< Back to latest news & events

Articles

EPO Board of Appeal decision indicates approach to Core AI Inventions

February 2023

Potential obstacles to obtaining patent protection in Europe for an improvement in a general method for machine learning have been highlighted by a recent decision (T0702/20) from the EPO Board of Appeal.

The decision relates to an application for a novel neural network apparatus having “loose coupling”, based on an error code check matrix, between nodes of the neural network resulting in an initial configuration of the neural network that was argued to speed up training and operation of the apparatus while maintaining discrimination performance.

The differences of the claimed invention over the prior art had been acknowledged during prosecution, but the Examining Division had rejected the Application on the basis that the distinguishing features “do not serve a technical purpose, and they are not related to a specific technical implementation either. They merely pertain to the initial, fixed structural definition of an abstract mathematical neural network-like model”.

During the Appeal, the Applicant provided several arguments as to why the claimed system did indeed serve a technical purpose which were not found persuasive by the Board.

In response, the Board noted that a neural network can, in principle (if difficult in practice), be analysed to replace the inputs to each neuron by mathematical functions implemented by the nodes of the previous layer, and ultimately to obtain a mathematical description that describes the output of the neural network as a function of the input. As such, a neural network can be considered to be a mathematical method, or a software program when the mathematical method is implemented on a computer. On this basis, the Appeal Board found that the invention should be considered in view of the established case law for computer-implemented inventions.

Accordingly, whether the invention can be considered inventive can be decided by focusing on the technical problems it solves.

As the invention was directed towards core AI technology and did not specify any application or use-case for the neural network, but rather claimed an improved AI model, it cannot address any specific automation problem and further does not provide any effects within the computer going beyond the normal execution of software. As such, the claims were found to relate to abstract computer-implemented mathematical operations on unspecified data that did not solve any technical problem.

Diverging Approaches?

The Board’s decision and reasoning appear to be very much in line with the recent guidance on the Examination of AI related inventions from the UK Patent Office. The Patent Office drew a clear distinction between inventions relating to “applied AI”, applying AI techniques to a field other than the field of AI, and “core AI”, relating to an advance in the field of AI itself. Indeed, the guidance includes a scenario relating to a modified neural network structure as an example of a non-patentable core AI invention.

In contrast, the Applicant has had some success in other jurisdictions obtaining granted patents with similar claims at the US, Japanese, and Korean Patent Offices, indicating that core AI inventions may be treated more favourably in those countries.

So Can I Patent My AI Invention?

While the invention, in this case, was held to not have a technical effect and therefore lack inventiveness, the Board also stressed that “there can be no reasonable doubt that neural networks can provide technical tools useful for automating human tasks or solving technical problems”. However, to provide a technical effect, a particular technical task to be addressed by the AI invention should be specified, along with sufficient detail, such as defining the training data, to establish that the neural network is able to solve the technical problem.

It seems clear from this decision that applied AI inventions, often solving a problem in a different technical field through AI techniques, will normally be considered patentable by the EPO. In contrast, inventions relating to core AI algorithms or models, not limited to a specific technical implementation, may be difficult to prosecute in Europe, and skilled drafting and prosecution advice will be needed in order to achieve granted patents for these inventions before the EPO.” If you have an AI invention and are unsure as to how this decision applies to you, contact one of our AI specialists for expert advice on how best to protect your invention.


This article was prepared by HGF Patent Director David Hufton.

Latest updates

Empowered, Not Replaced: The Risks and Rewards of Using AI Tools in Patent Prosecution

With the rapid rise of AI and extreme hype around generative AI tools in the workplace, patent firms around the world have had to seriously consider to what extent they …

Read article

EU Agrees on NGT Plant Regulation: What It Means for Patents and Licensing

The European Parliament and Council have reached a provisional agreement for plants developed using New Genomic Techniques (NGTs) – below we summarise the main points and set out the requirements …

Read article

When Retail Branding Meets Politics

(Inter IKEA Systems v Algemeen Vlaams Belang (Case C‑298/23) In November 2022, the Flemish political party Vlaams Belang presented its “IKEA-PLAN – Immigratie Kan Echt Anders” (“Immigration Really Can Be Different”). …

Read article

Office Closed Dates December 2025 / January 2026

HGF Office Closed Dates December 2025 / January 2026   UK Thursday 25 and Friday 26 December 2025 CLOSED Thursday 1 January 2026* CLOSED * Friday 2 January 2026 – …

Read article

Often Copied, Never Equaled: When Do Everyday Items Become Subject of Copyright?

The  borderline between ‘pure’ works of art and mere utilitarian objects” –  Can iconic, yet everyday products be protected under copyright? The above question was posed by Advocate General in …

Read article

T 0883/23: Dosage claims and their entitlement to priority when only the clinical trial protocol was disclosed in the priority application

In a recently issued decision by the EPO’s Board of Appeal (BoA), the BoA held that claims directed to a combination of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) at particular doses were …

Read article

The end of the Brexit overhang for trade marks: review, refile and revoke.

On the 31st December 2025, five years will have passed since the end of the Brexit transitional period on 31st December 2020. Why is this relevant? For UK cloned trade …

Read article
Event - 14th January 2026

Seminar on The aftermath of G1/24 - has anything changed?

HGF is hosting a The aftermath of G1/24 – has anything changed? Which will be followed by networking, apero, and snacks. The Seminar will be held on Wednesday, 14th January …

Event details