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Draft Call to Action IV

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The European Parliament has resisted a multi-million euro misinformation and lobbying campaign by a group of multinational firms and rejected an attempt by the united governmental patent bureaucracies and the European Commission to impose patents on pure software and business methods on the EU member states. It is now up to national parliaments, national judges and citizens to organise further resistance against the European Patent Organisation and the multinational corporations standing behind it, so as to make sure their harmful and unlawful patent granting practise will not be followed in the jurisdictions of the member states. The undersigned describe the problems and propose measures to address them.


Problems

  1. The European Patent Office:
    • Software patents: the EPO has in recent years granted 30-50,000 harmful patents on data processing rules against the letter and spirit of the written law and is persisting in this practise, based on case law created by the said office's Technical Boards of Appeal and followed by some, but not all, national courts.
    • Role: The EPO's role as a unified executive, legislative and judicial body violates all principles of the separation of powers that have been the standard since the 18th century.
    • Control: The supporters of the European Patent Office have tried several times to adapt the written law to reflect their new practise but each time failed due to lack of public support. Yet the harmful practise is continuing even without legislative support, and the EPO is promoting it more aggressively than ever.
  2. Legislation:
    • The EP's Role: The European Parliament has at several occasions proposed clarifications of patent law which would, if enacted, have effectively obliged the European Patent Office to exclude data processing rules from patentability, as intended by the law which is currently in force. However these proposals of Europe's only democratically elected legislature have been frustrated by unreasoned resistance from the Commission and the Council.
    • Innovation Policy: There is a lack of coordination between patent and innovation policy, and conversely the mistake of equating the two is often made. However, innovation policy (considered vital but problematic in the Lisbon Strategy) encompasses much more, such as competition control and even more fundamentally, the creative management of creative potential. This frequently involves phenomena not yet understood by economists, such as creative commons, open source, etc. Blind extensions of rights and enforcement means, even in cases where no one at all in the field wants it (e.g. criminal sanctions for patent infringements) happen all too often.
    • The Community Patent: The Community out-sources the granting of Community patents, giving an unaccountable non-Community organisation, the EPO, carte blanche. The EPO will be able to grant Community software patents. The Community Patent proposal as it stands makes the EPO's Board of Appeal the highest authority on the granting practice. The European Court of Justice will be the highest court in infringement / invalidity cases. Two separate legal systems are created, allowing different interpretations of the European Patent Convention. The Community patent comes with accession to the European Patent Convention, which will create a loophole: Community law can be made by an non-Community organisation, disregarding the Community's constituting treaties, bypassing the European Parliament. With its long retroactive liability, the Community patent makes legal extortion profitable.
  3. The draft Constitutional Treaty:
    • The draft Constitutional Treaty's unqualified statement that "Intellectual property shall be protected" is unprecedented. It has already been abused extensively by the Commission (in its justification for the IPRED family of directives) and completely misses the point that such exclusion rights generally are merely a means to an end as opposed to a fundamental right in themselves.
    • The Treaty in itself, regardless of the final form and content, cannot bring more balance and democracy in the European Union's decision making process without substantive changes in the Commission and Council's behaviour and attitude.

Solutions

Call to action

Therefore, the following signatories call on the following institutions to take action:

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