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IPI 2000Hart 1997Olswang 2000Beresford 2000UKPO 2002EWHC 2002

Keith Beresford 2000: Patenting Software Under the European Patent Convention

This is a highly practical guide to registering software patents in Europe. The report explains how to formulate a software patent specification and how to formulate claims. It also provides examples of granted software patents, and European Patent Office and UK case law.
title:
Keith Beresford 2000: Patenting Software Under the European Patent Convention
source:
Sweet & Maxwell London 2000
  1. Introduction
  2. Business method examples
  3. On technical effect (2.29)
  4. On Inventive Step
  5. Annotated Links
This is a highly practical guide to registering software patents in Europe. The report explains how to formulate a software patent specification and how to formulate claims. It also provides examples of granted software patents, and European Patent Office and UK case law.

Contents: The European Patent System and the definition of invention. Technical features and technical effects in software. Claim formulation for maximum protection. Supporting the claims by the description. Examples of granted software patents: user interfaces; software for generating computer programs; the rejected document processing cases; business model patents and E-commerce postscript. Jurisdiction: UK and EU.

Abstract: It is commonly held that software, e-commerce and business models related inventions are inhenrently unpatentable in Europe. In reviewing the situation, this article emphasises the large number of inventions in this field which have in fact been patented through the EPO or through national patent offices in Europe. [..] He shows that, if proper attention is paid to both the substance and the form of claims and description, to direct the reader to the technical problem and its solution, effective protection is in fact very often available.

Beresford gives the following examples:

Examples: business management and financial systems:
[Here] there has arisen one of the main misconceptions concerning the patentability of software implemented inventions under the European Patent Convention: this requirement is very far from being as restrictive as is frequently believed

... thus for example ... software that takes up less space in the computer, data structures that take up less memory space, file arrangements which take up less memory space, software which will operate more quickly, improved control facilities for the human operator of the computer system, software which makes it possible to perform by computer something which could previously only be done manually or mentally, or software which is more reliable.

... basis for patentability has been found to arise in new user interfaces which make the computer easier or more efficient to operate (Sohei), or which "ease the mental burden" on the operator (T 95/0333)

Beresford approvingly cites an 1958 English patent case (not software) where the judge said

It is well settled that the validity of a patent, challenged on the ground of inventiveness, may be established though the inventive step represent a very slight advance.
[ IPI 2000: The Economic Impact of Patentability of Computer Programs | Robert Hart 1997: The Case for Patent Protection for Computer Program-Related Inventions | Olswang OIPRC 2000: The First Mover Monopoly - study on business method patents at EPO and UKPO | Keith Beresford 2000: Patenting Software Under the European Patent Convention | UKPO 2002-02-20: proposal to allow patents to programs as such | UK High Court 2002-03-15: patent infringement doesn't depend on server location ]
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english version 2004/08/16 by Hartmut PILCH