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1. Having technical character is an implicit requirement of the
EPC to be met by an invention in order to be an invention within
the meaning of Article 52(1)EPC. (following decisions T 1173/97
and T 935/97)
2. Methods only involving economic concepts and practices of
doing business are not inventions within the meaning of Article
52(1) EPC. A feature of a method which concerns the use of
technical means for a purely non-technical purpose and/or for
processing purely non-technical information does not necessarily
confer a technical character to such a method.
3. An apparatus constituting a physical entity or concrete
product, suitable for performing or supporting an economic
activity, is an invention within the meaning of Article 52(1)
EPC.
4. There is no basis in the EPC for distinguishing between "new
features" of an invention and features of that invention which
are known from the prior art when examining whether the
invention concerned may be considered to be an invention within
the meaning of Article 52(1) EPC. Thus there is no basis in the
EPC for applying this so-called contribution approach for this
purpose. (following decisions T 1173/97 and T 935/97)
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