Michalski · Hüttermann & Partner

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Non-technical features back in the game for assessing inventive step? Is there an alternative to the problem solution ap...
29/05/2026

Non-technical features back in the game for assessing inventive step? Is there an alternative to the problem solution approach?

The UK Supreme Court just rewrote the rules for AI patents.

In February 2025, it overturned the Aerotel test — which had been the standard in Britain since 2006 — and declared it "unsound law." The entire legal landscape for AI and software inventions changed overnight.

In episode 175 of IP Fridays, I spoke with Bruce Dearling, partner at Hepworth Brown. He wrote the original application, prosecuted it through every level of the British court system, and won at the Supreme Court. He probably knows more about this case than anyone alive.

Here is what struck me most.

The ruling introduced what is called the "intermediate step." Before assessing inventive step, an examiner must now look at how all the features in a claim interact — technical and non-technical alike. You can no longer just strike through a feature because it looks non-technical. If those features together produce a real technical effect, the claim stands. Bruce considers this far more important than the "any hardware" headline that most commentators focused on.

What makes this bigger than a UK story: the Unified Patent Court issued a decision in April 2025 — Abbott v. Sinocare — using language strikingly similar to the Supreme Court ruling. The UPC is not bound by UK courts. The overlap is not a coincidence. And Bruce told me, off the record, that people close to the EPO have spoken about converging UPC practice toward the UK Supreme Court approach. We may be watching a pan-European shift in real time.

The EPO itself is not there yet. COMVIK and the problem-solution approach are still the standard. Bruce's view: the problem-solution approach is structurally infected with hindsight reasoning. You formulate the objective technical problem by working backwards from a solution you already know. He has held this view for decades, and now the UK Supreme Court has said something similar.

Singapore's IP Office has already launched a public consultation asking whether the Emotional Perception ruling should be adopted into national law. That is Commonwealth-wide soft power from a single Supreme Court judgment.

Two practical takeaways for anyone prosecuting AI or software patents right now: make sure the claim contains hardware, and make sure the description fully explains what technical effect each piece of hardware or software achieves. Not as boilerplate — as a real technical account. Bruce is blunt: those who write the claim first and the description second run into trouble.

Full episode at the IP Fridays website and any podcast platform you can think of - Spotify, Amazon Music, Youtube, Apple Podcast, ... — worth your time if you work in patent prosecution, IP strategy, or tech.

Frühlingsfest Michalski · Hüttermann & Partner auf unserer wunderbaren Dachterrasse! Vielen Dank an Uwe Albersmeyer und ...
21/05/2026

Frühlingsfest Michalski · Hüttermann & Partner auf unserer wunderbaren Dachterrasse! Vielen Dank an Uwe Albersmeyer und Dirk Schulz für die tolle Organisation!

Your company's data is either a managed asset or an unmanaged liability. There is no third option.That is the opening ar...
01/05/2026

Your company's data is either a managed asset or an unmanaged liability. There is no third option.

That is the opening argument Brian McGinnis makes in the latest episode of our podcast IP Fridays in this interview with Kenneth Suzan, co-host of this podcast — and everything that follows from it is worth hearing.

Brian is a partner at Barnes & Thornburg and one of the leading privacy and AI governance attorneys in the US. In our conversation, he covers ground that most legal podcasts never get close to:

Why your website is probably generating legal exposure right now — without anyone in your company knowing it. Why signing a vendor contract without a proper data processing agreement is the same as signing a bad IP license. Why the absence of an AI acceptable use policy is not a neutral position. And why the companies that treat compliance as a burden are leaving money on the table.

The parallel he draws between data governance and patent portfolio management alone is worth the listen.

Episode 174 of our podcast IP Fridays is live now. Listen to it wherever you listen to podcasts (e.g. Spotify, Youtube, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, the IP Fridays website, ...)

Michalski · Hüttermann & Partner Patentseminar am 7. Mai 2026! Jetzt anmelden!Wir laden ganz herzlich alle Inhouse Paten...
10/04/2026

Michalski · Hüttermann & Partner Patentseminar am 7. Mai 2026! Jetzt anmelden!

Wir laden ganz herzlich alle Inhouse Patent Professionals und Mandanten sowie weitere geladene Gäste zu unserem diesjährigen Patentseminar im Industrie-Club Düsseldorf ein. Wie im letzten Jahr gibt es ein spannendes Programm. Und das Seminar bietet auch wie immer Gelegenheit, dass sich Mandanten untereinander vernetzen und austauschen.

Die Anmeldung erfolgt gerne per Email an [email protected]

IP Fridays Podcast - Episode 173: Interview with Deborah A. Hampton - President of the International Trademark Associati...
27/03/2026

IP Fridays Podcast - Episode 173: Interview with Deborah A. Hampton - President of the International Trademark Association - 2026 INTA Annual Meeting - Anti Counterfeiting - Presidential Task Force for Unifying IP Protection & Enforcement Strategy

https://ipfridays.com

In the latest episode of our podcast IP Fridays, I sit down with Deborah Hampton, Global Brand Enforcement and Trademark...
27/03/2026

In the latest episode of our podcast IP Fridays, I sit down with Deborah Hampton, Global Brand Enforcement and Trademark Team Leader at Chemours and the current President of the International Trademark Association (INTA), to discuss the future of IP enforcement and the 2026 INTA Annual Meeting.

With 43 years of experience in the field, Deborah shares her unique perspective on the "value leakage" caused by fragmented IP strategies and how she is working to unify these approaches globally.

Why You Should Listen:

The Global Battle Against Counterfeits: Deborah breaks down why anti-counterfeiting is about much more than lost revenue—it’s a matter of consumer safety, economic stability, and dismantling organized crime networks.

Unifying the Strategy: Learn about the 2026 Presidential Task Force focused on "Unifying Intellectual Property Protection and Enforcement Strategy," designed to break down internal silos and create a unified global operating model for IP.

Educating the Next Generation: Discover how the Unreal Campaign is reaching young consumers (ages 14–23) to highlight the real-world dangers of counterfeit products.

Join Us in 2026!

Deborah’s vision for a unified IP strategy will be a central theme at the upcoming 2026 INTA Annual Meeting. This is the premier event for IP practitioners to:

Collaborate with high-ranking government, judicial, and IPO officials from around the world.

Stay Ahead of Trends in statutes, precedent cases, and emerging enforcement practices.

Mobilize as a Volunteer: Be part of the new 2026 committee structure and help turn strategic participation into global momentum.

Listen to the full episode now on IP Fridays! https://ipfridays.com

And register for the 2026 INTA Annual Meeting today! https://inta.org

IP Fridays Podcast - Episode 172: AI is Becoming the World’s Most Powerful Creative Tool—But Who Owns What It Creates? -...
27/02/2026

IP Fridays Podcast - Episode 172: AI is Becoming the World’s Most Powerful Creative Tool—But Who Owns What It Creates? - Interview with Co-Founder & CEO of Inception Point AI, Jeanine Whright, and Mark Stignani, who is Partner & Chair of Analytics Practice at Barnes & Thornburg LLP

https://ipfridays.com

AI is becoming the world’s most powerful creative tool—but who owns what it creates? Tool maker or tool user: who’s liab...
27/02/2026

AI is becoming the world’s most powerful creative tool—but who owns what it creates? Tool maker or tool user: who’s liable when AI output infringes? If an AI is trained on copyrighted material, is every output “contaminated”?

The integration of generative artificial intelligence into the media and entertainment sectors is no longer a speculative future but a current operational reality. In the latest episode of the IP Fridays podcast, Jeanine Wright, CEO of Inception Point AI, and Mark Stignani , Partner and Data Analytics Chair at Barnes & Thornburg LLP, provide a critical examination of how these technologies are reshaping content production and intellectual property strategy.

The discussion explores the transition from traditional media models to AI-driven ecosystems. Jeanine Wright details the development of synthetic personalities that engage audiences through autonomous content creation, highlighting a shift toward high-volume, niche-targeted production. This evolution presents significant opportunities for scalability, but it also introduces complex questions regarding the nature of digital personas and their long-term engagement with consumers.

From a legal and strategic perspective, Mark Stignani addresses the escalating challenges for intellectual property owners. The conversation covers the necessity of maintaining a clear chain of title in an era of machine-generated works and the emerging regulatory landscape concerning disclosure and transparency. A central point of debate involves the stratification of the market: as AI becomes the default for high-volume content, will "human-only" or "AI-free" designations become the new premium tier for luxury media brands?

The interview also navigates the ethical and legal boundaries of digital resurrection and the rights of publicity. As companies look to leverage these tools to drive efficiency and reach new markets, understanding the interplay between creative innovation and robust IP protection is essential for informed decision-making.

The full conversation offers a comprehensive look at these developments and the strategic foresight required to navigate the next five years of the industry.

You can listen to the full episode on the IP Fridays website or through any major podcast platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music and many more!

Patenstreit: Biontech verklagt Moderna wegen neuem Corona-Impfstoff
20/02/2026

Patenstreit: Biontech verklagt Moderna wegen neuem Corona-Impfstoff

Der in den USA eingereichten Klage zufolge verletzt der Moderna-Impfstoff die Rechte von Biontech an einer Technologie für ein optimiertes mRNA-Impfstoffdesign.

Zwei Stunden entschieden über das wertvollste Patent aller Zeiten
14/02/2026

Zwei Stunden entschieden über das wertvollste Patent aller Zeiten

Am 14. Februar vor 150 Jahren entschieden zwei Stunden über die Zukunft der Telekommunikation – und begründeten einen bis heute andauernden Streit darüber, wer das Telefon wirklich erfand.

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