Open letter by APRIL, End Software Patents and FFII to the Members of the 
European Parliament:

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Dear Member of the European Parliament,

We, as nonprofit organizations acting in the field of patent policy,
are concerned about the fast-tracking of the proposal for enhanced
cooperation on the unitary patent (NLE/2010/0384), which was voted in
JURI commission on January 27th. Given that the Court of Justice
(CJEU) will soon publish its opinion on the legality of a proposed
jurisdiction governing the settlement of litigation related to the
unitary patent and given that this proposal involves transferring
legislative power from the EP to the European Patent Office (EPO) [1],
we believe it would be sensible to wait for the CJEU's opinion so that
there can be an informed debate before deciding this important issue.

The current proposal for a unitary patent [2] requires a unified
jurisdiction with a central court. According to the Commission, the
current proposal is similar to the European and EU Patent Court
(EEUPC) proposal. The CJEU is reviewing the EEUPC proposal but has not
yet released its opinion regarding compliance with the EU Treaties.
This opinion is far from a formality: the Advocates General of the
CJEU were highly critical of the project and deemed it incompatible
with the EU Treaties [3], because the new patent court rulings would
have a direct impact on EU law without any control from EU
institutions.

Further, the current proposal involves delegating the entire
pre-granting procedure for the unitary patent to the EPO, whose
patent-granting excesses have been denounced repeatedly. Existing
outside of the EU, the EPO already has very little oversight. The main
democratic control that exists is that the EP still has the competence
to legislate. The EPO's own Enlarged Board of Appeal acknowledged the
need for a real legislative body in the patent system in an opinion
published in May 2010 on the topic of software patents, saying that
/"When judiciary-driven legal development meets its limits, it is time
for the legislator to take over"/ [4]. When the CJEU's opinion is
published, it may contain useful suggestions for how to add the
necessary oversight for such a system.

We respectfully request that the European Parliament postpone the vote
regarding enhanced cooperation until publication of the CJEU's
opinion.

** Signatories **

Tangui Morlier, April (President)
 +33 1 78 76 92 82, [email protected]
Ciaran O'Riordan, End Software Patents (Executive Director)
 +32 487 64 17 54, [email protected]
Benjamin Henrion, FFII (President)
 +32 484 56 61 09, [email protected]

** Links **

[1] See for instance the open letter to MEPs sent by the Staff Union
of the European Patent Office on
http://www.suepo.org/public/news/su10050cl.pdf

[2] This enhanced cooperation will be implemented by a regulation on a
unitary patent, which will cover all participating Member States, as
opposed to  the current European Patent, governed by the European
Patent Office (EPO) which is actually a bunch of various designated
national patents.

[3] More information can be found on
http://www.ipeg.eu/blog/wp-content/uploads/Advocates-General-Opinion-1-09.pdf.

[4] This decision can be found on
http://documents.epo.org/projects/babylon/eponet.nsf/0/DC6171F182D8B65AC125772100426656/$File/G3_08_en.pdf.

** About April **

Founded in 1996, April is the main French advocacy association devoted
to promote and protect Free/Libre Software. With its 5476 members
(5004 individuals, 472 businesses, associations and organizations),
April is a pioneer of Free Software in France. Since 1996, it is a
major player in the democratization and the spread of free software
and open standards to the general public, professionals and
institutions in the French-speaking world. It also acts as a watchdog
on digital freedoms, warning the public about the dangers of private
interests keeping an exclusive stranglehold on information and
knowledge.
April is a registered interest representative (ID: 30399252478-91) in
the EU.
http://www.april.org/

** About End Software Patents **

Since 2008, End Software Patents (ESP) works to eliminate patents
which prevent the development or distribution of software.  ESP
participates in government consultations and court cases, and provides
information resources to enable local citizens to participate
effectively in these processes. For more information on participating
in the project, or to access its knowledge base, please visit its
website at:
http://endsoftwarepatents.org/

** About FFII **

The FFII is a not-for-profit association registered in twenty European
countries, dedicated to the development of information goods for the
public benefit, based on copyright, free competition, open standards.
More than 1000 members, 3,500 companies and 100,000 supporters have
entrusted the FFII to act as their voice in public policy questions
concerning exclusion rights in data processing.
http://www.ffii.org

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