Short Guide to Patent Protection and Patentability
What can be protected?
Determining what qualifies as a patentable invention is a highly
difficult and complicated task. Patent laws state that "Anything
under the sun that was invented by man qualifies as patentable".
Simple enough, but if you notice, there are hundreds of pages
full of exceptions and details on the idea of patentability
following this phrase. Scores of appeals and patent court cases
have arisen due to questions regarding patentability because it
still hasn't, and probably never will be entirely pinned down.
So, defining what is patentable is not as clear cut as black and
white. Inventions can encompass a wide variety of areas, even
living subject matter so long as the subject matter is the
result of human intervention. An example of a patentable living
organism is a microorganism or a plant which is produced or
altered through genetic engineering. The key is that the living
matter must be a product of "human ingenuity" and not merely a
naturally occurring object, such as a shrimp with its digestive
tract removed. The living matter must be altered to yield unique
properties for it to be patentable.
However, the alteration can even be the mere fact that the
living matter is simply isolated or purified. For example,
unaltered pieces of DNA may be patentable provided they have
been sequenced. The PTO has decided that the act of isolating
and sequencing a strand of DNA is the result of human
intervention. Currently, there is huge debate surrounding the
patenting of biotechnology related "inventions" like DNA. Is a
piece of DNA really an invention at all? Or what about a
microorganism that happens to degrade oil? Is that an invention?
Should it be?
As you are probably starting to see, the patent office has its
work cut out for them as many of these questions are not black
and white.