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Software Patents: The Debate Continues!

By - Prithiviraj Senthil Nathan on February 27, 2020

Software[1] Patents which are generally referred to as Computer Related Inventions[2] have been a debatable issue in India and worldwide. Recently, the single bench of the Delhi High Court had made significant observations about the patent eligibility of Computer Related Inventions in Ferid Allani V. Union of India & Others[3]. The Court ordered the Indian Patent Office (“IPO”) to re-examine the petitioner’s patent application, in light of the judicial precedents, settled practices of patent offices including some of its published guidelines which have been issued for Computer Related Inventions. Further, the Court directed the IPO to take a decision on the patent within a period of two months, after granting a hearing to the patent applicant. Accordingly, it is understood that the IPO had re-examined the patent application (in light of the said ruling) and have once again refused to grant the patent vide its detailed order dated 01/02/2020. However, in a larger perspective, it is the decision of the Delhi High Court that assumes significance. It is significant for its reiteration a) that section 3(k) of the Indian Patent Act 1970 does not “per-se” bar patentability of a Computer Related Invention and b) if an invention demonstrates technical effect or technical contribution, the same shall not fall within the ambit of section 3(k), thus patentable, though based on the computer program. This article analyses the significant observations of the Delhi High Court, India’s perspective in granting for software patents (and Computer Related Inventions) while noting the position in the United States and European Union.

Brief Facts Of The Case

Ferid Allani (“Petitioner”) filed a patent application[4] seeking grant of a patent consisting of both method claims (claims 1 to 8) and device claims (claims 9 to 14) for his invention titled “a method and device for accessing information sources and services on the web”. It was claimed that the invention provided a method and a corresponding device for accessing information sources and services on the web. During the patent prosecution process, it was stated that a) the invention achieves objective in a manner that is quicker and easier to use than the methods known at the time of invention. b) It provides users poorly accustomed to computer tools and search engines with an efficient guide to useful information sources and/or to the most frequently consulted information sources.

The IPO rejected the patent application on the ground that the method claims 1-8 are computer programs per se under Section 3(k) and device claims 9-14 lack novelty and inventive step under Section 2((i)(j). The Petitioner appealed against the IPO order with the Intellectual Property Appellate Board (“IPAB”). However, IPAB turned down the appeal citing a lack of disclosure of technical effect or technical advancement in the application. The Petitioner filed a writ petition before the Delhi High Court against the IPAB decision.

Significant Reasoning By The Delhi High Court

After hearing the arguments of the parties, the Court directed the IPO to re-examine the Petitioner’s patent application within a period of two months, after granting a hearing to the patent applicant.  Post this order, it is understood that the IPO had re-examined the patent application (in light of the said ruling) and came to conclusion that the objections as regards lacking novelty still persisted and the invention fell within the ambit of Section 3(k). For the ame reasons, the patent application, once again was refused. However, in a larger sense, it is the reasoning  of the Delhi High Court which assumes significance. Some of the significant points of reasoning of the Delhi High Court are described below, along with the relevant excerpts:

  1. A liberal approach towards the Computer Related Inventions? Certainly, a reiteration that section 3(k) bars only “computer programs per se” and not all inventions based on the computer programs. The relevant excerpts (Para 10 of the Court’s ruling) are reproduced below:

“Moreover, Section 3(k) has a long legislative history and various judicial decisions have also interpreted this provision. The bar on patenting is in respect of `computer programs per se….’ and not all inventions based on computer programs. In today’s digital world, when most inventions are based on computer programs, it would be retrograde to argue that all such inventions would not be patentable. Innovation in the field of artificial intelligence, block-chain technologies and other digital products would be based on computer programs, however the same would not become non-patentable inventions – simply for that reason. It is rare to see a product which is not based on a computer program. Whether they are cars and other automobiles, microwave ovens, washing machines, refrigerators, they all have some sort of computer programs in-built in them. Thus, the effect that such programs produce including in digital and electronic products is crucial in determining the test of patentability…. The words `per se were incorporated so as to ensure that genuine inventions which are developed, based on computer programs are not refused patents”

  • The patent applications must be examined to check if the invention results in technical effect or technical contribution (Para 11 of the Court’s ruling).

“Across the world, patent offices have tested patent applications in this field of innovation, on the fulcrum of `technical effect or a technical contribution. If the invention demonstrates a technical effect or technical contribution it is patentable even though it may be based on a computer program.”

  • Guidelines and judicial precedents should be considered in determining whether the invention results in a technical effect or technical contribution. The relevant para is interspersed below (Para 13 of the Court’s ruling):

Insofar as Computer Related Inventions are concerned, there are three sets of guidelines that have been published by the Patent Office. The initial Guidelines are termed as “Draft Guidelines, the second document is described as Guidelines and the one issued in 2017 is termed `Revised Guidelines. While the initial 2013 Draft Guidelines defines “technical effect”, the said definition is not to be found in the later guidelines. The meaning of “technical effect is no longer in dispute owing to the development of judicial precedents and patent office practices internationally and in India. There can be no doubt as to the fact that the patent application deserves to be considered in the context of settled judicial precedents which have now laid down the interpretation of Section 3(k), the Guidelines and other material including the legislative material.”

Interestingly, the ruling is similar to the findings of Justice Manmohan Singh of the Delhi High Court in the case of Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson v. Intex[5], where Swedish telecom giant, Ericsson was granted an injunction against Intex for any devices that infringed on the eight Standard Essential Patents that are part of Ericsson’s portfolio.

Patenting Software Inventions: A Debatable Issue In India

Granting Software Patents has been a debatable issue due to three major reasons: a) the language of Section 3(k); b) Guidelines issued by IPO from time to time and c) Inconsistent decisions by the IPO.  Section 3(k), as in the current form, prohibits the patenting of “a mathematical or business method or a computer program per se or algorithms”. However, when Section 3(k) was initially presented in the Parliament as Patents (Second Amendment) Bill, 1999, the phrase “per se” for computer programs was not there. The phrase “per se” was introduced in the Bill on the recommendations of the Joint Parliamentary Committee (“JPC”), subsequently passed by the Parliament. The phrase “per se” has been a contentious issue, ever since.

While some argue that a software must not be protected under patents (and only as a copyright), others suggest that the inclusion of the word “per se” reflects the parliament’s intent to exclude only computer programs under Section 3(k) i.e., in other words, inventions implemented by software which are more than mere computer programs – can be patented.

It is pertinent to note that the IPO has published three guidelines for examining the Computer Related Inventions. The first set of guidelines was published in August 2015. Expectedly, it shed light on the per se issue, with a reference to Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary definition of ‘per se’ as ‘by itself’ – to show that you are referring to something on its own, rather than in connection with other things. However, the other content of the guidelines generated controversy, given its liberal approach and overreaching impact favouring the software claims. This made IPO issue a notification suspending the guidelines.

The second set of guidelines published in February 2016 was expected to fix the issues present in the first set. However, it broadened the exclusion rule (in a form of a three-step test) under Section 3 (k) by stating that software of any nature, unless in conjunction with novel hardware, cannot be patented. Hence, the guidelines were replaced with the revised guidelines for Examination of Computer Related Inventions, 2017  via an Order from the Controller General (“Third set”). The Third set done away with this test and instead focussed on substance of the invention over the form, while examining the patent application. It stated

“If, in substance, claims in any form such as method/process, apparatus/system/device, computer program product/ computer readable medium belong to the said excluded categories, they would not be patentable. Even when the issue is related to hardware/software relation, the expression of the functionality as a method is to be judged on its substance. It is well-established that, in patentability cases, the focus should be on the underlying substance of the invention, not the particular form in which it is claimed. The Patents Act clearly excludes computer programmes per se and the exclusion should not be allowed to be avoided merely by camouflaging the substance of the claim by its wording[6]”.

According to the revised guidelines, inventions technical nature shall be ascertained from the nature of the claims  . It stated “Thus, what is important is to judge the substance of claims taking whole of the claim together. If any claim in any form such as method/process, apparatus/system/device, computer program product/ computer readable medium falls under the said excluded categories, such a claim would not be patentable. However, if in substance, the claim, taken as whole, does not fall in any of the excluded categories, the patent should not be denied[7].           

Thus, the Third Set focus on substance over form as against the novel hardware requirement contemplated in the second set. This means that while examining an application relating to Computer Related Invention, its substance is considered and a claim is taken as a whole and the claims do not fall in any of the excluded categories. The Examiner can proceed with other steps to determine patentability with respect to the invention.

Adding to the confusion is the inconsistent decisions by the IPO in examining the software-related patent applications. While IPO has granted the patent to few inventions[8], it has refused others even if they met the same tests and standards, the infamous instance being the 756/DEL/2004 filed by Microsoft for an invention to secure local network.

Software Patent: Position In The United States And Europe

In the United States of America:

The USA, in the earlier days, adopted a liberal approach in granting Software Patents. This is mainly due to the then judicial precedent i.e., the decision of the US Supreme Court[9] which stated patentable subject matter to include anything under the sun made by man, but the laws of nature, natural phenomena and abstract ideas are three specific areas which are not patentable. However, on 19 June 2014, the Supreme Court passed a crucially important judgement in the case of Alice vs CLS Bank[10] (based on Mayo framework) contemplating a two-step assessment.

Firstly, one has to determine whether the claims are being excluded from patenting. Examples of such concepts are abstract ideas (which sometimes include certain abstraction levels of software), natural laws and natural phenomena[11]. The second determining factor is to establish if the elements of the claim can be seen as an inventive concept, which is sufficiently concrete to transform the claimed abstract idea into an application for which a patent can be applied; those elements must help in obtaining something that is “significantly more” than a non-admissible abstract idea[12]. Prior to this decision, three rulings of the US Supreme Court assume significance. Firstly, in Bilski[13], the five-justice majority held that the claimed method was ineligible because it was an abstract idea, and declined to rule that business methods were all ineligible. Next, in Mayo[14], the Court invalidated a patent on a medical diagnostic test claiming so broadly that it “pre-emptively” covered the underlying natural principle or law of nature on which the test was based[15]. In a key passage in the Mayo opinion, the Court explained[16]:

“[A] process that focuses upon the use of a natural law [must] also contain other elements or a combination of elements, sometimes referred to as an “inventive concept,” sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the natural law itself.” In other words, the implementation could not be trivial or conventional-it had to be sufficiently creative that it added something of substance to the natural law.

A year after the Mayo ruling, the Court decided the Myriad case[17]. Here, the issue was whether the product of nature could be patented. The narrow holding was that DNA was not subject to patenting but cDNA was. The point of more general interest in the case, however, was that the Court equated laws of nature, natural phenomena and abstract ideas to the products of nature at issue, so that the same legal rule applied to the patent eligibility of all of them-although the opinion slurs over this point without explanation[18].

Hence, based on the aforesaid analysis, and specifically two-step tests (as laid down in Alice decision), it appears that in the US, implementing an abstract idea using a computer, will not confer patent eligibility. It is only the improvement in a manufacturing process or other technological process in an inventive way using a computer may confer patent eligibility, despite the existence of an underlying abstract idea or principle. This position is reaffirmed by one of the earlier Federal Circuit decision, post-Alice era, where the Court invalidated a patent on processing digital graphics data. The Court set a legal principle that “A claim may be eligible if it includes additional inventive features such that the claim scope does not solely capture the abstract idea[19]

In Europe:

While the two-step process is the current principle in the USA for evaluating patent eligibility, in Europe, Article 52 and Article 53 are the key. Firstly, Article 52(2)(c) of the European Patent Convention (“EPC”) considers “schemes, rules and methods for performing mental acts, playing games or doing business, and programs for computers” are not patentable inventions. Second, Article 52(3) of the EPC, states that patentability of computer programs is excluded only if patents relate to that subject matter “as such”. Hence, invention going beyond a “computer program per se” can be granted a patent. Further, the EPO Guidelines for Examination mentions (G-II, 3.6) that the exclusion from patentability of “computer programs per-se” does not apply to computer programs “having a technical character”. This means an invention involving a computer program which exceeds the boundaries of software and provides a “further technical effect”, is eligible for patent protection[20]. Hence, the technical effect determines patent eligibility in Europe. This is reiterated in Pension Benefit[21] and Hitachi cases[22], where it was stated that the claims involving technical features will not be rejected, for simply relating to the excluded subject matter.

Software Patent – Drafting is the key

Few suggestions in handling Software Patent inventions:

Due care must be exercised in drafting claims and specifications at the application stage since the acceptance of any intended amendment in the future would rest on the discretion of the controller in lieu of section 59 of the Patent Act, 1970. In drafting the claims and specifications, kindly ensure the following:

  1. The claims and specifications should be coupled with the respective hardware or a software component.
  • Technical expressions shall be used to link the claims and specifications to technical effect or technical contribution. In this regard citing demonstrations highlighting the inventions’ technical solution will enhance the chances. As cited in the Ferid Allani order, a few illustrations of technical effect are:

Higher speed, reduced hard-disk access time, more economical use of memory, more efficient database search strategy, more effective data compression techniques, improved user interface, better control of the robotic arm, improved reception/transmission of a radio signal, etc;

  • Figures / Drawings must clearly relate to the claimed subject matter,

In the event, there are objections raised in the examination report, decisions of the controller in previous similar cases where patents are granted shall be highlighted. Unlike IPAB and the Court orders/judgments which are binding on the controllers, decisions of the controller do not have a binding effect but can be used as one of the convincing tools.

Conclusion

The ruling of the Delhi High Court in Ferid Allani’s case considerably leans to the liberal approach in granting patents to the software. The order more or less reflects the IPO’s first set of guidelines published for examining Computer Related Inventions. It would be interesting to note the approach to be adopted by IPO in the pending/fresh patent applications pertaining to computer related invesntions. Further, it would be interesting to note the approach to be adopted by the applicant in the instant case i.e., Ferid Allani, given that the IPO had, once again refused the patent application.  Until the matter is considered judicially or revisited by Parliament, the law in this area remains uncertain.


[1] The term “software” is not defined in Indian statutes and hence, for interpretation of this term, the general dictionary meaning is being used in the Guidelines for the Examinations of the Computer Related Inventions published by the Indian Patent Office in the year 2017. The Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary defines “software” as “the programs, etc. used to operate a computer”

[2] Per the Guidelines for the Examinations of the Computer Related Inventions published by the Indian Patent Office in the year 2017, Computer Related Inventions (CRIs) comprises inventions which involve the use of computers, computer networks or other programmable apparatus and include such inventions having one or more features of which are realized wholly or partially by means of a computer programme or programmes.

[3]  2019 SCC OnLine Del 11867, decided on 12-12-2019

[4] IN/PCT/2002/705/DEL

[5] https://indiankanoon.org/doc/74163100/;

[6] Section 4.4.4 (Page No: 13 and 14 of the Guidelines for the Examinations of the Computer Related Inventions published by the IPO in the year 2017)

[7] Section 4.5 (Page No: 15 of the Guidelines for the Examinations of the Computer Related Inventions published by the IPO in the year 2017)

[8] Patent No: 277534 in 2016; Patent No: 295692 in 2018; Patent No: 318123 in 2019

[9] Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303 (1980)

[10] 573 U.S. 208 (2014)

[11] https://www.arnold-siedsma.com/news/archief/2016/patenting-software-in-the-us-and-europe

[12] https://www.arnold-siedsma.com/news/archief/2016/patenting-software-in-the-us-and-europe

[13] Bilski v Kappas 561 U.S. 593 (2010).

[14] Mayo Collaborative Services v Prometheus Labs Inc 566 U.S._, 132 S. Ct 1289 (2012)

[15] Alice v CLS Bank: US Business Method and Software Patents Marching towards Oblivion?, An article in European Intellectual Property Review, January 2014.

[16] 2 Mayo 132 S. Ct. 1289, 1294 (2012) (citing F/ook437 U.S. 584, 594 (1978)). The Court held the patent invalid because the limitations in its claims added "nothing specific to the laws of nature other than what is well-understood, routine, conventional activity, previously engaged in by those in the field": Mayo 132 S. Ct. 1289, 1299 (2012).

[17] Association for Molecular Pathology v Myriad Genetics Inc 569 U.S._, 133 S. Ct. 2107 (2013).

[18] See Richard H. Stern, “Comment: Association for Molecular Pathology v Afyriad Genetics: Sieving the Gene Pool" [2013] E.I.P.R. 685, 689 (questioning the unexplained equation). But see fn.27 of that article (providing a rationalisation for the equation because of a similar underlying principle-“Once you learn that the BRCA DNA is located in such and such a place, it is no invention to isolate it by conventional means”). The Myriad Court did not stress, however, the Flook-Mayo requirement for an inventive application of the underlying principle-at least, it did not do so to the extent that Alice later did

[19] Digitech 2014 WL 3377201 at *4 (emphasis added).

[20] https://www.iam-media.com/securing-software-patents-through-epo

[21] T931/95

[22] T258/03

Contributed By - Prithiviraj Senthil
Designation - Partner

King Stubb & Kasiva,
Advocates & Attorneys

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