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TRIPS Agreement

Revision as of 11:21, 3 August 2011 by Ciaran (talk | contribs) (rv spam)

TRIPS is an international agreement signed in 1994 by most countries of the world. TRIPS requires that patents exist in certain domains and that they have a duration of 20 years.

TRIPS was negotiated as part of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade - which was replaced in 1995 by the World Trade Organisation. Can you help? What is the relation of these bodies to the UN?


As of 2010, the in-negotiation ACTA treaty is widely seen as the first post-TRIPS treaty that will, if ratified in it's current form, cause the same level of harm as TRIPS has.

TRIPS does not require software patents

Sometimes politicians are told that software patents are required for compliance with TRIPS, but this is rubbish.

Article 27: fields of technology

The clause used as a base for this rubbish claim is Article 27 paragraph 1:

patents shall be available for any inventions, whether products or processes, in all fields of technology, provided that they are new, involve an inventive step and are capable of industrial application.

However, TRIPS does not say that writing software is a "field of technology". In fact, that term is not defined at all, so every legislature is free to decide which activities are and which aren't part of a field of technology.

Remember, the question is not about whether software developers consider their work to be part of a "field of technology" or not. It's a purely legalistic categorisation question. In legal terms, legislatures have to choose whether to put software into the category of being patentable (being a "field of technology") or being not patentable. We ask them to define software as non-patentable.

Article 10: software is a literary work

Moreover, a direct comment about software in TRIPS is in Article 10:

Computer programs, whether in source or object code, shall be protected as literary works under the Berne Convention (1971).

Literary writing is not a field of technology, so this sentence implies that the authors of TRIPS did not intend software to be counted as a field of technology.

Support for this interpretation

In the USA, when the Supreme Court was considering the Bilski case and the patentability of software and business method patents, their decision made no mention at all of TRIPS or any other treaty.[1]

In 2003, during the EU software patents directive, the European Parliament voted amendments which clearly excluded software from patentability. They clearly didn't see any problem with this position and TRIPS.

Interoperability exceptions

Article 30

Full text:

Members may provide limited exceptions to the exclusive rights conferred by a patent, provided that such exceptions do not unreasonably conflict with a normal exploitation of the patent and do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the patent owner, taking account of the legitimate interests of third parties.

Article 40.2

Article 40.2 says:

Nothing in this Agreement shall prevent Members from specifying in their legislation licensing practices or conditions that may in particular cases constitute an abuse of intellectual property rights having an adverse effect on competition in the relevant market. As provided above, a Member may adopt, consistently with the other provisions of this Agreement, appropriate measures to prevent or control such practices, which may include for example exclusive grantback conditions, conditions preventing challenges to validity and coercive package licensing, in the light of the relevant laws and regulations of that Member.

Since software patents have severe adverse effects on competition and markets, so there is clearly grounds for adding conditions to the use of patents in relation to software, communication, standards, compatibility, etc. This approach was suggested, but also disputed, in Japan.

Related pages on ESP Wiki

External links

References