And what is "technical"? The BSA/CEC answer is circular: "anything that is based on technical considerations". Moreover, computer programs as such are declared to belong to a field of technology. Thus any rule of organisation or calculation (algorithm, business method) is not only a technical invention but also automatically contains a "technical contribution" if it is deemed "new" and "non-obvious". It must only be presented in the language of computing, i.e. by using terms such as "processor", "memory", "input/output", "network" or even "database" etc.
Computing jargon may sound "technical" to the naive mind. Any computer-literate person however knows that the universal computer is our standard logical device. Computing jargon is merely a metaphorical language for expressing abstract thought. It is equivalent to mathematics as well as business concepts and many other expression forms of algorithms. Not only that, it is the standard form in which algorithms come into touch with the material world today. Thus, under the CEC/BSA proposal, any rule of organisation and calculation, no matter in which field, will receive a patent if it is "novel" and "non-obvious". Moreover, since algorithms are expressed in pseudo-technical clothing rather than in their most naked form, it is ensured that these patents will tend be granted for trivial variations of known algorithms rather than for real mathematical innovations.
This proposal is a 100% transcription of the current doctrine of the European Patent Office (EPO). An leading EPO judge, in explaining this doctrine, accurately summarised it in the formula "All practical problem solutions are patentable inventions".
The CEC's press release in fact names a few fictive examples of what should be patentable, but it does not name a single example of a new and non-obvious algorithm that would not be patentable. The CEC's assertion, found elsewhere in the PR, that Amazon One Click might not be patentable under these rules, is a plain lie. The One-Click idea is, according to the CEC/BSA rules, a "computer-implemented invention" in a "field of technology", which, if found to be novel, also contains a "technical contribution", since methods for improving the efficiency of an automatic process by the clever use of generic computer hardware, according to CEC/BSA, lie in a technical field.
Article 3(2) says that "in determining the technical contribution, the invention must be assessed as a whole". This means that there must be no assessment of the technical character of the contribution, but only of the claimed object (in EPO/CEC language: "invention") as a whole. Thus if the claimed object is a process that runs on a standard computer, the "invention as a whole" can already be considered "technical".
To summarise: The requirement of "technical contribution" is a cosmetic one, and several layers of safeguard ensure that it cannot function as a means of restricting patentability:
Instead of creating clear rules, the CEC/BSA tries to push the wild-grown esoteric reasoning habits of a few EPO courts into the law, therebey making this law more proprietary, intransparent and unaccountable than ever. Evidently the CEC/BSA/EPO want to create a legislative jungle to which they and their friends alone hold the key, perpetually denying everybody else access to the discussion.
The provision of Art 52 EPC that computer programs as such are not patentable inventions is reinterpreted to mean that computer programs (computer-implemented teachings) are as such patentable inventions but they may not be claimed as what they are[1].
The CEC/BSA believes that this dirty construction makes it possible to maintain Art 52 EPC unchanged -- but of course deprived of all practical meaning.
This raises interesting questions:
The answer might be: we will go on having members of the patent family doing it in the Commission offices, just as Paul Schwander managed for the Commission the study on SME and software patents, just as Bernhard Müller drafted the initial versions in DG Internal Market, before being replaced by Anthony Howard.
Note that unfortunately, this is only one aspect: the cost effectiveness part of the financial statement is even more outrageous: Patent expenditures (litigation and associated activities and risks excluded) have been growing 12-15% per year in Europe for the past years. No other tax can afford to grow at such a rate, and even the big industry supporters of patents have started complaining about it.
see Software Patentability with Compensatory Regulation: a Cost Evaluation