Software Patents > Reviews > Akte München 1973 > Guidelines EPO 1978 > EPO 1990 T 22/90 > Technical Boards of Appeal March 2002, case T 49/99
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| EPO 1990 T 22/90 | Technical Boards of Appeal March 2002, case T 49/99 | EPO 2000 Pension Benefits System | EPO 1998 IBM computer program product | EPO T 6/83 | EPO 1994 IBM printer color markup |
This decision is not using "both technical and non-technical features" formula as found in CEC directive Article 4 paragraph 3 but rather a reasoning similar to CULT Amendment 15:
From reasons for the decision T 49/99:
5. [...] If the invention as claimed relates to non-technical subject-matter or activities, only those aspects or elements of the invention which contribute to its technical character are to be given significance in assessing inventive step.
7. Information modelling is a formalized process carried out by a system engineer or a similar skilled person in a first stage of software development for systematically gathering data about the physical system to be modelled or simulated and to provide so to say a real world model of the system on paper. Although information modelling embodies useful concepts and methods in developing complex software systems, it is as such an intellectual activity having all traits typical for non-technical branches of knowledge and thus being closely analogous to the non-inventions listed under Article 52(2)(a) and (c) EPC.
In examining inventive step, it should hence be treated like any other human activity in a non-technical field, which is, as such, not an invention for the purposes of Article 52(1) EPC. Only the purposive use of information modelling in the context of a solution to a technical problem, as e.g. is the case for the preferred embodiment relating to the control and management of technical processes in a power system, may contribute to the technical character of an invention.