Ens agradaria convidar-vos a una discussió sobre el projecte de directiva de patentabilitat de programari de la UE el dimecres 12.3.2003 a les 15.00 - 16.30 a la sala S 2.3 de l'edifici Louise Weiss d'Strasbourg.
Time and Place
Wednesday 2003/03/12 15.00-16.30 Strasburg LoW S2.3
Invitation
Dear Parlamentarians
El Parlament Europeu és el primer legislador del món a qui toca decidir sobre normes de propietat d'idees que s'han fet servir a l'Oficina Europea de Patents abans d'aprovar-les. La tria entre el reforç de la legislació actual i la reforma de la llei per admentre la pràctica actual és una decisió revolucionària. O bé revolució de l'status quo legal o bé revolució de l'status quo de la pràctica. Ens agradaria convidar-vos a una discussió sobre el projecte de directiva de patentabilitat de programari de la UE.
Ens agradaria convidar-vos a una discussió sobre el projecte de directiva de patentabilitat de programari de la UE el dimecres 12.3.2003 a les 15.00 - 16.30 a la sala S 2.3 de l'edifici Louise Weiss d'Strasbourg.
El motiu de la reunió és intercanviar idees abans de la discussió a JURI del 17 de març, inclosa l'anàl·lisi de L'
informe de na McCarthy
un cop d'ull a L'
L'esborrany de directiva de patents de programari i proposta d'esmena
. A
http://swpat.ffii.org/penmi/2003/europarl/index.en.html
apareixerà més informació sobre aquesta i futures reunions.
Esperem que sigui fins aviat i us agraïm que pareu atenció als drets elementals a la llibretat i productivitat de la ciutadania i empreses Europees.
Atentament
Subjects of discussion
- Typology of computer-related patents: Examples, Classification Criteria, Statistics, Trends
- Which of patents should be granted and which not? Which selection criteria can work?
- What can be clarified at the level of written law?
- What is there to "harmonise" in European Substantive Patent Law?
- Is a EU directive the right legal instrument?
- Relation of the software patent directive project to European constitutional law
- Criticism of various variants and amendments of the directive proposal
- The future of patents, copyright and related systems in Europe
Relevant Reading
Bitkom Survey: 60% against extension of patentability
- How EICTA is basing representation claims on misinterpreted answers to misleading questions
McCarthy 2003-02-19: Amended Software Patent Directive Proposal
- Arlene McCarthy, British Labor MEP appointed by the European Parliament's Committee for Legal Affairs and the Internal Market (JURI) to report on the European Commission's Software Patentability Directive Proposal (CEC/BSA Proposal), suggests that the European Parliament should enact the CEC/BSA version with additional safeguards to align Europe on the US practise and make sure that there can be no limit on patentability. McCarthy reiterates the CEC/BSA software patent advocacy and misrepresents the wide-spread criticism without citing any of it. Even economic and legal expertises ordered by the European Parliament and other critical opinions of EU institutions are not taken into account. McCarthy's economic argumentation consists of tautologies and unfounded assertions, such as that companies like Ericsson and Alcatel need software patents to finance their R&D, that SMEs need european software patents in order to compete in the USA, that patents are needed to keep developping countries at bay. McCarthy uses the term "computer-implemented inventions" as a synonym for "software innovations". These "by their very nature belong to a field of technology". McCarthy insists that "irreconcilable conflicts" with the EPO must be avoided. McCarthy says she wants to "set clear limits as to what is patentable" -- and that she wants to avoid the "sterile discussions" about "technical effects" and "exclusions from patentability". Yet her proposal stays confined to such discussions. McCarthy demands that all useful ideas, including algorithms and business methods, must be patentable as "computer-implemented inventions". McCarthy proposes to recognise the EPO as Europe's supreme patent legislator and to make decisions of a few influential people at the EPO irreversible and binding for all of Europe.
EU Software Patent Directive Amendment Proposals
- The European Commission proposed on 2002-02-20 to consider computer programs as patentable inventions and make it very difficult not to grant a patent on an algorithm or a business method that is claimed with the typical features of a computer program (e.g. computer, i/o, memory etc). We have worked out a counter-proposal that upholds the freedom of computer-aided reasoning, calculating, organising and formulating and the copyright property-based property rights of software authors while supporting the patentability of technical inventions (problem solutions involving forces of nature) according to the differentiations that have been laid down in the European Patent Convention (EPC), the TRIPs treaty and the classical patent law literature. This counter-proposal is receiving support from numerous prominent players in the fields of software, economics, politics and law.
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©
2003/09/18 (2002/01/02)
Grup de treball
versió catalana 2003/06/18 per Rafael Carreras