Australian Court finds AI systems can be an “inventor”

Written By

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Rebecca Currey

Partner
Australia

I am a partner in our Intellectual Property Group, based in Sydney. My experience spans the breadth and depth of IP issues, but my specialty is complex IP litigation and disputes including contentious patent, trade mark, copyright, and confidential information and consumer protection/passing-off matters.

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Jane Owen

Partner
Australia

I'm a partner and head of our Intellectual Property Group in Sydney where I use my deep-level experience of complex IP strategy and disputes to advise clients from a range of IP-rich industries.

In a world first, a judge of the Federal Court of Australia has found that artificial intelligence (AI) is capable of being an “inventor” for the purposes of the Australian patent regime.



This is one more chapter in the global debate as to whether patent law and policy should adapt to recognise the changing innovation landscape. This decision is one of a series of test cases globally regarding AI “inventors” on the current state of patent law in certain jurisdictions.

The confirmation that, in Australia, AI can be “inventors” under our existing regime (subject to any appeal decision) is contrary to the position in the UK, EPO and USA, where an inventor must be a natural person.

Background

An artificial intelligence system, known as DABUS (or device for the autonomous bootstrapping of unified sentience), had been named as the inventor by the Applicant, Dr Thaler, on a PCT application designating Australia. The alleged invention was the output of DABUS’ various products and methods directed at an improved fractal container.

DABUS had been named as the inventor because the Patent Regulations require, in relation to a PCT Application, the Applicant to name the “inventor of the invention to which the application relates”.

The Deputy Commissioner of Patents (Commissioner) had rejected the application because the application did not name a human inventor. The Commissioner was of the view that the ordinary meaning of “inventor” (which is not defined in the Patents Act) was “inherently human”, and that naming AI as the inventor was incompatible with section 15 of the Patents Act, which provides:

a patent for an invention may only be granted to a person who:

(a) is the inventor; or

(b) would, on the grant of a patent for the invention, be entitled to have the patent assigned to…

Full article available on PatentHub

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