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6th March 2004 -- FFII has received a text from the intranet of the UK Parliament which appears to have been written by civil servants 3 weeks ago to keep members of parliament updated on the software patent directive. The text presents the case in a far more balanced way than the usual statements of the UK Patent Office, which, as a mouthpiece of the government, has been nearly monopolising the political discourse on the dossier in the UK for a long time.

Introductory analysis

(by Hartmut Pilch)

The document quotes various viewpoints, but still stops short of poking into the wounds of the patent establishment. It does not directly raise the question of legitimacy of the EPO and UK caselaw. Also, it does not seriously challenge the fictions of this caselaw, including the assertion that "technical" software is patentable under European law and that the "technical contribution" criterion as practised by the "current law" is meaningful.

The document ends with a statement of a conservative leader in the UK parliament which is in fact copy&pasted from a statement by Malcolm Harbour, the tory IP spokesman in the EP, who has been carrying the doublespeak of the patent lobby to an extreme. However the text does not point this out.

It also quotes Richard Allan MP of the Libdems with a demand that the "status quo" not be changed. As we know, this demand is quite open to interpretation in a context where we have several competing interpretations of the law which all claim to be the status quo.

The Library Standard Note from 16th February 2005 from the UK House of Commons is a standard note, written by a civil servant research worker. It appears to be a kind of executive summary to keep !MPs and their staff up to speed with issues. These House of Commons intranet documents are not found on publication sites.

This text may be worth showing to UK members of parliament when writing letters.

The Text -- static version

We have published a static, uncommentable version.

You can insert links and annotations into the editable version below. Hopefully this will then become even more informative for UK politicians.

The Text -- editable version

SN/SC/3398

This Note describes the arguments surrounding the Computer Implemented Inventions Directive (popularly known as the Software Patents Directive), provides position statements for the major parties and details the progress that the Directive has made through the European legislature.

Further information can be found in Library Standard Note SN/SC/1612.

A. A software patent Directive

The issue of software patents has become increasingly controversial following plans by the European Commission and Parliament to update the present system through a proposed Directive. The Directive would include clarifying the position regarding software. Under current law, passed in 1973, software cannot be patented. However, a clarification in 1986 made it possible in the eyes of the European Patent Office and, since then, around 30,000 software patents have been approved.

The draft Directive would allow the patenting of computer-implemented inventions provided they meet certain criteria; however some opponents are concerned that the plans will, in effect, enable the patenting of all software.

This has raised concerns as lobbyists argue that software is a special case and should not fall under-the same rules as other inventions:


indented text Heres why: before the 1986 clarification, the only things that could be patented were physical inventions. Drugs and oil rigs can be compared with others, and can thus be patented. You cant patent business plans or mathematical formulae, the rules to games, philosophical systems or religions. These are all abstract ideas, and are specifically excluded.

The loophole that allows the software patents to be granted is the idea that the software code has a physical effect. If a program allows a machine to be more efficient, or a drug to be administered in a better way, or a previously unattainable effect to be achieved, then the software, proponents say, has what is called technical effect. Hence, you can patent it. No one has clarified exactly how much of-an effect on how much of a machine a program must have.

When you then have the premise that all computers are general-purpose machines, and that all software gives these general- purpose machines new abilities and improvements, and hence a technical effect, then you have the premise that software is patentable.

Opponents point out that software code is really just a written expression of an abstract idea. The code itself describes the idea. This leads to some nasty legal ramifications. For one thing, the implementation is irrelevant. The code you write the program in doesnt matter. [...] Thus, for the first time, and contrary to usual practice, the patenting of software introduces the patenting of abstract ideas, and not just their implementation. This, say opponents, could be very dangerous indeed.

A large program might contain tens of thousands of discrete ideas and techniques in action. So, in the words of Richard Stallman, the famed free software activist, "software patents are like landmines for programmers. At each design decision, there is a chance you will step on a patent and it will destroy your project. Considering the large number of ideas that must be combined in a modem program, the danger becomes very large.: ("Patent Unfairly", The Guardian 8th July 2004.)

However, some argue that the proposed Directive would not allow the blanket granting of software patents. John Gray, a patent lawyer with patent attorney Fitzpatricks, said:

The Government also expressed this view:

The Government believes that the proposals will not extend the patentability of software:

In September 2003, the European Parliament, in the First Reading of the Directive, introduced amendments that would severely restrict the granting of software patents including those involving a "technical contribution".

These amendments were not accepted by the Council of Ministers, who in May 2004 voted against them and reinstated the patenting of computer-implemented inventions where the invention has a "technical character".

When asked whether the Directive, as amended by the Council, would change the current situation in the UK, Patricia Hewitt, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, said:

Recent controversy has stalled the progress of the Directive. The Council has yet to vote on a Common Position, and therefore the Directive has not been passed back to Parliament. This is because Poland decided to oppose the Position and a number of other countries expressed reservations about the text, leading to a final vote on the Position being delayed. No date has yet been chosen for more discussion on the Directive. Should the Parliament and Council continue to disagree, the legislation will have to go before a conciliation committee. (The Guardian as above)

A further development occurred on 2 February 2005 when the European Parliament's Legal Affairs Committee voted overwhelmingly to ask the Commission to restart the legislative process. Parliament President, Josep Borrell will now formally request the European Commission to submit a new proposal. This request by the Committee could tip the balance of power to those who disapprove of the Directive, however Europa, the European Union's website, reports:

However, the Commission has no obligation to answer the Parliaments' request positively, and the Common Position agreed by Member States in May 2004 which included only a minority of the Parliament's first-reading amendments could still be put on the agenda of an upcoming Council meeting(s) as an A-item (i.e. An item to be adopted without further debate). Such a move, though, could be blocked by Member States opposing the current draft. This would lead to further delays in the adoption of the text, a scenario that would not please supporters of the proposed legislation.

A resolution to this debate may take considerable time.

B. Party positions

Richard Allan MP, the Liberal Democrat spokesman on IT, called for the government to ensure that there would be no change to the status quo over the boundaries of what could be patented. He stressed that there should be no move towards the American system of allowing the patenting of software. ("More heat than light" The Times, 25 January 2005)

Michael Fabricant MP, Shadow Minister for Economic Affairs, said:

End of SN/SC/3398

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