Wiki de la FFII France

FurtherTechnicalEffect

PagePrincipale :: DerniersChangements :: DerniersCommentaires :: ParametresUtilisateur :: Vous êtes ec2-18-118-30-137.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com
Further technical effect

The current EPO examination guidelines specify that a computer program is patentable subject matter if, when executed on a computer, it produces a further technical effect which goes beyond the normal physical interactions between the program and the computer. This meaningless phrase has been introduced in 1998 by decision T1173/97 of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office (EpO) with the intention to circumvent the European Patent Convention's restrictions on software patenting, by suggesting a far-fetched interpretation of the phrase "as such". Since then, the EPO has been issuing large numbers of software patents, while unsuccessful attempts have also been made to include the notion of further technical effect in laws such as the software patent directive.

Contents

Overview

Article 52(2) c of the European Patent Convention (EPC) states that programs for computers are not patentable inventions; however, Article 52(3) was used by EPO case law to render the exclusion meaningless. In order to be able to patent programs for computers, the EPO is using an interpretation of the EPC that allows computer programs to be not as such, and therefore to be patentable. The essential idea of this interpretation is that a computer program that produces a technical effect is not considered to be as such.

This, however, poses a problem: any computer program can be said to produce a technical effect when run on a computer; this technical effect is the physical changes (electric, magnetic, etc.) that occur in the hardware when the program is run. Thus, if the interpretation only mentioned a technical effect as a requirement for being not as such, then all programs would be not as such. Such an interpretation would be inconsistent, because it would mean that computer programs as such do not actually exist, whereas article 52 of the EPC presupposes their existence.

As a result, the EPO's interpretation of "as such" makes provision for that by distinguish computer programs into those that have a "further technical effect beyond the normal physical interactions between the program and the computer", and into those that don't have such a further technical effect. The latter are considered to be as such, whereas the former are considered to be patentable subject matter. In this way, virtually all software is patentable, as all that is necessary is that the applicant claims some kind of further technical effect, a task not particularly difficult, as the word "technical" is undefined.

The very essence of "further technical effects" is that these may be non "technical" in the classical sense. The teaching preempts a further weakening of the key dogmatic "technical" requirement in European patent law. As the permissive US pratice has no technical requirement and US delegations refuse to introduce such a requirement the weakening of technical aims to unilaterally harmonise EPO law with the US in the lights of cross-filed US applications.

History

T1173/97 invented the "further technical effect"

Until 1998, the EPO examination guidelines said that a computer program claimed by itself or as a record on a carrier is not patentable, irrespective of its contents. Patent application No. 91107112.4 (publication number 0457112) by IBM was refused by the patent examiners because it contained program claims, which violated the guideline. When IBM appealed, the Boards of Appeal, with decision T1173/97, introduced the notion of further technical effect, thereby allowing the patenting of pure software.

Interestingly, the rationale of the decision begins with discussions about the TRIPS agreements and alleged modern trends, as those are judged by the practices of the US and Japanese patent offices (which were already granting software patents), and seems to imply that the limitations imposed by Article 52 of EPC are a nuisance; it then goes on to investigate how to work around it, arriving, after several pages, at the suggestion of the further technical effect. That is, the authors of the decision have made little effort to conceal the fact that they are attempting to circumvent the law.

The decision also contains a list of older decisions which have played a role in the gradual lifting of many of EPC's limitations on patentability.

EPO about "Further Technical" effect (May 19, 2000)

In 2000 the EPO expected a deletion of "programs for computers" from the list of exclusions of EPC 52(2) by the diplomatic conference. They acknowledged that the notion of a "further technical effect"(T1173/97) was a preliminary solution for admitting software patenting, but in the lights of the expected deletion did not consider to apply it to examination pratices.


Source: https://www.epo.org/law-practice/legal-texts/html/guidelines/e/g_ii_3_6.htm

Past Diplomatic Conference 2000

The diplomatic conference did not delete "program for computers" from EPC 52(2) as expected by the EPO. Since then the EPO further applies the teaching to circumvent EPC 52(2) and case law developed around it.

In 2001 Bertil Hjelm, Principal Director DG2, European Patent Office presented a paper on the topic of "Recent Developements and challenges in the protection of intellectual property rights - software inventions and business methods" at a WIPO "international conference on intellectual property, the internet, electronic commerce and traditional knowledge" (Sofia, May 2001) in which he justifies the teaching of T1173/97 with the underlying assumption in his whole paper that scope has to be expanded.


The rationale he gives why the teaching should not be applied to examination is that the teaching might also be used to make software unpatentable in the absence of a "further technical effect" and prefers a weakening of the classical interpretation of "technical" to get broad results.


He further mentions that the explicit modification of the substantive rules of EPC 52(3) c were not needed as it is possible to circumvent these matters of exclusion by the "further technical effect" case law teaching and expects further weakening of "technical":



As indicated by Hjelm the EPO sticks to the "further technical effect" teaching to circumvent EPC 52(2). In its current examination guidelines the EPO states




See also



External links





Further technical effect (last edited 2009-08-15 23:27:54 by localhost)
Il n'y a pas de commentaire sur cette page. [Afficher commentaires/formulaire]