According
to Article 52(2)(d) European Patent Convention, „presentations of information“
as such (Article 52(3)) shall not be regarded as inventions. Like the exclusion
of “programs for computers” in littera c of the same article, the exclusion of
presentations of information as such from patentability has led to diverse case
law of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office, in particular with
regards to the patentability of aspects of graphical user interfaces (GUIs).
|
One billionaire in reality, many paupers in virtual reality |
With the
virtual and augmented reality revolution upon us, the patentability of presentations of
information (as such) is likely to become a hot topic, because virtual reality
headsets – and augmented reality applications – require a whole new
paradigm of user interaction. In two posts, I therefore look at the case
law of the Board of Appeals and then at a series of cases decided by the German
Federal Court (BGH) to see whether a clear approach emerges. With regards to
the EPO practice, a (relatively) recent
case decided by Board 3.5.05 is interesting as it tries to summarize and
distinguish a number of older cases.
The Guidelines
for Examination at the EPO state that “A feature relating to a presentation
of information defined solely by the content of the information does not have a
technical character.” But, exceptionally, if the arrangement or manner of presentation can be
shown to have a credible technical effect, it can be considered to contribute
to a technical solution to a technical problem (referring to T 1741/08, T 1143/06). The Guidelines go on to state that the mere
involvement of mental activities does
not on its own render the subject-matter non-technical (T 643/00). A visual indication of
an automatically detected event occurring in the system itself as a prompt for
human interaction with the system, e.g. to avoid technical malfunctions,
is usually regarded as making a technical contribution. On the other hand, a
visual indication aimed exclusively at the mental activities of the viewer, in
particular at preparing the relevant data for a non-technical decision-making
process by the user as the final addressee, is usually not regarded as making a
technical contribution (T 756/06).
Clear enough? Well,
in some cases it is. In T 1567/05, a program for modeling buildings
|
Fig. 7 from EP 1 026 609 A2 (FUJITSU) |
displayed stress-values
calculated for individual structural components of the building by using
colours. If the component has a small stress value (indicating a high safety
level), a colour conveying an idea of safety, such as blue, is used to indicate
the component. If its stress value is high (indicating a low safety level), a
colour conveying an idea of a danger, such as red, is chosen. The Board had no problem
finding that, although relating to technical phenomena, the stress values were
mere pieces of information aimed exclusively at the human mind. They did not represent
"conditions prevailing in an apparatus" that would make them
technical, because the data presented related to the building structure being
designed, not to the technical conditions of the claimed system itself, such as
an event occurring in it.
In a similar
vein, in T
0756/06 (Displaying a schedule/FUJITSU), the Board held that the layout of
a time schedule that allotted more lines per working hour than per non-working
hour was for the user's mental use, i.e. according to the user's requirements
and preferences, rather than for a technical purpose in a technical process. The
appellant argued that the time scales took into account the nature (size) of
the display and essentially resolved the prior art display problems by
technical means. However, since the claimed solution did not explicitly relate
the time scales to display dimensions it did not necessarily solve this
problem.
In T
1741/08 (GUI layout/SAP) the applicant cleverly argued the improved layout of
data entry fields on a computer Screen lowers the cognitive burden for the
user; the user therefore responds more quickly; and the computer therefore
requires less resources, which is a technical effect. But the Board would have
none of it, calling it a “broken chain”. Where the technical effect is only
achieved by way of a purely mental process (here: quicker processing of data by
the human user), the effect could not be considered the result of the claimed
feature.
But in
other cases, namely T
0643/00 (Searching image data/CANON), the Board did seem to accept that the
effect of a particular layout on the mental processes of the user could be
considered to contribute to the technical solution of a technical problem. In T
0643/00, the invention was seen in an improved image searching concept. The
simultaneous display of, for example, eight images in a reduced resolution
ensured the fast realization of multiple image data and allowed the user to
grasp the image content at a glance and to select the searched image for output
in a fast and efficient manner. The function of switching between different
levels of resolution ensured that the user could subject the selected image to
a thorough visual check before printing or using it otherwise. Whether the
actual retrieval and selection process was carried out automatically or with
the aid of human interaction was, in the Board's view, not decisive for the
technical character of the claimed image processing functions. “The
functions/steps of processing the images in a specific format [...] provide
information to the user [sic] in the form of a technical tool for an
intellectual task he has to master, and hence contribute to the technical
solution of the technical problem of an efficient search, retrieval and
evaluation of images stored in an image processing apparatus insofar as this is
supported by the specific image format chosen. In this respect it is neither
mere aspects of art design, like a pleasant look or feeling, that matter, nor
the mere information content of images presented, but the organisation of an
overall image structure in view of a technical problem.”
|
From EP 0 844 580 A2 (KONAMI) |
In case T
928/03 (Video game/KONAMI), the GUI of a computer soccer game was
configured to display various guide marks to draw the user's attention to
different (concealed) points of interest of the display screen. The decisive
distinguishing features of the independent claims were considered to consist in
displaying pass guide marks at predetermined locations of the screen so as to
properly indicate the direction in which the ball is to be passed by the active
soccer player. The objective technical problem was to resolve conflicting
technical requirements, namely "[o]n the one hand, a portion of an image
is desired to be displayed on a relatively large scale (e.g. zoom in); on the
other hand, the display area of the screen may then be too small to show a
complete zone of interest" (cf. reasons 4.3). In view of the above
distinguishing feature and the available prior art, the deciding board
acknowledged the presence of inventive step.
T
0336/14 (Presentation of operating instructions/GAMBRO) of 2 September 2015
concerned a user interface for an extracorporeal blood treatment machine which comprises at least one touch screen with at least two distinct areas,
a first area of the two distinct areas exhibiting at least two touch keys. The
Board identified as distinguishing features over the closest prior art WO-A-02/26286
that in the first area of the display a “plurality of data comprising operating
instructions for readying the machine for use” was shown, with “at least two
images being pictographs which represent configurations of the machine
correlated to the operating instructions.”
The Board tried
to provide some guidance in its decision: if the claim is directed at how, i.e.,
|
From EP 1 668 556 B1 (GAMBRO) |
in which manner, information
is presented, it is generally technical in nature. If, on the other hand, the
claim was directed at what was
presented, i.e., is related to the content of the information, it has to be
assessed why the content is
presented. Only if the content presented credibly assists the user in
performing a technical task by means of a continued and guided human-machine
interaction process is it technical in nature.
To answer the “why”
question, it is relevant to determine whether the cognitive information
presented constitutes an operation state, a condition or an event internal to
the underlying technical system, prompting the system user to interact with it for
enabling its proper functioning, or, whether it represents a state of a
non-technical application run on that technical system (such as the state of a
simulation model in T 1073/06). In the case at hand, the Board held that the
information displayed constituted pre-stored static information that was not
conditional on any internal state of the blood treatment machine, nor did it
provide any details on the current operating state of the machine. It is,
simply put, an instruction manual on a touch screen, and at thus only addresses
the human mental process of an "average user".
The “how” prong
of the test allowed the Board to distinguish over T 643/00, where the layout of
the images, rather than their content, was claimed. But under the same test the
layout of the input fields in T 1741/08 (GUI layout/SAP) should have passed, because the layout,
rather than the content of the fields, was claimed. The “how” filter is
arguably too coarse to reflect the current state of the case law.
The Board also
tried to distinguish over T 643/00 in noting that the application at issue in T
643/00 concerned the resolution of the images. But the resolution in T 643/00
was not reduced for technical reasons, such as faster image manipulation by the
processor, but for simultaneous display of several images to facilitate searching
by the user. If more efficient image search is technical, why is more efficient
operation of a blood treatment machine not technical? T 643/00 seems to
represent an exception rather than a rule, a view that is supported by the fact
that of the 17 decisions citing T 643/00, only two found a technical effect in
the presentation of information (besides the already mentioned T 0928/03 [Video
game/KONAMI] T
0049/04 [Text Processor/WALKER]), and both of these are over ten years old.
Jacob said the "Technical" wording is a restatement of the same problem.
ReplyDelete"Technical" becomes the black hole where the EPO finds it way to bypass the spirit of the EPC, where all the exclusions concerns abstract matters.
zoobab, have you bothered to read the post? It explains how, on the contrary, the BoA of the EPO has refused to see anything "technical" in presentations of information, except in three now rather old cases (T 643/00, T 928/03 and T 49/04).
ReplyDeleteApart from that, I know for one thing that T 49/04 was an extremely controversial decision within the EPO, and this may explain why, afterwards, the Boards didn't continue on the same path.
@Glad to be out...
ReplyDeleteIf "Zoobab" is the same Zoobab as on Twitter, s/he seems to be an anti-software-patent activist and appears to be a loyal follower of the Techrights blog, who see anything that even mentions software patents or the UPC (even in a negative context) as evidence of some sort of grand conspiracy to defraud the European public.
As it happens, I'm dubious about the merits of software patents or indeed the UPC. But I've learned that anything less than full, wholehearted agreement with the wacky conspiracy theories of such characters is seen as yet further evidence that there's not only a conspiracy, but also that you're part of it, even if you broadly share their misgivings albeit for different reasons.
In my opinion, the "what/how" distinction is misleading: features relating to how the information is presented do not necessarily contribute to the technical character of the invention, and the Boards explicitly said so in T1575/07. Both "what" features and "how" features are assessed by examining the reason why they appear in the claim, which is in fact the only criterion used by the Boards.
ReplyDeleteCertain reasons, such as lowering the cognitive burden, are seen as not technical (notwithstanding T49/04, which did not follow T125/04 and is all but "deprecated" nowadays). The main issue is that, for features describing how information is presented, the Boards do not always speak with one voice. Besides the above mentioned T49/04, if one looks at decisions citing T643/00, one notices that T643/00 has been interpreted differently by different Boards and more often than not it has been distinguished on the facts.
Thanks, L.B.Z. for the insightful comment. I agree - merely showing that the invention relates to how information is presented is insufficient to make it technical.
ReplyDeleteAs you point out, T643/00 _can_ be read very broadly, but not all boards accept the broad reading, and they indeed find (more or less convincing) reasons to distinguish. The precedential value of T643/00 is at least doubtful.