Reed Smith Client Alerts

The United States Patent Office (USPTO) is holding two upcoming public listening sessions on AI inventorship for patents. A first “East Coast” session will be held on April 25, 2023 at the USPTO Headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia. A second “West Coast” session will be held on May 8, 2023 at Stanford University in Stanford, California. Both sessions allow for virtual attendance. The purpose of the listening sessions is to seek stakeholder input on the current state of AI technologies and related inventorship issues, as set forth in the questions posed in the Federal Register Notice of February 14, 2023 published by the USPTO. Those questions flow out of the Federal Circuit’s recent decision in Thaler v. Vidal, 43 F.4th 1207 (Fed. Cir. 2022), which held that a patent inventor must be a natural person, but did not address whether inventions made by human beings with the assistance of AI are eligible for patent protection. Deadlines to speak at or attend the sessions are rapidly approaching.

Upcoming public listening sessions announced by the USPTO will give stakeholders the opportunity to express their views on AI inventorship for patents. An East Coast public listening session will be held on April 25, 2023, from 10:30 a.m. ET to 3:30 p.m. ET at the National Inventors Hall of Fame Museum, USPTO Headquarters, 600 Dulany St. Alexandria, VA 22314. A second, West Coast session will be held on May 8, 2023, from 10:00 a.m. PT to 3:00 p.m. PT at Stanford University, Paul Brest Hall, 555 Salvatierra Walk, Stanford, CA 94305. Both sessions allow for virtual attendance. The purpose of the listening sessions is to seek stakeholder input on the current state of AI technologies and inventorship issues that may result from their advancement, as set forth in the questions posed in the Federal Register Notice of February 14, 2023 (the “February 14, 2023 Notice”).1

The questions in the February 14, 2023 Notice were prompted by the Federal Circuit’s decision in Thaler v. Vidal, 43 F.4th 1207, 1210 (Fed. Cir. 2022). There, the Federal Circuit affirmed a district court’s ruling upholding the USPTO’s decision to deny petitions to name Device for Autonomous Bootstrapping of Unified Sentience (DABUS), an AI system, as a patent inventor. Based on Supreme Court precedent and language in the Patent Act, the Federal Circuit affirmed the holding that an inventor must be a natural person. Id. at 1211. But the court also made clear that it was not addressing “the question of whether inventions made by human beings with the assistance of AI are eligible for patent protection.” Id. at 1213.2