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Satisfaction générale après le rejet de la directive sur les brevets logiciels

Publié 07 juillet 2005 - Mis à jour 08 avril 2007
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Partisans et détracteurs de la position commune du Conseil semblaient également satisfaits du rejet par le Parlement de la proposition de directive sur les brevets logiciels, mercredi 6 juillet 2005. 

MEPs rejected the directive mainly because of the incalculable results caused by a catalogue of 200 amendments without any clear majorities that could have produced a consistent position of the Parliament. They also blamed the Council and the Commission for their reluctance to take the Parliament's differing position into account.  

Réactions : 

The rapporteur, former French Prime Minister Michel Rocard  (PSE), commented: "Confronted with threats by the Commission not to to take into account any amendments which would have been adopted in second reading, and in order to avoid that a risky conciliation procedure produces a text that would legalise patents on software, the Parliament has affirmed its backing for the work that has been achieved in first reading. At the same time, Parliament has refused that its perceptions be ignored once more." 

PPE/DE  MEP Joachim Wuermeling said: "For the opponents of software patents now triumphant, the defeat of the directive is a Pyrrhic victory. Even in the Council version, the directive would have provided waterproof protection from a patentability of software. Now, the very legal uncertainty that led to an excess of patent grants in the past persists." Still, Mr. Wuermeling thinks that "the rejection of the directive was the only way out of a completely messed-up situation".

PSE  MEP Erika Mann  said: "I recommended rejecting the draft directive when it became evident during the last few days that there was no majority for a coherent position of the Parliament on any of the directive's crucial points. Instead, the result would either have been left to chance or the adoption of the Council's common position, due to amendments blocking each other."

Gilles Savary, also an MEP for the PSE, said: "This clear victory for the European Parliament brings Europe into the camp of India, making programming language one of our times' universal languages, accessible to all under the protection of copyright. At the same time, it assures the vitality of software innovation in Europe and of Europe's SMEs. thanks to this vote, there is still hope that Europe will bring forth its own likings of Bill Gates, who himself is a child of programming freedom."

Graham Watson MEP,  leader of the ALDE group, said: "It is now time to put an end to the squabbling in Council as there is a pressing need for a Community patent regime that will bring the work of the European Patent Office under democratic scrutiny and reduce the costs and burdens on business in registering inventions."  

Green  group co-president Monica Frassoni  said: "Parliament has used its powers to reject what was a very flawed legislative proposal. The Commission sided with big business and refused to listen to the voice of the Parliament. In rejecting outright our first reading position, which considerably clarified that software should not be patented, the Commission and Council must take the blame for today's failure."

Philippe de Buck, Secretary General with the European business association UNICE,  said: "After a long and difficult debate, the European Parliament took the understandable decision to reject the common position, in order to avoid re-opening an unpredictable discussion on the long-standing basic concepts and definitions of industrial property protection, which would have harmed innovative companies in Europe, small, medium-sized and large. "

The Business Software Alliance said it respected the Parliament's decision: “Although we would have welcomed a harmonisation of laws throughout Europe, at least the intellectual property protection that innovators had yesterday will remain the same tomorrow – and that is critical for European competitiveness,” BSA Director Francisco Mingorance said: "This is a wise decision that has helped industry to avoid legislation that could have narrowed the scope of patent legislation in Europe."

Mark MacGann, Director General of EICTA, the European Information & Communications Technology Industry Association, used exactly the same wording: "This is a wise decision that has helped industry to avoid legislation that could have narrowed the scope of patent legislation in Europe."

Jim Murray, Director with BEUC, the European Consumer's Organisation said: "Software is already protected by copyright and should not be protected by patents. We regret that the Parliament did not use its legislative power to ensure this fundamental principle."

UEAPME Secretary General Hans-Werner Müller said: "The Commission missed an opportunity to bring forward a new and more balanced proposal after the request by the European Parliament in February. Subsequent attempts by the rapporteur to amend the Council position and remove software from the scope of the directive were hampered by the intense large industry lobby and this is to be regretted." The official with the European Association of Craft, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises added: "Rejecting the directive is a better outcome for small businesses than agreeing to a text that would allow the patenting of software, which the proposal as it stood would have done.” 

FFII, at the helm of the grass-roots movement lobbying against the directive, said: "This is a great victory for those who have campaigned to ensure that European innovation and competitiveness is protected from monopolisation of software functionalities and business methods. It marks the end of an attempt by the European Commission and governmental patent officials to impose detrimental and legally questionable practices of the European Patent Office (EPO) on the member states. However, the problems created by these practices remain unsolved. FFII believes that the Parliament's work, in particular the 21 cross-party compromise amendments, can provide a good basis on which future solutions, both at the national and European level, can build."

Alain Pompidou, president of the European Patent Office, insisted: "As with all inventions, computer- implemented inventions are only patentable if they have technical character, are new and involve an inventive technical contribution to the prior art. Moreover, the EPO does not grant 'software patents'. (...) In this respect, the practice of the EPO differs significantly from that of the United States Patent & Trademark Office."

Prochaines étapes : 

While the Commission's DG Internal Market spokesman Oliver Drewes said immediately after the vote Commissioner Charlie McCreevy would not come forward with another proposal on computer patents, another Commission spokesperson was quoted as having said that the Commission would do so only if explicitly asked by the Parliament. 

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