DocumentCode :
2605530
Title :
Background to software patenting in Australia
Author :
Fitzgerald, Anne
Author_Institution :
Law Sch., Columbia Univ., New York, NY, USA
fYear :
1997
fDate :
29 Sep-2 Oct 1997
Firstpage :
113
Lastpage :
114
Abstract :
For many years, up to the late 1980s, the Australian Patent Office (APO) routinely rejected patent applications involving computer software. Since Australian practice was diverging from the more liberal practices which were emerging in other countries, particularly in the USA, in March 1986 the APO published a new set of guidelines: Guidelines for Considering the Patentability of Computer Program Related Inventions. These guidelines incorporated the test developed by the US courts, known as the two part Freeman-Walter-Abele test (J. Swinson, 1993), the application of which subsequently led to the APO granting a number of software related patents (D. Webber). The question of whether computer software related inventions constitute a “manner of manufacture”, as required by the Patents Act 1990 and are therefore patentable subject matter, first came before an Australian court in 1992 and a patent was granted. Following this decision in IBM, in August 1992, the APO issued new guidelines for determining the patentability of software related inventions. The new test simply poses the question: “does the invention claimed involve the production of some commercially useful effect?” Examiners are directed not to object to applications on the basis of the earlier US authorities which were adopted in the 1986 APO guidelines. Illustrations of the test are provided in the Patent Office Guidelines (1992)
Keywords :
computer software; copyright; legislation; patents; Australia; Australian Patent Office; Australian court; Australian practice; Patent Office Guidelines; US courts; commercially useful effect; computer software; computer software related inventions; patent applications; software patenting; software related patents; two part Freeman-Walter-Abele test; Application software; Australia; Computer aided manufacturing; Computer applications; Computer displays; Computer graphics; Guidelines; Natural languages; Software testing; Tail;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering Conference, 1997. Proceedings., Australian
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-8081-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ASWEC.1997.623974
Filename :
623974
Link To Document :
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