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TC 1600 Subject Matter Eligibility Under 35 USC § 101 Andrew Wang SPE 1631 (571) 272-0811 1 Introduction of Interim Guidelines • Posted on USPTO web site 10/26/2005 • Published in the Official Gazette 11/22/2005 http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/sol/og/2005/week47/patgupa.htm 2 Application of Guidelines • Any position taken on 35 USC § 101 is based on the substantive law, not the guidelines themselves • The interim guidelines do not constitute substantive rulemaking and do not have the effect of law • The interim guidelines set forth the procedures USPTO personnel will follow when examining applications 3 Prerequisite to Analysis Under 35 USC § 101 • • • • Determine what applicant invented Review the specification and claims Conduct a thorough search of the art Identify and understand: – any utility and/or practical application asserted by applicant – the meaning of claim terms – claim scope 4 Improper Tests for Subject Matter Eligibility Tests that are not to be applied • “not in the technological arts” test • Freeman-Walter-Abele test • Mental step or human step tests • The machine implemented test • The per se data transformation test 5 Analysis Under 35 USC § 101 1) Does the claimed invention fall within one of the four statutory categories? 6 1) Statutory Categories 35 USC § 101 reads: “whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefore, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.” 7 Enumerated Categories • A “machine’, “manufacture”, and “composition of matter” all define things and products. • A “process” defines actions (i.e. inventions) that set forth a series of steps or acts to be performed. 8 Examples Outside of the Statutory Categories 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) Literary Works per se Rules to play a game per se Legal agreements, e.g. an insurance policy Signals per se A computer program, logic, or language per se 9 If Not, Do Not Stop • If a claim does not fall into a statutory category, that does not preclude complete examination for all other conditions of patentability • The examiner must continue with the analysis under 35 USC § 101 and still examine the claims for compliance with 102, 103, and 112. 10 Analysis Under 35 USC § 101 1) Does the claimed invention fall within one of the four statutory categories? 2) Does the claimed invention fall within a judicial exception? 11 2) Judicial Exceptions • The Supreme Court has specifically identified three categories of non-statutory subject matter – Laws of Nature per se – Natural Phenomena per se – Abstract Ideas per se 12 Examples of Judicial Exceptions • Laws of nature E=mc2; F=ma; V=IR • Natural Phenomena The heat of the sun; electricity; a new mineral • Abstract Ideas Mathematical algorithms; legal rights 13 If Yes, Do Not Stop • While judicial exceptions per se are not patent eligible, methods and products employing abstract ideas, natural phenomena, and laws of nature to perform a real-world function may well be • The scope of a claim must be ascertained to determine if it covers a Sec. 101 judicial exception or practical application of a Sec. 101 judicial exception 14 Analysis Under 35 USC § 101 1) Does the claimed invention fall within one of the four statutory categories? 2) Does the claimed invention fall within a judicial exception? 3) Does the claimed invention provide a practical application? 15 3) Practical Applications • If the claim is directed to a practical application of the Sec. 101 judicial exception producing a result tied to the physical world that does not preempt the judicial exception, then the claim meets the statutory requirement 16 Physical Transformation • Does the claimed invention transform an article or physical object to a different state? • Transformation of data is not considered a physical transformation • Physical acts are not necessarily a physical transformation 17 Determination of a Useful, Concrete, and Tangible Result • If the examiner does not find such a physical transformation, the examiner must determine whether the claim provides a practical application that produces a useful, concrete, and tangible result • A useful concrete, and tangible result must either be specifically recited in the claim or inherently flow therefrom • A practical application is provided when a judicial exception is applied, as claimed, to produce a useful, concrete, and tangible result 18 Useful Result • The claimed invention as a whole must satisfy the utility requirement of 35 USC § 101: specific, substantial, and credible • These criteria require an evaluation of the specification and the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art 19 Concrete Result • Generally, a claimed invention is not concrete when a result cannot be assured or is not reproducible • Concrete is not a requirement that the result must be 100% accurate (e.g.: a claim directed to a method of estimating, predicting, or approximating) 20 Tangible Result • A tangible result is a real world result • The opposite meaning of “tangible” is “abstract” (e.g.: thoughts and ideas are not real world results) • The tangible result requirement does not necessarily mean that a claim must be tied to a particular machine or apparatus or must operate to change articles or materials to a different state (i.e. it is not a duplicate of physical transformation) 21 Computer Related Products • Computer-related products such as software, data structures, and collections of data are also evaluated for a practical application • Computer-related products are classified in one of two groups: – Functional Descriptive Material – Non-Functional Descriptive Material 22 Functional Descriptive Material • “Functional Descriptive Material” includes data structures and computer programs which impart functionality when employed as a computer component • The definition of “data structure” is “a physical or logical relationship among data elements, designed to support specific data manipulation functions.” [see The New IEEE Standard Dictionary of Electrical and Electronics Terms 308 (5th ed. 1993)] 23 Functional Descriptive Material • Functional descriptive Material per se is not statutory • Functional Descriptive Material in combination with an appropriate computer readable medium must be capable of producing a useful, concrete, and tangible result when used in conjunction with a computer system – the “computer readable medium” must be a physical structure, not a signal, which permits the functionality to be realized with the computer 24 Non-Functional Descriptive Material • Non-Functional Descriptive Material per se is an abstract idea and therefore non-statutory • Non-Functional Descriptive Material is not statutory even in combination with a computer or physical medium (e.g.: experimental data stored in computer memory) – no useful, concrete, or tangible result is produced – no functionality is imparted to a computer (i.e. it is not a computer component) 25 Examples of Non-Functional Descriptive Material • • • • • Music Literature Art Photographs Data formats, frames, or packets • A data base per se • Mere arrangements of facts or compilations of data • Share price on a disk Even when non-functional descriptive material is stored on, read by, or outputted to a computer without any physical interrelationship, they do not impart functionality to the computer 26 Analysis Under 35 USC § 101 1) Does the claimed invention fall within one of the four statutory categories? 2) Does the claimed invention fall within a judicial exception? 3) Does the claimed invention provide a practical application? 4) Does the claimed invention preempt a judicial exception? 27 4) Preemption • A claim may not preempt every “substantial practical application” of an abstract idea, law of nature, or natural phenomena because it would in practical effect be a patent on the judicial exceptions themselves • In order to establish a case of preemption, the examiner must identify the abstraction, law of nature, or natural phenomenon and explain why the claim covers every practical application thereof 28 Example 1 Claim 1 (original). A computer program comprising: (i) first instructions for causing a computer executing said instructions to read gene expression data from memory; (ii) second instructions for causing said computer to analyze said gene expression data and identify genes with catalytic enzymatic activity; and (iii) third instructions for causing said computer to transmit said identified genes with catalytic enzymatic activity to a user. 29 Example 1 (cont.) Claim 1 (currently amended). A computer memory comprising a program, wherein said program further comprises[[ing]]: (i) first instructions for causing a computer executing said instructions to read gene expression data from memory; (ii) second instructions for causing said computer to analyze said gene expression data and identify genes with catalytic enzymatic activity; and (iii) third instructions for causing said computer to transmit said identified genes with catalytic enzymatic activity to a user. 30 Example 1 (cont.) Claim 1 (currently amended). A computer memory comprising executable code for a program, wherein said program further comprises: (i) first instructions for causing a computer executing said instructions to read gene expression data from memory; (ii) second instructions for causing said computer to analyze said gene expression data and identify genes with catalytic enzymatic activity; and (iii) third instructions for causing said computer to transmit said identified genes with catalytic enzymatic activity to a user. 31 Example 1 (cont.) Claim 1 (currently amended). A computer memory comprising executable code for a program, wherein said program further comprises: (i) first instructions for causing a computer executing said instructions to read gene expression data from memory; (ii) second instructions for causing said computer to analyze said gene expression data and identify genes with catalytic enzymatic activity; and (iii) third instructions for causing said computer to transmit said identified genes with catalytic enzymatic activity to a user and further displaying said identified genes on a computer screen. 32 Example 2 Disclosure: The purpose of the invention is to provide a method for inserting a medical instrument at an optimal location in a human body for the purpose of deploying the instrument during a surgical procedure using the instrument. Claim 1 (original). A method of determining an optimal location for insertion of a medical instrument into a human body comprising: i) determining a treatment site within a human body; ii) selecting an instrument for use in treating the body at the treatment site; iii) determining the size and type of instrument; and iv) determining an optimal location for insertion of the instrument using an algorithm based on the size and type of the instrument and the treatment site. 33 Example 2 (cont.) Claim 1 (currently amended). A method of determining an optimal location for insertion of a medical instrument into a human body comprising: i) determining a treatment site within a human body; ii) selecting an instrument for use in treating the body at the treatment site; iii) determining the size and type of instrument; [[and]] iv) determining an optimal location for insertion of the instrument using an algorithm based on the size and type of the instrument and the treatment site; and v) inserting the instrument at the determined optimal location. 34 Example 3 Claim 1: The relationship between energy and mass as represented by the equation E=mc2. 35 Example 3 (cont.) Claim 1: A method of determining [[T]]the [[relationship between]] energy associated with the [[and]]mass [[as represented by]]of an object comprising: (i) determining the mass of said object; and (ii) determining the energy E of said object using the equation E=mc2, wherein m is the determined mass of said object. 36 Example 3 (cont.) Claim 1: A method of determining the energy associated with the mass of [[an object]]a spaceship comprising: (i) determining the mass of said spaceship[[object]]; and (ii) determining the energy, E, of said spaceship[[object]] using the equation E=mc2, wherein m is the determined mass of said spaceship[[object]]. 37 Example 3 (cont.) Claim 1: A method of determining the energy associated with the mass of a spaceship comprising: (i) determining the mass of said spaceship; [[and]] (ii) determining the energy, E, of said spaceship using the equation E=mc2, wherein m is the determined mass of said spaceship; and (iii) displaying the determined energy to a passenger on said spaceship. 38 Acknowledgement Special thanks is extended to Eric DeJong for his contributions to the preparation of this presentation. 39