Journal Article10.24144/2307-3322.2024.82.3.31
European Union Law perspective on the intellectual property protection of artificial intelligence systems
D. P. Bohatchuk
TL;DR: EU law perspective on IP protection of AI systems focuses on copyright, patent and sui generis database protection. Copyright protection for AI systems is limited due to originality requirements. Patent protection for AI systems is possible but requires meeting all requirements. Sui generis database protection applicability is limited to the EU.
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Abstract: The paper analyzes possible ways of protecting artificial intelligence systems and their elements with the help of intellectual property law from the perspective of European Union law. This paper deals with copyright law, patent law and sui generis database protection in relation to artificial intelligence systems. The paper begins with an analysis of whether and how an artificial intelligence can be protected by means of copyright. The author analyzes the European Union’s copyright acquis and concludes that the elements of the AI system, as well as the entire artificial intelligence system, that are implemented in software, can be protected by copyright as a computer program if the originality requirements are met. However, the originality requirement is unlikely to be met in all cases in this context. The same issue with the originality requirement applies to potentially possible copyright protection of artificial intelligence systems as databases. Therefore, it is concluded that the fulfillment of copyright requirements for protection of an artificial intelligence system must be established in each particular case. The author also considers whether patent law is applicable to protect artificial intelligence systems. For this purpose, the provisions of the patent law of the European Union, in particular, of the European Patent Convention, are analyzed. The author concludes that the artificial intelligence system may be patentable as a “computer-implemented invention” in case all the requirements for patent protection are met. Sui generis database protection is also considered as an additional possibility for legal protection of artificial intelligence systems, taking into account that its applicability is limited to the European Union. Whether sui generis database protection is applicable to the artificial intelligence system should be decided on a case-by-case basis.
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References
Copyright Exceptions: The Digital Impact: Directive 2001/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 May 2001 on the harmonisation of certain aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society
R. Burrell,Allison Coleman +1 more
TL;DR: The European Parliament's Directive 2001/29/EC harmonizes copyright and related rights in the information society, fostering a digital market by balancing creators' rights with the need for a flexible regulatory framework to promote innovation and economic growth in Europe.
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•Posted Content
Rethinking Software Protection
TL;DR: This chapter starts with a short technical description of what AI is, and identifies those parts of AI applications that constitute software to which legal software protection regimes may be applicable, before outlining those protection regimes, namely copyright and patents.
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