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PROTECTION FOR METHODS OF DOING BUSINESS

PROTECTION FOR METHODS OF DOING BUSINESS. REGIONAL SEMINAR ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. MARIA ELISEEVA Brown Rudnick Freed & Gesmer Boston, MA, USA. MOSCOW July 10-12, 2001. What is patentable anyway?.

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PROTECTION FOR METHODS OF DOING BUSINESS

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  1. PROTECTION FOR METHODS OF DOING BUSINESS REGIONAL SEMINAR ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY MARIA ELISEEVA Brown Rudnick Freed & Gesmer Boston, MA, USA MOSCOW July 10-12, 2001

  2. What is patentable anyway? U.S. law defines patentable subject matter as “any new and useful process, machine, manufacture or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvements thereto.”

  3. What is not patentable? The U.S. Supreme Court has enumerated non-patentable categories: 1. Laws of nature 2. Natural phenomena 3. Abstract ideas.

  4. From non-patentable to patentable • Mathematical algorithms not reduced • to a practical application are just • abstract ideas. • Mathematical algorithms reduced to • practical application and producing a • useful, concrete and tangible result • are patentable subject matter in the U.S.

  5. Important! Even if an invention is identified as patentable subject matter, it still must satisfy other requirements for patentability (novelty, non-obviousness, certain requirements of description and claims) for a patent to issue.

  6. State Street Bank v. Signature Financial Group, 47 USPQ2d 1596 (Fed. Cir. 1998) • State Street Bank and Signature Financial are in the business of being custodians and accounting agents for certain funds. • Signature Financial had a patent (US 5,193,056) for a data processing system. • Negotiations broke down and State Street filed a declaratory judgment action of invalidity, non-infringement and unenforceability of the ‘056 patent.

  7. State Street Bank v. Signature Financial Group, 47 USPQ2d 1596 (Fed. Cir. 1998) • One of the grounds for challenging the validity of the patent was that it was directed to a mathematical algorithm and to a method of doing business, which are not , as State Street asserted, subject matter patentable under U.S. patent law. • The patented system was directed to a data processing system facilitating a structure in which mutual funds (Spokes) pool their assets in an investment portfolio (Hub)

  8. State Street Bank v. Signature Financial Group, 47 USPQ2d 1596 (Fed. Cir. 1998) • The system provides a way to allocate daily the assets of two or more Spokes invested in the same Hub (investment portfolio) • A fund administrator is required to calculate the price of the shares to the nearest penny. • A computer with the appropriate software is a necessity in such a situation.

  9. State Street Bank v. Signature Financial Group, 47 USPQ2d 1596 (Fed. Cir. 1998) • The case reconfirmed that a mathematical algorithm, formula or calculation which produces a useful, concrete and tangible result is patentable subject matter. • Software-related inventions producing a useful, concrete and tangible results are capable of protection by a patent.

  10. State Street Bank v. Signature Financial Group, 47 USPQ2d 1596 (Fed. Cir. 1998) • This case reconfirmed that the transformation of data resulting in a calculation of a share price, constitutes a practical application of a mathematical algorithm, which is a useful concrete and tangible result. • If a computer related invention produces a concrete and useful result, it is patentable subject matter, provided that other conditions for patentability are satisfied.

  11. Class 705 Filing Data Application Filing and Patents Issued Data Class 705199519961997199819992000 Applications Filed330584927134028217800 Patents Issued126144206420585899 This data is based on information available as of 01/01/01 and will be updated annually. Patents have been associated with Class 705 based on their primary classification (called the ORIGINAL classification, in USPTO-specific terminology). Annual counts are based on the fiscal year which begins onOctober 1 and ends on September 30.

  12. Class 705 TITLE: Data processing: financial, business practice, management, or cost/price determination. DEFINITION: Machines and methods for performing data processing or calculation operations in the: 1) practice, administration or management of an enterprise; 2) processing of financial data; 3) determination of the charge for goods or services.

  13. What is a business method claim? “Business method” is a generic term used by many to describe various types of process claims It has been stated in court, however, that claims drawn to a method of doing business should be examined like any other process claims, and should not be categorized as special “business method” claims.

  14. Patentability of methods of doing business • The State Street court concluded that claims should not be categorized as methods of doing business. Instead, they should be examined as any other process claims. • The key to patentability is that useful, concrete and tangible result must be produced.

  15. How to successfully prepare and prosecute a business method patent? Specification: - clearly define the invention - identify and describe the problem solved by the invention - describe the best mode of practicing the invention - clearly describe one or more practical applications of the invention, how it produces a “useful, concrete and tangible result”.

  16. Computer-implementedinventions Identify the functionality of the programmed computer (what it does when the software runs on it). How the elements of the computer are configured, interact and interrelate to provide the described functionality. Describe if the computer is to be integrated with other elements; or how the computer is to be used in the claimed process. Source code is not required to disclose the functions of the software; disclosing the functions of the software is usually sufficient.

  17. Patents and the Internet • A new emphasis on Internet, software, and business method and business model patents • The law is in fact unchanged since at least ten years ago • Despite this, such patents have been much more visible in the media lately. The highly publicized cases made such patents more visible. All that changed is that now everyone knows it can be done

  18. The following list of some e-commerce related patents granted by the Patent Office is illustrative of the kind of subject matter patented by various companies: • Sales and Purchasing: • Patent No. 5,960,411 to Amazon.com on "one-click" shopping • Patent No. 5,715,314 to Open Market on "e-shopping cart” • Patent No. 5,895,454 on a single shopping cart for use in • multiple sites • Patent No. 6,029,141 to Amazon for its affiliate program • Patent No. 5,963,916 to Intouch on methods to preview • prerecorded music samples over the Internet

  19. The following list of some e-commerce related patents granted by the Patent Office is illustrative of the kind of subject matter patented by various companies: Web Auctions: Patent No. 5,778,367 to Network Engineering Software on database technology on the web (eBay sued) Patent No. 5,794,207 to Priceline.com on reverse auctions Patent No. 5,890,138 to Bid.com on price and availability decrease

  20. The following list of some e-commerce related patents granted by the Patent Office is illustrative of the kind of subject matter patented by various companies: Financial Transactions: Patent No. 5,870,721 on real time loan approval Patent No. 6,006,207 on loan repayment Consumer Reward Models: Patent No. 5,794,210 to Cybergold on attention brokerage, also known as pay-for -view ads Patent No. 5,774,870 to Netsentives on award redemption (frequent flyer miles for on-line shopping) system

  21. Claiming strategy • When patents are analyzed for the purpose of licensing, infringement, litigation, the advantage of having a lot of independent claims of varying scope is more evident. • In litigation, the more independent claims a patent has, the more difficult and expensive it is to analyze and attack the patent. • In licensing, a greater number of independent claims makes it more likely that the patent coverage is complete.

  22. Some recent Internet patents and related lawsuits • Amazon.com obtained a patent on its 1-click ordering method, sued Barnes and Noble, obtained a preliminary injunction (reversed by the appellate court). • Priceline.com obtained a patent on reverse auction of airplane tickets and sued Microsoft. • Amazon.com also now has a patent on referral sales commissions.

  23. Getting patent protection • Getting patent protection is important even if you don't think you would ever use the patent offensively • Cost to prepare and file, for complex subject matter, is likely to be in the range of $5K to $15K. The law permits you to do this yourself. There are, however, many reasons to consider hiring a patent firm

  24. Waiting too long to file • It is important to file promptly after inventing, and before public disclosure or sale • US “grace period” of one year does nothing to excuse delay with respect to non-US patent rights • Keep lab notebooks and reward inventors

  25. Thank you for your attention! This presentation can be found at http://www.patentbar.com/ms.ppt

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