Contact
December 20, 2022
The new IPO Guidance is in two parts:
- the legal framework for examining applications for or using AI and how this will be applied;
- scenarios providing practical illustrations based on an abridged patent specification; each scenario includes a basic analysis showing how the IPO would apply the guidance.
In short, the guidance explains that:
- in the UK, patents are available for AI inventions in all fields of technology;
- AI inventions are typically computer-implemented and may rely on mathematical methods and computer programs in some way; UK patent law excludes from patent protection inventions relating solely to a mathematical method “as such” and/or a program for a computer “as such”; however, these exclusions are applied as a matter of “substance not form” by considering the task or process an AI invention performs when it runs;
- when the task or process performed by an AI invention reveals a technical contribution to the known art, the AI invention is not excluded and is patent-eligible;
- following HTC Europe Co Ltd v Apple Inc [2013] RPC 30, in which five “signposts” pointing to allowability were identified, an AI invention is likely to make a technical contribution if, when it runs on a computer, its instructions: (i) embody a technical process which exists outside the computer; or (ii) contribute to the solution of a technical problem lying outside the computer; or (iii) solve a technical problem lying within the computer itself; or (iv) define a new way of operating the computer in a technical sense;
- AI inventions are not excluded if they are claimed in hardware-only form, i.e. if they do not rely on program instructions or a programmable device for their implementation;
- an AI invention is only excluded from patent protection if it does not reveal a technical contribution; an AI invention is unlikely to make a technical contribution if its task or process: (i) relates solely to items listed as being excluded (e.g. a business method) and there is no more to it; or (ii) relates solely to processing or manipulating information or data and there is no more to it; or (iii) has the effect of just being a better or well-written program for a conventional computer and there is no more to it;
- these conditions apply whether the invention is categorised as “applied AI” or “core AI” or it relates to training an AI invention in some way;
- patent protection is available for training datasets when they are used in inventions which reveal a technical contribution; however, claims to datasets characterised solely by the information content of the dataset are likely excluded as presentation of information as such; and
- the sufficiency of disclosure of an AI invention or dataset is assessed, like any other invention, according to the principles set out in Eli Lilly v Human Genome Sciences [2008] RPC 2.
To access the new Guidance, click here.
Expertise
Wiggin's expertise, delivered direct to you
Sign up to get our experts' take on the latest developments in your sector. Whether your business revolves around media, technology or you have IP to protect, our updates will help inform your decision making.