Zypries050609En

German Federal Minister of Justice tempting MEPs towards Software Patents

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Berlin, 9 June 2005 - In a letter to German !MEPs/, German Federal Minister of Justice Brigitte Zypries tells the old tale about the software patents directive which, in the Council's version, would change nothing and nevertheless would "harmonise". She says that if/ !MEPs accept the Council's version mostly unchanged, they may be allowed to reformulate the definition of "technical contribution". She also only supports regulating interoperability issues by existing patent system rules for compulsory licensing.

The letter spans two A4 pages. The first one-and-a-half page contain a summary of the ministry's position which aims to drive the !MEPs towards the Council's version of the directive and away from the 2003 Parliament's version. The contradiction between not creating new law and nevertheless correcting a divergent practice remains unresolved. However, the hint that some case law should be codified turns out to be helpful.

Contrary to the impression given by the letter, the to-be-codified concepts, including program claims, did not originate in the German Federal Court of Justice, but in the European Patent Organisation (EPO)'s Technical Board of Appeal. The German Federal Court just used them in reviews of decisions by the Federal Patent Court.

Furthermore, the justice minister's statement that the 2003 Parliament's version of the directive "would have exempted large fields of technology from patentability" lacks any explanation. This is particularly unintelligible because the Parliament's version merely restates and concretises the core messages of Art.52 of the European Patent Convent (EPC). However, when replacing "large fields of technology" with "more than 30,000 general data processing and business method exclusion rights granted against letter and spirit of the EPC", the resulting statement becomes plausible and gives a hint at why the SME-dominated european software economy favors the Parliament's version of the directive.

Ms. Zypries adds that the German economy contributes one third of all patent applications at the EPO. This figure hides the fact that the German share of all data processing method patent applications at the EPO amounts to only 6%, with more than 80% of the applications owned by non-European applicants. In particular, most of those applications are filed by enterprises from the USA (42%) and from Japan (29%).

The last three paragraphs of the letter adds that the Federal Minister of Justice, encouraged by the round table sessions it held and the Bundestag motion, has identified two points for "further optimization" in the Council's version of the directive. First of all, the notion of "technical contribution" could be concretized. Ms. Zypries therefore suggests incorporation of the (forces-of-nature-based) definition of "technology" as developed and used by the German Federal Court of Justice.

Secondly, "ensuring interoperability" is mentioned as "core demand also and particularly by the critics", followed by the proposal for a compulsory licensing model according to amendment 153 tabled in the Parliament's Legal Affairs Committee (JURI). No indication is given as to how open-source projects could handle licensing demands with such an unspecific provision. Actually, those "critics" supporting a methodically correct EPC interpretation do not have that problem because their interpretation of the EPC concludes that presentation and logical processing of information cannot be regarded as patent infringement.

Comments

Christian Cornelssen, FFII

(Participant in the round table sessions)

First and foremost the justice minister favors the Council's version. Attributing that version to be "optimizable" means: As long as the directive comes to justify the rush of patent applications driven by patent offices and their biggest clients in the realm of digital immaterial goods during the last decades, the German Federal Ministry of Justice can accept talks about details.

!MEPs should not let themselves be distracted by that manoevre. Here is how interoperability can be reached best: not with an exception that has always been unable to pass through Council and Commission, but with a rule that has been followed strictly by the EPO until 1985. The rule says: If the contribution to the state of the art consists solely in a program for computers, there is no patentable subject matter, regardless of the form used to present the claims. The underlying principle says: Data processing is not a field of technology. This rule can be implemented using the amendments by Rocard, Zwiefka, and others. It is compatible with TRIPs, and it is practiceable. It offers directly what the economic majority and innovation policy want, and it does not require even more investment of trust and hope in the Council's IP working group - which is a condition that has been proven to be essential for the success of the directive project.

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