Alice Corporation owned several U.S. patents claiming a computerized scheme for mitigating "settlement risk" in financial transactions by using a third-party intermediary (a trusted third party) to ensure both sides of a trade are performed. The representative claims recited steps such as creating and maintaining shadow credit and debit records for transacting parties, obtaining start-of-day balances, adjusting those shadow records as transactions were entered, and at the end of the day issuing instructions to exchange obligations only if sufficient resources were available. The claims were drafted in multiple forms: (1) method claims, (2) computer system claims configured to carry out the method, and (3) computer-readable medium claims containing program code to implement the method. CLS Bank, a financial services firm that operates a real-time gross settlement system, sought a declaratory judgment that Alice's claims were invalid, unenforceable, and not infringed. The district court held all asserted claims ineligible under § 101 as drawn to an abstract idea implemented on a generic computer. A divided Federal Circuit panel initially reversed, but on rehearing en banc the court issued fractured opinions with no controlling rationale and affirmed the district court's judgment. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve the proper analysis for determining patent eligibility of computer-implemented claims.
Are claims that implement intermediated settlement on a generic computer—whether framed as methods, systems, or computer-readable media—patent-eligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101, or are they directed to an abstract idea without an inventive concept?
Under § 101, laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are not patentable. Courts apply a two-step framework: (1) determine whether the claims are directed to a patent-ineligible concept (e.g., an abstract idea); and, if so, (2) examine the claim elements—individually and as an ordered combination—to determine whether they contain an "inventive concept" that transforms the nature of the claim into a patent-eligible application. Mere implementation of an abstract idea on a generic computer, or invocation of well-understood, routine, and conventional activities, is insufficient. Claim drafting form (method, system, or medium) cannot supply eligibility where the substance is the same abstract idea executed on generic technology.
No. The claims are ineligible under § 101. They are directed to the abstract idea of intermediated settlement, and the claim elements—individually and in combination—add nothing more than generic computer implementation, which does not supply the requisite inventive concept. This conclusion applies equally to the method, system, and computer-readable medium claims.
Step One—Abstract Idea: The Court, per Justice Thomas, concluded that Alice's claims are directed to intermediated settlement, a fundamental economic practice long prevalent in commerce. As in Bilski (where hedging was deemed abstract), the concept of using a third-party intermediary to mitigate counterparty risk is a basic organizing principle of economic activity. Drafting that concept in computer-implemented terms does not alter its abstractness. Step Two—Inventive Concept: The Court then assessed whether the claims transformed the abstract idea into a patent-eligible application. The method claims merely required generic computer functions—creating and maintaining shadow records, obtaining and reconciling balances, authorizing transactions, and issuing end-of-day settlement instructions—performed by conventional components. Such steps are well-understood, routine, and conventional in the context of electronic data processing and thus do not amount to an inventive concept. The Court contrasted Diamond v. Diehr, where claims improved a technological process (rubber curing) by integrating a mathematical formula into an industrial method; by contrast, Alice's claims simply instructed a computer to apply an abstract idea without any technological improvement to the computer or another technical field. Claim Form Irrelevant: The system and computer-readable medium claims were "no different in substance" from the method claims. Merely reciting generic hardware (e.g., a data processing system, communications controller) configured to perform the same abstract steps cannot supply eligibility. The Court rejected the notion that claim drafting stratagems could confer patentability where the underlying focus remains an abstract idea implemented on generic computers. Precedent and Policy: Relying on Mayo's two-step framework and earlier cases (Gottschalk v. Benson; Parker v. Flook; Bilski v. Kappos), the Court emphasized that monopolizing basic building blocks of human ingenuity risks impeding innovation. The eligibility inquiry serves as a gatekeeping function distinct from novelty and nonobviousness. Justice Sotomayor, joined by Justices Ginsburg and Breyer, concurred, expressing the view that business method patents are not patentable under § 101 more generally.
Alice crystallized the two-step eligibility test and made clear that automating a longstanding economic practice on a generic computer is not enough. In its wake, courts frequently decide § 101 issues at the pleading or summary judgment stage, and many software and business method claims have been invalidated for lack of an inventive concept. At the same time, subsequent Federal Circuit decisions have explained that software claims can be eligible when directed to specific improvements in computer functionality or another technology (e.g., claims that change how a computer operates, not merely what it does). For students, Alice is indispensable for understanding the boundary between abstract ideas and patent-eligible applications, the practical importance of claim drafting that emphasizes technological improvements, and the strategic use of § 101 in litigation.
Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank crystallized the Supreme Court's modern approach to patent eligibility, holding that claims implementing a fundamental economic practice on a generic computer do not qualify as patentable subject matter. By unifying earlier strands from Benson, Flook, Diehr, Bilski, and Mayo into a structured two-step framework, the Court provided a doctrinal lens through which to examine software and business method claims.