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UPC wrangling over transparency risks undermining Europe’s patent court ambitions

The launch of Europe’s long-awaited Unified Patent Court has been rocked by an internal argument over transparency. New rules proposed last month would make secrecy the default, not transparency, and industry is not happy.

 

The reason for the change is, according to some reports, because the transparency the UPC promised in its initial draft of the rules breaks Europe’s stringent data protection laws. You read that correctly: documents from a public court of law cannot be shared with the public.

 

If the new rules are adopted it will mean that documents, including court decisions and orders, as well as written pleadings and evidence, will only be made available “upon reasoned request”, and that the decision to grant access would be made by the judge rapporteur “after consulting the parties”.

 

It is a reversal from a previous draft of the rules, which did promote genuine transparency. Until last month it looked like the UPC would be a shining beacon and example to all national patent courts in Europe, which have historically been opaque about case details.

 

Important patent owners including innovative companies from the pharmaceutical and technology industries are among the many trying to prevent this change. For them, the lack of transparency poses serious threats and there is a real risk that companies will just avoid the Europe-wide patent system altogether.

 

Why is transparency so important?

 

The lack of transparency makes it particularly difficult for parties, especially SMEs with small or non-existent in-house legal teams, to be aware of the litigation history of a patent and be able to coordinate their defence with other parties. This will often make an already expensive and time consuming defence even longer and more costly, and will increase the likelihood of targeted firms settling simply to avoid this crushing burden. For a concrete example read our blog from last year about a small Spanish tech firm called NTR Global.

 

Moreover, the lack of transparency hinders the targeted parties’ ability to find out whether a patent has been previously litigated and what its owner has already said about what the patent covers. This opens the door for the patent proprietor to game the system by interpreting claim elements differently in different cases. Put simply, it allows such a patent owner to cover its tracks so it can prey on others using the same patent. 

 

The only ones to gain from the new proposed rules on transparency are patent assertion entities, whose business model is built around gaming the system. For them it is a dream come true. A jurisdiction the size of the US with opacity written into its rules – and the potential for a Europe-wide injunction to drive settlements that far exceed the value of their patents.

 

The US, once the favoured hunting ground for opportunistic PAEs, has offered electronic access to patent litigation documents for more than thirty years. The Public Access to Court Electronic Records (PACER) database provides the public with real-time access to documents filed at all federal courts.

 

And since the eBay ruling by the Supreme Court in 2006, automatic injunctions in the US are by and large a thing of the past. Not so in Europe, where they remain the norm in spite of EU law to the contrary.

 

The combination of a lack of transparency and this propensity among European judges to hand out injunctions as a cure all for patent disputes – even when the patent covers just a trivial feature of a complex product – only favours those that seek to make a fast buck, and harms genuine innovators.

 

This has always been a problem in Europe. But with the arrival of the UPC the risk of opportunistic attacks will be super-sized.

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New academic paper calls for targeted reforms of the IP rights enforcement directive to boost European competitiveness

A new academic paper titled Realizing the potential of proportionality in patent enforcement A case for amending IPRED by professor Rafal Sikorski from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland makes a convincing case for making targeted amendments to the IP rights enforcement directive (IPRED). IP2Innovate spoke to him and asked why IPRED reform is so important for European competitiveness? Here’s what he said: “We are aware that patent enforcement, especially injunctive relief, can be leveraged by patent holders to obtain excessive royalties. Users innovate with their products but find there may be a patent in a small part of the product, one that may even have come from a component supplied by a third party. This is frequently the case with complex tech products. Clearing up these patent issues is both time consuming and costly and in some cases – that is when patent applications have just been filed by patent holders but not yet published – simply impossible”. Professor Sikorski said. “This impacts competitiveness because it can result in products being removed from the market. The injunction creates a barrier to entry and that stifles competition It deprives the market of competition, and it denies consumers the ability to buy these products. “Products have been barred from sale in Europe due to patent disputes. It has happened in the mobile phone sector, laptops, cars. Even a temporary injunction has a very negative effect on a firm’s business. “Mario Draghi’s report on how to restore European competitiveness has been interpreted by some patent owners as a call for strengthening patent enforcement. However, I would argue that Europe must have a more flexible system. Ensuring healthy innovation and competitiveness requires more than just rigid enforcement. It also needs flexibility to address concerns in individual cases.”
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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.
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Decades old patent framework harms Europe's competitiveness

Decades old framework harms competitiveness. Modernising EU’s patent system will be key to EU’s ability to innovate, compete and grow. ​​​Two decades is a long time to lag behind. But that’s how long the European Commission’s Competitiveness Compass tells us the EU has been trailing ​other major economies​. Why? ​​​​Part of the problem is that the system holding Europe back sits on decades old framework. The application of the IPR Enforcement Directive (IPRED), created before today's tech revolution, results in the heavy-handed enforcement over patents which damages innovation. The Compass recognises that to compete, Europe must be able to lead in critical technologies like AI, robotics, biotechnology, and clean energy – all sectors characterized by complex products incorporating thousands of patented technologies. Yet the current application of the IPRED does not cater for complex products. Currently, European patent courts nearly always grant automatic injunctions in patent infringement cases, even if the manufacturer of a complex product has accidentally infringed a patent reading on a minor component of that product. This means companies have to take entire product ranges off the market or pay excessively high settlements, with costs rising into the hundreds of millions. This is impacting investment decisions and​​​ diverting resources from key technology areas​​​​​, and what’s more, it​’​s enriching an ecosystem of ​​​investors​ that buy up ​trivial​ patents specifically to benefit from the imbalanced system. After 20 years, this outdated framework needs updating to ensure remedies for infringement are proportionate, and abusive patent litigation doesn’t hinder innovation and competitiveness. The United States ​​​made this adjustment almost twenty years ago​. The 2006 eBay v. MercExchange US Supreme Court decision required courts to evaluate the facts of each case before issuing injunctions. This balanced approach has​​​ put a stop to automatic injunctions​ while protecting legitimate patent rights. As Europe aims to close its productivity gap and lead in critical technologies, modernising IPRED is key. A more balanced patent system would support Europe's innovative capacity in the exciting and complex technologies that will drive future growth, and help bridge the competitiveness gap. The Compass states the EU needs to close the innovation gap and simplify rules to leverage the benefits of the Single Market. Otherwise, it will “will lose relevance” in a world characterised by strength of the “big powers”.
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