The Three Faces of Prometheus: A Post-Alice Jurisprudence of Abstractions

50 Pages Posted: 30 Mar 2015 Last revised: 19 Aug 2015

Date Written: April 11, 2015

Abstract

While Alice v. CLS Bank has confirmed that patent claims require a further “inventive concept” beyond an underlying abstract idea or law of nature for patent-eligibility, there is little agreement on what defines either an “abstract idea” or an “inventive concept.” Resolving that uncertainty is critical to determining the patent-eligibility of software claims beyond the simple “do it on a computer” type invalidated in Alice. This Article argues that the rationale and two-step analysis articulated in Mayo and Alice represent a fundamental reorientation of the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, and provide a principled reason to transcend the Court’s earlier § 101 cases. Based on the structure of the Mayo/Alice test, this Article argues for a differentiated framework of “inventive concept,” requiring inventive application for most abstract ideas, but only non-generic application for most laws of nature. Under this framework, two key classes of subject matter remain patent-eligible: claims that do more than reveal the results of an underlying law of nature, and claims to specific and inventive information-processing techniques.

Keywords: patents, patent-eligible subject matter, software

JEL Classification: O34

Suggested Citation

Lefstin, Jeffrey A., The Three Faces of Prometheus: A Post-Alice Jurisprudence of Abstractions (April 11, 2015). 16 North Carolina Journal of Law and Technology 647 (2015), UC Hastings Research Paper No. 147, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2586860

Jeffrey A. Lefstin (Contact Author)

UC Law, San Francisco ( email )

200 McAllister Street
San Francisco, CA 94102
United States

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