blog
IP2Innovate

IP2I Recommendations for Improvements to the Public Availability of Information on Proceedings before the UPC

By Patrick Oliver, Executive Director of IP2Innovate

IP2I appreciates the improvements made to date to improve the availability of information on proceedings before the Unified Patent Court. To achieve its full potential for transparency and permit a better understanding of legal developments and trends, IP2I recommends that continued improvements focus on providing more robust searchability for information, and reducing the delay associated with making information available to the public.

Recommendation: Provide more robust searchability for information.

Especially as the volume of proceedings before the court grows, the current layout of the UPC public-facing website will not be suited for allowing the public to find orders or decisions in specific cases, or to inform itself on aspects of the Court’s caselaw at large. Currently, the only filtering mechanisms in the “Decisions & Orders” section of the website are by location and, per location, by type of document (order or decision). Sooner rather than later, this will require interested members of the public to parse and consult growing lists of otherwise not searchable entries to find information they are looking for.

Already, there has been an emergence of third-party solutions to providing increased searchability to the public. To ensure free, consistent, and equal access, and completeness and accuracy of the data especially as case volumes increase, IP2I believes that the public should not have to rely upon third-party solutions, and that instead this functionality should be provided by the UPC itself.

Based on recent updates from UPC Registrar Alexander Ramsay, we understand that improved searchability related to headnotes and keywords is currently being planned. This is welcome news, and as part of these planned improvements, IP2I further recommends that a meaningful search mask be added to the public-facing website for orders and decisions (or alternatively, that this functionality be provided through the public-facing CMS without requiring registration). A simple, yet flexible and user-friendly search mask should include the following filter and search functions:

  • Selection of Instance – filterable by “Any”, “Court of Appeals” or “Court of First Instance”
  • Selection of location – filterable by “Any location” or any one specific UPC court seat
  • Type of underlying action – filterable by “All” or any specific type of action under the UPC
  • Selection of type of document – filterable by “All”, “Order”, or “Decision”
  • Selection of language – filterable by “All” or any one specific UPC language
  • Date of order or decision – optional search parameter, specifiable exactly or as a range
  • Case number – optional search parameter
  • Patent number – optional search parameter
  • Party names – optional search parameter(s)
  • Word (stem) search in full document text

Recommendation: Reduce the delay for making information available to the public.

There is currently a significant delay between the filing of a proceeding and the public availability of information on that proceeding. There is also a significant delay between the issuance of a decision or order by the court and the availability of that decision or order to the public.

IP2I asks that the UPC prioritise improvements in this area, both to reduce the time taken to complete the required formality check and any necessary redactions, and to provide the information on the UPC website shortly after it is populated for the parties to the proceeding in the CMS. Providing the public with information on proceedings and access to decisions and orders in a reduced timeframe is imperative to the public’s understanding of how the court has ruled on issues and the use of the system.

Share

Other blogs

Patrick Oliver

Patent abuse hurts European SMEs and undermines the knowledge transfer process

This year World Intellectual Property Day focuses on SMEs. As the two examples below show, patents can be an SME’s worst enemy, as well as their best friend. Abuse by patent assertion entities is a serious and growing threat in Europe, especially to small and mid-size innovative firms. The gaming of the European patent system must stop.
IP2Innovate

IP2I calls on European Commission to protect Europe’s patent system from abuse

A new academic study by economists at the universities of Bordeaux, Grenoble, and Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona) highlights how patent assertion entities (PAEs) are continuing to take advantage of weaknesses in Europe’s patent system. The study, entitled Patent Privateering, looks at one specific method of patent abuse. Patent privateering is a term to describe a situation where a patent owner hands patents to a patent assertion entity (PAE) to exploit for mutual benefit, allowing the patent owner to maintain a secret stake in the patents. The study concluded that patent privateering is widespread in Europe. The practise has been around for many years but as other jurisdictions including the US have made it harder, Europe’s patent system is a ripe target for abuse. This is largely because patent courts in Europe do not apply the principle of proportionality, and instead hand out injunctions to patent owners almost automatically.
IP2Innovate

Structural weakness in Europe’s patent system should also be a Presidency priority

The Portuguese Presidency of the EU is hosting a high-level conference tomorrow focused on intellectual property in the digital world, and the importance of an innovation-oriented ecosystem to improve the quality of life for citizens and companies, and drive economic recovery.
Back to overview

Subscribe to our newsletter

Privacy policy

© IP2Innovate 2024 - Website door Two Impress