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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: Intellectual Property and Access to Im/material Goods
Editor(s): Lai, C. Jessica; Maget Dominicé, Antoinette
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN (hard cover): 9781784716615
Section: Chapter 5
Section Title: The nebulous “invention”: from “idea and embodiment” to “idea/embodiment and observable physical effects”?
Author(s): Lai, Jessica C.
Number of pages: 26
Abstract/Description:
This chapter examines modern case law to show that patent law continues to be interested in the tangible physical embodiment of inventions as well as the intangible idea and information behind them. Focusing on information-based technologies, it analyses the different ways that Europe, the US and Australasia have recently dealt with software, business methods, biotechnology and methods of medical treatment or diagnosis. The cross-jurisdictional overview underscores the importance of physical embodiment or physical effects when it comes to identifying an “invention” or “manner of new manufacture”, even with these more informational kinds of developments. The chapter highlights the inconsistency between the arguments that such technologies cannot constitute patentable subject matter because they are information-based and have no corresponding physical embodiment or observable physical effects, on the one hand, and the concept that patent law is about the intangible, on the other hand. Finally, the chapter questions patent law’s ties to the physical and whether it is desirable or not.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2016/991.html