Talk:T 641/00
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Neutral Point of View
[edit]The aThe The article violates the "neutral point of view" requirement, since it does not mention that the COMVIK decision is controversial. Ignoring allegedly non-technical features of the application is not allowed, since it is not allowed to list features that are irrelevant to the problem to be solved. Rbakels (talk) 07:56, 27 May 2023 (UTC)rt
- In my understanding, the COMVIK approach is established case law of the Boards of Appeal of the EPO, i.e. it is largely uncontroversial. See for example:
- "(...) the established case law on computer-implemented inventions (COMVIK approach) (...)"[1]
- As far as I know, there is no sustained controversy in the literature about this approach. --Edcolins (talk) 14:14, 27 May 2023 (UTC)
- Practitioners have to follow the (EPO) Board of Appeal approach, and you are probably one of them. But the COMVIK approach is
- actually against the law, see e.g. Axel von Hellfeld "Ist nur Technik Stand der Technik? - Zum neuen Neuheitsbegriff
- im Europäischen Patentamt und dessen Anwendung auf rechnergestützte
- Erfindungen", GRUR Int 2008, p. 1007 (English: "Is just technology state of the art? On the new novelty concpt in the EPO
- and its application to computer implemented inventions".) Note that Board of Appeal decisions are no "case law" in the
- regular sense, if only for the reason that the "members" of the boards of appeal are no independent judges, but reappointed every five years by the EPO.
- It is acknowledged that the "COMVIK approach" while providing desired results for most business method patent applications,
- gives counter-intuitive results for other types of inventions. For instance medicines typically are based on discoveries
- (excluded by art. 52(2a) EPC) and make no other contribution.
- The COMVIK approach pretends to comply with the requirement of an assessment "as a whole", but it actually does not since
- it ignores features that are allegedly non-patentable by themselves. But a patent application may only claim features that
- are needed to solve the problem at hand, so features are never irrelevant.
- The EPO focus on the technical character/contribution is based on an exclusively German tradition - which is the reason that
- it was not included in the initial EPC in 1973. EPC 2000 includes the phrase that patents are granted "in all fields of technology",
- but that only means that no field of technology may be excluded. It definitely has that meaning in the TRIPS Agreement where it came from.
- The Boards of Appeal argue that the four categories of subject-matter excluded by art. 52 EPC share a non-technical
- character, but that is controversial, and e.g. not accepted by the British courts.
- The latest development is that the COMVIK Approach actually obviates the need for an "invention concept" -
- against all patent law traditions and legislation. This observation can actually be considered a "proof by contradiction" of the
- incorrectness of the COMVIK Approach. Rbakels (talk) 12:07, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
References
- ^ "Press Communiqué of 10 March 2021 on decision G 1/19 of the Enlarged Board of Appeal". www.epo.org. European Patent Office. Retrieved 27 May 2023.