Picture of a judge hitting a gavel
Symbian's win could benefit UK software makers

High Court rewrites UK software patent rules

Symbian's successful appeal has significant implications for UK software industry, say experts

Written by Neon Kelly

The High Court has passed a ruling that for the first time allows computer programs to be patented in the UK.

The decision came about as the court upheld an appeal from Symbian following the rejection of an application the software firm made to the Intellectual Patent Office (IPO).

Symbian filed for a patent relating to the way computers use a library of functions that can be accessed by programs. The claim was discarded by the IPO last July, on the grounds that it related to software-based innovation - the IPO says patents are not available in the UK for solely computer-based programs, only for inventions that use software programs.

But yesterday Mr Justice Patten ruled that making such exclusions puts UK software companies at an unfair disadvantage compared with rival developers in Europe, where the legal landscape works differently. The European Patent Office (EPO) has already approved Symbian's application.

The decision represents a major breakthrough for the UK software industry, said Nick Wallin, patent attorney at law firm Withers & Rogers.

“All companies that invest in research and development should be free to obtain patent protection for their developments without being exposed to a series of arbitrary and outdated exclusions that undermine the value of their inventions,” said Wallin, who represented Symbian during the case.

And the High Court's decision could lead to greater harmonisation between UK and European patent offices, according to Dr John Collins, partner at Marks & Clerk.

"Throughout the judgment, there was repeated reference to the impossible division in treatment at the UK Intellectual Property Office and the European Patent Office, said Collins.

"Whilst the UK office recognises its examination process is different to that at the European level, it states that this resolves in the same outcome. This clearly is not the case, when the EPO accepts the same application that the UK office has rejected under its own treatment of software patentability."

The IPO plans to contest the ruling at the Court of Appeal, on the grounds that the judge did not follow procedures created following a benchmark case in 2006.

reader comments

related articles

EU innovation

EU delays innovation legislation

Industry says delay could damage research and development 22 Dec 2004

 

Lord Sainsbury backs EU patent directive

Science and innovation minister says directive will foster and support innovation 14 Dec 2004

BTG sues Amazon over intellectual property rights

Claims an undisclosed amount of damages over web tracking technology 16 Sep 2004

Software developers warned of legal risks

Increasingly litigious patent infringement environment can be a minefield for IT directors 18 Aug 2004

UK software developers win more rights

Court of Appeal overturns Intellectual Property Office decision on Symbian 09 Oct 2008

Microsoft issues warning to pirates

Vendor threatens similar offenders with ITAC treatment 02 Feb 2009

Microsoft catches up with ITAC owner

Barry Omesuh receives custodial sentence and could be forced to sell properties to pay £2.5m fine for parallel importing 27 Jan 2009

related whitepapers

today's top stories

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

Habitat gets a web site makeover

The furniture retailer is revamping its online presence to provide a fully transactional web site. CIO Jacques Dekock explains why 02 Jul 2009

Government aims to bolster UK's cyber defences

Is the UK’s first national cyber security strategy up to the task of co-ordinating the country’s response to digital threats? Computing investigates 02 Jul 2009

Focus resources on what really matters

IT has become too caught up in the drive for efficiency, at the expense of business success 02 Jul 2009

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Tell us what you think about job hunting through LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter etc

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

network cablesVideo

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

green footprintsVideo

How to manage enterprise energy use - and the role IT can play

A panel of experts explore how firms can get to grips with their carbon footprint and make smarter use of energy 01 Jul 2009

Latest in-depth articles

Phil PavittAnalysis

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

UPS worker making a deliveryAnalysis

Global standardisation delivers benefits at UPS

Delivery giant sees benefits of central IT solution 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation