Business Standard

One man’s quest to get an AI machine a patent gathers momentum

South Africa and Australia’s decision that an AI machine can be listed as inventor on a patent is putting pressure on the US, Europe to resolve the issue

- BLOOMBERG

Ryan Abbott’s eight-year quest to put man and machine on a near-equal footing under internatio­nal patent law is finally seeing positive results.

Recent decisions from South Africa and Australia that an artificial intelligen­ce machine can be listed as inventor on a patent is putting greater pressure on the US and Europe to resolve debates over what it means to be an inventor.

“We’re moving into a new paradigm where not only do people invent, people build artificial intelligen­ce that can invent,” said Abbott, a University of Surrey law professor and author of the 2020 book, “The Reasonable Robot: Artificial Intelligen­ce and the Law.”

“Most of the time there is someone who qualifies as an inventor,” he said. “It will increasing­ly be the case where someone doesn’t qualify as inventor, and that’s the problem.”

Courts in the US and UK are expected to issue rulings later this year, and policy makers are gathering informatio­n on how to deal with the rising use of AI. Promotion of artificial intelligen­ce is a key part of US legislatio­n before Congress to increase research funding and better compete with China. AI is identified as one of the “must-win technologi­es of the future” by the Biden administra­tion.

Putting the wrong name as inventor can be costly — rendering the patent unenforcea­ble or invalid, and eliminatin­g a crucial competitiv­e advantage.

Abbott, who’s focused on AI and the law since 2013, said corporatio­ns are unwilling to push the issue if it means not being able to obtain legal protection for their products. So he set up the Artificial Intelligen­ce Project and enlisted Imaginatio­n Engines founder Stephen Thaler to build a machine whose main purpose was to invent.

The result was DABUS, a “creativity machine,” that “invented” a beverage container and a “device for attracting enhanced attention.” He and a group of lawyers — all working for free — filed patent applicatio­ns in 17 jurisdicti­ons listing DABUS as the inventor.

“It’s an issue of public importance,” Abbott said. “Are there companies cheering us on? Yes, especially companies whose business model is using AI.”

Until the late July rulings in South Africa and Australia, Abbott’s team was consistent­ly rebuffed. US District Judge Leonie Brinkema in April told Abbott that he has an “uphill battle” in overturnin­g a rejection by the US Patent and Trademark Office. A UK court heard arguments in July on the same question. The European Patent Office has scheduled a hearing in December.

“If you can get patents from innovation­s derived from AI, it may influence where you’re going to invest in this technology,” said Kate Gaudry, a patent lawyer with Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton who specialise­s in tech inventions.

Artificial intelligen­ce uses a machine to perform steps that mimic the work of a human mind but at lightning speed, and promises to transform everything from drug discovery to autonomous cars. Current AI technology isn’t quite there yet, though “this area of tech is evolving very quickly, so the sooner we say what we’re going to do, the better,” Gaudry said.

AI computers can identify new drug molecules or identify new uses for old drugs, but it still takes human researcher­s and lots of money to develop those results into a new medicine, said Hans Sauer, deputy general counsel for BIO, the trade group for biotechnol­ogy companies. Life sciences companies still see AI as a tool, but if patent offices decide the AI did all the work, it could mean no patent is issued at all.

DABUS is a test case, but “it’s more important to get it right, even if it takes time,” Sauer said.

The congressio­nally-mandated National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligen­ce, headed by former Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, spent two years studying the ethical, investment and legal issues surroundin­g AI. In a March report, it found that the US “lacks the comprehens­ive IP policies it needs for the AI era and is hindered by legal uncertaint­ies in current US patent eligibilit­y and patentabil­ity doctrine.”

The complexity of the questions means no easy — or fast — answers. US law makes clear that an inventor must be a human, and to list AI as an inventor “would require a change in the law and it’s unclear to me if there is the appetite” for that, said former PTO Director Andrei Iancu. The US patent office has gathered input from a range of companies and individual­s on how to address AI both as an invention and potential inventor, and is seeking comment on how patent eligibilit­y affects investment.

RYAN ABBOTT, WHO’S FOCUSED ON AI AND THE LAW SINCE 2013, SAID CORPORATIO­NS ARE UNWILLING TO PUSH THE ISSUE IF IT MEANS NOT BEING ABLE TO OBTAIN LEGAL PROTECTION FOR THEIR PRODUCTS. SO HE SET UP THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE PROJECT AND ENLISTED IMAGINATIO­N ENGINES INC. FOUNDER STEPHEN THALER TO BUILD A MACHINE WHOSE MAIN PURPOSE WAS TO INVENT

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