March 23, 2012
To some stakeholders, the Supreme Court’s Mayo ruling represents a sea of change. To others, the Court finally provided clarity on the Section 101 analysis. Finnegan partner Erika H. Arner stated, “Unfortunately I think this framework will not help clarify the Section 101 analysis. I think lower courts and the patent office will struggle with the subjective inquiry of what is ‘enough’ to render a claim patentable.” Ms. Arner also saw “a shift in the Court’s thinking.” She said, “Rather than emphasizing, as it usually does, that Congress intended the scope of patent protection to be as broad as possible, the Mayo Court focuses on the judge-made exclusions from patentable subject matter, reasoning that narrower patent protection may better promote innovation. This apparent shift by the full Court may signal the need for clarification by Congress.”
Commentary
May 20, 2026
Award/Ranking
Finnegan Partner Antje Brambrink Shortlisted for Women in Business Law EMEA Award
May 13, 2026
Press Release
Finnegan Secures Decisive ITC Victory for Innoscience in Final Determination
May 11, 2026
Award/Ranking
Associates Rank Finnegan “Best of the Best” in BTI Associate Satisfaction Survey
May 7, 2026
Announcement
Finnegan Partner Ningling Wang Becomes President of Licensing Executives Society International
May 4, 2026
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