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  • Patent Index 2020
Case Law of the Boards of Appeal – Case Law of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office
  1. Home
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  4. Case Law of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office
  5. I. Patentability
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I. Patentability

Overview

I. PATENTABILITY

A.Patentable inventions

1.Patent protection for technical inventions
1.1.Technical character of an invention
1.2.Separate and independently patentability requirements
1.3.Absolute and relative patentability requirements
1.4.Verification of the presence of an invention under Article 52(1) EPC
1.4.1Assessment of the invention independently of the prior art
 a) Earlier case law of the boards of appeal: the "contribution approach"
 b) Abandonment of the "contribution approach"
 c) Some consequences of abandoning the contribution approach
1.4.2Technical considerations and technical implementations
1.4.3Methods involving technical means
1.4.4Methods used in a technical process carried out on a physical entity
1.4.5Apparatus constituting a physical entity or concrete product
2.Non-inventions under Article 52(2) and (3) EPC
2.1.Introduction
2.2.Discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods
2.2.1Discoveries and scientific theories
2.2.2Mathematical methods
2.3.Aesthetic creations
2.4.Computer-implemented inventions
2.4.1Definition of computer-implemented invention
2.4.2Distinction from computer programs
2.4.3Scope of Article 52(2)(c) EPC exception to patentability
2.4.4Patentability of computer programs: G 3/08
2.4.5Patentability of computer programs: technical character
2.4.6Establishing technical character
 a) Further effects of programs for computers
 b) Direct link to physical reality
 c) Potential technical effect
 d) Virtual or "calculated" technical effect
 e) Tangible effect
 f) Technical considerations: programming a computer
 g) Technical considerations: implementation of a function on a computer system
 h) Methods performed by a computer
 i) Computer-implemented simulation methods
2.5.Schemes, rules and methods for performing mental acts, playing games or doing business
2.5.1Methods for doing business
2.5.2Methods for performing mental acts
2.5.3Word-processing
2.6.Presentations of information
2.6.1User Interfaces

B.Exceptions to patentability

1.Introduction
1.1.Amendments made to Article 53 EPC as part of the EPC 2000 revision
1.2.Basic principles
2.Breaches of "ordre public" or morality
2.1.Rule 28 EPC
2.1.1Scope of exception under Rule 28(c) EPC
2.1.2Scope of exception under Rule 28(d) EPC
2.1.3Test date
2.2.Article 53(a) EPC
2.2.1Test date
2.2.2Assessment of an objection according to Article 53(a) EPC
 a) Difference from test under Rule 28(d) EPC
 b) Concept of "morality" and "ordre public"
 c) Donor consent
3.Patentability of biological inventions
3.1.Plants and plant varieties
3.1.1Definition of the term "plant varieties"
3.1.2Limits to patentability
3.2.Animals and animal varieties
3.3.Essentially biological processes
3.3.1Essentially biological processes for the production of animals
3.3.2Essentially biological processes for the production of plants
 a) G 2/07 and G 1/08
 b) Patentable technical processes
3.3.3Product claims for plants or plant material
 a) G 2/12 and G 2/13
 b) G 3/19 – dynamic interpretation of Article 53(b) EPC
3.4.Microbiological processes and the products thereof
3.4.1The concept of "microbiological processes"
3.4.2Difference between microbiological and genetic-engineering processes
4.Medical methods
4.1.Introduction
4.2.Differences and similarities in approaches to establishing whether a method for treatment by surgery or therapy or a diagnostic method involved
4.3.No need for practitioner involvement
4.4.Surgical methods
4.4.1One surgical step in a multi-step method
4.4.2Treatment by surgery not limited to surgery for a therapeutic purpose
4.4.3Towards a new concept of "treatment by surgery"
4.4.4"Treatment by surgery" in the case law since G 1/07
 a) Surgical nature of a method step
 b) Assessment of "substantial health risks"
 c) Surgical step part of claimed method or simply a preparatory measure?
 d) Surgical step not in the claim but covered by it?
 e) The apparatus claim is not a disguised method claim
 f) Unpatentable claims for products that can only be produced in a surgical step
4.4.5Avoiding the exclusion of methods of treatment by surgery from patent protection under Article 53(c) EPC
 a) Claim cannot be left to encompass surgical step
 b) Disclaimer
 c) Methods only concerning the operation of a device
4.4.6Data obtained during surgery
4.5.Therapeutic methods
4.5.1The term "therapy"
 a) Definition of the term
 b) Prophylactic treatments
 c) Distinction from performance improvement
 d) Distinction from cosmetic methods
 e) Examples from case law
4.5.2Methods with both therapeutic and non-therapeutic indications
 a) Inevitable and inextricably linked therapeutic effect of the claimed method
 b) Therapeutic and non-therapeutic effects distinguishable
4.5.3Disclaimer for escaping the exception to patentability under Article 53 c) EPC
4.6.Diagnostic methods
4.6.1Opinion G 1/04 and its application in case law
 a) What constitutes "diagnostic methods"
 b) The criterion "practised on the human or animal body"
 c) Clarity of a claim relating to diagnostic methods
 d) Intermediate findings of diagnostic relevance

C.Novelty

1.General
2.State of the art
2.1.General
2.2.Applications with same filing or priority date
2.3.Relevant date of documents
2.4.Prior rights – Article 54(3) EPC
2.4.1European prior rights
2.4.2Applicability of Article 54(3) EPC in cases of potentially colliding European parent and divisional applications
2.4.3Excluded national prior rights
2.4.4PCT applications as state of the art
2.5.Non-prejudicial disclosures under Article 55 EPC
2.6.In-house knowledge not published before the priority date
2.7.Prior art acknowledged in a patent application
2.8.Common general knowledge
2.8.1Definition of "common general knowledge"
2.8.2Patent specifications as common general knowledge
2.8.3Specialist journals as common general knowledge
2.8.4Databases as common general knowledge
2.8.5Proof of common general knowledge
3.Availability to the public
3.1.General
3.2.Ways of making information available to the public
3.2.1Publications and other printed documents
 a) General
 b) Company papers
 c) Advertising brochure
 d) Report available in the specialist field
 e) Books
 f) Instruction manual
 g) Patent and utility models
 h) Trade names
 i) Abstracts of documents
3.2.2Lectures and oral disclosure
3.2.3Internet disclosures
 a) General
 b) Public availability of a document stored on the World Wide Web
 c) Publication date
3.2.4Public prior use
 a) General
 b) Public prior use occurred
 c) No public prior use
 d) Internal structure or composition of a product
3.2.5Biological material
3.3.The concept of "the public"
3.3.1Sale to a single customer
3.3.2Making available to a person not skilled in the art
3.3.3A limited circle of people
3.3.4Public library
3.4.Obligation to maintain secrecy
3.4.1General
3.4.2Parts for serial production
3.4.3Distribution of prospectuses, technical descriptions
3.4.4Commercial relationships and interests
3.4.5Demonstrating products for presentation purposes
3.4.6Presenting the product in writing
3.4.7Making samples/products available for test purposes
3.4.8Conferences
3.4.9Public availability of documents submitted for standardisation
3.4.10Joint venture and other commercial agreements
3.4.11Paper submitted to obtain an academic degree
3.4.12Medical field
3.4.13Notary
3.5.Evidence
3.5.1Burden of proof
3.5.2Standard of proof
 a) General
 b) Public prior use
 c) Internet – proof of the date of availability
4.Determining the disclosure of the relevant prior art
4.1.General rules of interpretation
4.2.Combinations within a prior art document
4.3.Taking implicit features into account
4.4.Taking intrinsic features into account
4.5.Taking equivalents into account
4.6.Taking drawings into account
4.7.Taking examples into account
4.8.Broad claims
4.9.Deficiencies and mistakes in a disclosure
4.10.Accidental disclosure
4.11.Reproducibility of the content of the disclosure
5.Ascertaining differences
5.1.Comparing each individual item from the prior art
5.2.Distinguishing features
5.2.1Difference in wording
5.2.2Differences in values
5.2.3Difference in parameters
5.2.4Difference in composition
5.2.5Functional features
5.2.6Generic disclosure
5.2.7Product claim with process features
5.2.8Non-technical distinguishing features
6.Chemical inventions and selection inventions
6.1.General
6.2.Novelty of chemical compounds and groups of compounds
6.2.1Anticipation of certain compounds
 a) Definition of a substance by its structural formula or other parameters
 b) Selection of starting substances from different lists
 c) Selection on the basis of a general formula
6.2.2Novelty of groups of substances
6.2.3Novelty of enantiomers
6.2.4Achieving a higher degree of purity
6.3.Selection of parameter ranges
6.3.1Selection from a broad range
6.3.2Overlapping ranges
6.3.3Multiple selection
6.4.Subject-matter group
7.First and second medical use
7.1.First medical use
7.1.1Introduction
7.1.2Scope of a purpose-related product claim
7.1.3Protection of a preparation in the form of a "kit-of-parts"
7.1.4Further technical information as compared with the state of the art
7.2.Second (or further) medical use
7.2.1Introduction
7.2.2Transitional provisions
7.2.3Purpose-limited product claims and Swiss-type claims – scope of protection
7.2.4Novelty of the therapeutic application
 a) General
 b) New therapeutic application based on the group of subjects to be treated
 c) New technical effect
 d) Same illness
 e) New dosage regimen
 f) New therapy with a different mode of administration
 g) Interpretation of "substance or composition"
 h) Statement of purpose of surgical use for a known instrument
 i) Discovery of a previously unknown property of a compound underlying the known effect
 j) Whether there is a therapeutic method
8.Second (or further) non-medical use
8.1.Novelty criteria for use claims and process claims containing a purpose feature
8.1.1General issues decided before the Enlarged Board of Appeal
8.1.2Non-therapeutic treatment of animals
 a) Non-therapeutic application
8.1.3Applicability of G 2/88 and G 6/88 to process claims
 a) General
 b) Different treatment of use and process claims
 c) Interpretation of process claims
 d) Use of a known process for a particular purpose
 e) Discovery of new properties/technical effects underlying the known use
 f) Use of a substance to achieve a technical effect only attained in special circumstances
8.1.4Statement of purpose in non-medical use claims in view of Article 52(4) EPC 1973
8.1.5Novelty criteria for product claims with purpose characteristics

D.Inventive step

1.Introduction
2.Problem and solution approach
3.Closest prior art
3.1.Determination of closest prior art in general
3.2.Same purpose or effect
3.3.Similarity of the technical problem
3.4.Most promising starting point
3.4.1General
3.4.2Most promising springboard
3.5.Further criteria for determining the closest prior art
3.5.1Defective disclosure
3.5.2Confidential disclosure in the application
3.5.3Speculative character
3.5.4Old prior art documents
3.5.5Improvement of a production process for a known product
3.6.Consequences of choosing a certain starting point
4.Technical problem
4.1.Determination of the objective technical problem in general
4.2.Formulation of the objective technical problem
4.2.1No pointer to the solution
4.2.2Problem formulated in the patent application as starting point
4.2.3Formulation of partial problems – lack of unity
4.3.Solving a technical problem
4.3.1Sufficient evidence for alleged advantages
4.3.2Comparative tests
4.3.3"Post-published evidence" and the question of whether it was made plausible already by the disclosure in the application that the technical problem is solved
4.4.Reformulation of the technical problem
4.4.1Reformulation if the problem is not solved
4.4.2Reformulation of the "subjective" into an objective technical problem
4.4.3Limitations to the reformulation of the technical problem
 a) General principles and relationship with Article 123(2) EPC
 b) Subsequently invoked technical effect
4.5.Alternative solution to a known problem
5."Could-would approach"
6.Ex post facto analysis
7.Expectation of success, especially in the field of genetic engineering and biotechnology
7.1.Reasonable expectation of success
7.2.Try and see situation
8.Skilled person
8.1.Definition of the skilled person
8.1.1Definition
8.1.2Competent skilled person – group of people as "skilled person"
8.1.3Definition of the person skilled in the art in the field of biotechnology
8.1.4Identification of the skilled person in the case of computer-implemented inventions
8.2.Neighbouring field
8.3.Skilled person – level of knowledge
8.4.Everyday items from a different technical field
9.Assessment of inventive step
9.1.Assessment of inventive step in the case of mixed-type inventions
9.2.Problem-solution approach when applied to mixed-type inventions
9.2.1The Comvik approach
9.2.2Excluded subject-matter
9.2.3Technical implementation of excluded subject-matter
9.2.4Features contributing to the technical character of the invention
9.2.5Non-technical features
 a) Technical contribution
 b) Interaction of non-technical features with technical subject-matter
9.2.6Aim to be achieved in a non-technical field included in the formulation of the technical problem
9.2.7The notional business person
9.2.8Credible technical effects
9.2.9Computer programs
9.2.10Assessment of features relating to a presentation of information
 a) Data visualisation
 b) Graphical user interfaces
 c) Functional and cognitive data
 d) User preferences for displaying data
 e) Data structures
9.2.11Assessment of features relating to mathematical algorithms
 a) Design
 b) Simulations
 c) Database management systems and information retrieval systems
 d) Navigation systems
 e) Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning
 f) Linguistics and classification of texts
 g) Image processing
 h) Security
9.2.12Discoveries
9.2.13Human Perception
9.2.14Games
9.2.15Mental acts / modelling
9.2.16Logistics
9.3.Combination invention
9.3.1Existence of a combination invention
9.3.2Partial problems
9.4.Combination of teachings
9.5.Technical disclosure in a prior art document
9.6.Features not contributing to the solution of the problem
9.7.Substitution of materials – analogous use
9.8.Combination of documents
9.9.Chemical inventions
9.9.1Problem and solution approach in chemical inventions
9.9.2Structural similarity
9.9.3Broad claims
9.9.4Intermediate products
9.9.5Predictable improvements resulting from amorphous forms as compared to crystalline forms
9.9.6Synergistic effects
9.10.Equivalents
9.11.Selection inventions
9.12.Problem inventions
9.13.New use of a known measure
9.14.Obvious new use
9.15.Need to improve properties
9.16.Disclaimer
9.17.Optimisation of parameters
9.18.Small improvement in commercially used process
9.19.Analogy processes
9.20.Envisageable products
9.21.Examples of lack of inventive step
9.21.1Foreseeable disadvantageous or technically non-functional modifications
9.21.2Modifications to the closest prior art obvious to the skilled person
9.21.3Technical standards
9.21.4Reversal of procedural steps
9.21.5Purposive selection
9.21.6Automation
9.21.7Enhanced effect
9.21.8Simplification of complicated technology
9.21.9Choice of one of several obvious solutions
 a) Arbitrary choice from a host of possible solutions
 b) Selection from obvious alternatives
9.21.10Several obvious steps
9.21.11Putting the closest prior art device into practice
9.21.12Animal testing and human clinical trials
10.Secondary indicia in the assessment of inventive step
10.1.General issues
10.2.Technical prejudice
10.3.Age of documents – time factor
10.4.Satisfaction of a long-felt need
10.5.Commercial success
10.6.Market competitors
10.7.Simple solution
10.8.Surprising effect – bonus effect

E.The requirement of industrial application under Article 57 EPC

1.Notion of "industrial application"
1.1.Invention and industrial application
1.2.Any kind of industry
1.2.1Methods applied in the private and personal sphere
1.2.2Cosmetic and beauty salons
2.Reproducibility and sufficiency of disclosure
3.Indication of a profitable use of the invention in industry
New decisions
T 1688/20

Catchword:

Novelty of selection inventions - selection from a broad range - "gold standard" - see point 3.4

T 857/20

Catchword:

Neuheitsschädlich sind nur solche Vorrichtungen, deren offenbarte Merkmale all jene der Erfindung vorwegnehmen, einschließlich etwaiger Strukturen und Funktionalitäten, die durch ein Verfahrensmerkmal bedingt sind. Wenn eine Vorrichtung ihre beanspruchte Funktionalität im Zusammenwirken mit einer nicht mitbeanspruchten Gegenstruktur entfalten kann, so ist auch diese Erfindung nur neuheitsschädlich vorweggenommen, wenn ihre strukturellen und funktionalen Merkmale bereits vor dem Anmeldetag unmittelbar und eindeutig offenbart worden sind. Auch wenn die Gegenstruktur nicht mitbeansprucht ist, erscheint es im Rahmen der Prüfung von Artikel 54 EPÜ unzulässig, sich eine beliebige Struktur auszudenken, die für die Erreichung der Funktionalität eingesetzt werden könnte, wenn eine solche im Stand der Technik nirgends auch nur ansatzweise gezeigt ist. (Siehe Gründe 3.5 bis 4.2)

T 702/20

Catchword: 

A neural network defines a class of mathematical functions which, as such, is excluded matter. As for other "nontechnical" matter, it can therefore only be considered for the assessment of inventive step when used to solve a technical problem, e.g. when trained with specific data for a specific technical task.

T 670/20

Catchword:

The clinical trials were carried out in accordance with the EMEA Guidelines for Good Clinical Practice. These guidelines explicitly require adherence to the prescribed protocol and assurance of drug accountability. This set-up of the trials implies that the patients who decided to participate in the trials agreed, following their informed consent, to use the provided medication according to instruction or to return the unused medication. Accordingly, the participating patients who were provided with the tablets under investigation entered into a special relationship with the investigators of the trials and were with regard to the provided tablets not members of the public that could freely dispose over these tablets. (see section 4.3)

T 620/20

Catchword:

The undesired phenomena observed in the patent with the use of the prior art compositions would not inevitably manifest themselves upon the practical implementation of the teaching of the prior art. The recognition of the relevance of these phenomena should therefore be considered to form part of the technical contribution described in the patent. A specific reference in the formulation of the objective technical problem to the avoidance of these phenomena risks to unfairly direct development towards the claimed solution, which is not permissible in line with the principles as developed in the established jurisprudence (see reasons section 4.2.3).

T 297/20

Catchword:

The mere change, by an operator, of the degree of abstraction of a graphical view ("condensation") of a power grid does not credibly assist a user in performing a technical task by means of a continued and/or guided human-machine interaction process within the meaning of T 336/14 and T 1802/13 and thus cannot bring about a technical effect (see points 3.2 to 3.6 of the Reasons).

T 2622/19

Catchword:

As to the application of the problem-solution approach, in particular the determination of the objective technical problem and the choice of the "second document", see points 6.3.2 and 6.3.4 of the Reasons.

T 1553/19

Catchword: 

The normal rule of claim construction of reading a feature specified in a claim in its broadest technically meaningful sense corresponds to determining the broadest scope encompassed by the subject-matter being claimed according to a technically sensible reading. In the case of a feature defined in a positive manner, which imposes the presence of a specific element, this is effectively achieved by giving to the element in question its broadest technically sensible meaning. However, for a feature defined in a negative manner, which excludes the presence of a specific element, the broadest scope of the claim corresponds to the narrowest (i.e. most limited) technically sensible definition of the element to be excluded. (Reasons, point 5.7)

T 1362/19

Catchword:

If an abstract feature is not defined in more concrete terms either in the relevant claim or in the description of the application, it has to be understood in a broad sense. This may be important when assessing the implicit disclosure of a document of the state of the art. In particular, for this assessment it may be irrelevant whether there are several alternatives for implementing the abstract feature in concrete terms (Reasons 2.3.7).

T 1349/19

Catchwords:

Inventive step objection based on hindsight: arguments involving a convoluted set of sequential steps conceived starting from the claimed subject-matter and working backwards in attempt to bridge the gap with the prior art (Reasons 1.27)

T 1117/19

Catchword:

Die Verbesserung der Nutzerzufriedenheit z. B. bei einer TV-Live-Übertragung ist im Allgemeinen eine nicht-technische, administrative Aufgabe, für die üblicherweise ein TV-Stationsmanager als Fachperson zuständig ist (siehe Gründe 5.6 der Entscheidung).

T 752/19

Catchword:

Improved patient compliance to a pharmaceutical formulation cannot be used to establish an overall technical effect if it is the result of a "broken technical chain", namely an alleged chain of technical effects starting with information provided to a patient which is then broken by the patient's mental activities (see points 2.4 and 2.5).

T 698/19

Catchword: 

If non-technical features have both a technical and a non[1]technical effect, the technical effect must be taken into account when assessing inventive step, but the technical effect must be clearly derivable from the application as a whole (Reasons 3.6.4 (1)).

T 524/19

Catchword: 

While a feature might, in certain contexts, be seen as technical, the technical effect of a feature must be assessed as a whole and in the context of the claimed invention (reasons 2.7.4).

T 351/19

Catchword:

According to the Comvik approach the non-technical features of a claim may be incorporated into a goal to be achieved in a non-technical field. Subsequently, the approach invokes what might be described as the legal fiction that this goal, including the claimed non-technical features, would be presented to the skilled person, who would be charged with the task of technically implementing a solution which would achieve the stated goal. The question whether the skilled person would "arrive" at the non-technical features does not therefore arise, as these features have been made known to the skilled person, as part of the goal to be achieved. The relevant question for the assessment of inventive step is whether it would be obvious for the skilled person to implement a technical solution corresponding to the claimed subject-matter (Reasons, point 3.12).

T 288/19

Catchword:

The business person sets the framework of the problem to be solved by their business model (insurance conditions) and thus reduces - by setting specific boundary conditions - the degrees of freedom of the skilled computer specialist. The technically skilled person, who has to solve the objective technical problem of implementation, therefore has no latitude in selecting the corresponding (physical) parameters (reasons 3.6.10).

T 2660/18

Catchword:

In case T 625/11, the board concluded that the determination, as a limit value, of the value of a first operating parameter conferred a technical character to the claim which went beyond the mere interaction between the numerical simulation algorithm and the computer system. The nature of the parameter thus identified was, in fact, "intimately linked to" the operation of a nuclear reactor, independently of whether the parameter was actually used in a nuclear reactor (T 625/11, Reasons 8.4). The board is of the opinion that, in the case at hand, no technical effect is achieved by the method's functionality as the method merely produces a test rod pattern (i.e. a fuel bundle configuration) design and data "indicative of limits that were violated by the proposed test rod pattern design during the simulation". Contrary to case T 625/11, no parameter is identified that is "intimately linked to" the operation of a nuclear reactor. A rod pattern design appears to have non-technical uses such as for study purposes. These are "relevant uses other than the use with a technical device", and therefore a technical effect is not achieved over substantially the whole scope of the claimed invention (G 1/19, points 94 and 95). The data "indicative of limits that were violated by the proposed test rod pattern design during the simulation" do even not, or at least do not entirely, reflect the physical behaviour of a real system underlying the simulation (see G 1/19, point 128). The board notes that, due to the breadth of the wording of claim 1 of the main request, the obtained rod pattern design might violate any number of limits by an almost unlimited amount. Hence, this is not an "exceptional case" in which calculated effects can be considered implied technical effects (see decision G 1/19, points 94, 95 and 128).

T 2626/18

Catchword:

The appellant argued that the claimed features relating to the abstract business concept neither could have been provided by the business person to the technical expert for programming, nor would the technical expert have corresponding knowledge starting from a networked standard computer system. The appellant thereby alleged that there was to be considered an imaginary third person who came up with the concept of the invention to be implemented on a computer system. The Board notes that when assessing inventive step in the field of computer implemented business related inventions following the COMVIK approach and the corresponding case law, there is no room for such a third expert. When analysing the features of a claim and answering the question of whether they provide a technical contribution, each such feature has to be judged to be either a contribution of the technical expert or of the non‑technical business person in order to conclude whether there is an inventive technical contribution.

T 1641/18

Catchword:

Während eine Fachperson im Allgemeinen Dokumente nicht kombinieren würde, wenn dies zu einem Verzicht auf eine wesentliche Funktion der Erfindung im nächstliegenden Stand der Technik führen würde, gilt dies in der Regel nicht für Kombinationen, bei denen ein wesentliches Merkmal durch ein dieselbe Funktion erfüllendes alternatives Merkmal ersetzt wird (Punkte 1.3.2 und 1.3.3 der Gründe).

T 1370/18

Catchword:

An encoding or compression algorithm contributes to the technical character of the claimed compression method if it is used for the purpose of reducing the amount of data to be stored or transmitted (reasons 7).

T 1001/18

Catchword:

Since the problem and solution approach defines the problem based on the effect of the differences from the closest prior art, and the effect is derived primarily from the disclosure of the invention, the effect documented in the present documents alone is taken as the basis for the problem formulation. The Board concluded that any further, undocumented effects would be speculative and should not be additionally included in the problem formulation (reasons 5.3.2)

T 555/18

Catchword: 

If the only feature that distinguishes a claim from the closest prior art is a range of an unusual parameter and it is concluded that it would be obvious for the skilled person to solve the underlying technical problem in ways that can be presumed to inherently lead to values within or close to the claimed range, it is the proprietor who should bear the burden of proof to demonstrate that implementing such solutions would not lead to the claimed parametrical range.

T 2759/17

Catchword:

A disclosure within a prior art document can only be considered to represent a suitable starting point for assessing inventive step if the skilled person would have realistically started from it. An important consideration in this assessment generally is whether this disclosure aims at the same or a similar purpose or effect as that underlying the patent in question (see in particular 5.3 to 5.6 of the Reasons).

T 1265/17

Catchword: 
If a claim is unduly broadened with respect to the scope of the examples used to illustrate a technical effect, particularly when this broadening concerns the feature/s allegedly providing that effect, the burden of proof might shift back to the proprietor to prove that the effect observed in the examples would also be obtained throughout the entire scope of the claims. If no evidence is provided in this respect, a conclusion may have to be drawn on the basis of plausibility arguments (reasons 2.2.5-2.2.7).

T 1026/17

Catchword:

In the Board's judgement it is part of the non-technical requirement specification to keep keys (be it analog or electronic keys) away from people one does not trust. This does not require technical considerations of a technically skilled person. The Board does not consider this to be a technical difference, but to be an administrative consideration within the sphere of a business person when contemplating a secure tender process. It is not regarded as a technical innovation, but a natural choice for the bidders to use individual keys, keep the keys back as long as possible and furnish them as late as possible. And even if this was considered technical, it would, in the Board's view, be obvious to do so. Furthermore, the Board considers that implementing a functionality in the networked e-tender system corresponding to D1 would be, at the claimed level of generality, obvious in view of the above business related requirement specification. The Board notes that the implementation is claimed in functional terms and neither the claim nor the application as a whole provide details on how encryption/decryption is achieved on a technical level. The application apparently relies in this respect on the skilled person's common general knowledge. The Board notes in this regard that if providing necessary software and data structures were beyond the skilled person's skills, the invention would not be sufficiently disclosed (Article 83 EPC). Even if the appellant is correct that using different keys for different bidders is a difference over D1, this would in the Board's view imply - in the light of bidders creating their own individual keys for unlocking/decrypting being obvious - that the keys of different bidders are different, too. Therefore creating individual keys/pass-phrases would inherently require the use of multiple keys for implementation. (See points 4.2 to 4.4 of the reasons)

T 1527/16

Catchword:

Claim not allowing a distinction between the ingredients which prevent obesity and those which do not prevent or can even induce it. Identification of the protein hydrolysate as an active ingredient for preventing obesity not distinguishing the claimed subject-matter from the disclosure of the prior art. See reasons, points 1.4 to 1.8.

T 550/14

Catchword:
The appellant's wish for the Board to define criteria that the examining division should use to prove that a feature is not technical is tantamount to defining the term technical, which the Boards have consistently declined to do. However, as stated in e.g. T 2314/16 - Distributing rewards/RAKUTEN at points 2.6 to 2.8, over the years the case law has provided guidance on the issue of technicality. Recently, the Board has tended to use the framework for discussion given in the CardinalCommerce decision (T 1463/11 - Universal merchant platform/CardinalCommerce) to help classify whether borderline features of a claim are on the technical or the non-technical side. It is thus clear that some discussion can and ought to take place. However, rather like objections against added subject-matter, one is essentially trying to prove a negative which tends to be a rather short exercise. On the other hand, the appellant is trying to prove a positive which involves more argument. Thus an objection from the division should probably start with a prima facie assertion that the feature in question is non-technical, perhaps because it is in one of the exclusions listed in Article 52(2) EPC, or a related or analogous field. If this is uncontested then this would be enough. However the Board considers that it is then up to the appellant to provide arguments why there is a technical effect or that some technical considerations are involved. The division should consider these arguments and give reasons why they are not convincing. As mentioned above, the Board is satisfied that this happened in the present case. One final piece of advice for examining divisions would be where possible to search for and start from a document that already discloses some of the alleged non-technical features, thus avoiding the discussion for these features (see for example, T 756/06 - Displaying a schedule/FUJITSU, point 5 or T 368/05 - Integrated account/CITIBANK, point 8). (See points 3.3 to 3.5 of the reasons)

T 489/14

Catchword:

Application of decision G 1/19 to
- simulation methods (Reasons, point 2)
- design methods (Reasons, point 4)
- measurement methods (Reasons, point 7)

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