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Patenting the payments system--New
developments in patent law may have
dramatic impact on payments players
October 13, 2009
A seemingly obscure point of interpretation of U.S. patent law could have
meaningful impact on innovation in the payments market. This interpretation could
affect new players and existing players alike and deserves attention. Investments in
innovative new payments technologies always carry risks. Investments can fail if the
business model does not come to fruition. Poor understanding of vulnerabilities in
new technology could open up new opportunities to fraudsters or simply could alter
risks for parties to the transaction or providers of the transaction service itself.
However, those same investments in payments innovation could also serve to
strengthen the defenses to various risks, thereby improving the overall picture for
all.
On November 9, 2009, the Supreme Court will hear the Bilski case, which draws
into question the viability of business method patents. This is a subcategory of the
range of patents that have been issued in recent years for payments-related
innovations described in a previous Portals and Rails post. In particular, Bilski will
address the issue of whether U.S. patent law requires that the subject matter of
patents be reflective of machines or some physical transformation of matter.
Included in this issue is a question of whether abstract ideas that mention
computers as a means to reduce the idea to practice are patentable as well. This
case could affect the calculus for making new payments technology investments
overall.
Some feel that a ruling by the Supreme Court that limits patentable subject matter
to exclude business methods will negatively affect a wide array of innovations,
including those for the manipulation of information, whether or not implemented
by computer. Others, including some from the financial services industry, feel that
business method patents should be limited or eliminated and that progress and
innovation will in fact be strengthened as there will be less threat of suit by those
who obtain monopoly patent rights on "abstract ideas."
Payments innovations are firmly ensconced as part of the "knowledge economy." In
the payments context, as reported in this blog and elsewhere, there are a dynamic
array of technology and business model developments and an ongoing stream of
new patents and patent applications. Just think of the array of new ways that
payments can be accomplished using the Internet in the past 10 years or so. Many
of these existing and future innovations may be affected by the Bilski decision one
way or the other.
Patents have been seen as a key tool to reward financial services innovations and as
a means for new entry into various market segments. Patents also serve to disclose
publicly the nature of the invention, which helps to drive other, follow-on
innovations. Over the long term, limiting patent protection for business methods
could alter the reward incentive structure for payment innovations. Or it could

remove an impediment to product investments in payments as there is less threat of
suit, which may allow for more rapid deployment of innovative new products and
services.
The Supreme Court's decision in Bilski could have a dramatic impact on the
payments marketplace as competitors may have to adjust their sights in terms of
how they protect and deploy their innovations. New players in the marketplace may
find it more difficult to enter the payments markets while existing players may or
may not have their market positions strengthened.
For now, the jury is out, so to speak. To get a deeper sense of the issues being
considered, see the related briefs filed with the Supreme Court.
By Clifford S. Stanford, assistant vice president and director of the Retail
Payments Risk Forum at the Atlanta Fed
• October 13, 2009 in
◦ fintech
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