J. TARNOW SENIOR UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD. ALLSCRIPTS HEALTHCARE SOLUTIONS, INC.

BNA s Patent, Trademark & Copyright Journal

v. Civil Action No LPS-CJB 1. _This is a patent infringement case. On December 1, 2014, plaintiff Y odlee, Inc.

United States District Court

101 Patentability 35 U.S.C Patentable Subject Matter Spectrum. g Patentable Processes Before Bilski

G3/08 PATENTABILITY OF SOFTWARE : DETAILS EXPECTED FROM

AIPPI World Intellectual Property Congress, Toronto. Workshop V. Patenting computer implemented inventions. Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Request for Comments on Determining Whether a Claim Element is Well- Understood, Routine, Conventional for Purposes of Subject Matter Eligibility

BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE THE CLEARING HOUSE ASSOCIATION L.L.C. AND THE FINANCIAL SERVICES ROUNDTABLE IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS

Supreme Court Decision on Scope of Patent Protection

BUSINESS METHOD PATENTS IN THE UNITED STATES: A LEGISLATIVE RESPONSE

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS TYLER DIVISION

USPTO Training Memo Lacks Sound Basis In The Law

Patent Law & Nanotechnology: An Examiner s Perspective. Eric Woods MiRC Technical Staff

Paper Entered: August 7, 2014 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD

In the Supreme Court of the United States

MARCH 2016 SUPPLEMENT PLI PATENT OFFICE EXAM COURSE CHAPTER 2100 (SUPPLEMENT)..1 CHAPTER 2900 (NEW).. 11

The Patent Examination Manual. Section 10: Meaning of useful. Meaning of useful. No clear statement of utility. Specific utility

Patentable Subject Matter: The View from Europe

Supreme Court of the United States

Examination of CII and Business Methods Applications

Deputy Commissioner for Patent Examination Policy

How Prometheus Has Upended Patent Eligibility: An Anatomy of Alice Corporation Proprietary Limited v. CLS Bank International

In The Supreme Court of the United States

Nnittb ~tates Qtn.urt of Appeals furt!te 1tieberalQtircuit

FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION v. GRAFF/ROSS HOLDINGS LLP Doc. 35 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Supreme Court of the United States

March 28, Re: Supplemental Comments Related to Patent Subject Matter Eligibility. Dear Director Lee:

In re Ralph R. GRAMS and Dennis C. Lezotte.

Supreme Court of the United States

101 Patentability. Bilski Decision

IS THERE A COORDINATED MOVE IN B+ AND ELSEWHERE?

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA SAN JOSE DIVISION

Case 1:13-cv DJC Document 118 Filed 09/15/15 Page 1 of 13 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

Overview of recent trends in patent regimes in United States, Japan and Europe

Bilski Same-Day Perspectives From the November 9, 2009 Supreme Court Hearing

Key Developments in U.S. Patent Law

Abstract. Keywords. Kotaro Kageyama. Kageyama International Law & Patent Firm, Tokyo, Japan

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEVADA ) ) This case arises out of the alleged infringement of a patent for an audio communication

Questionnaire May 2003 Q Scope of Patent Protection. Response of the UK Group

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE MEMORANDUM OPINION

Chapter 2100 Patentability

Foreign Patent Law. Why file foreign? Why NOT file foreign? Richard J. Melker

WAKE FOREST JOURNAL OF BUSINESS

The Federal Circuit's Post-Bilski Jurisprudence: The Patentability of Internet- and Computer-Based Inventions

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA INTRODUCTION

Transcription:

! Is the patentability of computer programs (software) and computerrelated inventions in European jurisdictions signatory of the European Patent Convention materially different from the US?! Mateo Aboy, PhD!! (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Presentation Topic & Research Details Q: Is the patentability of computer programs (software) and computerrelated inventions in European jurisdictions signatory of the EPC materially different from the US?! Law Subject: Intellectual Property Law (UL LLB LA3026) Specialty Area: Substantive Patent Law (EPC and US Jurisdictions) SubSpecialty Area: Patentable Subject Matter Eligibility Legal Issue: Patentability of Computer Programs (Software) Patentability of technically excluded subject matter pursuant to EPC Art 52(2) Potential divergence between the statutory law requirements regarding the Patentability of Computer Programs (Software) and the actual practice Comparative patent law between EPC/EPO and US 35 USC/USPTO with regards to computer programs/methods (software) (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Presentation Overview Introduction Sources of Law Statutory Law: Patentability Requirements (US & EPC) Statutory Law: Subject Matter Eligibility (US & EPC) Case Law: Patentability of Computer Programs (US & EPC) Examination Policy & Guidelines: USPTO & EPO Concluding Remarks References (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

(c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC Introduction The status of computer programs (software) as patentable subject matter is one of the most controversial legal, policy, and socioeconomy debates of the 21st century. While there is clarity with regards to patent eligibility of Industrial Age (e.g., machine, article of manufacture, composition of matter) technology, there is uncertainty with regards to Information Age (e.g., smart embedded systems using programmed processors) technology that rely on software. Given the complexity of the legal, policy, and economic issues involved, the US, European Courts, and EPO Technical Board of Appeal have struggled to formulate a clear test for determining whether and under what circumstances computerrelated inventions (software) should be patenteligible subject matter or be excluded. It is commonly believed (by inventors, business, and patent professionals) that there are significant differences between the patent eligibility for computer programs among the US and European jurisdictions from EPC signatory countries. Is this true or perhaps just a myth?

International Patent Treaties (EPO, UK, US) Paris Convention for Protection of Industrial Property (WIPO) Patent Cooperation Treaty PCT (WIPO) Regional Patent Treaties (EPO, UK) European Patent Convention EPC (EPO, Council of Europe) :: Art 52 & 53 Statutory Law UK Patent Acts 1977 :: Section 1(2) Exclusions from Patentability US 35 USC; 37 CFR :: 35 USC 101 Inventions Patentable Recent Case Law Decisions & Jurisprudence Biski v. Kappos (US Supreme Court 2010); DUNS Licensing (EPO 349, 2007) Policy: Examination Procedure, Policy & Guidance Sources of Law USPTO Guidance for Determining Subject Matter Eligibility for Process Claims in View of Bilski v. Kappos (July 27, 2010) Patent Examination Policy Memorandum & EPO Examination Guidance (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Brief Overview of US Patent Law Case Law (Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, US Supreme Court)! &! Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP) Title 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations, 37 CFR Title 35 of the United States Code, 35 USC US Constitution (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

EU & US Patentability Requirements UK Patents Act 1977 EPO EPC US Patent Code: 35 USC S.3 S.56 Nonobviosness S.103 S.2 S.54 Novelty S.102 S.4 S.57 Utility S.101 S.1 S.52 Subject Matter Eligibility S.101 (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Subject Matter Eligibility Law US Jurisdiction: US Patent Code 35 USC 101 & Case Law Eligible Subject Matter: S101. Inventions Patentable: Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title. Subject Matter Exclusions: Judicially created exceptions (US Supreme Court): abstract ideas, laws of nature, and natural phenomena (LeRoy v. Taham, O Reilly v. Morse, Diamond v Diehr). European Jurisdictions (EPO): EPC Art. 52(2) Article 52. Patentable inventions: (1) European patents shall be granted for any inventions, in all fields of technology, which are susceptible of industrial application, which are new and which involve an inventive step. (2) The following in particular shall not be regarded as inventions within the meaning of paragraph 1: (a) discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods; (b) aesthetic creations; (c) schemes, rules and methods for performing mental acts, playing games or doing business, and programs for computers; UK National Jurisdiction: Patents Act 1977 S.1 A patent may be granted [ ] if (a) the invention is new, (b) it involves and inventive step, (c) it is capable of industrial application, (d) it is not excluded. Exclusions in Section 1(2)(c) Identical to EPC 52(c) (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Current Computer Programs Case Law US Jurisdiction: Bilski v. Kappos (US Supreme Court, 2010) Computer programs inventions may or may not be patenteligible: process v. an abstract idea. The machineortransformation test remains an useful investigative tool to determine eligibility. Factors beyond the machineortransformation test (a claimed process is patenteligible under S101 if 1) it is tied to a particular machine or 2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or thing) may weight for or against a finding that a claimed invention is patentable. European Jurisdictions (EPO): DUNS Licensing Associates, 2008 EPOR Vicom/Computer Related Invention (Case T208/84 OJEPO Bd. Appeal 1987): an invention which would be patentable according to conventional patentability criteria should not be excluded from protection by the mere fact that for its implementation modern technical means in the form of a computer program are used. Decisive is what technical contribution [after DUNS changed to technical character] as defined in the claim when considered as a whole make to the known art. Conclusion: Programs for computer which have technical character (are inventions) are not considered to be a program for computer as such and therefore are not excluded. DUNS: technical character (e.g. physical entry or physical change) [e.g., a computer program claim would not excluded if explicitly included hardware). (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

USPTO Current Examination Guidelines USPTO Guidance for Determining Subject Matter Elibility for Process Claims in view of Bilski v Kappos, Patent Examination Policy (July 27, 2010) Factors Weighting Toward Eligibility Recitation of a machine or transformation (either express or inherent). Evidence: a) Machine or transformation is particular, b) Machine or transformation meaningfully limits the execution of the steps, c) Machine implements the claimed steps, d) The article being transformed is particular, e) The article undergoes a change in state or thing (e.g., objectively different function or use), e) The article being transformed is an object or substance. The claim is more than a mere statement of a concept. Evidence: a) The claim describes a particular solution to a problem to be solved, b) The claim implements a concept in some tangible way, d) The performance of the steps is observable and verifiable. Factor Weighting Against Eligibility No recitation of a machine or transformation (either express or inherent). Insufficient recitation of a machine or transformation. Evidence: Involvement of machine, or transformation, with the steps is merely nominally, insignificantly, or tangentially related to the performance of the steps, e.g., data gathering, or merely recites a field in which the method is intended to be applied, b) Machine is generically recited such that it covers any machine capable of performing the claimed step(s), c) Machine is merely an object on which the method operates. Transformation involves only a change in position or location of article, d) Article is merely a general concept. (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

USPTO Current Examination Guidelines Examples of general concepts (excluded) include, but are not limited, to: Basic economic practices or theories (e.g., hedging, insurance, financial transactions, marketing); Basic legal theories (e.g., contracts, dispute resolution, rules of law); Mathematical concepts (e.g., algorithms, spatial relationships, geometry); Mental activity (e.g., forming a judgment, observation, evaluation, or opinion); Interpersonal interactions or relationships (e.g., conversing, dating); Teaching concepts (e.g., memorization, repetition); Human behavior (e.g., exercising, wearing clothing, following rules or instructions); Instructing how business should be conducted. (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

EPO Current Examination Guidelines EPO Guidelines for Examination Part G 3.6 Programs for Computers The basic patentability considerations in respect of claims for computer programs are in principle the same as for other subjectmatter. While "programs for computers" are included among the items listed in Art. 52(2), if the claimed subjectmatter has a technical character it is not excluded from patentability by the provisions of Art. 52(2) and (3). A computer program claimed by itself is not excluded from patentability if it is capable of bringing about, when running on or loaded into a computer, a further technical effect going beyond the "normal" physical interactions between the program (software) and the computer (hardware) on which it is run (T 1173/97 and G 3/08). The normal physical effects of the execution of a program, e.g. electrical currents, are not in themselves sufficient to lend a computer program technical character, and a further technical effect is needed. The further technical effect may be known in the prior art. A further technical effect which lends technical character to a computer program may be found e.g. in the control of an industrial process or in the internal functioning of the computer itself or its interfaces under the influence of the program and could, for example, affect the efficiency or security of a process, the management of computer resources required or the rate of data transfer in a communication link. The processing of data which represents physical entities (such as an image stored as an electric signal), resulting in a change in those entities (T 208/84), also denotes a further technical effect. (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Concluding Remarks Part I US and EPC (and domestic law for countries signatory of the EPC including all EU countries) take different approaches to the issue of patentable subject matter eligibility. US Jurisdiction US statutory law defines patentable inventions positively (i.e., any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter) and leaves exclusions to judicial interpretation (US Supreme Court). European Jurisdiction (EPC Signatory Countries) EPC (while setting out the general requirements for novelty, inventive step, and industrial applicability) defines invention negatively, according to what is excluded from being patentable. EPC Art 52 presents a nonexclusive list of what are NOT considered inventions. The list explicitly includes programs for computers. European National Jurisdictions (e.g. UK, Germany, France, Spain, Italy) National patent laws in EPC signatory countries (e.g., UK, German) follow closely the EPC (e.g., UK Patents Act 1977) and EPO case law. UK Current Law: Astron Clinica v Controller [2008] RPC 339 Small differences in language. Courts should follow the EPO jurisprudence (highly persuasive in UK) (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Concluding Remarks Part II! US Jurisdiction Statutory Law: Computer Programs are not excluded (35 USC 101) Current Case Law: Bilski v. Kappos (MachineorTransformation Test + Other Factors; Exclude Abstract Ideas) Examination Guidelines: Factors Weighting for (e.g. MT) or against (e.g., abstract) Eligibility European Jurisdiction (EPC Signatory Countries) Statutory Law: Computer Programs are explicitly excluded (Art 52: programs for computers, as such ) Current Case Law: DUNS Licensing (Technical Character, Further Technical Character, Hardware) Examination Guidelines: A computer program claimed by itself is not excluded from patentability if it is capable of bringing about, when running on or loaded into a computer, a further technical effect. Examples of Technical Effect. (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Concluding Remarks Part III In the US jurisdiction, abstract ideas are not patentable which in the case of computer programs effectively means computer related inventions which do not have technical character and achieve a further technical effect (this is actually the law regarding patenteligibility of computerrelated inventions in European jurisdictions signatory of the EPC). The approach taken in the US seems more logical since the case law does not have to contradict the statutory law as is the case in European jurisdictions that explicitly exclude programs for computers in the EPC and national legislation (statutory law) but then award a significant number of patents for computer programs by relying on case law to support a conclusion that this particular computer program IS NOT a computer program for the purposes for EPC 52 ). EPO Enlarged Board of Appeal noted in 2010 internationally increasingly convergent decisions, which included Duns Licensing, the 2008 English Court of Appeal Decision Symbian Ltd v. ComptrollerGeneral for Patents, and the CAFC case In re Bilski. In conclusion: The differences in actual practice of patent examination policy are very minor and EPO/USPTO are very likely to produce the same result for a given invention (they are not materially different, especially when claim drafting is adapted to the respective practices of the USPTO and EPO). (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC

Statutory & Primary Treaty Sources US: 35 USC (Patent Code) UK: Patent Act 1977 Case Law Authorities EPC: European Patent Convention (15th Edition, 2013) Authorities & References US: LeRoy v Taham (55 US at 17576, 1852); Gottschalk v Benson (188 F.2d 165, 166 CCPA 1972); Parker v Flook (437 US 584, 585 1977); Diamond v Chakrabarty (447 US 303 1980), Diamond v. Diehr (450 US 175, 17778 1981), State Street Bank v. Signatory Financial Group (149 F.3d 1368, 1373 Fed. Cir. 1998); Bilski v Kappos (130 S. Ct. 3218 2010). EPC: Viacom/Computer Related Invention (Case T208/84 OJEPO Tech. Bd. Appeal 1986); Koch & Sterzel (Case T26/86 OJEPO Tech. Bd. Appeal 1988); IBM/Computer Program Product (Case T1173/97 OJEPO Tech. Bd. Appeal 1998); PBS Partnership (Case T931/95 OJEPO 2001); Hitachi/Auction Method (Case T258/03 OJEPO 575 Tech. Bd. Appeal 2004); Microsoft/Clipboard Formats (Case T424/03 EPOR Tech. Bd. Appeal 2006); DUNS Licensing (Dunc Licensing OJEPO 62, 2008). UK: Merrill Lynch (1989 RPC 561); Fujitsu (1997 RPC 618); Aerotel (2007 1 All ER 22830); Symbian (2009 RPC 1 AC at 7); Astron Clinica; Summary of Academic References P Virtanen, "Latest Software Patent Law Developments in the US and EU", (2010) 7:3 SCRIPTed 562 Journal of Law, Technology & Society; S Marsnik, Drawing a Line in the Patent SubjectMatter Sand B.C. Int l & Comp. L. Rev. 227 (2011) (c) 2014 Mateo Aboy, PhD Aboy & Associates, PC