Guest Post by Ryan Abbott: Reflections on Recentive v. Fox: To Do or not To Do it with AI?

By Ryan Abbott. Professor Abbott, MD, JD, MTOM, PhD, is Professor of Law and Health Sciences at the University of Surrey School of Law, Adjunct Associate Professor of Medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, partner at Brown, Neri, Smith & Khan, LLP, and a mediator and arbitrator with JAMS, Inc.

Recently, the Federal Circuit handed down its decision in Recentive v. Fox which the Court stated presented a question of first impression: “whether claims that do no more than apply existing methods of machine learning to a new data environment are patent eligible.” Recentive Analytics, Inc. v. Fox Corp., 134 F.4th 1205 (Fed. Cir. 2025). As the framing of the question suggests, the Court answered in the negative, confirming that patents that simply take an abstract idea and “do it with AI” are not statutory subject matter.

Since this decision, questions have come up about what this might mean for the patenting of inventions relating to artificial intelligence (AI) in the United States, and by extension, America’s leadership in AI development. Even before this case, the argument has been made that getting patents on AI innovations is difficult or impossible under the current law, and therefore patent eligibility reform is needed. These are important questions. As I have argued for years in my work on the Artificial Inventor Project, and as I testified on in Congress, AI technology is playing a rapidly growing role in the innovation process. We want to make sure the patent system is promoting the development and use of AI so that it can be used to generate socially valuable innovation (and that there are no legal concerns when that happens, including related to inventorship).

My view is that current patent eligibility law as it pertains to abstract ideas best supports the AI development and innovation that we need in the United States. The current approach permits the patenting of all aspects of AI technology – from the development and training of machine learning models to the applications of those models. Recentive gave us a glimpse into how patent eligibility law applies at one end of the AI patenting spectrum, and it reached the right conclusion.

Before delving into Recentive, it is helpful to understand the application of patent eligibility law in a traditional software patenting context. Eligibility analysis relies on the two-step Alice/Mayo test, which first determines whether claims are directed to judicial exceptions to eligible matter, namely abstract ideas, laws of nature, or natural phenomena. Alice Corporation v. CLS Bank International, 573 U.S. 208 (2014); Mayo Collab. Servs. v. Prometheus Lab’ys, Inc., 566 U.S. 66 (2012). If claims are directed to a judicial exception then to be patent eligible they must recite additional elements that amount to “significantly more” than the judicial exception. Mayo, 566 U.S. at 72-73. The Supreme Court has described the second part of the test as the search for an “inventive concept”. See MPEP § 2106. This is the Supreme Court’s way of ensuring that a true, technological invention lies at the heart of the patent and that it isn’t just an abstract idea dressed up to look like a real invention.

For more than a decade, the Alice/Mayo two-part test has been the exclusive test for software patent eligibility analysis. It balances patent incentives with the need to allow the public to utilize “the basic tools of scientific and technical work.” Alice Corp., 573 U.S. at 216. Patents on such tools could do more harm than good and “might tend to impede innovation more than it would tend to promote it.” Id. Claims are not ineligible simply because they involve judicial exceptions, the applications of such concepts remain protectable. Indeed, the Federal Circuit has subsequently clarified that claims directed to software and improvements in computer-related technologies are not inherently abstract. See, e.g., Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft Corp., 822 F.3d 1327, 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see also Visual Memory LLC v. NVIDIA Corp., 867 F.3d 1253, 1258 (Fed. Cir. 2017). Judicial exceptions have existed for more than 150 years, and a significant amount of case law has now applied Alice/Mayo in the context of software patents.

The Federal Circuit has tended to require patent applications to describe specific improvements over the prior art that improve a process, whether software- or hardware-based, rather than merely performing an existing process on a computer. This has allowed a wide range of computer-implemented claims to be found patent-eligible. See, e.g., McRO Inc. v. Bandai Namco Games America Inc., 837 F. 3d 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2016); Amdocs (Israel) Ltd. v. Openet Telecom Inc., 841 F. 3d 1288 (Fed. Cir. 2016); Ancora Technologies Inc. v. HTC America Inc., 908 F. 3d 1343 (Fed. Cir. 2018). This standard thus encourages research and development into improvements in computer processes, while preventing applicants from broadly tying up the use of computers to perform existing processes and relying on functional claiming (e.g., filtering content on a computer, unless an improvement over the prior art for filtering content; parsing, editing, sorting, and comparing data, absent a specific inventive method for carrying out these functions). See BASCOM Glob. Internet Servs., Inc. v. AT&T Mobility LLC, 827 F.3d 1341, 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see Berkheimer v. HP Inc., 881 F.3d 1360, 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2018).

With the foundation of applying patent eligibility law to traditional software patents, we can more fully understand the Federal Circuit’s assessment of patent eligibility in an AI context in Recentive. This case concerned the eligibility of using machine learning, a subset of AI, to generate network maps and schedules for television broadcasts and live events. Recentive was appealing the district court’s ruling that its patents were directed to ineligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. §101. The Federal Circuit affirmed the lower court on the basis that the patents lacked an inventive concept and were directed to the abstract idea of using a generic machine learning technique in a particular environment.

Preparing network maps is a long-standing practice, if a sophisticated and niche one that has traditionally been performed by human beings. Recentive characterized its patents as applying existing, generic AI approaches to this specific context. In other words, “do it with AI.”

This type of “do it with AI” claim is ineligible under the two-step Alice inquiry.  On the first step, the Court found that the claims were directed to the abstract idea of producing network maps and event schedules using known standard mathematical techniques. Recentive’s patent did not claim or describe how the machine learning technology resulted in a technological improvement. Instead, the patent was just about using AI to perform a task previously done by humans more quickly or efficiently without actually explaining how to accomplish that, which does not create eligibility. This is the same application of the Alice/Mayo test to traditional software patents.

On the second step, which looks at whether additional elements add an “inventive concept” that transforms an otherwise ineligible claim, the Court also found the patents failed. The patents only provided broad, functionally described common computing techniques and devices—again merely claiming an abstract idea.

While the Court framed Recentive as a question of first impression, the Federal Circuit has long held that software claims do not become eligible by limiting their application to a particular field or environment – eligibility does not result from taking an abstract idea and throwing in “do it on a computer” or “do it over the internet.” See, e.g., Intell. Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Bank (USA), 792 F.3d 1363, 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2015). Similarly, that applying an existing technology to a new database does not create eligibility.  See, e.g., SAP Am., Inc. v. InvestPic, LLC, 898 F.3d 1161, 1168 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Like the software patent cases that came before it, Recentive just applied AI to an existing framework.

While simply describing an abstract idea and adding “do it with AI” is not patentable (nor should it be), patent protection is available for all aspects of AI innovation. Practitioners have outlined best practices for drafting these patent applications, emphasizing the importance of providing sufficient detail and explaining the technical advantage of the claimed solution. https://www.fr.com/insights/thought-leadership/articles/ai-patent-eligibility-observations-and-lessons-for-the-us-and-china/ (“The key for applicants is to clearly show that their claim improves a technological process rather than merely uses technology to perform an existing process.”) https://www.troutman.com/insights/locke-lord-quickstudy-patenting-ai-inventions.html. (“Draft a strong patent application… Focus on technical aspects and algorithms… Provide experimental evidence and results…”). Of course, applicants must also ensure what is being claimed is commensurate with what was actually invented and not improperly tying up the basic tools of further scientific development. The USPTO’s most recent guidance on patent subject matter eligibility in 2024 provided some examples as well.  See, e.g., https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2024-AI-SMEUpdateExamples47-49.pdf.

Recent district court decisions applying Recentive have also upheld claim eligibility for AI-related claims. Aon Re, Inc. v. Zesty.AI, Inc., No. CV 25-201, 2025 WL 1938214 (D. Del. July 15, 2025) (“The claim thus implements machine-learning technology in a specific way to address a practical technical problem: how to accurately and quickly assess the physical characteristics and condition of a property from an aerial image using machine learning models.”); Nielsen Co. (US), LLC v. Hyphametrics, Inc., No. CV 23-136-GBW, 2025 WL 1672002 (D. Del. June 13, 2025) (Claimed method provides “an improvement to the technical field of image processing, and, in particular, to improving speed and reliability of detecting overlays in images, with reduced or eliminated human oversight… These claims contain structure because they, inter alia, recite the specific [neural] networks used to perform the detection”).

Though all aspects of AI can be patented under Alice – and our patent eligibility law aims to ensure that AI patents do not over-claim in a way that would harm further AI innovation and usage – AI has nonetheless become yet another argument in support of patent eligibility reform. Various changes have been proposed over the past decade to expand the scope of section 101. Most recently, Senator Thom Tillis re-introduced the Patent Eligibility Restoration Act (PERA) in the Senate. https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/1546/text. This Act would eliminate all judicial exceptions to patent eligibility, replacing them with explicit and narrow statutory exclusions: 1) a mathematical formula not integrated into a claimed invention; 2) a mental process performed solely in the human mind; 3) an unmodified human gene as it exists in the human body; 4) an unmodified natural material as it exists in nature; and 5) a process that is primarily economic, financial, business, social, cultural, or artistic in nature. Most relevant to the issue of AI patenting, and what would be patent-eligible if PERA were to become law, the bill includes an eligibility escape hatch. It states that “the claimed invention shall not be excluded from eligibility for a patent if the invention cannot practically be performed without the use of a machine or manufacture.” This would mean that any abstract ideas could be patented if implemented on a computer leveraging computational capabilities. Effectively all AI inventions “cannot practically be performed without the use of a [computer].” This means that under PERA, “do it with AI” patents like the one found to be ineligible in Recentive would be eligible.

As a result, PERA would be a significant shift for patent eligibility of computer-related patents, and one that would harm rather than help the development and use of AI. Problematically, by untethering patent eligibility for abstract ideas from the requirement that patents be about technological improvements, PERA would allow patents that harm the development and widespread usage of actual technology. This in turn is likely to result in more patent thickets which will make AI development increasingly difficult and expensive, it will give incumbents more leverage over startups, and it risks holdups from foreign adversaries abusing the patent system. This is precisely the type of approach that allowed a flood of “do it on a computer” and “do it on the internet” patents to harm software development and usage for years. It is not a standard that is likely to help the United States remain the world’s leader in AI development.      Nor is it a standard that will support innovators using AI as part of their development process.

And that is where our focus should lie: making sure our patent system is helping to incentivize AI technology development and usage in order to move the field forward. Patent eligibility has a pivotal gatekeeping role in the system, as the Federal Circuit correctly showed in Recentive. The line that has been drawn and applied in a software context for years is also the right one for AI.

The author represents that he is not being paid to take a position in this post. In addition to being an academic, the author is a practicing attorney and represents clients with interests on both sides of the post’s subject matter.

Have we Reached the Shenanigans Threshold?

by Dennis Crouch

When the Supreme Court in Cuozzo Speed Technologies v. Lee, 579 U.S. 261 (2016), barred judicial review of the USPTO's decisions to institute (or deny institution) of inter partes review, it left a small door ajar for agency "shenanigans."   This post asks whether USPTO Director John Squires recent decision in Interactive Communications International, Inc. v. Blackhawk Network Inc., IPR2024-00465 (Dir. Rev. Oct. 1, 2025), may be the case that finally gives "shenanigans" real content.

In Blackhawk, Director John Squires vacated a PTAB final written decision (FWD) that had already found all challenged claims unpatentable.  Ordinarily a director review decision would still be appealable to the Federal Circuit, but Dir. Squires took the case to the next step.  In addition to rejecting the PTAB opinion, Dir. Squires also terminated the proceeding and expressly declared that his order "does not constitute a final written decision under § 318(a)."  The maneuver left the petitioner without an appealable decision -- even though the case had already been fully litigated and decided on the merits.

This post focuses on the appealability problem raised by Blackhawk and situates it alongside the five pending mandamus petitions now before the Federal Circuit challenging the Trump Administration's expanding assertion of institutional control over IPR proceedings.  The pattern here is clear and undisputed that USPTO leadership is using the cloak of § 314(d)'s nonappealability to achieve policy ends. The question though is whether the aggressive approach crosses some yet-undefined line.  Blackhawk is in line with 2025’s broader posture: the Trump Administration has pushed presidential prerogative in many areas of national policy -  leveraging statutory gray zones that earlier administrations largely treated with self-restraint.  That new assertiveness forces Article III courts to step in and draw clearer outer bounds.


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Supreme Court: Still no Patent Cases

by Dennis Crouch

Following up on my September 29 post covering the patent and trademark cases at the Supreme Court's long conference, the Court released its order list on October 6, 2025, and the results are in.  All patent cases denied.

The Court denied certiorari in all four patent cases that were decided:

  • Purdue Pharma v. Accord Healthcare (No. 24-1132) - nexus requirements for objective indicia of non-obviousness
  • Lavery v. Pursuant Health (No. 24-1311) - post-expiration royalty payments under Brulotte and Kimble
  • R.J. Reynolds v. Altria (No. 25-158) - "built-in apportionment" exception to Garretson damages rules
  • USAA v. PNC Bank (No. 25-149) - APA review of PTAB IPR decisions (Justice Alito recused)

Two notable absences: MSN Pharmaceuticals v. Novartis (No. 25-225) The Entresto case focusing on failure to describe after-arising technology; and Gesture Technology v. Apple (Nos. 24-1280, 24-1281) PTAB jurisdiction over expired patents.  These cases were originally scheduled for the Long Conference, but were delayed by the Court's request for response the respondents.  Briefing is ongoing and we'll get a cert decision later this fall.


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A First Look at the USPTO’s FY2026 Examiner Performance Plan (PAP): What’s Changed and Why It Matters

The USPTO has quietly rolled out substantial changes to its examiner Performance Appraisal Plan (PAP) for FY2026.  PAP is the formal framework the USPTO uses to measure, evaluate, and rate patent examiners’ job performance. These changes are made easier because of last month's elimination of union rights of patent examiners (POPA) based upon their presidentially declared national security role.  However, this post is based upon discussions with examiners because the USPTO has not released documents regarding the plan.

A few changes stand out:


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Who Gets to Challenge USPTO Rules? Federal Circuit Says Big Tech Yes, Small Inventors No

by Dennis Crouch

In US Inventor, Inc. v. United States Patent and Trademark Office, No. 2024-1396 (Fed. Cir. Oct. 3, 2025), a group of inventor advocacy organizations petitioned the USPTO for rulemaking that would allow small entity patent owners to opt out of inter partes review and post-grant review proceedings.  The USPTO denied their petition and the orgs sued, led by US Inventor. Their lawsuit was dismissed by the district court and the appellate panel has affirmed - holding that the organizations lacked Article III standing because the alleged injury to their members was too speculative, requiring a chain of contingent events largely dependent on the independent actions of third parties.

US Inventor and National Small Business United had filed a rulemaking petition in August 2020 proposing amendments to 37 C.F.R. sections 42.108 and 42.208 that would prohibit institution of IPR or PGR proceedings if the patent owner objected and met certain criteria, including being a small or micro entity who was the original patent applicant and had actually reduced the challenged claims to practice. The USPTO denied the petition in October 2021, explaining that the issues raised overlapped with those in a separate request for comments and that the petition's suggestions would be considered in any future rulemaking. When the organizations challenged this denial in district court under the Administrative Procedure Act, the district court dismissed for lack of standing, and the Federal Circuit affirmed that dismissal applying D.C. Circuit law.

Associational Standing Requirements

Organizations can assert "associational standing" to sue on behalf of their members if three requirements are met: (1) at least one member would have standing to sue in their own right; (2) the interests at stake are germane to the organization's purpose; and (3) neither the claim nor the relief requires participation of individual members. Only the first element was contested in this appeal. To establish individual standing, a plaintiff must show injury in fact that is concrete and particularized, actual or imminent (not conjectural or hypothetical), fairly traceable to the defendant's conduct, and likely redressable by a favorable decision.

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Contradictory Expert Testimony and Director Review

by Dennis Crouch

In his first Director Review decision, new USPTO Director John Squires has gone the extra mile -- in addition to granting director review and reversing the Board's decision favoring the patent challenger, Dir. Squires also ordered immediate termination of the proceedings based upon unreliable expert testimony.  This more dramatic termination is important because that looks more like a withdrawal of institution which is not appealable.

Interactive Communications Int’l, Inc. v. Blackhawk Network Inc., IPR2024-00465. [IPR2024-00465 Director Review Decision]

Blackhawk's challenged U.S. Patent No. 11,488,451 a method for selling pre-printed lottery tickets through a retailer’s existing point-of-sale (POS) terminals without requiring specialized lottery hardware. Instead of printing a new ticket at a dedicated lottery terminal, the system uses pre-manufactured tickets that carry unique identifiers and are activated when scanned and paid for at checkout. This framework allows the pre-printed ticket itself (once activated) to serve as the legal lottery instrument, while enabling lottery sales across all checkout lanes without specialized installations.


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Proven Infringement, Zero Recovery: Federal Circuit Once Again Cancels a Jury Verdict for the Patentee

In Rex Medical, L.P. v. Intuitive Surgical, Inc., No. 2024-1072 (Fed. Cir. Oct. 2, 2025), we find yet another decision involving the Federal Circuit overturning a jury's damages verdict.  A jury had awarded $10 million for the infringement that was reduced to nominal damages of $1.

Key holdings:

  1. Nominal damages are proper - The Patent Act sets a "reasonable royalty" damages floor, but only if there is an evidentiary basis.
  2. Comparable-license apportionment is mandatory - when a comparable license covers more than simply the patent at issue, additional evidence must be presented to the jury to explain how to apportion the license value between the patent at issue in the case, and the other rights licensed.
Click to see images from the patents (kind of gross).
Patent image 1
Patent image 2

There is a lot to question about this decision, but ultimately I think it comes down to the statement that Intuitive's attorney made at oral arguments:

Melanie L. Bostwick: This is not in the record because Rex didn't do its job in present this evidence.

Background: Days before trial, District Judge Maryellen Noreika excluded Rex's damages expert Douglas Kidder from testifying about the key comparable license in the case—a $10 million settlement agreement between Rex and Covidien that covered not only the '650 patent at issue, but also a related patent that had been the subject of a lawsuit (the '892 patent), eight other U.S. patents, seven U.S. patent applications, and nineteen foreign patents or applications. The district court found that Kidder had failed to adequately apportion the license payment among all these patents, rendering his methodology unreliable.

Trial moved forward without expert testimony.  The jury was provided the prior license and heard testimony from Rex's president Lindsay Carter, who had negotiated the prior license.  Intuitive cross examined Carter, but did not provide any witnesses  or other evidence to prove no damages or a lower damages amount.  Intuitive had been prepared to call its own damages expert (Todd Schoettelkotte), who had opined that a reasonable royalty would have been about $1–1.6 million.   The Jury ultimately found infringement and awarded $10 million in damages.

On post-trial motions, the district court granted judgment as a matter of law reducing the damages award to $1, finding that the jury lacked sufficient evidence to apportion the Covidien license to the '650 patent alone. The court also denied Rex's request for a new damages trial, reasoning that Rex had the opportunity to present other evidence but chose to rely on the very license the court had already precluded its expert from using. Rex appealed both the exclusion of its expert and the reduction of the jury award, while Intuitive cross-appealed on infringement and invalidity grounds.

Rex Medical, L.P. v. Intuitive Surgical, Inc., Nos. 2024-1072, 2024-1125 (Fed. Cir. Oct. 2, 2025).


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More on the Federal Shutdown and the US IP System

by Dennis Crouch

The federal government shutdown that began at 12:01 AM on October 1, 2025, is creating a patchwork of disruptions across the nation’s intellectual property infrastructure, with each major system affected differently based on their funding structures. The Copyright Office is apparently completely shuttered, its staff unable to access email or respond to inquiries.

As I discussed yesterday, the USPTO remains operational by drawing on fee-based reserve funds built up over recent years.  But, the new news is an announced 1% workforce reduction (~1500 people) today along with closure of its Denver Office as part of “mission-prioritization.”  Interestingly, the agency cited to a Biden-era report to Congress that “physical office space is less necessary” primarily because of the successful telework policies. The current administration has taken extensive steps to eliminate those policies. [Updated to fix my math – 150 people fired, not 1,500.]

The federal judiciary will continue paid operations through at least October 17 using court fee balances and existing funds, prioritizing criminal matters and emergencies while non-essential civil litigation faces potential delays.

Restrictions, Election, Traversal, and Disclaimer

by Dennis Crouch

In Focus Products Group International, LLC v. Kartri Sales Co., Inc., No. 2023-1446 (Fed. Cir. Sept. 30, 2025), the Federal Circuit reversed patent infringement findings against one defendant (Marquis Mills) while affirming most findings against another (Kartri Sales).

The most important part of the decision for patent prosecutors focuses on examiner driven restriction practice and how that can be used to define claim scope.   The case also delves into trademark and trade dress issues that I leave for a separate post.

The patents at issue—U.S. Patent Nos. 6,494,248, 7,296,609, and 8,235,088—cover “hookless” shower curtains that attach directly to a shower rod through reinforced ring openings with slits. This integrated approach eliminates the need for separate hooks or clips. The representative claims recite shower rings with specific design features: a slit extending through the ring to an opening, and in some claims, a “projecting edge” that extends from the ring’s outer circumference. The accused products, manufactured by Marquis and sold by Kartri under the “Ezy-Hang” brand, featured rings with flat upper edges similar to Fig 21 above —a design feature that became the central battleground for determining infringement.

During prosecution of the ‘248 patent application, the examiner issued a restriction requirement identifying multiple patentably distinct species and defined those species through specific figure groups. Critically, the examiner distinguished “Species IV” (Figures 18-20, depicting rings with projecting fingers or extensions) from “Species V” (Figure 21, depicting rings “with a flat upper edge”). The patentee elected to pursue Species IV without objection – i.e., election without traversal.  The patentee then rewrote the claims in a way that no longer focused on the flat upper edge. Except that one such claim slipped in — the patentee had added re-added a dependent claim that expressly “includes a flat upper edge” and the examiner asked it to be withdrawn as a non-elected species.  Finally, in the notice of allowance, the examiner indicated that the non-elected claims had been cancelled as “drawn to a non-elected species without traverse;” and the applicant did no object to that characterization or seek reconsideration.

Eventually the Species IV patents issued without any claims focusing on the flat-upper-edge.  However, the claim language was broad enough to encompass versions with both curved uppers and flat uppers.  The question in the case then is whether the restriction procedure serves as an affirmative disclaimer of the flat upper scope. (more…)

Supreme Court Long Conference: Patent and Trademark Cases from September 29, 2025

by Dennis Crouch

The Federal Government's fiscal year begins on October 1, as does the Supreme Court's term. The new term always begins with a "long conference" that considers certiorari petitions briefed over the court's summer break. The conference was held on September 29, 2025, and we will soon be hearing which of these cases (if any) will be granted certiorari.

Patent

MSN Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., No. 25-225

This case addresses whether courts may consider after-arising technology when evaluating patent validity under 35 U.S.C. § 112(a)'s written description and enablement requirements. Novartis's patent for Entresto (a blockbuster heart failure drug generating over $3 billion annually) claimed a combination of valsartan and sacubitril, but the actual commercial product uses a form discovered four years after the patent filing that was not particularly described in the original specification. The Federal Circuit held that later-discovered technology cannot invalidate patents, creating some tension with precedents like The Incandescent Lamp Patent, 159 U.S. 465 (1895), and Amgen Inc. v. Sanofi, 598 U.S. 594 (2023), which seem to require patents to enable the full scope of their claims.

Gesture Technology Partners, LLC v. Apple Inc., No. 24-1280 and 24-1281

These cases questions whether the PTAB has constitutional authority under Article III and the public rights doctrine to conduct inter partes review proceedings on patents that expired before the IPR petition was filed. Gesture Technology's camera-based sensing patents expired in 2020, but Apple filed an IPR petition in May 2021, and the PTAB subsequently invalidated the claims, extinguishing Gesture's ability to collect damages for past infringement. The Federal Circuit held that PTAB has jurisdiction over expired patents because patent owners retain limited rights (damages for past infringement), but Gesture argues that once exclusionary rights expire, only Article III courts can adjudicate retrospective damage claims. Gesture  also argues that Apple should be estopped under 35 U.S.C. § 315(e)(1) because Apple is a member of Unified Patents and should be treated as a real party in interest or privy, but the Federal Circuit held Gesture forfeited this argument.

R.J. Reynolds Vapor Company v. Altria Client Services LLC, No. 25-158

This case addresses whether the Federal Circuit's "built-in apportionment" exception violates Garretson v. Clark, 111 U.S. 120 (1884), which requires patentees to "in every case give evidence tending to separate or apportion the defendant's profits and the patentee's damages between the patented feature and the unpatented features." After a 2022 jury trial, Reynolds was found to infringe Altria's e-cigarette patents and ordered to pay $95.2 million based on a 5.25% royalty rate calculated using a lump-sum license.  The Federal Circuit majority affirmed in December 2024, finding sufficient evidence of "built-in apportionment" in the comparable license, but Reynolds argues this undermines the fundamental requirement to separate the patent's contribution from unpatented features. Reynolds alternatively requests a grant-vacate-remand in light of the Federal Circuit's intervening May 2025 en banc decision in EcoFactor, Inc. v. Google LLC, 137 F.4th 1333 (Fed. Cir. 2025), which vacated a $20 million damages award and held district courts must rigorously assess damages expert testimony regarding comparable licenses.

United Services Automobile Association v. PNC Bank N.A., No. 25-149

This case presents an administrative law question about whether the PTAB's IPR decision was arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) when it reached different conclusions than prior PTAB proceedings involving "saliently similar facts" but different parties. USAA owns patents covering mobile check deposit technology, and when Wells Fargo challenged these patents in IPR using functionally identical prior art, the PTAB denied the challenges and found claims not obvious, leading to a $200 million jury award against Wells Fargo in 2019.


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Federal Government Shutdown (But not the USPTO)

by Dennis Crouch

Although the federal government shutdown appears ready to begin at 12:01 AM on October 1, 2025, the United States Patent and Trademark Office is likely to continue in normal operation by drawing on its Operating Reserve which the agency has been building up over the past several years.  A prolonged shutdown would eventually exhaust the reserves and trigger an end to spending.

The constitutional foundation for shutdown protocols lies in the Appropriations Clause, which provides that "No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law." U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 7. This clause requires congressional approval before executive agencies may spend federal funds. The Antideficiency Act, 31 U.S.C. § 1341 et seq., enforces this constitutional mandate by prohibiting agencies from creating obligations or making expenditures exceeding available appropriations. The Act contains limited exceptions for activities necessary to protect life or property, but routine government operations—including patent examination—do not qualify for these exceptions.

The Antideficiency Act, codified at 31 U.S.C. § 1341–1342, prohibits federal agencies from obligating or expending funds in advance of appropriations, with narrow exceptions for emergencies involving the safety of human life or protection of property. Violations carry criminal penalties. During appropriations lapses, agencies must furlough employees and suspend operations unless funds remain available from prior appropriations or mandatory spending authorities.

Spending of the USPTO's Operating Reserve does not violate this prohibition because these funds were already appropriated in previous fiscal years under prior appropriations legislation. When the USPTO spends from its reserve during a lapse, it is drawing on money that Congress previously authorized for agency use—not creating new obligations without appropriations authority.

The USPTO's Operating Reserve functions as a financial cushion that enables continued operations precisely because these funds were already appropriated in previous fiscal years. The reserve represents unspent balances from prior appropriations that the agency carried forward. When new appropriations lapse, the USPTO does not violate the Antideficiency Act by spending from this reserve because Congress previously authorized the use of these specific funds. This arrangement distinguishes the USPTO from agencies dependent on annual discretionary appropriations with no carryover authority.


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Centralized Expanded Discretionary Denial

by Dennis Crouch

Soon after taking office, newly confirmed USPTO Director John Squires formally delegated his discretionary authority over inter partes review institution decisions to Deputy Director Coke Morgan Stewart on September 25, 2025. Just one day later, on September 26, the agency exercised that delegated authority to deny institution in fifteen IPR petitions covering eight patent groups. The denial decisions, though brief (each under two pages of text), reveal continued reliance on the expanded “Fintiv” framework that weighs parallel district court proceedings, while also emphasizing “settled expectations” based on patent age and petitioner delay. Notably, one decision denied institution even though the parallel district court case had been stayed, marking another expansion of discretionary denial grounds beyond trial timing concerns.  L’Oréal USA, Inc. v. Brightex Bio-Photonics, LLC, IPR2025-00971.  In general, I’m thinking of identifying this approach as Centralized Expanded Discretionary Denial or more simply, the Stewart Framework.

Why "Centralized Expanded Discretionary Denial"?

I refer to this as the "Centralized Expanded Discretionary Denial Framework" rather than "Fintiv" or its variants because the current practice has evolved far beyond the original trial-timing analysis. The framework now encompasses multiple independent grounds: parallel litigation timing (Fintiv+), parallel avoidance commitments (Sotera+), settled expectations, customer suits, roadmapping, equitable delay, and business relationships. "Centralized" reflects the 2025 shift from PTAB panel decisions to Director-level review, where the Director or Deputy Director personally exercises § 314(a) discretion rather than delegating these determinations to three-judge panels as was standard practice before 2025. "Expanded" or perhaps "Expansive" captures how denial grounds now extend well beyond timing to encompass equitable and strategic factors.  

I expected that Director Squires would continue the discretionary denial approach that Stewart began several months ago. And, the delegation memo confirms ongoing business as usual.  The new set of decisions show continued willingness to exercise discretionary authority across multiple scenarios: parallel district court litigation with unfavorable trial timing, customer suits where the petitioner is not directly accused, repeated challenges to the same claims after prior unsuccessful petitions, and cases involving long notice periods and business relationships between parties. (more…)

EcoFactor: Did the Federal Circuit Unconstitutionally Displace the Jury?

by Dennis Crouch

Over the past couple of years, I have noticed increased willingness of the Federal Circuit to reject jury verdicts, especially in situations involving potentially inadequate expert testimony. This past summer, the Federal Circuit's en banc EcoFactor decision followed this pattern by overturning a $20 million jury verdict based upon flaws in the patentee's damages expert testimony. EcoFactor, Inc. v. Google LLC, 137 F.4th 1333 (Fed. Cir. 2025) (en banc). In my view, the decision did not alter any law associated with expert testimony, but rather served as a pointed reminder to district to rigorously scrutinize whether the expert's opinions are actually tied to sufficient facts in the record and whether the methodology is reliably applied to the specific circumstances of the case. But, this rigor has some potential of improperly overstepping into the jury's role as fact finder.

The key Constitutional issue is the Seventh Amendment, which guarantees a trial in patent cases where the patentees are seeking legal damages. The Seventh Amendment also prohibits "re-examin[ing]" any fact tried by the jury, other "than according to the rules of the common law."  The "common law" language cues the court to look back to 1791 and consider what was available at the time.

EcoFactor presents three questions in its new petition for writ of certiorari:

  1. Whether the Federal Circuit violated the Seventh Amendment by substituting its own evaluation of evidence for the jury's factual findings;
  2. Whether the Federal Circuit applies a uniquely stringent standard for admitting damages expert testimony under Federal Rule of Evidence 702 that conflicts with other circuits; and
  3. Whether the court violated EcoFactor's Fifth Amendment due process rights by deciding the appeal on contract interpretation grounds never raised or briefed by the parties.

The petitioner's basic argument here is that the appellate court engaged in improper reweighing of facts rather than sticking to the narrow post-verdict options available in 1791.

Federal Rule of Evidence 702 governs the admission of expert testimony in federal court. As amended in 2023, the rule requires that expert testimony be based on "sufficient facts or data," use "reliable principles and methods," and reflect "a reliable application" of those principles to the case facts. The district court acts as gatekeeper, admitting expert testimony only when the proponent demonstrates by a preponderance of evidence that these requirements are met. The rule aims to ensure that expert opinions assist the jury without overwhelming it with unreliable speculation.

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Thanks for Your Input: Federal Circuit Ignores USPTO’s §101 Framework (Again)

by Dennis Crouch

In Rideshare Displays, Inc. v. Lyft, Inc., No. 2023-2033 (Fed. Cir. Sept. 29, 2025) (nonprecedential), the Federal Circuit affirmed the PTAB determination that claims directed to vehicle identification systems for ridesharing services were unpatentable for obviousness, but reversed the Board’s grant of Rideshare’s motion to amend substitute claims. Judge Hughes, writing for the panel, held that the substitute claims were directed to patent-ineligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101 because they merely used technology as a tool to improve user experience rather than improving computer functionality itself.

The patents at issue all share a common specification directed to systems and methods for vehicle identification that allow ridesharing app users to verify they are getting in the correct cars and drivers to confirm they are picking up the correct riders. U.S. Patent Nos. 9,892,637; 10,169,987; 10,395,525; 10,559,199; and 10,748,417.  The systems work by having a driver’s device receive a notification signal that triggers an indicator visible from outside the car, such as a code or icon on a display. Lyft filed five petitions for inter partes review in November 2021, and the Board found all challenged claims unpatentable as obvious or anticipated over the prior art.  Rideshare moved to amend claims in two of the proceedings, and the Board allowed several substitute claims, prompting Lyft’s cross-appeal challenging the amendments on patent eligibility, written description, and obviousness grounds.

In its decision, the court compared the claimed system to “hand-printed cards with names to help identify ride pickups at crowded locations, such as an airport,” finding that invoking computers and mobile devices to streamline human interactions does not transform an abstract idea into patent-eligible subject matter.

USPTO's Limited Authority Over Substantive Patent Law

The USPTO lacks interpretive authority to construe substantive patent statutes including 35 U.S.C. §§ 101, 102, 103, and 112. The agency's internal guidance documents directing how patent examiners and even PTAB judges must apply these provisions receive no deference from reviewing courts. The Federal Circuit independently interprets these statutory provisions de novo, applying its own precedent rather than deferring to administrative interpretations. Here, for example, the court explicitly declined to follow the USPTO's 2019 eligibility guidance framework which I have previously noted tends toward being more pro-eligibility than court precedent.

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Director Squires Takes Aim § 101 Rejections

by Dennis Crouch

In a striking early display of directorial authority, newly sworn-in Under Secretary of Commerce and USPTO Director John Squires has vacated a Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) decision that had entered a new ground of rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 101 against DeepMind Technologies' machine learning patent application. The September 26, 2025 decision in Ex parte Desjardins, Appeal 2024-000567, Application 16/319,040, represents one of Director Squires' first substantive actions since taking office one week ago and offers yet another clear signal that Section 101 reform is building steam. SquiresPTABDecision.

Squires writes:

Categorically excluding AI innovations from patent protection in the United States jeopardizes America's leadership in this critical emerging technology. . . the panel essentially equated any machine learning with an unpatentable 'algorithm' and the remaining additional elements as 'generic computer components,' without adequate explanation. . . . most troubling [the Panel] eschewed the clear teachings of Enfish, and instead substituted only a cursory analysis that ignored this well-settled precedent. Panels should treat such precedent with more care, especially when acting sua sponte.

Finally, and most clearly a signal to all USPTO employees to back-off with regard to patent eligibility, he writes:

This case demonstrates that §§ 102, 103 and 112 are the traditional and appropriate tools to limit patent protection to its proper scope. These statutory provisions should be the focus of examination.

The application, filed by DeepMind (owned by Google) and prosecuted by Fish & Richardson, claims methods for training machine learning models on multiple sequential tasks while avoiding "catastrophic forgetting," which is defined as the phenomenon where neural networks lose knowledge of previous tasks when trained on new ones.  As someone with some ADHD tendencies, I recognizing this issue.


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USPTO Director Squires’s First Patents: Crypto Software and Diagnostic Methods

by Dennis Crouch

On September 23, 2025, John A. Squires—just sworn in as the 60th Director of the USPTO—issued his first public act. In his first official act as USPTO Director, John Squires held a ceremonial signing of two newly issued patents—one covering diagnostic methods using a discovered antibody and the the other a blockchain-based resource allocation FinTech software. U.S. Patent Nos. 12,419,201 and 12,419,202. These choices appear to me a deliberate signal. Squires highlighted technologies that sit squarely within the domains that the Supreme Court and Federal Circuit have restricted most heavily over the past decade via the expanded patent eligibility doctrine of Alice and Mayo. In his remarks, Squires emphasized his intended signal: “the U.S. Patent Office is open for business, especially for the technologies of tomorrow.”


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The Rising Bar for Patent Experts: Finesse Wireless and the Need for Particularized Precision

by Dennis Crouch

The Federal Circuit reversed a Texas jury’s $166 million infringement verdict in Finesse Wireless LLC v. AT&T Mobility LLC, 24-1039 (Fed. Cir. Sept. 24, 2025), holding that the patentee’s contradictory and unclear expert testimony could not support the Jury’s finding of patent infringement.  The case is centered on  Finesse’s U.S. Patent Nos. 7,346,134 and 9,548,775, which relate to methods of reducing “intermodulation interference” in wireless communications.

Chief Judge Moore, writing for a unanimous panel, emphasized that when a patentee’s infringement case rests on “self-contradictory testimony” from its expert, courts “may conclude the evidence is insufficient” to satisfy the burden of proof.  But in this case, the panel didn’t just note the possibility of insufficient evidence – it actually applied the rule against the patentee. After analyzing Dr. Wells’s contradictions, the opinion held: “This sort of confusing change of course is not sufficient to support the jury verdict.”

This decision underscores the Federal Circuit’s escalating demands on expert testimony in patent cases. It shows up at two levels: (1) parties must marshal “their” experts to walk the jury through virtually every technical or patent‐law issue; and (2) the expert’s testimony must be internally consistent, tightly tied to the record, and conveyed with particularized precision.  I’ve written on this new hurdle that is typically focused on patentee-presentations.  See Federal Circuit Tightens Expert Testimony Standards in Trudell, Patently-O (Feb. 2025); Throwing Out the Jury: How the Federal Circuit’s ‘Particularized Testimony’ Rule Further Threatens the Doctrine of Equivalents, Patently-O, (May 2025); Wilco v. Weeks Marine: When Expert Disagreements Don’t Create Genuine Disputes of Material Fact, Patently-O (Aug. 2025); and The Remedies Remedy is Almost Complete: EcoFactor v. Google, Patently-O (May 2025). (more…)

Headnote Wars in the AI Space: Thomson Reuters (Westlaw) v. ROSS AI

by Dennis Crouch

ROSS Intelligence has filed its opening brief in the Third Circuit, challenging Judge Stephanos Bibas's decision that the AI company's use of Westlaw headnotes to train its legal search engine constituted copyright infringement. The case presents fundamental questions about the intersection of copyright law and artificial intelligence training that could significantly impact the development of AI systems across industries. Thomson Reuters Enter. Ctr. GmbH v. Ross Intel. Inc., No. 25-2153 (3d Cir. appeal filed Sept. 2025).

ROSS Intelligence built an AI legal search engine designed to let users ask legal questions in plain English and receive ranked, cited passages from judicial opinions as answers. To train the system, ROSS commissioned 25,000 legal memoranda from LegalEase Solutions, each posing a question and providing multiple ranked answers. Many of the questions were adapted directly from Westlaw headnotes summarize points of law from judicial opinions. These headnote-derived questions served as labeled examples that helped the AI learn how to identify, rank, and distinguish between relevant and irrelevant case passages. Although the headnotes themselves were not displayed to ROSS users, they were incorporated into the training process as inputs, making them central to the copyright infringement dispute between Thomson Reuters (owner of Westlaw) and ROSS.

Judge Bibas' February 2025 decision granted summary judgment in favor of the copyright holder -- finding that Westlaw's headnotes were sufficiently original for copyright protection and that ROSS's use for training did not qualify qualified as fair  use.  The district court certified the copyright questions for immediate interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), recognizing the novel and difficult nature of the issues presented.

In its newly filed appeal, ROSS presents two issues:

  1. Is a short quote or paraphrase of a judicial holding copyrightable?
  2. Does the fair use doctrine protect ROSS’s internal use of Westlaw’s headnotes in memos that served as training data for an AI legal search engine that produced only non-infringing outputs?

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Redefining Patent Utility: The Functional Relationship Test’s Answer to Super-Utility Claims

by Dennis Crouch

The Federal Circuit recently handed down its decision in Bayer Pharma Aktiengesellschaft v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc., No. 2023-2434 (Fed. Cir. Sept. 23, 2025), focusing on the the claim limitation “clinically proven effective.”  Bayer’s U.S. Patent No. 10,828,310, which claims methods for reducing cardiovascular events in certain patients by administering specific doses of rivaroxaban (2.5 mg twice daily) and aspirin (75-100 mg daily) “in amounts that are clinically proven effective.” Generic manufacturers Mylan, Teva, and Invagen successfully challenged the patent in IPR proceedings — finding the claim term non-limiting.  The Federal Circuit agreed that the term did not provide patentable weight – but through a different analytical path.

Clinically Proven Effective: Contrasting Analytical Approaches

The PTAB concluded “clinically proven effective” was non-limiting, reasoning that because the claims already recited specific dosage amounts (2.5 mg rivaroxaban twice daily and 75-100 mg aspirin daily), the additional characterization of these amounts as “clinically proven effective” was merely redundant. Drawing on Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Ben Venue Labs., Inc., 246 F.3d 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2001), the PTAB found the phrase constituted an “expression of intended result [that] essentially duplicates the dosage amounts recited in the claims.”

On appeal though, the Federal Circuit took a markedly different approach, declining to decide whether “clinically proven effective” was limiting at all. Instead, the court applied the functional relationship test from King Pharms, concluding that even if the phrase were limiting, it constituted a “functionally unrelated limitation” that could not rescue an otherwise anticipated method from unpatentability. The court reasoned that clinical proof of efficacy “in no way transforms the process of taking the drug[s]” at the specified amounts and frequencies, emphasizing that the “the actual method . . . is the same” regardless of subsequent clinical validation.

The Functional Relationship Test from King Pharmaceuticals

In King Pharmaceuticals v. Eon Labs, 616 F.3d 1267 (Fed. Cir. 2010), the Federal Circuit established an important test for determining when additional claim limitations can make an otherwise anticipated method patentable. The case involved patents claiming methods of taking the muscle relaxant metaxalone with food to increase the drug's bioavailability - a practice that was already disclosed in prior art for reducing stomach upset. The patentee argued that adding a step of "informing" patients about the increased bioavailability made the claims novel. The Federal Circuit rejected this argument, holding that the relevant inquiry is whether the additional limitation has a "new and unobvious functional relationship" with the known method. Since informing patients about the drug's benefits "in no way transforms the process of taking the drug with food" and "the actual method . . . is the same" regardless of whether patients are informed, the informing step lacked the required functional relationship. This test prevents patentees from indefinitely extending patent protection over known methods by simply adding instructional, informational, or other functionally unrelated steps that don't change how the method actually works.

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Ultra Vires or Policy Discretion? Federal Circuit Now Weighing 5x Discretionary Denial Mandamus

by Dennis Crouch

Two additional mandamus petitions have joined the Federal Circuit's growing docket challenging the USPTO's 2025 shift toward more restrictive inter partes review (IPR) institution practices under President Trump, bringing the total to five pending cases that collectively test the boundaries of appellate review under 35 U.S.C. § 314(d). The newest petitions are In re HighLevel, Inc. (No. 25-148) and In re SanDisk Technologies, Inc. (No. 25-152).  Both challenge Director Stewart expanded discretionary denial approach that rescinded the Vidal memo that petitioners had previously relied upon. HighLevel challenges the USPTO's categorical use of § 101 district court rulings to deny IPR institution for §§ 102/103 challenges, while SanDisk attacks the agency's invocation of "settled expectations" and resource management concerns to deny institution despite litigation stays and Sotera stipulations limiting claim scope overlap.  Prior Patently-O Posts:

The Federal Circuit has requested responses from both the USPTO and IPR petitioners in all five cases (including the earlier In re SAP America, Inc., In re Motorola Solutions, Inc., and In re Google LLC petitions).  This is an unusual step that the court often skips in mandamus practice and signals at least some judicial interest in the underlying legal issues.

Each petition attempts to characterize the USPTO's February 28, 2025 rescission of the Vidal Memo and subsequent policy implementations as constitutional violations or ultra vires agency action.


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