The IP Brief - July 2024
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As ever, things continue to develop at a rapid pace in the AI space, with two important updates since our last edition of The IP Brief.
First and foremost, the final vote on the EU AI Act was passed on 21 May and the Act was published in the EU’s Official Journal on 12 July, clearing the way for the Act to come into effect on 1 August this year. Whilst not the focus of the Act, there are a number of copyright-related provisions in there which are particularly relevant for generative AI. These include obligations on providers of general-purpose AI models (which could include generative AI models) which have been placed on the EU market to:
- put in place a policy to comply with EU copyright law (including any rights holders’ opt outs for text and data mining purposes); and
- publish a “sufficiently detailed” summary of the content used to train the model, based on a template to be provided by the EU AI Office.
See our recent blog for more details. And see here and here for a broader summary of what the EU AI Act covers and what you can be doing now to prepare.
Separately, in May, the UK IPO released its updated guidelines for examining patent applications relating to AI (see our blog). This followed a temporary period of suspension of the guidelines after the High Court’s decision in Emotional Perception AI Ltd v Comptroller General of Patents last year, where it was found that an AI invention relating to an artificial neural network (“ANN”) did not engage the exclusion from patentability for computer programs (see our blog). The updated guidelines reinforced the Emotional Perception High Court decision and temporarily offered reassurance to AI developers that patent applications for ANN implemented inventions wouldn’t face objections from the UK IPO based on the computer program exclusion.
In parallel, however, the UK IPO appealed the Emotional Perception decision. The Court of Appeal handed down its judgment on 19 July, overturning the first instance decision and confirming in the process that: an ANN is a computer; the weights and biases of an ANN (whether implemented in hardware or software form) are a computer program; and the computer program exclusion is therefore a relevant consideration when examining patent applications for ANN implemented inventions. Given these conclusions, the UK IPO has once again suspended its guidelines pending consideration of the Court of Appeal decision and will ultimately need to amend them for a second time. We will be publishing a blog on this latest decision shortly on The Lens.
If you would like to discuss any of the above in more detail, please contact your relationship partner or email one of our IP team.
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This material is provided for general information only. It does not constitute legal or other professional advice.