Software cos. eye key patent case in Supreme Court
By JOELLE TESSLER
AP Technology Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - With the technology industry looking on, the
Supreme Court on Monday will explore what types of inventions
should be eligible for a patent in a pivotal case that could
undermine such legal protections for software.
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A ruling that sides with the Patent Office could bar patents on
processes and methods of doing business, such as online shopping
techniques, medical diagnostic tests and procedures for executing
trades on Wall Street. And it might even undercut patents on
software.
In a worst-case scenario for the high-tech industry, the ruling
could invalidate many existing software patents or at least make
them more difficult to defend in lawsuits. And it could make such
patents harder to obtain in the future because software is
generally patented as a process for doing something rather than as
a physical invention.
``Technology companies care about this case because it will
define what you can and cannot get a patent on,'' said Emery Simon,
counselor to the Business Software Alliance, which represents large
technology companies including Microsoft Corp. and Intel Corp.
``The scope of patentability could have ramifications for the path
that technology takes.''
It's impossible to know what products might never have come to
market without patent protection for software. But tech companies
say these patents have played a critical role in keeping the U.S.
at the cutting edge by giving people control over their inventions
for nearly 20 years.
``The software industry would lose an important incentive to
innovate if the government ceased issuing software patents,''
warned patent attorney James Carmichael, a former judge on the
Patent Office board of appeals.
Although technology companies insist they'll keep innovating no
matter how the high court rules, an unfavorable outcome might force
them to write patent applications in a different way or rely more
on copyright and trade secret protections. And it might even draw
Congress into the debate.
The facts of the case are not about software.
The roots of the dispute go back to 1997, when inventors Bernard
Bilski and Rand Warsaw tried to patent a method of hedging
weather-related risk in energy prices. That process, which powers
energy billing services offered by a Pittsburgh company called
WeatherWise USA, can be used to lock in energy prices, even during
an unusually cold winter.
The Patent Office concluded the process was too abstract and
denied the application. So Bilski and Warsaw took their claim the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which upheld the
Patent Office decision last year and said a process is eligible for
a patent only if it is ``tied to a particular machine or
apparatus'' or if it ``transforms a particular article into a
different state or thing.''
The Bilski filing, the court found, did not meet the test.
Now, the question facing the Supreme Court is whether that
``machine-or-transformation'' test is the right standard.
The answer should settle a long-running debate over whether
business methods should be eligible for patents.
Some of the best-known business-method patents in technology
come out of electronic commerce, including Amazon.com Inc.'s
``1-Click'' tool for completing online purchases and Priceline.com
Inc.'s ``Name Your Own Price'' model. Yet many big companies,
particularly in technology and financial services, argue that such
patents are too broad and too often used as weapons in costly
infringement lawsuits to extract licensing fees.
Technology companies, meanwhile, are watching the Bilski case
for another reason: If the Supreme Court upholds the
machine-or-transformation test, one of their fundamental assets -
software - might no longer qualify.
The number of software patents has been climbing sharply in
recent years - a reflection of the technology industry's explosive
growth and the increased reliance on software in all industries. A
series of court rulings upholding software patents in the 1990s,
including a key case in 1998 that opened the floodgates to
business-method patents as well, also helped drive up software
patent numbers.
Not everyone agrees software patents are a good thing, though.
Rob Tiller, assistant general counsel for software company Red
Hat Inc., maintains that software patents actually discourage
innovation because software developers are at constant risk of
infringing on existing patents. Red Hat embraces the open-source
movement, which makes software code freely available for anyone to
modify, improve and use and is fundamentally at odds with software
patents.
As the justices sort through these issues, they will have to
determine how to draw the line between theoretical ideas not
connected to the real world and concrete applications that put
those ideas into practice.
The Supreme Court has already established that abstract ideas,
natural phenomena and laws of nature cannot be patented. But there
is still plenty of disagreement over what qualifies.
The same appeals court that ruled in the Bilski case had reached
one conclusion when it upheld business method and software patents
in the 1990s, saying that any invention that produces a ``useful,
concrete and tangible result'' can qualify. The
machine-or-transformation test arrives at a very different
understanding.
Michael Jakes, a patent lawyer representing Bilski and Warsaw
before the Supreme Court, argues that the new test is too
restrictive and would exclude too many innovations - including
software - in today's service-based, information-age economy.
``The test may have made sense for industrial processes such as
curing rubber or tanning leather,'' Jakes said. ``But with today's
technology, we have processes that don't fit these categories. But
they are still practical and useful and innovative and important.''
At this point, there is no firm consensus on what the test for
patentability should be. IBM Corp. says an invention should be
eligible if it makes a ``technological contribution.'' Microsoft
says an invention should be eligible if it has physical properties
or produces a result in the physical world.
Under both tests, the companies say, software would make the cut
and the Bilski risk-hedging application would not.
Indeed, Horacio Gutierrez, deputy general counsel for Microsoft,
said the Supreme Court would actually help the technology industry
by blocking a patent in this case - sending a strong signal that
the government must hold patent applications to high standards.
Whatever test the Supreme Court ultimately settles on, IBM
attorney Marian Underweiser hopes it will be flexible and broad.
``The danger is that if the test is too narrow and too
specific,'' she said, ``it won't stand the test of time because
technology moves so quickly.''
11/07/09 12:27
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