US Supreme Court Invalidates Patent For Being Software Patent
ciaran_o_riordan (662132) writes The US Supreme Court has just invalidated a patent for being a software patent! To no fanfare, the Court has spent the past months reviewing a case, Alice v. CLS Bank, which posed the question of "Whether claims to computer-implemented inventions ... are directed to patent-eligible subject matter." Their ruling was just published, and what we can say already is that the court was unanimous in finding this particular software patent invalid, saying: "the method claims, which merely require generic computer implementation, fail to transform that abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention," and go on to conclude that because "petitioner's system and media claims add nothing of substance to the underlying abstract idea, we hold that they too are patent ineligible." The End Software Patents wiki has a page for commenting the key extracts and listing third-party analyses. Analysis will appear there as the day(s) goes on. Careful reading is needed to get an idea of what is clearly invalidated (file formats?), and what areas are left for future rulings. If you can help, well, it's a wiki. Software Freedom Law Center's website will also be worth checking in the near future.
Please let this lead somewhere good.
We need someone who is familiar with the law to explain this to us techies. PJ we need you!
We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
-- Anais Nin
There's no way this happened on purpose, something must be wrong.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
A unanimous decision, authored by the most conservative voice on the court (Thomas) with a concurring opinion by one of the most liberal (Sotomayor). If this were the beginning of April, I would say this story was a prank. Yeah, it doesn't completely kill software patents, but it does seem to mortally wound the "business process + software = patent troll profit" problem that is plaguing software development. This is a good day for the judicial branch. It's a good day for the USA.
What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
Sorry, all you've got is me.
If anyone can help, I've been building this wiki for five years now without a break:
http://en.swpat.org/
(And I'm working on campaigns against software patents since 2003.)
Expert in software patents or patent law? Contribute to the ESP wiki!
the court was unanimous
How did that happen?
Most Supreme Court decisions are unanimous. In the last term, 52% of decisions were 9-0. Another 12% were 8-1.
Yes.
Similarly, assembling a wooden crate "with a nail gun" is not an inventive step over "the same way for thousands of years, but with a hammer."
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A summary of the decision:
1. [We have long held that] Laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are “the basic tools of scientific and technological work.” and are not patentable.
2. Restricting such an idea and applying it in a particular domain also is not patentable, long established.
3. This is an abstract idea -- and a well-known one in your industry at that.
4. Applying it "on a computer" is trying to patent it in a restricted domain, and thus not patentable.
5. quo novus ordo et tu Brute seclorum GT 9-0 FO
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
For anyone that wants to troll a patent autorny that has his feelings hurt over this, go here: http://www.ipwatchdog.com/2014...
In what can only be described as an intellectually bankrupt opinion, the Supreme Court never once used the word “software” in its decision.
Hahahahahahaha... had tears in my eyes reading that.