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Federal Circuit: Novelty in Implementation of an Abstract Idea Insufficient to Overcome Alice

by Dennis Crouch

The key language from the Federal Circuit's most recent pronouncement in  Ultramercial v. Hulu (Fed. Cir. 2014) is as follows:

We do not agree with Ultramercial that the addition of merely novel or non-routine components to the claimed idea necessarily turns an abstraction into something concrete. In any event, any novelty in implementation of the [abstract] idea is a factor to be considered only in the second step of the Alice analysis. . . . [And, the Internet] is a ubiquitous information-transmitting medium, not a novel machine. And adding a computer to otherwise conventional steps does not make an invention patent-eligible. Any transformation from the use of computers or the transfer of content between computers is merely what computers do and does not change the analysis.


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