by Dennis Crouch
In Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute v. Amazon.com, Inc., No. 2024-1725 (Fed. Cir. Feb. 24, 2026), a panel led by Judge Dyk affirmed summary judgment invalidating U.S. Patent No. 7,177,798 as ineligible 35 U.S.C. § 101. The ‘798 patent claims a method for processing natural language inputs using case-based reasoning applied to a metadata database. Rensselaer and its exclusive licensee CF Dynamic Advances had asserted the patent against Amazon’s Alexa virtual assistant technology. The district court (N.D.N.Y., Judge Sannes) granted Amazon’s motion for summary judgment, finding the claims directed to patent-ineligible subject matter under Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank Int’l, 573 U.S. 208 (2014). The nonprecedential opinion applies the rule from Recentive Analytics, Inc. v. Fox Corp., 134 F.4th 1205 (Fed. Cir. 2025) (cert. denied) that applying a well-established AI technique to a new field does not overcome patent ineligibility. Judge Dyk authored both opinions.
The patent dates to a 2003 filing and describes what Rensselaer characterized as the first application of case-based reasoning to natural language processing. Case-based reasoning is an AI problem-solving technique that draws on past experiences (stored as “cases”) to address new problems. Rensselaer’s core argument was that conventional NLP systems of the late 1990s were plagued by a specific technological failure: they relied on “exceedingly large collections” of keywords that were “not practical to implement” and still could not reliably interpret natural language queries. The ‘798 patent proposed to solve this by combining case-based reasoning with a structured metadata database containing four interrelated types of information: case information, keywords, information models, and database values. Through this architecture, the system could learn from past interactions, resolve ambiguities between competing interpretations, and reduce keyword growth over time. Representative claim 1 recites a method that takes a natural language input, searches “language-based databases” (including the metadata database) “without augmentation,” provides results to the user, and determines combinations of database objects.
The patent had a notable litigation history. RPI had previously secured a $24.9 million license from Apple covering Siri, and the ‘798 patent survived five separate inter partes review challenges (three from Apple and two from Amazon). The PTAB repeatedly found that petitioners failed to show the claimed metadata database existed in the prior art.
At Alice step one, the court found the claims abstract. But, the Federal Circuit’s opinion is actually somewhat thin on explicitly stating the abstraction. The district court identified the abstract idea as “an approach for interpreting and responding to a natural language input by storing and searching certain types of information.” The Federal Circuit affirmed but framed its step one analysis more through the Recentive lens: the claims “largely recite the use of generic technology using standard methods,” and the claimed advance (applying case-based reasoning to NLP) amounts to applying “a well-established idea (case-based reasoning or AI) to a novel environment (natural language processing).”
Still on Step 1, the court noted that the specification describes the invention as running on a “general purpose computer system” and notes that “the invention is not limited to a particular computer system platform, processor, operating system, or network.” The court wrote that “[g]eneric use of AI without other parameters, such as ‘improving the mathematical algorithm or making machine learning better,’ is abstract.” See also Dennis Crouch, Pre-Alice Patents and the Eligibility Problem: GoTV v. Netflix and Innovaport v. Target, Patently-O (Feb. 10, 2026).
Rensselaer tried to distinguish Recentive by pointing to the metadata database recited in the claims, arguing this structure represented an unconventional technological improvement. The court was unpersuaded. Existing precedent holds that adding new content to a database does not improve the database’s functionality. BSG Tech LLC v. Buyseasons, Inc., 899 F.3d 1281 (Fed. Cir. 2018). And the intrinsic record undercut Rensselaer’s position: the specification states that a metadata database “is well-known in the art.”
At Alice step two, Rensselaer argued that case-based reasoning “did not exist anywhere within the NLP field” before the ‘798 patent. The court acknowledged the novelty but held it irrelevant, again relying on Recentive‘s holding that using AI in a novel field does not supply an inventive concept. Novelty and eligibility are distinct inquiries, and a conventional application of an AI technique to a new environment remains abstract regardless of whether anyone had done it before.
The decision fits within a growing line of cases applying Recentive to invalidate AI-related patents that frame their contribution as deploying existing techniques in new domains.














