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EU report on AI-assisted creativity and invention

The European Commission has published its final report on Trends and Developments in Artificial Intelligence: Challenges to the Intellectual Property Rights Framework. It finds, where AI is a mere tool of authors and inventors, that no current changes are needed to patent on copyright law but recommends changes to guidance and further research into future legal reforms.

The report focusses on copyright and patent protection for “AI-assisted creative and innovative outputs” in science (meteorology), media (journalism) and pharmaceutical research.

Significantly, one of the assumptions of the report is that “fully autonomous creation or invention by AI does not exist, and will not exist for the foreseeable future” and it does not consider whether AI needs to be considered an author or inventor. Nor does it consider the protection of inputs to AI (e.g. datasets) or the use of AI in the moderation or enforcement of IP rights.

Within this scope, the Report concludes:

The existing concepts of copyright and patent law are sufficiently
abstract and flexible to meet the current challenges from AI.

However, it suggests further research and changes to guidance:

taking into account the practical implications of AI technologies, the Report identifies specific avenues for future legal reform (if justified by empirical evidence), offers recommendations for improvements in the application of existing rules (e.g. via guidelines), and highlights the need to study the role of alternative IP regimes to protect AI-assisted outputs, such as trade secret protection, unfair competition and contract law.

Although autonomous creations of AI are outside the scope of the Report, the introduction takes the view that these cannot be protected as patents (which accords with the EPO, UKIPO and UK High Court decisions on the DABUS patent applications) or under copyright. It also suggests the UK and Irish protection for computer-generated copyright works are “perhaps … better understood as a species of related rights” (which could bring into doubt EU reciprocal recognition such IP as copyright under international treaties.)

EU copyright law

The Report makes the following conclusions and recommendations for EU copyright law:

Regarding sui generis database rights, the Report suggests that “The creation/obtaining distinction in the sui generis right is a cause of legal uncertainty regarding the status of machine-generated data that could justify revision or clarification of the EU Database Directive.” (This was touched on in the European Commission’s Evaluation of Directive 96/9/EC on the legal protection of databases, which considered a German case, Autobahnmaut, concerning a database of machine-generated toll data, but the Evaluation concluded overall that “engaging in a process of reforming the sui generis right would at this stage be largely disproportionate to its overall policy potential or the limited range of problems it currently generates for stakeholders“.)

EU patent law

The Report makes the following conclusions and recommendations for EU patent law:

Matt Hervey is Head of Artificial Intelligence (UK) at Gowling WLG (UK) and advises on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and IP across all sectors, including automotive, life sciences, finance and retail. Find out more about Matt Hervey on the Gowling WLG website. He is co-editor of The Law of Artificial Intelligence (Sweet & Maxwell).

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