SOFTWARE RELATED INVENTIONS; PROSPECTS AND RISKS FOR EUROPEAN COMPANIES
Bournemouth University, July 9th 2002 - 9.30am to 4.30pm, in the OVC Boardroom, 5th floor, Poole House, Talbot Campus
Overview of Symposium
Following the success of last year's "A New Feudalism of Ideas?", the Centre for Intellectual Property Policy & Management (www.cippm.org.uk) is inviting you to the 2nd Bournemouth Symposium on Software Related Inventions: Prospects and Risks for European Companies.
Protecting software as literary works under copyright is conceptually incoherent. It also has the undesirable consequence of granting in effect permanent restrictions on the use of software products. We shall never see the source code of Windows. By contrast the patent system is said to be based on a trade-off between disclosure and protection. Why then treat software differently from other products of human ingenuity?
Awarding patents to software related inventions appears theoretically plausible, but commercially problematic. In an industry advancing through incremental innovations, the deadweight costs of a patent system have been rejected by many independent software developers. The European Patent Office has shirked the issue sheltering behind the myth of a “technical effect”. In practice, protecting software under the European Patent Convention has now become a matter of clever drafting.
This symposium seeks to explore some of these issues in an informal setting, away from the lobby interests of the Proposed Directive of the European Commission
PROGRAMME:
09.30 - COFFEE and WELCOME (Prof. Nick Grief, Head of School)
10.00 - PAPERS 1 - European Practice (chair: Prof. Gerald Dworkin)
11.30 - COFFEE
12.00 - PAPERS 2 - European Policy (chair: Prof. Martin Shepperd)
13.30 - BUFFET LUNCH
14.30 - OPEN
SESSION (chair: Martin Kretschmer)
Contributions may include, but are not limited to:
16.00 - TEA and LAUNCH OF BOURNEMOUTH PAPERS ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
16.30 - CLOSE