http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2020/12/guest-post-study-on-trends-and.html
In this context, The IPKat is pleased to publish a guest post by Kat friends from the Institute for Information Law (IViR) Bernt Hugenholtz, João Pedro Quintais, and Daniel Gervais, discussing the findings, conclusions and recommendations set out in the study on Trends and Developments in Artificial Intelligence: Challenges to the Intellectual Property Rights Framework, which was also published on 25 November 2020.
The impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on intellectual property (IP) law undoubtedly ranks as one of the most-discussed topics of 2020 among legal academics and practitioners. Following initiatives at WIPO, the EPO and several national IPOs (including the UKIPO and the USPTO), EU institutions have now also become active in this area.
The study comprises two parts: an assessment of the state-of-the-art of uses of AI in the three focus areas and a legal analysis of how European IP law currently applies to AI-assisted outputs.
As the state of the art review demonstrates, the use of AI systems in the realms of culture, innovation and science has grown spectacularly in recent years and should continue to do so. AI systems have become almost ubiquitous in meteorology and in pharmaceutical research and are making deep inroads into media and journalism.
- Current EU copyright rules are generally sufficiently flexible to deal with the challenges posed by AI-assisted outputs.
- The absence of (fully) harmonised rules of authorship and copyright ownership has led to divergent solutions in the national law of distinct Member States in respect of AI-assisted works, which might justify a harmonisation initiative.
- Further research into the risks of false authorship attributions by publishers of “work-like” but “authorless” AI productions, seen in the light of the general authorship presumption in art. 5 of the Enforcement Directive (2004/48/EC), should be considered.
- Related rights regimes in the EU potentially extend to “authorless” AI productions in a variety of sectors: audio recording, broadcasting, audiovisual recording, and news. In addition, the sui generis database right may offer protection to AI-produced databases that are the result of substantial investment.
- 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 (96/9/EC).
- The EPC is suitable to address the challenges posed by AI technologies in the context of AI-assisted inventions or outputs.
- When assessing novelty, national IPOs and the EPO should consider investing in maintaining a level of AI capability that matches the technology available to sophisticated patent applicants.
- When assessing inventive step, it may be advisable to update EPO Examination Guidelines to adjust the definition of the “person skilled in the art” and secondary indicia to track developments in AI-assisted inventions or outputs.
- When assessing sufficiency of disclosure, it would be useful to study the feasibility and usefulness of a deposit system for AI algorithms and/or training data and models that would require applicants in appropriate cases to provide information that is relevant to meet this legal requirement.
- For the remaining potential challenges identified, it may be good policy to wait for cases to emerge in particular before national courts to identify actual issues that require a regulatory response, if any.
- Further study of the role of alternative IP regimes to protect AI-assisted outputs, such as trade secret protection, unfair competition and contract law, should be encouraged.
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