@ai_and_law · Post #196 · 21.12.2023 г., 08:04
UK Supreme Court finds AI is not and never was an inventor for patent purposes Hello everyone! The UK Supreme Court has ruled against granting patent rights to artificial intelligence in a case where a U.S. computer scientist sought patents for inventions created by his AI system named DABUS. Stephen Thaler's attempt to register AI-generated patents was rejected by the UK's Intellectual Property Office, stating that, under UK patent law, an inventor must be a human or a company, not a machine. The UK Supreme Court unanimously upheld the rejection, emphasizing that an inventor must be a natural person. The ruling doesn't address the broader question of patentability for technical advances powered by autonomous AI. Thaler's lawyers argue that this ruling renders UK patent law unsuitable for protecting AI-generated inventions, affecting industries relying on AI for technological advancements. Thaler faced a similar outcome in the United States earlier this year, where the Supreme Court declined to challenge the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's refusal to issue patents for AI-created inventions. The UK Supreme Court's decision aligns with similar rulings in Europe, Australia, and the U.S., providing clarity that inventors, for now, must be natural persons. #AILaw#AIInnovation#PatentLaw
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