Patent Protection (part of Intellectual Property Protection of Software II lecture held 27th October 2010) MVV59K Software Law 2 Lecturer Mgr. Jaromír Šavelka Institute of Law and Technology Faculty of Law Masaryk University Room no. s61 (office hours Tue 14:30 – 16:30) Email: jaromir.savelka@law.muni.cz Phone: +420 549 495 377 3 Overview of the Lecture • Definition • Legal Provisions • US Case Law Development • Current Situation in Europe 4 DEFINITION Patent Protection 5 Definition “A patent for an invention is the grant of a property right to the inventor, issued by the Patent and Trademark Office. It constitutes the right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale, or selling the invention.“ (US Patent and Trademark Office) 6 LEGAL PROVISIONS Patent Protection 7 Legal Provisions International - Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property Czech Republic - Act no. 527/1990 Coll. on Inventions … United States - U. S. Patent Act (Title 35 USC) 8 Legal Provisions Requirements for patentability 1) Invention 2) Novelty 3) Inventive step 4) Industrial application 9 Legal Provisions Estabilishment of the Protection 1) Filing of the Application 2) Priority right emergence 3) Preliminary examination 4) Publication of the Application 5) Opened for comments and objections 6) Full examination of the Application 7) Registration of the Patent 10 Legal Provisions Effects of the Protection • Exclusive right to use the invention and authorise others to use the invention. • The extent of the protection shall be determined by the terms of the patent claims 11 Legal Provisions Limitations of the Protection • Exhaustion of rights • Independent exploitation of the invention before the emergence of the priority right 12 Legal Provisions Patent as Object of Property • Transfer of ownership (written contract) • License (written contract) (compulsory?) 13 Legal Provisions Termination of the Protection • In Czech Republic granted for 20 years • Failure to pay administrative fees • Surrender of trademark rights (proprietor) • Revocation (official authority) 14 US CASE LAW DEVELOPMENT Patent Protection 15 US Case Law Development „Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.“ (§ 101 Title 35 USC) HOWEVER … 16 US Case Law Development Gottschalk v. Benson (1972) An algorithm for converting binarycoded decimal numbers to equivalent pure binary numbers on digital computers. 17 US Case Law Development Gottschalk v. Benson (1972) OUTCOME: Process must be tied to a particular machine OR must operate to change materials to a different state or thing … in order to be patentable. 18 US Case Law Development Gottschalk v. Benson (1972) OUTCOME: So called … MACHINE-OR-TRANSFORMATION TEST … estabilished! 19 US Case Law Development Diamond v. Diehr (1981) Process for curing synthetic rubber which included mathematical formula. 20 US Case Law Development Diamond v. Diehr (1981) OUTCOME: A process may be patentable despite the fact it includes a mathematical formula. 21 US Case Law Development In re Abele (1982) Specific method of image processing applied to computerized axial tomography (CAT) scans. 22 US Case Law Development In re Abele (1982) OUTCOME: Introduction of Freeman-Walter-Abele test. 1) algorithm recited in the claim? 2) invention itself no more than the alg.? 3) applied in any manner to physical elements or process steps? 23 US Case Law Development In re Alappat (1994) = Home assignment Will be presented by … Mr. Jakub Harašta Mr. Lukáš Hrůša Mr. Martin Kočí Mr. Štěpán Stehlíček 24 US Case Law Development Alpex Computer Corporation v. Nintendo Company Ltd. (1996) Alleged infringement of patent related to microprocessor-based home video game system. 25 US Case Law Development Alpex Computer Corporation v. Nintendo Company Ltd. (1996) OUTCOME: If a patent holder defined its claims as not covering a certain system, no patent infringment occurs if someone uses that system, notwithstanding any functional simularity. 26 US Case Law Development Lockwood v. American Airlines, Inc. (1997) Alleged infringement of three patents related to automated interactive sales terminals. 27 US Case Law Development Lockwood v. American Airlines, Inc. (1997) OUTCOME: Concept of prior art has been clarified: - Known or used by others before the date of invention - In public use more than one year before the date of application 28 US Case Law Development Fonar Corp. v. General Electric Co. (1997) Appeal on the basis of insufficient disclosure of the invention. 29 US Case Law Development Fonar Corp. v. General Electric Co. (1997) OUTCOME: If software is a part of a best mode of carrying out an invention, the description of such a best mode is satisfied by a disclosure of the functions of the Software. 30 US Case Law Development AT&T Corp. v. Excel Communications, Inc. (1999) Alleged infringment of a patent concerning a process of indicating certain information about a telephone call recipient. 31 US Case Law Development AT&T Corp. v. Excel Communications, Inc. (1999) OUTCOME: A method of indicating a telephone call recipient’s primary interexchange carrier constitutes a patentable process. 32 US Case Law Development Bilski v. Kappos (2010) A method for hedging risks in commodities trading. 33 US Case Law Development Bilski v. Kappos (2010) OUTCOME: Business methods can be patented, even if they do not pass the machine-or-transformation test. 34 CURRENT SITUATION IN EUROPE Patent Protection 35 Current Situation in Europe European Patent Convention (EPC 1973) Art. 52 para 1 „European patents shall be granted for any inventions which are susceptible of industrial application, which are new and which involve an inventive step.“ 36 Current Situation in Europe Art. 52 para 2 „The following in particular shall not be regarded as inventions within the meaning of paragraph 1: a) discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods; … c) schemes, rules and methods for performing mental acts, playing games or doing business, and programs for computers; … 37 Current Situation in Europe • VICOM (T 0208/84, 1986) • Röntgeneinrichtung (T 0026/86, 1987) • SOHEI (T 0769/92 ,1994) • IBM (T 1173/97, 1998) • Pension Benefit Systems Partnership (T 0931/95, 2000) • COMVIK GSM AB (T 0641/00, 2002) • Hitachi, Ltd. (T 0258/03, 2004) 38 Current Situation in Europe • The invention consisting of computer program must create an additional technical effect in course of its utilization that goes beyond its usual interaction with a computer !!! • The case law of EPO showed the definition as extremely wide (about 30.000 patents) • Often rejected by national courts 39 Current Situation in Europe Proposal for EU Directive on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions Resulted in battle Between Parliament and Council. Eventually REJECTED!!! 40 CONCLUSIONS Patent Protection 41 Conclusions • It is possible to grant a patent for purely software invention in US (softened machine-or-transformation test) • In EU there is a crisis of patent protection for computer programs (additional technical effect beyond usual interaction) Thank you for your attention! Time for your questions … (jaromir.savelka@law.muni.cz)