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Court of Appeal backs EPO against UK patent office

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 13 October 2008 - 10:20 · 5 comments & 2234 views

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The Court of Appeal has refused to accept the UK Intellectual Property Office's rejection of a patent for a piece of software in a move which experts say will open the door for more software patents in the UK. Symbian has won the right to patent a piece of software which makes other software run more quickly. The Court of Appeal rejected the UK Intellectual Property Office (UK-IPO)'s objections to the application.

The software in question was granted a patent by the European Patent Office (EPO), but the UK-IPO rejected an application to make that patent active in the UK. The High Court had previously backed Symbian's case, and the Court of Appeal has reaffirmed that decision. UK law has said that an invention that consists solely of software is not eligible for a patent, but what exactly this means has long been a contentious issue. Software patents are more commonly awarded by the EPO and are very common in the US.

View: The full story @ out-law.com

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#1 +TCLN Ryster on 13 Oct 2008 - 10:55
Link to source? More information on the patent in question? Anything?
#2 Majesticmerc on 13 Oct 2008 - 12:05
An article that says something about something. Where are the sources, details, and anything?
#3 beardedwonder on 13 Oct 2008 - 13:54
#4 +M2Ys4U on 13 Oct 2008 - 15:37


Software patents are bad.
#5 ir0nw0lf on 13 Oct 2008 - 15:56
Guess you folks over the pond there get a taste of the BS we in the US have been dealing with for decades. It only goes downhill from there... "Good luck to you all" LOL.

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