ESAIntellectual Property Rights
   
Intellectual Property
What is intellectual property?
ESA and IP
Patents
Trademarks
Industrial designs
Semiconductor products
Copyright and neighbouring rights
Unfair competition
Trade secrets
Confidentiality agreement
Services
Frequently asked questions Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
 
printer friendly page
STK output / result
 
Patents and software
 
Patents are one way of legally protecting a software. They are not granted for the software itself, referred to as software “as such”, but for an invention that uses innovative software to produce a useful result. These inventions are called ‘software-based’ or ‘computer-implemented inventions’.
 
For a patent to be issued the invention described in the application must produce a technical effect. The use of the software should lead to a technical result or solve a technical problem as it must have an industrial application.

Software-related inventions that have qualified for patents often involve software that connects to, and runs, hardware components. The combined software and hardware are also patentable, i.e. a process or method used by software as well as the machine aspect of the invention.

Proposal for Directive on the patenting of computer-implemented inventions

The European Commission considered that a “significant barrier to trade in patented products within the Internal Market exists due the fact that certain inventions can be protected in some Member States but not others.” Therefore, in February 2002 it introduced a proposal for a Directive on the patenting of computer-based inventions, to harmonise the way in which European national patent laws deal with inventions using software.The text has not yet been passed. It was transmitted to the Parliament to begin its second reading last September 2004.

The European Commission reasserted that the Directive would not apply to the software “as such”. “The central requirement of the proposal is that, in order to be patentable, an invention that is implemented through the execution of software on a computer or similar apparatus has to make a contribution in a technical field that is not obvious to a person of normal skills in that field”.

Is double protection possible?

Both copyright and patent can be used to protect a software. Copyright may protect the programme as such, the programme’s literal expression and perhaps its structure, sequence and organisation. A patent may be issued on the programme’s innovative approach to solving a particular problem or producing a particular result in a computer-related invention.

Patent protection offers broader rights than copyright protection because a patent creates a monopoly over the technical solution it covers, whereas copyright only protects the expression itself.

Nevertheless, it is much easier and less expensive to obtain copyright protection than patent protection. Plus, the more restricted copyright protection lasts longer than the greater protection granted by patents.

It is advisable to display the copyright notice on each software programme and to file for patent protection to cover an innovative computer-related invention.  
 

 


More information
Copyright and softwareProposal for a directive
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2010 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.