Skip to main content

Ruling May Curtail Software Patents

Ruling May Curtail Software Patents

The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit—effectively the second-highest court in the U.S.—has issued a ruling rejecting a patent application that sought to patent a business method independent of any device or transformation of matter. For years, the Federal Circuit has been broadening patent rights, extending patent protection to software applications and business methods during the 1990s. The new ruling should signal an end to many types of business method patents…and, in turn, change the world of software patents, which are closely related to business process patents from a legal standpoint.

The specific case the Federal Circuit ruled on is In Re Bilski. Bernie Bilski, CEO of a company called WeatherWise, applied for a parent on a “method for managing the consumption risk of a commodity.” The application was rejected by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on the grounds that it was attempting to patent a mental process, manipulating “an abstract idea” to solve a “purely mathematical problem.” While many business method patents cross the lines between a purely mental process and a software application, Bilski made no effort to disguise his patent application as anything other than a mental process—and that may have been the application’s downfall. In a strong 9 to 3 ruling, the Federal Circuit upheld the rejection of BIlski’s patent application, putting new limits on future business patent applications. While the court did not overturn its previous decisions expanding business and software patent rights, it did describe one of the existing precedents as “inadequate” and indicated it would not rely on the case as precedent in the future.

Recommended Videos

Although the Bilski case could still be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, the Federal Circuit court’s new stance towards business method patents likely means that software patent applications will be held up to a higher standard of scrutiny, although few expect a complete rollback to the 1980s when business method and software patents were almost impossible to obtain.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Nvidia’s RTX 50-series may launch ‘soon,’ whatever that means
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang with an RTX 4090 graphics card.

As we inch closer to the expected release date of Nvidia's RTX 50-series, the number of leaks is growing by the minute. Today, a reputable leaker weighed in on when we might see the RTX 50-series join the ranks of the best graphics cards. Could Blackwell make an appearance sooner than currently expected? It's certainly possible, but who even knows at this point?

The information comes from kopite7kimi, who, in typical tipster fashion, dropped a vague message on X (formerly Twitter) and then left without answering any questions. However, at this point in the GPU release cycle, even one vague sentence is enough to send the internet for a spin, which is what's happening in the reply section of Kopite's tweet.

Read more
The M5 MacBook Pro may be another boring update
MacBook Pro with M4

The recently announced 2024 MacBook Pro lineup is not even on the market yet, but there is already buzz about the next two generations of the laptop series. Speculation suggests that there likely won’t be any exciting features on the Apple device until 2026.

There have already been rumors circulating, which indicate the MacBook Pro may upgrade from a mini-LED display to an OLED display in 2026, has been speculated for many months. Industry analysts, including Ming-Chi Kuo and Ross Young, have stated that the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models are set to remain as mini-LED displays in 2025.

Read more
AMD may completely dominate CES 2025
AMD presenting its new Turin CPUs.

AMD might really go all-out during CES 2025 this January. According to a known leaker on the Chiphell forums, AMD is readying a slew of consumer products, ranging from more X3D desktop CPUs to handheld chips and RDNA 4 graphics cards. Here's what we have to look forward to.

The tantalizing bit of gossip comes from Zhangzhonghao, a leaker who's been known to discuss new releases ahead of time. Starting with laptops, AMD is reportedly set to release next-gen Kraken (or "Krackan" as referred to by this leaker) Point APUs alongside Ryzen AI Max (or Strix Halo) and, lastly, Fire Range CPUs.

Read more