Bonum Certa Men Certa

António Campinos is Unable to Recruit Patent Examiners, Europe's Largest Patent Office in State of Crisis

Summary: Just as EPO staff has warned for years, the EPO is not capable of fulfilling its mission and instead it's just granting low-quality patents that even prolific recipients aren't happy about

HAVING just published some infographics about the EPO's inability to recruit -- an ongoing crisis that started under Benoît Battistelli and persists under António Campinos -- let's look at a new publication from EPO staff. It's dated 5 days ago.



"The predictions are becoming reality and true observations (or facts) aren't possible to cover up."Not only are examiners being pressured to allow European software patents; they're pressured to help fake "production" in general. As a result, the presumed validity of European Patents suffers and Europe as a whole will suffer.

Here's the full publication as HTML/plain text/GemText:

Zentraler Personalausschuss Central Staff Committee Le Comité Central du Personnel

Munich,17/02/2023 sc23020cp

Depletion of the Workforce

Failure to recruit under the current administration



Dear Colleagues,

Despite it only being February, we are already facing a surge of the ever-present production pressure. The message from above is that we are behind target, and must all dig deep to make up the deficit. Many colleagues are having the urgency pressed upon them from their line managers, with the message that we just aren’t individually doing enough.

But what is the root cause of this problem? Is it that we are all idle workers with free time in the work day where we can pick up the pace? Or is there another reason? This paper looks at how the workforce numbers have developed over recent years, and further visualises the Offices plans for future recruitment. The findings unfortunately do not bring comfort – we are far from experiencing the worst of the production pressure.

The dwindling examiner workforce The graph below shows how the patent applications have risen since 2012, and further shows the prediction of the Office for the coming years. In stark contrast to this trend is the decrease in the number of examiners, since the peak in 2017. The plan of the Office for future recruitment of examiners is also indicated, illustrating that not only do they currently see no issue with these opposing trends, but that they intend to continue in this direction. This means only one thing for the examiners that remain – more pressure to produce, and less time to dedicate to each file. This has also not gone unnoticed outside of the Office. The IPQC has sent a letter to the EPO highlighting their concerns regarding the lack of time allotted to examiners for search and examination and the deteriorating quality.

Examiners plan



Comparing the figures in the graph for 2022 with 2012, it can be seen that the number of examiners is practically equivalent, but the number of incoming patent applications has risen by 30%. The Office often touts the improvements in the IT tools as a driving factor of the increase in “efficiency”. However, from the perspective of the users, the replacement IT tools are experienced as merely a new user interface that we must become familiar with immediately, with similar functionality as the old ones. They certainly do not enable us to think quicker so that we can read and analyse documentation any faster than before.

No better for formality officers The graph below shows the evolution of the number of formality officers from 2018 (prior data is not comparable due to a reorganisation). The situation is certainly no better for these colleagues. In fact, there has been no recruitment at all of formality officers since 2019. In this area, the numbers have fallen rapidly, around 12% since 2018, just 4 years. The plan for 2023 is also for zero recruitment, with some potential for recruitment thereafter. However, the planning still foresees a reduction in formality officers for every single year until 2027.

EPO FO plan



Low recruitment – choice or consequence? It is not clear whether the stark lack of recruitment is solely due to a choice of the current management, or whether it is also impacted by the difficulty to recruit considering the changes to our employment conditions, particularly the 2018 introduction of fixed-term contracts for all new staff. This job insecurity, which is imposed upon recruits for 10 long years for a role that is a lifetime commitment, undoubtedly impairs the EPOs ability to recruit highly qualified scientists and engineers.

The Office do hint at the difficulties they are facing, in that they have turned to headhunting in response to the current highly competitive job market. Halting recruitment completely for more than two years, and then hiring fewer examiners than leavers for a prolonged period raises questions as to whether the administrations’ description of it being a “cautious planning approach” and a “prudent recruitment policy” are really appropriate. This decision to completely freeze recruitment in more favourable times brings to mind the idiom “make hay while the sun shines”, but it seems we’ve waited until it’s raining. The situation of the aging population at the Office, in that the average age of staff has risen from 45 in 2015 to almost 50 in 2021, raises even more concerns about the recruitment policy. Because of our unbalanced age pyramid, the number of expected retirements rise rapidly year on year, yet we depend upon experienced colleagues to train the new recruits.




What should we do about it? What should we do when faced with mounting pressure from our line managers to do more? One thing we certainly should not do is to work any more hours than contracted, a possibility that becomes all the more possible with the blurring of the physical boundaries between work and home. This is not a short-term issue that can be overcome in a few weeks or months of toil. This is a conscious decision of the administration to test the limits of the workforce by pushing towards a skeleton crew, and working under high pressure conditions for prolonged periods of time can lead to chronic stress. By (over-)achieving the goals set for us we simply push the bar higher. There must be a limit, and we have reached it, and should show that with our actions.

There is one simple answer to the Office being behind target and not managing to deal with incoming workload, and that is something that is not within our ability to fix – more recruitment. We should keep in mind the idea that “failure to prepare on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part”. It is not our job to fill the void that management planned for. But it is our job to collectively set boundaries of how much of our time, effort, and energy we are willing to give to the unsatiable requesters.

The Central Staff Committee


Credit is due; the staff union has warned about this for years. The predictions are becoming reality and true observations (or facts) aren't possible to cover up. Even some of the largest stakeholders complain.

Recent Techrights' Posts

Dr. Andy Farnell on Marketing Bad Things Like Slop Using FOMO (Fear of "Being Left Behind")
many of the same themes we often cover here
IBM Stock Compared to Bitcoin, Fake Articles About IBM Promote Myths About IBM
The stock moves based on false marketing
Oligarchs and States Always Attempted to Obstruct Efforts to Expose Their Corruption
We commend the administrator who consistently and adamantly defend the freedom of speech
 
IBM Red Hat Does Not Compete With Microsoft, It's a Microsoft Reseller
even if employees of Red Hat dislike and distrust Microsoft
Red Hat Layoffs, Even of "AI" Staff in India
This is how companies die
LLM Slop Isn't Replacing Online News, It's Just a Pest That's Gradually Going Away as Money for Slop Runs Out
Slop likes to talk about itself (like some kind of 'web-cancer')
Not Journalism: Almost 80% of the 'Articles' We Saw About Torvalds and 'Vibe Coding' Are LLM Slop (Sometimes Slop Images)
The real issue is, Torvalds who created Git as a solution to proprietary prison is entertaining Microsoft's own proprietary prison
EPO People Power - Part XXXIII - Interest From Some European Media, For a Change
Without it, we'll become another Russian Federation
Just Another Reminder That Microsoft Didn't Deny Mass Layoffs
Remember that Microsoft never denied this
GNU/Linux Measured at 6% in Réunion This Year
Population sizes like a million people are nothing to sneeze at
Bluewashing Continues, Red Hat Onboarding Interns in Low-Paid Regions
It's the end of the second Monday of 2026
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Monday, January 12, 2026
IRC logs for Monday, January 12, 2026
Gemini Links 13/01/2026: ScottoRang and Outage
Links for the day
GNU/Linux Exceeding 6% in Cape Verde
Windows is measured as down sharply
When It Comes to Health, Slop is a Flop and It Kills People
Chatbots will mostly die after many people die due to them
2026 Has Begun Well for GNU/Linux Users (and for Us)
A lot of the anti-Linux FUD we got accustomed to seeing some years ago became scarce
Links 12/01/2026: Vista 11 Exodus and Famicom/NES Game
Links for the day
Links 12/01/2026: Twitter (X) Being Blocked in More Countries, PTAB Besieged by Cheeto Appointees (Bad Patents Getting Through)
Links for the day
Links 12/01/2026: Brussels Plotting Exit From GAFAM (US), Carole Cadwalladr Explains "Peter Thiel's New Model Army"
Links for the day
Scheduled Maintenance Between 15th of January and Days to Follow, Free Software Foundation (FSF) Looking to Add 43 More Members by 16th of January
People who value Software Freedom should consider joining to support the FSF
Bracing for Microsoft Layoffs, Tired of Microsoft Lies, Microsoft Staff Wants Transparency, Not Face-Saving Coverup From Frank Shaw
totally made up stock price
GNU/Linux Estimated at Around 5% in Montserrat
another country where the "share" of GNU/Linux is now measured at 5%
GNU/Linux Exceeding 5% in Guadeloupe According to statCounter
GNU/Linux "share" estimates in Guadeloupe
Dr. Richard Stallman @ Georgia Tech Next Week
More Than One Week From Now
EPO People Power - Part XXXII - Little Hope That European Press Will Attempt to Expose Drug Abuse in Europe's Second-Largest Organisation
What does this tell us about the press in Europe?
Three most controversial Australian authors linked to St Paul's, Coburg
Reprinted with permission from Daniel Pocock
Links 11/01/2026: Data Breaches and Recent (Early 2026) Political Developments
Links for the day
Gemini Links 12/01/2026: Insomniacs After School and Boycotting Amazon
Links for the day
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Sunday, January 11, 2026
IRC logs for Sunday, January 11, 2026
Brett Wilson LLP 'Dropping' the LLP, Is This Rebranding?
It's not a coincidence or a glitch, there was a formal change somewhere in the system
Can IBM Still Control the Narrative?
We'll see what comes out through the grapevine later this week
IBM SkillsBuild as Microsoft Training, Microsoft Vendor Lock-in, Microsoft Surveillance
Microsoft benefits from IBM's "training"
EPO People Power - Part XXXI - Almost No Crime is Possible Without Enablers and Complicit Colleagues
By the middle of January 2026 we'll have taken things up another gear
Aruba's GNU/Linux Adoption Seems to Have Reach All-Time High This Year
ChromeOS rose by a lot too
After the LLM Slop Frenzy...
In every way, slop is no better than spam
Links 11/01/2026: 'Nothing to Lose' in Iran and Kyiv Restores Electricity
Links for the day
Gemini Links 11/01/2026: "Late To The Party" and "Thinking About Software Licences"
Links for the day
Links 11/01/2026: Bob Weir and Stewart Cheifet Perish
Links for the day
Higher Adoption Rates of GNU/Linux in Cyprus in Recent Years
there are some Cypriots who are championing Free software
Microsoft's linkedin.com is Shrinking, Expect LinkedIn Layoffs to Carry on in 2026
Expect the mass layoffs and office closures to carry on there, maybe as early as next week
Gemini Links 11/01/2026: Scott Morgan and 'The Unix Way'
Links for the day
IBM to Be 'Reorganised'
The rich look for ways to 'monetise' what's left IBM
Dr. Andy Farnell Explains Why He'll Stop Sending E-mail to Microsoft and Gmail Users
The article is long and well worth reading
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Saturday, January 10, 2026
IRC logs for Saturday, January 10, 2026