Managing Intellectual Property

New Bilski guidelines issued

30 July 2010

Eileen McDermott, New York

One month after the Supreme Court’s Bilski decision, the USPTO has issued a second version of its interim guidance to examiners for determining subject matter eligibility

The June 28 Bilski ruling upheld the Federal Circuit’s determination that Bernard Bilski’s and Rand Warsaw’s invention was not patent eligible, but struck down its assertion that the so-called machine-or-transformation test should be the sole test for determining patent eligibility.

In light of the ruling, a USPTO task force immediately released interim guidance to examiners instructing them to continue using the machine-or-transformation test as a “tool for determining whether the invention is a claimed process under Section 101 [the section of US patent law that pertains to patent eligibility]”.

It added that, if an invention does not meet the test, it should be rejected, unless it clearly does not claim an abstract idea.

Some felt those guidelines were inadequate and put too much emphasis...



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