In June 2010, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Bilski v. Kappos, a case that had the potential to rewrite the landscape for determining what types of computer-related and business method inventions would receive patent protection. Just six weeks earlier, the European Patent Office’s Enlarged Board of Appeal delivered a decision on the same subject matter that had the potential to produce similar change in Europe. Yet, given these two opportunities to overhaul imperfect patent systems, neither decision provided more than incremental change. This Article explains why neither jurisdiction is able or willing to produce comprehensive reform in this area, and seeks to illuminate the nature of patent reform that is possible on the two cont...
In 2002, the European Commission embarked in the arduous project of drafting a Proposal of a Directi...
This paper has been adapted from a presentation given by the author at Duke University School of Law...
While the European Parliament overwhelmingly rejected in 2005 the directive proposal on the patentab...
In June 2010, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Bilski v. Kappos, a case that had the potenti...
In 2010 the Supreme Court decision in Bilski v. Kappos had the potential to completely rewrite paten...
Patents on software and business methods appear to have a pivotal position in today's economy, yet t...
“It seems that the jurisdiction in which a case is litigated has a significant impact on its outcome...
This paper investigates the patent assertion entities (PAEs) problem in Europe. First, it argues tha...
The purpose of the study was to clarify what the current situation is regarding patentability of sof...
This comment addresses and analyzes the state of software patentability in the United States (“U.S.”...
This article argues that the consequences of the ‘fragmentation’ of the European patent system are m...
In an environment widely described as a 'pro-patent era' and in the light of vigorous debates over b...
this article is to clarify some of the concepts involved in patenting software in Europe. Especially...
Software is a global business. Patents are increasingly the protection of choice; as a consequence, ...
Europe must transition from a national, splintered patent enforcement regime to a transnational, uni...
In 2002, the European Commission embarked in the arduous project of drafting a Proposal of a Directi...
This paper has been adapted from a presentation given by the author at Duke University School of Law...
While the European Parliament overwhelmingly rejected in 2005 the directive proposal on the patentab...
In June 2010, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Bilski v. Kappos, a case that had the potenti...
In 2010 the Supreme Court decision in Bilski v. Kappos had the potential to completely rewrite paten...
Patents on software and business methods appear to have a pivotal position in today's economy, yet t...
“It seems that the jurisdiction in which a case is litigated has a significant impact on its outcome...
This paper investigates the patent assertion entities (PAEs) problem in Europe. First, it argues tha...
The purpose of the study was to clarify what the current situation is regarding patentability of sof...
This comment addresses and analyzes the state of software patentability in the United States (“U.S.”...
This article argues that the consequences of the ‘fragmentation’ of the European patent system are m...
In an environment widely described as a 'pro-patent era' and in the light of vigorous debates over b...
this article is to clarify some of the concepts involved in patenting software in Europe. Especially...
Software is a global business. Patents are increasingly the protection of choice; as a consequence, ...
Europe must transition from a national, splintered patent enforcement regime to a transnational, uni...
In 2002, the European Commission embarked in the arduous project of drafting a Proposal of a Directi...
This paper has been adapted from a presentation given by the author at Duke University School of Law...
While the European Parliament overwhelmingly rejected in 2005 the directive proposal on the patentab...