R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

UK set for US-style software patent laws

Software writers would be able to patent their programs in the UK for the first time under law changes being considered by the European Commission.

Ian Lynch, vnunet.com 23 Oct 2000
ADVERTISEMENT

Software writers would be able to patent their programs in the UK for the first time under law changes being considered by the European Commission.

Currently, there is ambiguity over the status of software patents in member countries, according to the Commission. In the UK, software is specifically excluded from qualifying for patent status.

The Commission has started a consultation process, which will last until 15 December, to address what it calls the lack of consistent, European Union-wide legislation, which could hold back growth in the IT industry.

IT lobbyists have communicated two positions to the Commission. One was that patents stimulate innovation by providing adequate protection of the substantial amounts of money and resources devoted to their research and development. On the other hand, the open source community argues that patents would be restrictive.

However, the Commission is undoubtedly moving towards legislation, having recognised the need for action regarding patent protection for computer-implemented innovations back in February 1999.

In a statement, the Commission said: "Computer programs 'as such' are excluded from patentability. Yet, thousands of patents for technical inventions using a computer program have been granted by national patent offices and by the European Patent Office. Harmonisation of national patent laws on the issue is therefore necessary."

Moves to bring in legislation changes could be boosted by an inter-governmental conference to be held in Munich next month.

"It is possible that this conference will decide to delete computer programs from the list of items that cannot be patented," said the Commission.

Europe is far stricter on patents than in the US and Japan, where patents are readily granted to innovators in the computing industry.

US patents don't, however, carry the same weight as they do in the UK. Many thousands of patents are issued every year in the areas of 'Computer Systems' and 'Computer Applications'. To qualify for registration, an invention is supposed to be 'new' or 'not obvious'.

The main problem is that the US Patent Office is overrun with applications and doesn't have the resources to research 'Prior Art' to the level of detail required. Prior Art is the term used for evidence that proves that the idea isn't new.

Indeed, this has resulted in a number of everyday interactions being patented. For example, using a credit card to buy goods online, electronic shopping carts (OpenMarket 5715314 and 5724424), embedding hot links in emails to past customers, saying 'click here for our new site' (NetDelivery 5790793), and rewarding people for reading your advertising (Cybergold 5794210).

See also:

Parliamentary technicality patently problematic  13 Nov 2001
Did they illegally keep patents secret?  11 Sep 2001
AltaVista said it is prepared to file suit in the next couple of months to protect patents it believes it has on indexing web pages, web spiders and other web search tools.  22 Jan 2001
Franck Jeannin, the French chief executive of LinkGuard, a Maidenhead-based company that manages web links, talks about life in the UK, patents and the firm's new deal with Dell.  30 Nov 2000
With some saying that US software patent law is out of control, European governments are now trying to get a grip.  27 Oct 2000
Interactive TV software vendor OpenTV has marched into a long running patent battle between Amazon.com and Barnes and Noble over one-click shopping, claiming that it was the first to patent the technology.  05 Oct 2000
BT's attempt to enforce a patent on internet hyperlinks has been thrown into fresh doubt by video footage of a 1968 research project.  02 Oct 2000
The US patent system was branded a joke this week after it was revealed that a fashion designer made an undisclosed sum from clothing websites with a general ebusiness system and method for fashion shopping.  07 Sep 2000
US patent law condemned as BT seeks substantial gain from hyperlink 'invention'.  10 Jul 2000
BT's claim that it holds patents to internet-based hyperlink and hypertext technology - and more worryingly, that it intends to charge US ISPs to use it - has highlighted once again the absurdity of the hi-tech patent industry.  27 Jun 2000
An industry user group has congratulated BT on its decision to pursue licence fees for the patent behind hyperlinks, the mainstay of web navigation, saying the telco's actions illustrate the absurdity of US software patent laws.  22 Jun 2000

All Public Sector IT

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
C# Web Developer, Finance, London Financial Services Required: C#, ASP.NET, AJAX Fantastic opportunity not to be missed!! This is a great opportunity to work on a unique objectives that no other company is doing working ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Senior Hardware Engineer Scotland/Edinburgh Communication Systems Permanent Position 40-45K+Benefits A leading organisation involved with the design and development of data acquisition systems and synthesis boards for a range of radar, signal intelligence and software radio ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
FPGA Engineer Defence/Safety Critical Buckinghamshire Permanent Position 45K+Benefits A leading UK defence organisation requires an experienced digital design engineer to strengthen its existing development team due to a number of long-term projects that have recently ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
DSP Engineer 3 Months Contract Hertfordshire £Excellent Rates£ This position requires you to have experience of measurement algorithms development for the generation and analysis of digital wireless communication standards including GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN and ... more >
More job opportunities