Law in the Internet Society
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Patentability of Software after Bilski: How the Federal Circuit Will and Should Define Patentable Subject Matter and Nonobviousness Doctrine to Encourage Free Software

-- By ThomasHou - 19 Oct 2011

Section I: Bilski's Minimal Effect on Computer Software as Eligible Subject Matter

The Supreme Court's decision in _Bilski v. Kappos_ was anticipated to lay the groundwork for patentable subject matter, including patentability of computer software. There, the Court had to decide whether a method of hedging risk in commodities trading constituted a "process" under Section 101 of the Patent Act, which the Federal Circuit (hereinafter the "FedCir") answered no according to its machine-or-transformation test. The Court affirmed but criticized the FedCir? for relying exclusively on the machine-or-transformation test, and also held that business methods were not per se unpatentable. The Court relied on its earlier precedents on process patents to hold that the claimed invention was an unpatentable abstract idea. For computer software though, the Supreme Court declined to "comment[] on the patentability of any particular invention" and left to the FedCir? to develop doctrine on the patentability of process patents.

The FedCir? has recognized the patentability of computer software ever since its en banc decision in _In Re Alappat_. Recent developments in its doctrine and that of the Supreme Court have hardly thrown that into doubt. In its most recent decision on this matter, _Cybersource Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc._, the FedCir? considered the patentability of a method for detecting credit card fraud by utilizing information from Internet addresses and a computer readable medium containing instructions for executing that method. The FedCir? held the method an unpatentable mental process that a human mind could perform and the usage of computers to gather the data did not save the claim from unpatentability. For the medium, the FedCir? emphasized that it must look at the underlying invention and recitation of a computer without the computer placing a significant limit on the scope of the claim does not save it from unpatentability.

Going forward, the FedCir? will continue to uphold computer software as eligible subject matter under its machine-or-transformation test. Having taken a beating in Bilski and other recent Supreme Court decisions, the FedCir? will likely be flexible in its approach and look at the software holistically. Most computer software are sufficiently tied to a machine to satisfy the machine-or-transformation test. Nonetheless, one aspect that the Bilski decisions did not clarify was whether a general purpose computer could satisfy the machine prong, or a computer specifically adapted to the claimed process is required. As Jonathan Masur points out, this question can important in limiting the grant of computer software patents. The PTO has endorsed the general purpose computer option and with few contrary indications from the FedCir? , there seems to be meager argument about the scope of subject matter eligibility of computer software, at least in the courts.

Section II: The Continued Viability of Nonobviousness to Bar Trivial Computer Software Patents

Before computer software patentees get too excited, they should remember the Supreme Court's counsel that eligible subject matter is a mere floor and claimed inventions must also be "novel, nonobvious, and fully and particularly described. These limitations serve a critical role . . . ." The nonobviousness requirement under Section 103 of the Patent Act has long been the gateway for patentability and the hardest for patentees to satisfy. The Supreme Court laid out the standard test in its _Graham v. John Deere Co._ decision. In the early case of _Dann v. Johnston_, the Court applied the Graham factors and held a computer software program to help bank customers invalid for obviousness. However, the Court's most recent case on nonobviousness is illustrative and key for testing this requirement against claimed computer software.

In _KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc._, the Supreme Court

Section III: What Free Software users should consider when confronted with a patent infringement claim


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r4 - 27 Oct 2011 - 02:29:11 - ThomasHou
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