ARTICLE
12 May 2022

Australian Federal Court Now Says AI Machines Cannot Be Inventors

JA
J A Kemp LLP

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J A Kemp is a leading firm of European Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys. We combine independent thinking with collective excellence in all that we do. The technical and legal knowledge that we apply to the protection of our clients’ patents is outstanding in its breadth and depth. With around 100 science and technology graduates in the firm, including 50 PhDs, no area of science or technology is outside our scope. Our Patent Attorneys have collective in-depth expertise in patent law and procedure in every country of the world. The team of professionals who advise our clients on trade mark and design matters have backgrounds in major international law firms and hold qualifications as Chartered UK Trade Mark Attorneys, Solicitors and European Trade Mark Professional Representatives. Dedicated to this specialist area of intellectual property protection, the team has the expertise and resources to protect trade marks and designs in any market worldwide.
Those following the widespread (and largely unsuccessful) attempts of the "DABUS" legal team in attempting to get an AI machine recognised as an inventor by patent offices will recall that their only real success to date came in...
Australia Intellectual Property

Those following the widespread (and largely unsuccessful) attempts of the "DABUS" legal team in attempting to get an AI machine recognised as an inventor by patent offices will recall that their only real success to date came in Australia where the Federal Court decided that DABUS could be validly recognised as an inventor (see our earlier report).

However, now even that ray of light appears to have been blocked out as the Full Federal Court has reversed that decision. After substantial analysis of the statutory background to the requirement to name an inventor, the five judges found unanimously that "only a natural person can be an inventor for the purposes of the Patents Act and Regulations" and that "such an inventor must be identified for any person to be entitled to a grant of a patent".

The judgment recognises that the filing of the application was "intended to provoke debate" as to the role of artificial intelligence and states that such debate is "important and worthwhile" and "should be attended to with some urgency". However, the Court notes that this is a matter of policy which requires consideration of many and varied questions and is therefore not a role that the Court should take when considering statutory construction. The decision criticises the first instance judge for taking that approach.

In so far as the DABUS team's intent was to promote such a debate, then this recognition is, perhaps, a limited success. In the UK that debate has already started, with the UK IPO recently holding a consultation (now closed to responses) on how AI should be dealt with in the patent and copyright systems. We await the outcome of that consultation to see whether any changes to the existing systems are considered necessary or desirable.

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