In
United States patent law, a '''
Beauregard claim'
is a claim to a computer program written in the form of a claim to an article of manufacture: a computer-readable medium on which are encoded, typically, instructions for carrying out a process. This type of claim is named after the 1995 decision In re Beauregard
. The computer-readable medium that these claims contemplate is typically a floppy disk or CD-ROM, which is why this type of claim is sometimes called a "floppy disk" claim. In the past claims to pure instructions were generally considered not patentable because they were viewed as "printed matter," that is, like a set of instructions written down on paper. However, in In re Beauregard
the Federal Circuit vacated for reconsideration in the PTO the patent-eligibility of a claim to a computer program encoded in a floppy disk, regarded as an article of manufacture. Consequently, such computer-readable media claims are commonly referred to as Beauregard'' claims. When first used in the mid-1990s,
Beauregard claims held an uncertain status, as long-standing doctrine held that media that contained merely "non-functional" data (i.e., data that did not interact with the substrate on which it was printed) could not be patented. This was the "printed matter" doctrine which ruled that no "invention" that primarily constituted printed words on a page or other information, as such, could be patented. The case from which this claim style derives its name,
In re Beauregard (1995), involved a dispute between a patent applicant who claimed an invention in this fashion, and the PTO, which rejected it under this rationale. The appellate court (the
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit) accepted the applicant's appeal - but chose to remand for reconsideration (rather than affirmatively ruling on it) when the Commissioner of Patents essentially conceded and abandoned the agency's earlier position. Thus, the courts have not expressly ruled on the acceptability of the
Beauregard claim style, but its legal status was for a time accepted. However, although time has rendered the issue essentially moot with regard to conventional media, such claims were originally and perhaps still can be more widely applied. The particular inventions to which
Beauregard-style claims were originally directed—i.e., programs encoded on tangible computer-readable media (CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs, etc.)—are no longer as important commercially, because software deployment is rapidly shifting from tangible computer-readable media to network-transfer distribution (Internet delivery). Thus,
Beauregard-style claims are now less commonly drafted and prosecuted. However, electronic distribution was practiced even during the time when the
Beauregard case was decided and patent drafters therefore soon tailored their claimed "computer readable medium" to encompass more than just floppy disks, ROMs, or other stable storage media, by extending the concept to information encoded on a carrier wave (such as radio) or transmitted over the Internet. Two important developments have occurred since the mid and late 1990s, which have impacted the form or viability of
Beauregard claims. First, in
In re Nuijten, the Federal Circuit held that signals were not patent eligible, because their ephemeral nature kept them from falling within the statutory categories of 35 U.S.C. § 101, such as articles of manufacture. Practice accordingly evolved to recite
Beauregard claim matter as being stored on "non-transitory" computer-readable media. Second, the decisions of the Supreme Court leading up to
Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank International appeared to exclude what amounted to a patent on information from the patent system. In
CyberSource Corp. v. Retail Decisions Inc., the Federal Circuit first held a method for detecting credit card fraud patent ineligible and then held a corresponding
Beauregard claim similarly patent ineligible because it too simply claimed a "mere manipulation or reorganization of data." After the
Cybersource decision, the Supreme Court's decision in the
Alice case made the status of some
Beauregard claims even more uncertain. If the underlying method claim is not patent-eligible, recasting the claim in
Beauregard format will not improve its patent eligibility. Claims of this type have been allowed by the European Patent Office (EPO). However, a more general claim form of "a computer program for instructing a computer to perform the method of [allowable method claim]" is allowed, and no specific medium needs to be specified. The UK Patent Office (aka IPO) began to allow computer program claims following this revised EPO practice, but then began to refuse them in 2006 after the decision of Aerotel/Macrossan. The UK High Court overruled this practice by decision, so that now they are again allowable in the UK as well, as they have been continuously at the EPO. == Exhausted combination ==