ArticleTrader.com
  

 Main Menu

  Home
  Member Login
  Forum
  Submit Article
  Membership
  RSS Feeds
  Contact Us
  About

 Services

  Article Distribution
  Link Building

 Tools

  ArticleMS
  Directory Tracker

 Categories

  Automotive
  Business
  Computers
  Entertainment
  Finance
  Food
  Health
  Home and Family
  Internet
  Legal
  » Family law
  » Immigration
  » Personal Injury
  Science
  Self Improvement
  Shopping
  Society
  Sports
  Technology
  Travel
  Writing

187 users online.



 
  » Category Sponsors
  Get Your Link Here - Limited Time Bargain at only $14/month!

Home » Legal » Supreme Court Agrees to Review Bilski decision

subbu231
Article written by subbu231

View Full Profile
Get Html Code
PDF | Print View | Post to your Site

Supreme Court Agrees to Review Bilski decision

Submitted by subbu231
Mon, 20 Jul 2009

Make Money With Your Site!
Sell Links off your
site at ReverseLinks.
Buy Permenant Links
Get Permanent Text Links
for cheap.
In October 2008, the Federal Circuit reviewed the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences that discussed below in a 132 page decision. The Board had sustained a rejection of all eleven claims under 35 U.S.C. 101 as not directed to patent-eligible subject matter. The Federal Circuit affirmed, holding that Bilski's claims were not statutory under 35 U.S.C. 101.

In this case, the Federal Circuit was reacting to Supreme Court criticism during oral arguments in Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings v. Metabolite Laboratories against the State Street test.

Bilski's patent application claimed a method of hedging risk in commodities trading.

The Federal Circuit looked at the Supreme Court's Benson decision where the Supreme Court held that because an algorithm had no uses other than those that would be covered by the claims (any conversion of BCD to pure binary on a digital computer), the claims pre-empted all uses of the algorithm and thus were effectively drawn to the algorithm itself.

Continuing its focus on Benson, the Federal Circuit stated that the Supreme Court in that case enunciated a definitive test to determine whether a process claim is tailored narrowly enough to encompass only a particular application rather than to pre-empt the principle itself. A claimed process is surely patent-eligible under Section 101 if (1) it is tied to a particular machine or apparatus, or (2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or thing. The involvement of the machine or transformation in the claimed process much not merely be insignificant extra-solution activity. This is the test that the Federal Circuit would use going forward, not the State Street test.

The Federal Circuit disavowed the State Street test of "useful, concrete, and tangible result" and stated that this inquiry is insufficient to determine whether a claim is patent eligible under Section 101. State Street was the case that opened the door wide open to business method claims of all types. The door is no longer wide open.

The Federal Circuit then held that Applicants' process as claimed did not transform any article to a different state or thing. The claims were therefore non-statutory.

Keep in mind that Bilski and Benson only considered method claims. An open question was how much of a machine is required? A general purpose computer may not be sufficient. The Federal Circuit indicated that the machine must be intimately tied to the claimed steps. The USPTO Board of Appeals has recently held that Beauregard claims are statutory but that doesn't mean that the Federal Circuit would agree as a general proposition. Also, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the Federal Circuit tend to apply method tests to apparatus claims with respect to 35 U.S.C. 101 when it comes to software. Diamond v. Diehr (which held that which held that the execution of a method, controlled by running a computer program, was statutory) is good Supreme Court law and is more recent than Benson.

The Supreme Court, on June 1, 2009, decided to accept the Benson case for review. It seems likely they will reverse, at least in part, or they would probably not have taken the case. Even if the Supreme Court does not make significant changes, it is still possible to obtain allowance of software patents with careful drafting.

--

 

Deepak Malhotra is a registered US patent attorney with a BSEE degree, a Juris Doctor degree, and over 20 years experience in patent preparation and prosecution before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. He is licensed to represent inventors from anywhere in the U.S. or around the world before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Deepak is a software patent attorney who specializes in helping businesses in filing software patents.


Source: ArticleTrader.com
Creative Commons License

Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

You do not have permission to comment. If you log in, you may be able to comment.

 Top Authors

 1 Stebee (3270)
 2 limalan88 (2920)
 3 alien82 (2756)
 4 kajuba (2508)
 5 sverdlow (1712)
 6 juliet (1691)
 7 jamiehanson (1690)
 8 MarkeD (1296)
 9 AnthonyF (1244)
 10 robertoms2003 (1212)
 11 articles (1205)
 12 artavia.seo (1148)
 13 spinxwebdesign (1113)
 14 gprather (1071)
 15 cj (1069)

 Distribution

Article Distribution

  
  Affiliate Program 2Checkout.com, Inc. is an authorized retailer of ArticleTrader.com

0.02s