Showing posts with label US Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US Law. Show all posts

Sunday, February 23, 2014

US Supreme Court to decide on Patent–Eligibility of ‘Computer-Implemented Inventions’

Section 101 of US Patent Act (“35 U.S.C. § 101”) provides that one may obtain patent for invention or discovery of any new and useful subject-matter (process, machine, manufacture etc.) or for any new and useful improvement thereof. In a pending case before it, United States Supreme Court (“Supreme Court) has to decide whether claims related to ‘computer-implemented inventions’ are patent-eligible subject matter within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 101.

Invoking the writ jurisdiction (writ of certiorari) of the Supreme Court under 28 U.S. Code § 1254(1), Alice Corporation Pty. Ltd. (“Petitioner”) has filed a petition against the decision given in an en banc hearing. The disputed invention in the present case relates to a ‘computerised system for creating and exchanging financial instruments such as derivates’ (“INVENTCO system”). One aspect of INVENTCO system can be described as follows:

“.....specific computer system and computerized process for the execution of a previously agreed-upon exchange, known as “settlement”

To understand it more clearly, prior to the execution of an agreement to exchange financial instruments or assets, there is a stage where parties merely agree to execute the exchange. There may be situations where one of the parties, at the time of actual execution or settlement of the agreement, performs its obligation(s) but other party does not. So as to address this situation of risk, the disputed invention provides for a specifically programmed computer. Following are the features of this computerised system:

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Copyright war for ‘Sherlock Holmes’!

For a person, irrespective of whether he is related or non-related to law, ‘Sherlock Homes’ is not an unfamiliar character. Being conceived by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and first appearing in the year 1887 (A Study in Scarlet), the characters of Sherlock Holmes and his friend, Dr. John Watson, have made a distinct mark in novels, short stories, cinema, TV series etc.

(Image Source: BBC America)
Recently, a U.S. court, while delivering a ‘declaratory judgment’, has held that both the characters, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson, are among those elements of Doyle’s works which no longer enjoy copyright protection in United States. The action was brought by Leslie S. Klinger against Conan Doyle Estate Ltd. Klinger had claimed that ‘various characters, character traits and other story elements from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories are free for the public to copy. A large number of Doyle’s works (published prior to 1923), which consists of four novels and forty-six short stories out of a total of fifty-six, are now in public domain and no longer enjoy copyright protection. However, some of his works, i.e., ten short stories or ‘Ten Stories’ (published post-1923), still enjoy copyright protection.