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4 Rev. Econ. Rsch. on Copyright Issues 3 (2007)

handle is hein.journals/rvwoecrh4 and id is 1 raw text is: 










      Review of Economic Research on Copyright Issues, 2007, vol. 4(1), pp. 3-14




 PATENT AND/OR COPYRIGHT FOR SOFTWARE: WHAT HAS
                           BEEN DONE SO FAR?


                                 RICHARD   WATT


        ABSTRACT.  The particular case of software seems to have stretched the patent-
        copyright divide to the point of breakage. Inspite of being traditionally ex-
        cluded from patent, software is an obvious case of a single creation that em-
        bodies both expression and innovation, and so strong arguments exist for
        software to be both copyrightable and patentable material. The legal profes-
        sion has looked carefully at the patentability of software over the past 15 years
        or so, both from a fully legal perspective, and using economic-type arguments.
        But we are still waiting for the economics profession per s6 to set to work on
        this issue. Here, I shall go through some of the most well known arguments sur-
        rounding the protection of software, and then put forward a personal opinion
        as to what theoretical economists are likely to add, if and when they include
        this important question on their research agendas.




                                1. INTRODUCTION

        It is crystal clear that software is entitled to both copyright and
        patent protection. It should also be crystal clear that these forms
        of protection should not be mutually exclusive. There is no justifi-
        cation whatsoever  in the Constitution, the federal statutes, or the
        case law to justify a denial of joint patent and copyright protection
        for software. (Einhorn, 1990 p. 278)
   The  above quote  is now  more than  15 years  old, and in spite of that, many
parts of the world are still debating whether or not software protection should or
should not be extended from  copyright to include patent as well. Together with this
quandrum,   software is now also increasingly released under open  source licenses,
a mechanism   that seems to fly in the face of both traditional forms of intellectual
property protection.
   Ever since it was first conceived formally and embodied  into legal doctrine, in-
tellectual property has been  divided into two  principal branches  - patents and
copyrights. Copyrights  protect expression of ideas, and patents protect innovative
ideas themselves.  While  initially these two categories were quite likely sufficient
to provide an  all encompassing and  mutually  exclusive description of all possible
creations of the mind, it is becoming increasingly clear that this is no longer true.
It has been repeatedly noted by legal scholars that there exist many cases of intel-
lectual creations that require new sui generis regimes (see, for example, Reichman
1994), and it is also clear that there are creations that can satisfy the basic defini-
tions of both copyright and patent. Most notably, the case of computer software has
been repeatedly  discussed; see for example Samuleson  et al. 1994), since software
seems  to provide the most  important example   of a creation with clear aspects of
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