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June 04, 2025

Comments

Being a patent attorney in Europe, I find missing a discussion about the nature of the problem solved by the claimed subject matter.

Here in Europe, eligibility is limited to subject matter which solves an objective "technical" problem. The problem of keeping track of one's bank balance is a problem in the arts of book-keeping rather than a problem in technology.

Here, one is not discussing a new and inventive replacement for a conventional computer. Rather, the contribution to human knowledge is a sequence of logic steps, perhaps new, perhaps not obvious, but one which is to run on a conventional computer/adding machine/abacus/set of fingers. In Europe at least, not all contributions to human knowledge that are new and not obvious are eligible for patenting. It is not as simple as the argument that everything that isn't within "the fine arts" must inevitably be within the meaning of "the useful arts". Or is logic or mathematics one of the useful arts? Can I patent my new equation?


As I see it, even while the USA debates what is "abstract" Europe debates what is "technical". I wonder, which approach chimes better with the aim of a correctly functioning patent system.

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