In re Bilski

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In re Bilski In re Bilski Federal Circuit (2008) (en banc) Decided: October 30, 2008 A very SMALL decision on A very SMALL decision on a very BIG issue! a very BIG issue!

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In re Bilski. A very SMALL decision on a very BIG issue!. Federal Circuit (2008) (en banc) Decided: October 30, 2008. Claim 1. A method for managing the consumption risk costs of a commodity sold by a commodity provider at a fixed price comprising the steps of: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of In re Bilski

Page 1: In re Bilski

In re BilskiIn re Bilski

Federal Circuit (2008) (en banc)

Decided: October 30, 2008

A very SMALL decision on A very SMALL decision on

a very BIG issue!a very BIG issue!

Page 2: In re Bilski

Claim 1A method for managing the consumption risk costs of a commodity sold

by a commodity provider at a fixed price comprising the steps of:

(a) initiating a series of transactions between said commodity provider and consumers of said commodity wherein said consumers purchase said commodity at a fixed rate based upon historical averages, said fixed rate corresponding to a risk position of said consumer;

(b) identifying market participants for said commodity having a counter-risk position to said consumers; and

(c) initiating a series of transactions between said commodity provider and said market participants at a second fixed rate such that said series of market participant transactions balances the risk position of said series of consumer transactions.

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Claim 1: Layman Example

MINE:

Sensitive to lower coal prices

Power Plant:

Sensitive to rising coal prices

TRADERS:

Buy/Sell at fixed cost

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Procedural Posture

• Examiner rejected the claims under § 101(no analysis under §102 or 103)

• BPAI– Affirmed the Rejection– Found that claims were “broad enough to read

on performing the steps without any machine or apparatus”

• Federal Circuit – Affirms § 101 rejection

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Issue Presented

“what the term ‘process’ in §101 means, and how to determine whether a given claim [] is a ‘new and useful process.’”

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Holding

Adopts the machine or transformation test for judging the eligibility of a process for patent protection.

“Therefore, although invited to do so by several amici, we decline to adopt a broad exclusion over software or any other such category of subject matter beyond the exclusion of claims drawn to fundamental principles set forth by the Supreme Court.”

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Machine or Transformation Test

A claimed process is surely patent-eligible

subject matter under § 101 if:

(1) it is tied to a particular machine or apparatus, or

(2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or thing.

Slip op. at 10.

(reasoned from Benson case – SCOTUS)

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Quasi-Holding?

A patentable process is like pornography:

we cannot define it, but

we know it when we see it!*

*not the words of the CFAC

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So what is a “particular machine”?

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Prong 1: Machine

A particular machine is . . .

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Prong 1: Machine

"We leave to future cases the elaboration of the precise contours of machine implementation, as well as the answers to particular questions, such as whether or when recitation of a computer suffices to tie a process claim to a particular machine."

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So what is a satisfactory

“transformation”?

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Prong 2: Transformation

• Must transform a type of “article”

• “must be central to the purpose of the claimed process”

• must “impose meaningful limits on the claim's scope”

• cannot “be insignificant extra-solution activity”

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Court’s Logical Analysis

1.  We know that natural principles aren't patentable.2.  We know it is difficult to determine what is and what is

not a natural principle.3.  The SCOTUS told us that there are two ways to tell if

something is not a natural principle:– A. If it is tied to a machine or– B. If it transforms the subject matter

4.  Therefore, the only way for a process to be patent eligible is to be tied to a machine or tranform subject matter.

5.  In order to make sure all principles are excluded, insignificant post-solution machines or transformations don't count.

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Where The Judges Came Down

Judge Newman’s Dissent

Judge Rader’s Dissent

Scope of § 101Broad Narrow

Majority + conc.

Judge Mayer’s Dissent

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So How Will the PTO Treat This?

Ex parte Langemyr (post Bilski argument)– “method executed in a computer apparatus”– Process “does not require any physical output

into the real world.” (fails under prong 2)– “the limitation that the method is ‘executed in

a computer apparatus’ does not tie the method to a ‘particular machine.’” (fails prong 1)

– BPAI states that the general applicability to all computers caused it to fail

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Treatment by the PTO (cont.)

Ex parte Wasynczuk– “computer-implemented” process– Broadest claim invalid - “the sole structural limitation

recited is the ‘computer-implemented system’ of the preamble”

– Dependent claim where one step is performed by first “computer” and second step is performed by second “computer” IS ALLOWED!

– two “physical computing devices” operating together “is ‘a particular apparatus’ to which the process is tied”

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Talking Points

• What is sufficient to qualify as a “particular machine”?

• Is data physical such that its transformation should qualify?

• How should software claims be drafted moving forward?