ShortIntroEn This page is a freely editable addendum to http://swpat.ffii.org/log/intro/index.en.html Simply click the Edit button or the edit symbol to add text! Softwarepatenten in Europa: Een kort overzicht DEUTSCH | GREEK | FRANÇAIS | PORTUGUESE | (Click for More Acute Version) Before editing or translating this document, please read ShortIntroDiscussionEn Software Patents in Europe: A Short Overview A patent is a right to monopolize an invention. A would-be inventor specifies a scope of activities from which he wants to exclude others (the claims), and submits it to the Patent Office, which evaluates whether these claims depict an invention within the sense of the law and whether the invention is correctly disclosed and industrially applicable (formal examination). Some patent offices will moreover examine whether the invention is new and non-obvious (substantive examination). If the application passes the examination hurdles, the Patent Office grants the applicant exclusive rights to produce and market the invention for a period of 20 years. Programming is similar to writing symphonies. When a programmer writes software, he weaves together thousands of ideas (algorithms or calculation rules) into a copyrighted work. Usually some of the ideas in the programmer's work will be new and non-obvious according to the (inherently low) standards of the patent system. When many such ideas are patented, it becomes impossible to write software without infringing on patents. Software authors are in effect deprived of their copyright assets; they live under permanent threat of being blackmailed by holders of large patent portfolios. As a result, less software is written and fewer new ideas appear. In Europe, the uniform rules for what is patentable and what is not are laid out in the European Patent Convention of 1973. In Article 52, the Convention states that mathematical methods, intellectual methods, business methods, computer programs, presentation of information, etc., are not inventions in the sense of patent law. There is a systematic reason for that: in the legal tradition patents have been for concrete applications of natural science ("technical inventions"), whereas patents on software cover abstract ideas. When patents are applied to software, the result is such that instead of patenting a specific mousetrap, you are actually patenting any "means of trapping mammals" (or, for an example of an actual patent, any "means of trapping data in an emulated environment"). In 1986 the European Patent Office (EPO) started granting patents describing computer programs in violation of the EPC by allowing them to be presented in the guise of process claims, typically phrased as follows: "1. process for [using general-purpose computing equipment], characterised by ..." The patents granted on this basis were described as hypothetical, based on the notion that the program as such, when distributed on a disk or via the Internet, could be held as not constituting a process and therefore as not an invention in that sense. In 1998 the European Patent Office "resolved" this ambiguity and began granting patents that literally contradicted the law, by allowing program claims using the following phrasing: "2. computer program, characterised by that [with its help a process according to claim 1 can be executed]." The EPO has granted more than 30,000 pure software patents in this manner, and the number has been rising at a rate of 3,000 per year. Most of these patents are broad and trivial and not significantly different from corresponding types of patents that the US and Japan have been allowing. In fact the three patent offices have created a common "Trilateral Standard" for granting such patents in May 2000, summarised under the misleading term "computer-implemented inventions." The pro-software patent lobby has been publicly asserting that patenting "computer-implemented inventions" is somehow different from patenting software "as such." But these differences are insignificant. Some commentators distract attention from the nature of the code that executes on a computer, by stating that no clear distinction can be made between "hardware" and "software." However, the distinction that applies has to do with the nonpatentability of abstraction, not with the physical way code is expressed. A unique piece of hardware, a computer, is now available for all to use, and it is designed to automate abstract logic by providing generic logical functions which can be executed by providing it with instructions that are inherently abstract themselves. The presence of this unique generic logic device in our lives is what has brought about the need to assure that the implications of software for patent policy are honored and acknowledged. Code is certainly embodied in physical form, but it is a representation of abstract ideas, just as surely as written mathematical calculations are. In August 2000 the European Patent Organisation, i.e. the intergovernmental organisation that runs the European Patent Office, attempted to delete all the exclusions listed under Art 52 of the European Patent Convention. Due to public resistance which they apparently did not anticipate, this effort failed. In 2002, the European Commission's Directorate for the Internal Market (under Monti's successor Frits Bolkestein) submitted proposal 2002/0047, for a Directive "on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions." The Directive was claimed to serve the purposes of harmonizing Member State laws and clarifying some details with the aim of preventing excesses of the EPO. However, closer readining reveals that though the proposal from the Commission did not allow program claims, it was actually designed to codify the EPO's practice of unlimited patentability. On September 24, 2003, the European Parliament as a whole (plenary assembly) voted to incorporate a set of amendments into the Directive that actually accomplished what the Commission had pretended to aim for: it clarified and harmonised the rules, reaffirming the non-patentability of programming and business logic and upholding freedom of publication and interoperation. This set of amendments was based on a year of work in the Parliament's committees for Culture and Industry. However the Directive has been considered to belong within the domain of the Legal Affairs Committee (JURI), which is dominated by MEPs with close affinity to the patent establishment. JURI had ignored the proposals of the other committees and proposed a set of fake limits on patentability, in an attempt to fool the plenary assembly. Pursuant to the European Union's Codecision Procedure, the amended proposal was next examined by the Council of Ministers. Within the Council, the "Working Party on Intellectual Property (Patents)" is in charge of the dossier. This group consists of exactly the same members as the Administrative Council of the European Patent Office: the patent office administrators from the national governments. After a few months of secret negotiations, the "Working Party" produced a "compromise document" that removed all of the Parliament's limiting amendments and reinstated the Commission's proposal and additionally explicitly allowed program claims (Art 5(2)) and disallowed any interoperability privilege within patent law (Rec 17) while inserting some fake limits from JURI (Art 4A etc), resulting in the most extreme and uncompromising proposal yet. Access to this document was denied until the very last minute "due to the sensitive nature of the negotiations and the absence of an overriding public interest." On 18 May 2004, the Council approved the Working Party's text (with some cosmetic modifications) by a slim majority despite the apparent intention of a number of countries to follow Germany's lead in promising to vote against it. In that session, Germany claimed to be satisfied by a meaningless amendment; the Netherlands supported the document while admitting that it might be problematic; and Commissioner Frits Bolkestein inserted an amendment in Article 4 which, he claimed, clearly made software unpatentable, when in fact his phrasing merely reasserted deceptive terminology and Article 5(2), by allowing program claims, unambiguously states the opposite. In the press conference that followed the Council vote, Bolkestein failed to offer any examples of software that would not be patentable pursuant to the proposal. The Council vote was also notable for the way in which the Irish Presidency pressed Denmark for her votes, by which the slim majority was secured. The Council may officially endorse this proposal in September 2004 unless a country changes its mind and asks for discussion and vote and at the vote a qualified majority no longer exists. When a text passes Council, it is returned to the European Parliament. Then, the European Parliament may choose to return to a first reading or it may accept this text for second reading, subject to limits on the types of amendments they may offer.