November 2017

Managing the ’emotional property’ that comes with consumer generated intellectual property (CGIP)?

The following guest post comes from Business Prof. Ian McCarthy and is based upon his is based on the research article: CGIP: Managing consumer-generated intellectual property.  Although I don’t like the label of “Emotional Property” the concepts presented here make sense. – DC 

by Ian McCarthy

Traditionally, firms have produced goods and services, and consumers have consumed or used them. However, consumers are not only using and consuming, but also increasingly creating products, services and related intellectual property when they adapt and modify the proprietary offerings of companies. Consider for example the legendary hacker George Hotz, who unlocked the original iPhone and hacked Sony’s PlayStation 3. He gave these innovations away free to the public. Consumers also create and publish a vast amount of informational content. Consider all the images uploaded to Facebook, the book reviews posted on Amazon and the videos on YouTube: all of this is consumer generated content ends up belonging to the companies. Regardless of whether consumers are changing physical products or generating information content, these creative acts produce “consumer-generated intellectual property” (CGIP)—intellectual property produced by consumers rather than only by companies.

CGIP has components that appeal to companies and consumers, but are also a source of potential conflict. From the perspective of the company, the focus is on controlling the CGIP and appropriating value from it. While on the consumer’s side it is about the credit and emotion associated with creativity.

These differences highlight that CGIP involves not just intellectual property, but also emotional property.

As intellectual property is the legal rights to creations of the mind, emotional property is the emotional investment in or attachment to creations of the heart and mind. More specifically emotional property is defined as the product of the affection, fervor and energy that consumers devote to the creative act, and the attachment and pride they have with their creation.

Emotional property is an important but overlooked feature of innovation management. As it governs how consumers react to companies seeking to exploit their creations and CGIP, here is a framework of eight strategies, the 8 Cs (cultivate, coordinate, cooperate, capture, code condemn, crush and copy Cs) to help managers deal with CGIP. The 8 Cs are based on whether companies are positively or negatively disposed to CGIP, and whether the strategic action is directed primarily at the consumer or at the company. Figure 1 shows how the eight strategies (or 8 Cs) for CGIP vary in terms of these two dimensions.

CGIP-Fig1Figure 1. Consumer-generated Intellectual Property (CGIP) Strategies

CGIP-Fig2Figure 2: The Emotional Property-Intellectual Property (EPIP) Matrix.

The Emotional Property-Intellectual Property (EPIP) matrix (Figure 2) plots the 8 Cs and shows why companies would adopt a certain strategy. This on the extent to which the company perceives the consumer to have either high or low emotional property vested in the innovation, and the extent to which the firm has the potential to control the intellectual property.

The 8 Cs available to companies all fit neatly into the EPIP matrix, but here I illustrate just two of the Cs here. Where the firm’s potential control of- and the consumer’s emotional attachment to the IP are both low, the firm can either “condone” or “condemn” an infringement. A nice example of the condone strategy is Sony’s decision to ignore a breach of its copyright in the case of the now famous JK Wedding Dance video. Jill and Kevin used a song by Sony artist Chris Brown as background music to the entrance of the bridal party and put the video on YouTube where it got millions of hits. Sony’s decision was driven not only by the fact that the video was just good harmless fun, but also because the artist had recently gotten really bad press and was in bad need of an image resuscitation. Where both the firm’s potential control of- and the consumer’s emotional attachment to the IP are high, a firm can implement a cooperate strategy. The website Quirky invites consumers to submit new product ideas to its site for consideration. If an idea is favorably received it is then developed into a prototype and in many cases eventually turned into a commercial product. In exchange for Quirky funding this development process, the inventor assigns all IP to Quirky. Quirky gains and controls the IP, but the consumer also gets credit and remuneration, which compensates their high emotional stake.

Read it here:Berthon, P., Pitt, L., Kietzmann, J. and McCarthy, I.P., 2015. CGIP: Managing consumer-generated intellectual property. California Management Review, 57(4), pp.43-62.

Preemption: Texas Misappropriations law Improperly Overlaps with US Patent Law

by Dennis Crouch

A new decision from the 5th Circuit includes an interesting analysis of federal preemption.  Namely, the appellate panel found that Texas law of unfair competition by misappropriation improperly extends to offer patent and copyright protections.

[Orthoflex v. ThermoTek – 5th Circuit Opinion]

The Texas common law tort of  “unfair competition by misappropriation” is essentially an anti-free-riding law with three elements:

(i) the creation of plaintiff’s product through extensive time, labor, skill and money,

(ii) the defendant’s use of that product in competition with the plaintiff, thereby gaining a special advantage in that competition (i.e., a “free ride”) because defendant is burdened with little or none of the expense incurred by the plaintiff, and

(iii) commercial damage to the plaintiff.

My colleague Prof. Gary Myers wrote back in 1996 that it was time for the “demise of this outdated cause of action . . .  [that arose] before comprehensive copyright, patent, and trademark laws were fully developed.”  Despite Myers suggestion, the law has continued in some states, including Texas.

Here, the plaintiff’s claim is that Orthoflex improperly made use of ThermoTek’s manuals and billing information as well as the design of its physical products.  However, rather than suing on copyright and patent respectively, ThermoTek sued on state-law misappropriation.  The jury awarded more than a million dollars to the plaintiff. However, the district court judge nullified the jury verdict and instead held that the entire claim was preempted by federal IP laws. On appeal, the 5th Circuit has affirmed.

Both Copyright and Patent laws have been interpreted to preempting substantially overlapping state protection regimes.  Here, copyright is more straightforward because the Copyright Act of 1978 expressly preempts state copyright-like laws, including common law, and including state provisions that protect works that are otherwise excluded under Section 102(b).  Note here, that this is the third time that the court has held that Texas’s unfair-competition-by-misappropriation is improperly equivalent to copyright law. See Ultraflo and Alcatel.

The court notes that inclusion of an “improper means” requirement into the misappropriation law would likely rescue it from preclusion on the copyright side.

On the patent side, the court cited to Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc., 489 U.S. 141 (1989) statements that state laws that offer “substantially similar” protections are preempted by federal patent law and thus not enforceable.

As with copyright law, the appellate panel here suggested that torts that require “deceit” or “improper means” will be acceptable, but laws that focus simply on protecting the investment in product development and marketing will be preempted.

The latter laws, however, would likely obstruct Congress’s goals by “offer[ing] patent-like protection to intellectual creations which would otherwise remain unprotected as a matter of federal law.” Quoting Bonito Boats.

Here, the court noted that the Texas law is particularly problematic because it offers protection in perpetuity without the safeguards of the patent system.  The court also particularly rejected the notion that instructing the jury that “reverse engineering is not actionable” does not save the law.  Rather, to avoid preemption a proper jury instruction must expressly include an additional element such as fraud or dishonesty.

I believe that this is the correct decision. My one major caveat begins with the difference between copyright law’s express statutory preemption of state law and the mere implicit preemption offered by the patent laws.  Couple that with the major historical difference from Bonito Boats — that this type of misappropriation claim likely predates patent law doctrine whereas Bonito Boats involved a newly developed Florida statute.  Seems to me that we need to add an additional analysis to consider the extent that patent law is designed to snuff-out these preexisting common law claims 150 years after the fact.

PatentlyO Bits and Bytes by Anthony McCain

Get a Job doing Patent Law                  

Federal Circuit: TC Heartland changed the law; pre-decision waiver of venue challenges are nullified

by Dennis Crouch

In re Micron (Fed. Cir. 2017)

On writ of mandamus, the Federal Circuit has sided with accused-infringer Micron – holding that TC Heartland was a sufficient change in the controlling law of venue to overcome the fact venue-challenge had been previously waived in the case.  My sense is that this is quite poor analysis opinion, but the outcome will likely stick — allowing venue transfer many more cases.

Over the past three decades, the Federal Circuit had repeatedly interpreted the Federal venue statutes to allow infringement lawsuits to be filed in any court with personal jurisdiction over the accused infringer. In its 2017 TC Heartland decision, the Supreme Court changed course — holding that for business-defendants in patent cases venue is only proper in districts where (1) the defendant is incorporated or (2) the defendant infringes the patent and has a regular and established place of business.   Except for nationwide retailers, this significantly limits the locations where venue is proper. And, remember, the focus here is “proper venue” – if venue is not proper then the case must be dismissed or transferred.

Waiver: The immediate focus following TC Heartland has been the several hundred already pending infringement lawsuits where venue is likely improper.  The difficulty for those defendants is improper venue is subject to waiver — and the rules particularly indicate that a motion for improper venue is waived unless presented during the pleadings. FRCP 12(h)(1).   Here, Micron is facing an infringement lawsuit in Massachusetts (Harvard v. Micron) but did not move for dismissal for improper venue as required by the rules. Once TC Heartland was decided, the defendant then asked the court to consider the issue.

No Waiver: However, R. 12(g) indicates that waiver occurs when the defense is “available to the party but omitted.”  In the mandamus action here, the court ruled that the change in law is so significant that the defense was not truly available until after the Supreme Court’s decision.

The Rule 12 waiver question presented here is whether the venue defense was “available” to Micron in August 2016. We conclude as a matter of law that it was not. The venue objection was not available until the Supreme Court decided TC Heartland because, before then, it would have been improper, given controlling precedent, for the district court to dismiss or to transfer for lack of venue. . . .

This is a common-sense interpretation of Rule 12(g)(2). Where controlling law precluded the district court, at the time of the motion, from adopting a defense or objection and on that basis granting the motion, it is natural to say, in this context, that the defense or objection was not “available” to the movant.

Although the court is absolutely correct that its approach is the common-sense approach since we have been operating under the old rule for decades.  However, the major analytical problem with the court’s decision here is its notion that its misinterpretation of Supreme Court law is somehow “controlling” law.  Rather the Supreme Court decided the identical issue in Fourco (1957) and then in TC Heartland (2017) held the minor amendments made to the guiding statutes did not alter the holding of Fourco.  In other words, the “controlling law” this entire time has been the Supreme Court precedent. Supreme Court writes:

The issue in this case is whether [the amendment to the statutes] supplants the definition announced in Fourco and allows a plaintiff to bring a patent infringement lawsuit against a corporation in any district in which the corporation is subject to personal jurisdiction. We conclude that the amendments to §1391 did not modify the meaning of §1400(b) as interpreted by Fourco.

Regardless of this technicality, the rule appears now that district courts should be considering and granting improper venue decisions moving forward.

In what appears to be dicta, the court did place important limitations on the improper venue challenges – noting that a motion that is not sufficiently timely (i.e., too close to trial) might be denied on that grounds.

 

New USPTO Fees

The USPTO has finalized a new set of fees: Final Rules.  Some of the changes:

  • Inter Partes Reviews: (request + post-institution) $30,500 (up from $21,000).
  • Application Filing (Filing + Search + Examination) $1,720 (up from $1,600).
  • Provisional Applications: $280 (up from $260).
  • Extra independent claims: $460 (up from $420).
  • Extra dependent claims: $100 (up from $80).
  • Submission of 800mb of Sequences: $10,000.

These go into effect Jan 16, 2018.

Fact-Finding in Eligibility Analysis: Reviewed De Novo?

Prism Tech v. T-Mobile USA (Supreme Court 2017) [Prism Technologies Petition]

The district court sided with the patentee – Prism Tech’s – finding the user-authentication claims eligible under section 101.  Important for the petition here, the district court relied upon substantial expert testimony as well as other documentary evidence in concluding that the claims were enforceable.

Ordinarily, a district court’s factual findings are reviewed with deference on appeal — even when those factual findings are subsidiary to an ultimate question of law. See, Teva Pharm. USA, Inc. v. Sandoz, Inc., 135 S. Ct. 831 (2015) (In claim construction, appellate court must give deference to a district court’s subsidiary factual findings); Mintz v. Dietz & Watson, Inc., 679 F.3d 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (a district court factual findings underlying an obviousness determination are given deference on appeal); Alfred E. Mann Found. for Sci.Research v. Cochlear Corp., 841 F.3d 1334, 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (a district court’s factual findings underlying an regarding indefiniteness finding must be given deference on appeal).

On appeal here, however, the Federal Circuit rejected the lower court’s determinations without giving any deference to the underlying factual determinations — instead the appellate court here reviewed all eligibility issues de novo, including subsidiary findings of fact.  Note here, that this is the same approach taken by the Federal Circuit in claim construction prior to being reversed by the Supreme Court in Teva.

An element of the Supreme Court’s Teva decisions stems from R. 52(a)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure which appears quite clear:

Findings of fact, whether based on oral or other evidence, must not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and the reviewing court must give due regard to the trial court’s opportunity to judge the witnesses’ credibility.

Of course, even in Teva, the Supreme Court did not truly follow R.52 — holding there that seemingly factual determinations based upon intrinsic evidence (such as prosecution history statements) rather then extrinsic evidence need not be given deference.

Prism has now petitioned the Supreme Court for review with the following simple question:

Whether a district court’s factual findings in support of its holding that claims are directed to patent eligible subject matter may be reviewed de novo, as the Federal Circuit requires (and as the panel did in this case), or only for clear error, as Rule 52(a) and corollary Supreme Court precedent require.

The petition also tells the interesting story regarding Prism’s parallel $30 million jury verdict against Sprint. Sprint did not challenge the patents on eligibility grounds and ended up losing in a decision confirmed on appeal by the Federal Circuit.  However,  after the Federal Circuit decided the T-Mobile case, the district court flipped its decision ruling on a post-appeal motion that Sprint should be granted relief from judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b).  According to the petition, a major problem with that decision is that the court applied it (without independent analysis) to prevent enforcement of claims not-at-issue in the T-Mobile case.

US08127345-20120228-D00002

The major problem with Prism’s case is the patents themselves and the high level of generality used by the claims.   Asserted claim 1 of U.S. Patent No. 8,127,345 is a method for controlling access to protected resources over an IP network.  The network setup includes an authentication server; an access server; and a client computer.  The method then has several steps:

  • Request: The client computer sends an access-request to the access server along with identity data about the client computer.
  • Authentication: The access server then forwards the identity data to an authentication server; and the authentication server authenticates the identity (and stores the identity data in the authentication server)
  • Authorization: The authentication server then authorizes the client computer to receive at least some of the requested resources
  • Permission: The authentication server then permits access to the resources.

 

The Federal Circuit found that these steps “are directed to the abstract idea of ‘providing restricted access to resources,'” and that the claim does not include any further concrete innovations that would transform it to a patent eligible claim.  On that ultimate question, I don’t see the Supreme Court ruling any differently.

= = = = =

Claim 1 is reproduced below.

1. A method for controlling access, by at least one authentication server, to protected computer resources provided via an Internet Protocol network, the method comprising:

receiving, at the at least one authentication server from at least one access server, identity data associated with at least one client computer device, the identity data forwarded to the at least one access server from the at least one client computer device with a request from the at least one client computer device for the protected computer resources;

authenticating, by the at least one authentication server, the identity data received from the at least one access server, the identity data being stored in the at least one authentication server;

authorizing, by the at least one authentication server, the at least one client computer device to receive at least a portion of the protected computer resources requested by the at least one client computer device, based on data associated with the requested protected computer resources stored in at least one database associated with the at least one authentication server; and

permitting access, by the at least one authentication server, to the at least the portion of the protected computer resources upon successfully authenticating the identity data and upon successfully authorizing the at least one client computer device.

Challenging Alice at the Supreme Court?

Recognicorp v. Nintendo (Supreme Court 2017) [RecogPetition]

The new Supreme Court petition for writ of certiorari asks the following questions:

In Alice Corp. Pty. Ltd. v. CLS Bank Int’l, 134 S. Ct. 2347 (2014), the Court set forth a two-step test for determining whether computer-implemented inventions claim patentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. First, a court must determine whether the claims at issue are “directed to” an abstract idea. Second, if the claims are “directed to” an abstract idea, the court must then determine whether the claims recite inventive concepts — elements which ensure that the patent amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the abstract idea itself.

The questions presented are:

1. Whether computer-implemented inventions that provide specific improvements to existing technological processes for encoding or decoding data are patent-eligible under the first step of the Alice test, even if those inventions involve or make use of abstract ideas.

2. Whether the use of new mathematical algorithms to improve existing technological processes by reducing bandwidth and memory usage can constitute “inventive concepts” under the second step of the Alice test.

The patent at issue here is U.S. Patent No. 8,005,303 that is generally directed toward a mechanism for creating a composite image.  In the brief, the patentee explains that the method allows the use of “composite facial image codes” to represent a face.

Claim 1. A method for creating a composite image, comprising:

displaying facial feature images on a first area of a first display …, wherein the facial feature images are associated with facial feature element codes;

selecting a facial feature image from the first area … via a user interface …

wherein the first device incorporates the selected facial feature image into a composite image …, wherein the composite image is associated with a composite facial image code … wherein the composite facial image code is derived by performing at least one multiplication operation on a facial code using one or more code factors as input parameters …; and

reproducing the composite image on a second display based on the composite facial image code.

After reading through this claim, I’ll give this petition approximately 0% of winning.

US08005303-20110823-D00000

Guest Post by Eric Sutton: Do You Know What your Provisional Application Did Last Summer?

Eric Sutton is a senior patent counsel at Oracle and an adjunct professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law. Any views or opinions expressed by him in this article are solely his own and do not necessarily represent those of Oracle Corporation, its subsidiaries or affiliates.

As known to most patent practitioners,[i] a parent provisional does not lock in a priority date for a child non-provisional unless the parent provisional provides a written description and enablement of an invention that is claimed in the child non-provisional. This assessment is conducted on a claim-by-claim basis[ii] to see if the parent provisional adequately supports and enables the precise subject matter of each child non-provisional claim for which priority is desired. If none of the claims in the child non-provisional are fully supported and enabled by the parent provisional, then the priority date for all of the claims is the later filing date of the non-provisional. In this scenario, the provisional has no clear value.

Under our first-inventor-to-file system, references that are published or patent applications that are filed between an applicant’s parent provisional filing and the applicant’s child non-provisional filing open the door for prior art to the claims of the child non-provisional filing, if those claims are not fully supported and enabled by the parent provisional.

Patent applicants, especially for software-related technologies, often file provisionals just before product releases, presentations at conferences, or publications of white papers or marketing materials. In-house patent portfolio managers frequently reassure business leaders that the technologies are protected by the provisionals, and outside patent counsel often similarly reassure in-house patent portfolio managers. However, due to time and budget pressures that often impact provisionals, relying on a provisional for priority may be significantly riskier than relying on a non-provisional.

Consider the hypothetical example below:

image001

In the example, suppose your company files many provisionals and, on average, files many non-provisionals — each about ten months after its corresponding provisional. You file the provisionals ahead of product releases, and your competitor follows up with very similar product releases within a few months. The competitor’s product releases and several publications about the underlying technology occur during the ten-month span between provisional and non-provisional filings. Any aspects of these publications that were not completely derived from your product would serve as potentially invalidating prior art to your non-provisional filings unless your provisional filings satisfy the written description and enablement requirements with respect to your non-provisional claims. This scenario could happen over and over again, and negative effects from this scenario could even be baked into your provisional and non-provisional filing strategies in a fast-paced product development environment.

In a big data analysis of provisional application quality, focused on comparing provisional application content to non-provisional claims using Innography®, LexisNexis® PatentAdvisor®, and self-developed software, I found that many patent attorneys seemingly do rely rather extensively on their provisionals.[iii] On average, applicants rely extensively on their provisionals by allowing an average of ten months of risk for intervening prior art by filing the first-filed child non-provisional ten months after the corresponding provisional. Whether or not that intervening prior art actually shows up is beyond their control, particularly if they have already let the cat out of the bag by sharing their technology with others.

How can we know, with high probability for a large set of provisionals, whether those provisionals provide support for their child non-provisional claims? While there are many approaches available, some are more or less time-consuming, more or less subjective, more or less scalable, and more or less reproducible. I chose to analyze a large chunk of application pairs[iv] to see whether word stems present in the non-provisional claims[v] were also present in the corresponding parent provisionals.[vi] I then further excluded word stems that often appear in patent claims to produce even more interesting results that focus in on the less common word stems that theoretically would be more troubling if missing from the provisionals. The results are objective for what they show, i.e., that provisionals are, on average, missing several word stems from the broadest independent claims of the non-provisionals.

The study does not conclude missing word stems or even missing uncommon word stems necessarily mean that there is no support or enablement in the provisional. On the contrary, the conclusion of this study depends on your personal experience and judgment. Suppose you know nothing about a large set of provisionals in your portfolio other than how many unique word stems and, more specifically, how many uncommon unique word stems from the broadest child non-provisional claims were missing from the provisionals.

My guess is that most people would be very comfortable if all of the word stems or uncommon word stems were present in the provisional (0% miss rate) even though it is still possible they have not supported or enabled the claims in particular scenarios. On the other hand, I think most people would be very uncomfortable if all of the word stems or uncommon word stems were absent from the provisional (100% miss rate) even though it is still possible that they have supported or enabled the claims. Different people will have different comfort levels between 0% and 100% depending on their own experiences and understanding, but at higher percentages one would likely begin to bet against priority rather than for it.

The study evaluated 1905 pairs of parent provisionals and non-provisionals, filed between March 2012 and July 2013.[vii] In the sample, there were 16,739 unique word stems in the first claims of the 1905 non-provisionals. For the parent provisional / child non-provisional pairs, an average of 7.0 unique word stems from claim 1 were missing from the parent provisionals out of an average of 49.8 unique word stems per claim, for a 13.3% unique word-stem miss rate. As mentioned above, applicants waited an average of 10 months between filing the first-filed non-provisional from the provisionals, which means applicants relied on these provisionals by taking on unnecessary risk, despite the significant average miss rates.

The chart below shows percentages of cases at different levels of word stem miss rates.

Sutton 2As shown, about 19.3% of cases were missing 25% or more of the unique word stems, a point that is likely beyond the comfort level of most patent practitioners. That said, 21.5% of cases had a 0% miss rate, indicating that a large group of patent practitioners is avoiding the written description and enablement risk that comes with varied language.

After a careful analysis of stems at different thresholds, it turned out that the top 3% of stems (516 stems) occurred 30 or more times in the sample and included stems that, for the most part, would likely not be considered relevant to a written description analysis, whether or not a synonym was present in the provisional. The choice of a cutoff level was subjective, but the cutoff itself was objectively applied in the sense that all terms above the cutoff were removed from the study and all terms below the cutoff remained in the study. The rationale used for the subjective cutoff level was to pick a level that was just beyond any level including the most common terms occurring in computer-related claims. Although the sample of cases was not limited to computer-related cases, computer-related terms excluded as being part of the top 3% were, for example:

comput, store, storage, devic, service, server, system, machin, network, send, receiv, transmit, communic, provid, transit, instruct, engine, modul, configur, process.

Using the list above as a proxy for familiar common terms was helpful in picking a cutoff point even though a significant portion of the sample did not involve computer-related innovation. Stems beyond the top 3% boundary remained in the study. These less common stems occurred 29 or fewer times in the sample of 1905 claims.

Should the miss rates go up or down after removing the common stems? My hypothesis was that miss rates would go down because terminology such as “compris” (excluded as within the top 3%) might often be added by attorneys down the road as claims are solidified. At a minimum, more cases would have a 0% miss rate when fewer stems are searched. Others predicted that the miss rates would go up for other buckets because common terminology is usually present in the provisional, at least as boilerplate. Therefore, removing the common terminology would reveal the true incompatibility between provisionals and non-provisional claims.

I was not willing to tolerate the same miss rates as I did in the analysis for all stems. Because we are focusing on only the stems that occur relatively infrequently (in 29 or fewer out of 1905 claims), it is significantly more likely (though not certain) that these stems would reflect content that could be relevant to written description or enablement issues.

Others were right to think the results would get worse. Removing the top 3% of stems reduced the average number of unique stems per claim by 27 stems (45.8%) to 22.8 stems. Out of those 22.8 uncommon unique stems remaining, on average, provisionals were missing 5.3 for an average miss rate of 17.7%, up by 4.4%. Personally, I was shocked at this result and felt uncomfortable on behalf of the patent bar.

The chart below shows percentages of cases at different levels of uncommon word stem miss rates.

Sutton 3As shown, about 26.7% of cases were missing 25% or more of the unique word stems. The 26.7% uncommon stems mark is up from the 19.3% mark for all stems, reflecting a delta of 7.4%. If having 25% or more uncommon stems missing is beyond the comfort level of most patent practitioners, then practitioners should be uncomfortable with at least 26.7% of the provisionals being filed. I was equally as shocked to see that 9.8% (up by 5.5%) of cases were missing 50% or more of the uncommon stems. The largest cluster was 24.1% (up by 2.6%) having a miss rate of 0%, although there were a few miss rates even at 100%.

Due to the skewed distribution with miss rates falling at both ends of the spectrum, statistical metrics such as standard deviation did not provide much insight into the dataset beyond the charts shown. Nevertheless:

  • a miss rate of 21% (30% of the sample) was greater than one standard deviation away from the peak of 0%,
  • a miss rate of 34% (19% of the sample) was 1.645 times the standard deviation away from the peak (considered significantly different than the peak of 0% for a right-tailed distribution, p = .05, if the peak miss rate of 0% is considered to be the target). Note this analysis incorrectly treats the 100% miss rates as deviating from the target, when at least these cases clearly have a different target. This unnecessarily inflates the miss rate required to qualify as significantly different.
  • a miss rate of 42% (14% of the sample) was greater than two standard deviations away from the peak.

U.S. ISSUES

It turns out that, in the U.S., the patent office does not even check for provisional application priority unless there is intervening prior art. That said, priority issues do come up in courts where litigants are equipped with discovery and additional resources.[viii] Based on the results of this study, it seems that there is some low hanging fruit where the patent office could object to a priority claim that is extremely unlikely to be accurate and, after patent office review, turns out to be inaccurate regardless of whether the patent office has found intervening prior art.

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

Although I am not qualified to opine on the laws of specific other countries, I do know that many other countries generally have a stricter view on specification support for the purposes of preserving priority. According to Heather McCann, a European Patent Attorney at EIP: “Having a mismatch in the literal terminology of the U.S. provisional and a child PCT application or a child European direct national filing could significantly reduce the possibility of obtaining patent protection and successfully defending a validity challenge, post-grant, if the contents of the U.S. provisional application were published (even by the applicant) prior to the child PCT or child direct national filing.”[ix]

Unfortunately for U.S. applicants, unless they are keen on priority issues, non-U.S. patent offices might be able to reject cases from U.S. applicants more frequently based on a difference between common U.S. practice and foreign written description and enablement laws.

INEQUITABLE CONDUCT

Because inequitable conduct involves intent, which is fact-specific, this article does not delve any deeper into this potential issue. That said, it would be interesting to hear an argument and supporting explanation against such a finding if the applicant incorrectly claimed priority even though 100% of the uncommon word stems were missing from the provisional.

GENERAL CONCLUSIONS

The study is an objective report of terminology disagreement between provisionals and non-provisionals. Individual attorneys will vary on how much terminology disagreement they find comfortable in light of their understanding of 35 U.S.C. 112(a).

With 27% of the provisionals missing a quarter or more of the broadest non-provisional claim’s uncommon unique word stems, there is much room for the patent bar to either improve provisional application quality or avoid inaccurate priority claims. Perhaps this could also be accomplished by prioritizing the conversion to a non-provisional or filing incremental provisionals as more details become available, rather than waiting 10 months for the conversion.


 

[i] For more information on the written description and enablement requirements, particularly as they apply to software-related innovation, see Sutton, E. Software Patents: A Practical Perspective (ver. 2.2, Sept. 2017), available on Amazon at http://a.co/9xcPNr9 (a software patents textbook in support of a law course offered at Chicago-Kent College of Law).

[ii] Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center v. Eli Lilly and Company, 849 F.3d 1049 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (inadequate written description in provisional); Phigenix, Inc. v. Genentech Inc., 238 F.Supp.3d 1177 (N.D. Cal. 2017) (inadequate written description in provisional); See Storer v. Clark, 860 F.3d 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (provisional not enabling); Dynamic Drinkware, LLC v. National Graphics, Inc., 800 F.3d 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“priority claims are not examined by the PTO as a matter of course, and consequently are not entitled to a presumption of adequate written description support in the provisional application,” and “[a] provisional application’s effectiveness as prior art depends on its written description support for the claims of the issued patent . . . .”).

[iii] N=1905, down from an original sample of 2341 after excluding: (a) unparseable provisionals, (b) clearly incomplete claims (for example, a method claim ending at the colon), and (c) later-filed provisionals that paired with the same first-filed non-provisional; provisionals filed Mar. 2012 to July 2013 across all companies, spanning the AIA transition; raw provisional pdfs available from PAIR, provided by Innography® in Jan. 2017; filing dates provided by Innography® directly and through use of their excellent patent portfolio analytics tool; sample spread over TC 1600, 1700, 2100, 2400, 2600, 2800, 3600, and 3700.

[iv] N=1905, same sample as above, comparing claim 1 of the non-provisional to the entire contents of the provisional application pdf, drawings included, based on Official Character Recognition (OCR) performed in batch by Adobe® Acrobat® 9 Standard, version 9.0.0. Provisionals were paired up with their first-filed non-provisionals based on data provided by Innography®. The claims of the non-provisionals were downloaded from Innography®.

[v] The first claims of the first-filed non-provisionals were stemmed using a popular word stemming library to result in unique word stems.

[vi] The text of the corresponding provisionals, as a result of the Adobe® Acrobat® 9 Standard OCR (see above), was searched for any text that would match the unique word stems. Spacing issues and formatting issues were corrected before performing the comparison.

[vii] The provisionals involved were filed between March 2012 and July 2013, bridging the AIA transition. If attorneys changed practice from pre-AIA to post-AIA, those changes were not sufficiently detectable in this sample. Although I personally believe that attorneys have not changed practice post-AIA; to fully test that hypothesis, I would need a sample significantly earlier than the AIA and a separate sample significantly later than the AIA. These samples simply were not available to me when I started the study.

[viii] Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center v. Eli Lilly and Company, 849 F.3d 1049 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (inadequate written description in provisional); Phigenix, Inc. v. Genentech Inc., 238 F.Supp.3d 1177 (N.D. Cal. 2017) (inadequate written description in provisional); See Storer v. Clark, 860 F.3d 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (provisional not enabling); Dynamic Drinkware, LLC v. National Graphics, Inc., 800 F.3d 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“priority claims are not examined by the PTO as a matter of course, and consequently are not entitled to a presumption of adequate written description support in the provisional application,” and “[a] provisional application’s effectiveness as prior art depends on its written description support for the claims of the issued patent . . . .”).

[ix] See, for example, European decision T 1983/14 “Purchase of mobile top-up/JANUARY PATENTS LTD.” (Nov. 23, 2015) (“The case law of the Boards of Appeal requires that the subject matter be directly and unambiguously derivable by the skilled person from the disclosure as a whole. The expressions ‘invoiced together’ and ‘charged for together’ . . . disclosed no more than that transactions could take place on the same machine[, not] multiple products being invoiced as one transaction.”); European decision T 2061/13  (June 20, 2017) (“subject-matter of claim 1 is . . . not directly and unambiguously derivable by the skilled person . . . such that . . . claim 1 does not have a right to priority from P1.”).

Patent Examiners Suggestions for Improving the Patent Document

Patentees often blame the USPTO for low patent quality.  Examiners though often reflect upon the principle “garbage-in, garbage out.”

As part of its patent quality initiative, the USPTO is considering the patent document could be improved to better facilitate examination and ultimately improve patent quality at issuance.

The chart below comes from an internal USPTO survey of patent-examiners – asking them what attributes of a patent application are “most necessary” for quality (and efficient) examination.  For each of those attributes, the survey asked about the frequency that they are found in patent applications (click to enlarge) (PDF with Explanations):

ApplicationFailures

Note – the survey was conducted by Martin Rater – USPTO’s Office of Patent Quality Assurance chief of statistics.

Not surprising, the largest gaps are found in the area of claims written in a form that is so broad so that it is no longer relatable to the inventive concept. The chart here focuses on “top needs.” Examiners also noted elements they don’t see as necessary – perhaps most notably a “Glossary of terms provided (separate section in the specification).”

PTAB Decision from This Week: CAD Modeling

136px-Spline_(PSF)[1]Tough case for Livermore Software.  The PTAB just rejected its claims as abstract ideas.  Claim 1 is a bit long but is listed below as a method for joining mis-matched portions of an object’s surface (NURBS patches) so that a whole object model is prepped for finite element analysis (FEA).  The problem for the patentee is that it presents a step-by-step algorithm with such precision that the Examiner (and PTAB) saw it as claiming a mathematical algorithm.

Livermore

Ex parte Hartmann, Apn. 14/051,559 (Nov.  2, 2017) [PTAB Decision: Livermore101]

The PTAB writes:

We agree with the Examiner that claims 1, 7, and 13 are directed to the abstract idea of manipulating data through mathematical relationships, which is similar to the computing formula discussed in Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 584 (1978), and the Arrhenius formula in Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175 (1981). . . . [All of the claimed steps] are abstract mathematical concepts and algorithms that could be performed in the human mind, or by a human using a pen and paper, without need of any computer or other machine.

Moving to Step-Two of Alice, the PTAB wrote:

We find that the additional limitations … do not add significantly more to the abstract idea. … Particularly, claims 1, 7, and 13 recite well-understood, routine, and conventional elements (i.e., computer system having an application module, memory, processor, and computer readable storage medium) that enable the creation of a computerized model using a “generic computer structure that serves to perform generic computer functions that are well-understood, routine, and conventional.”

Interesting aspect of the decision here is the notion that the spline adjustment could be done by a human with pen and paper.  The historical approach to do this well required the use of a spline tool (shown above).

In its decision the PTAB suggests (but does not hold directly) that the claims may be eligible if they had expressly (rather than implicitly) recited “a CAD model, a computer aided engineering (CAE) model, or a mechanical engineering design analysis for a product (e.g., car, airplane).” One way to think about the claim below is as a step for enabling model conversion (an abstract idea) but not the actual full conversion process (a concrete application rather than an abstract idea).

Rejected Claim 1 below:  

1. A method of joining imperfectly-matching Non-Uniform Rational Basis Splines (NURBS) patches to form a computerized model suitable for finite element analysis (FEA), said method comprising:

receiving, in a computer system having an application module installed thereon, definitions of a first NURBS patch and a second NURBS patch, the first and second NURBS patches to be joined together along a physical boundary defined in a first curve with a first set of control points, associated weights and a corresponding first plurality of knot-vector values in the first NURBS patch and defined in a second curve with a second set of control points, associated weights and a corresponding second plurality of knot-vector values in the second NURBS patch, wherein the first set of control points and said first plurality of knot-vector values are different from the second set of control points and said second plurality of knot-vector values;

normalizing said first plurality of knot-vector values such that the first curve’s parametric length equals the first curve’s physical length in the first NURBS patch;

normalizing said second plurality of knot-vector values such that the second curve’s parametric length equals the second curve’s physical length in the second NURBS patch;

determining a common curve as an overlapped section of the first and the second curves to represent the physical boundary;

adjusting the first and the second curves such that first and second projection points correspond to starting and end locations of the common curve, respectively;

designating one of the first and second curves having less number of control points along the common curve as a master curve, the other as a slave curve; and

determining a set of linear constraint equations for numerically connecting the first and second NURBS patches along the physical boundary by computing dependencies of the slave curve’s control points to the master curve’s control points,

whereby the first and second NURBS patches together with the set of linear constraint equations for the control points along the physical boundary enable a computerized model created therefrom suitable for finite element analysis.

 

 

80/20 Rule: 80% of IPRs challenge patents already asserted in district court

Pedram Sameni at Patexia has an interesting new post titled Eighty Percent of IPR Filings are for Defensive Purposes.   As the title suggests, their study of the 6,580 IPR challenges filed 2012-2017, 80% challenge patents that were already being asserted in district court.

https://www.patexia.com/feed/patexia-chart-44-80-percent-of-ipr-filings-are-for-defensive-purposes-20171107

 

From Joe Matal: The Importance of Independent Inventors to America – and America’s Economy

Blog by Joe Matal, Performing the Duties and Functions of the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the USPTO (Originally Posted at the USPTO Director’s Blog)

Throughout history, independent inventors have transformed our lives with their innovative ideas and played a key role in the growth of the U.S. economy. Regardless of whether these ideas spawned small family businesses or large corporations, the work of small inventors is part of the fabric of American innovation. Think of names like Dupont, Ford, Kellogg, and Wright; and technology such as the telephone, the electric lightbulb, the steam engine, and the airplane. A disproportionate number of the most important technological advances started in the minds of small-scale, independent inventors, and their ideas have helped create new jobs, businesses, and even entire global industries. Today, the importance of small inventors and small business endures. According to the Small Business Administration (SBA), two out of three net new jobs in the U.S. are created by small businesses.

Our policies and processes throughout the USPTO are intended to drive entrepreneurship and innovation, and create a fair, accessible, and easy-to-use system for all inventors. As I explained in Tampa, there’s always room for improvement at the USPTO. Every aspect of our agency is continually being refined to better serve the patent and trademark owner community. Hearing from them helps us identify ways we can make that happen.

To that end, the USPTO has a wide variety of resources designed to help independent inventors. They can take advantage of our Patent Pro Bono Program and Pro Se Assistance Program, which help applicants who seek patents without the assistance of a lawyer.  Historically, USPTO has found that pro se applicants have substantially higher abandonment rates than do other applicants.  The agency has recently begun expanding its pro se assistance program in order to ensure that every pro se inventor who wants to can be assisted by this art unit, in which examiners play an active role in guiding the inventor through the prosecution process. The USPTO also offers its Track One program, which provides expedited patent prosecution, and does so with significant discounts for small, independent inventors. Our Inventors Assistance Center, which is staffed by former patent examiners, intellectual property specialists, and attorneys, can answer general questions concerning patent examining policy and procedure.

In addition, our four regional offices, located in each of the U.S. time zones, serve to make our services more readily available to local communities, and their unique industry and innovation needs, whether it be an event on the basics of patents and trademarks, or meeting directly with an examiner to discuss an application. Representatives from across the USPTO regularly meet with groups of inventors, startups, and businesses. I encourage you to browse our list of all upcoming events to find one that interests you.

I look forward to continuing the discussion with inventors to learn what we’re doing well, what we can do better, and how best to serve their needs. Only by working together will we achieve the best outcomes for our nation’s inventors and entrepreneurs, and help grow our economy, create new jobs, and build new industries.

Next Step: Pushing for Global Increases and Uniformity in Trade Secret Protections

by Dennis Crouch

Over the past several decades, the US has been at the forefront of a global campaign to raise the levels of intellectual property protections.  Intellectual property protections is now a key aspect of any bilateral or multilateral trade agreement. The focus has been primarily on Patents, Copyrights, Design Rights and Trademarks. Trade secrets do, however, come into play as well. TRIPS, for instance, includes a requirement that member nations protTopSecretect trade secrets as well, although not at the level of “property rights.”

In the US, the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016 created a Federal cause of action for Trade Secret misappropriation.  An unstated goal of the new law was to place US trade negotiators in a strong position when encouraging other countries to ramp-up their trade secrecy regimes as well.

With that foundation solidified, a set of major industry lobbying groups (BIO, IPO, PhRMA, etc) have informed U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) that “the timing is right for a focused government-to-government initiative on global trade secret protection.”  The new letter particularly requests USTR to take the following four general actions to promote global trade secret protections.

  1. Make trade secret protection a priority in trade negotiations;
  2. Work with the private sector (industry) in determining needs and best best practices;
  3. Support trade secrets at the WTO through a “Friends of Trade Secrets dialogue; and
  4. Take a leadership role in promoting strong trade secrets protection.

Although many trade secret claims are business-to-business disputes, most of them stem have – at their heart – a former employee who left to form/join a competitor. And, unlike patent rights, trade secret rights are more directly owned by the employer rather than inventor or creator of the valuable information. This business-worker-competition difficulty is at the core of many policy arguments over trade secret protections.

Some of the potential changes that may be argued for: Many countries do not treat trade secrets as a “property” right but instead simply as a portion of unfair competition law; Many countries have no criminal laws (or only low penalties) against trade secret misappropriation; TRIPS allows for local consideration as to what constitutes “honest commercial practices” and thus allow for a lack of global uniformity in the definitions; Some countries have substantial state-sponsored industrial espionage operations that result in substantial misappropriation; Many countries have a lack of civil court infrastructure to allow for effective enforcement of trade secret rights.

It is unclear the extent that USTR will push for rights to keep trade-secrets from the governments.  On that note, the new NYTimes article is on point: China’s Technology Ambitions Could Upset the Global Trade Order.

 

 

= = = =

TRIPS Article 39.2 Natural and legal persons shall have the possibility of preventing information lawfully within their control from being disclosed to, acquired by, or used by others without their consent in a manner contrary to honest commercial practices so long as such information:

(a) is secret in the sense that it is not, as a body or in the precise configuration and assembly of its components, generally known among or readily accessible to persons within the circles that normally deal with the kind of information in question;

(b) has commercial value because it is secret; and

(c) has been subject to reasonable steps under the circumstances, by the person lawfully in control of the information, to keep it secret.

What are the Defenses to Patent Infringement?

RPost Comm. v. GoDaddy, LLC (Supreme Court 2017)

Like Oil States, the new petition for certiorari by RPost is a home-run swing — but will it connect?  The question presented:

Is patent ineligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101, which Congress did not codify in 35 U.S.C. § 282(b), not a cognizable defense in a patent litigation?

This question stems from Prof. David Hricik’s 2012 Patently-O post on the topic where he similarly asked: Are the Courts Correct in Their Assumption that a Patent Issued on Non-patentable Subject Matter is Invalid?

The idea here is that the defenses to patent infringement are expressly codified in 35 U.S.C. § 282(b).  Some failures of a patent can be raised in court as defenses to take-down an issued patent (such as lacking written description) while others simply cannot (such as improper revival or lack of best mode).

The petition here is timely – not only because so many patents are being invalidated under Section 101 – but also because the Supreme Court in SCA Hygiene (2017) reaffirmed the power of Section 282(b) — holding that laches was not a congnizable defense under the provision.  The petition argues:

The same type of statutory analysis [applied in SCA] must be applied here because no word or phrase in § 282(b) codifies ineligibility as a litigation defense.

 

Note here, that the same question was asked in Retirement Capital Access Mgm’t Co. v. U.S. Bancorp and Michelle Lee (cert denied 2015).  The Federal Circuit has refused to rule directly on this issue — instead affirming the lower-tribunal holdings without opinion (R.36).

A difficulty with the the whole approach is that the Supreme Court has already expressly refused to be bound by the statute in its eligibility analysis.

Top-side amicus briefs will be due in early December.

Links:

Documents:

 

 

Reminder: PHOSITA is not an Automaton; What is an Automaton?

University of Maryland Biotech Institute v. Presens Precision Sensing (Fed. Cir. 2017)

In a non-precedential decision, the Federal Circuit has affirmed the USPTO handling of the inter partes reexamination of Maryland’s U.S. patent No. 6,673,532. The examiner rejected claims 1, 3– 6, 9–11, 13–16, 19, and 20 as obvious under 35 U.S.C. § 103.  That determination was affirmed by the PTAB and now by the Federal Circuit.

Note, the inter partes reexamination was filed in 2011 and at that time Maryland did not challenge the process on Eleventh Amendment Immunity grounds.  However, the same patent was challenged in an Inter Partes Review (IPR) in 2016 and the PTAB recently dismissed the petition on sovereign immunity grounds. [IPR2016-00208 28 – Termination – Dismissed After Institution].  In the appeal, Maryland did not raise the issue.

Here, the patent covers growing cells in a cultivation vessel that includes various LEDs and light sensors.   This process can be used to make several non-invasive observations, including oxygen level, optic density, pH, etc.

US06673532-20040106-D00001

The prior art rejection combined two references.  One of which taught what was claimed – certain sensors within the cultivation vessels themselves – and the other reference disclosing the sensors “located in individual flow-through units outside the cultivation vessel.”  The second reference was needed though to complete the obviousness analysis.

On appeal, the patentee argued that combining the references was not proper because of the two different vessel configurations.   The Federal circuit rejected that approach – holding that PHOSITA is “not an automaton . . . limited to physically combining references.”  While a court may ask whether “substantial reconstruction and redesign” would be necessary to combine the references.  However, as KSR demands, “The combination of familiar elements according to known methods is likely to be obvious when it does no more than yield predictable results.”

Obviousness affirmed

= = = = =

As an aside, patent law may do well to move-on from the automaton language.  Nobody knows what an automaton really is — does someone have one they can show me? How does an automaton compare with contemporary AI?

PTAB Request Amicus Support for its Decision on Immunity

In what appears to be a first, the Patent Trial & Appeal Board (PTAB) has requested briefing from Amacus Curie on the question of whether Tribal Ownership of a patent immunizes the patent from Inter Partes Review (IPR) challenge. The case is Mylan v. Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe, IPR2016-01127 et al.

The panel writes:

[W]e authorize briefing from any other amici curiae, which shall also be no more than 15 pages by December 1, 2017. To the extent possible, to avoid redundancy and in the interests of efficiency, we direct any interested amici who wish to present similar arguments to the Board to coordinate in their filing of a joint amicus brief. Arguments redundant to those already presented by the parties or other amici may not be considered.

[98 – Order granting Amicus briefs].  Interesting approach to what is essentially a backdoor administrative rule-making.

Abstract Analysis in Other Areas of the Law

One of the struggles of the Subject Matter Eligibility test is understanding the definition of the legal term “abstract idea.” The Supreme Court has used the term “abstract” in many other areas of law – perhaps most pointedly in the area of standing and the requirement of a concrete, non-abstract harm.

In the 2016 internet law case of Spokeo v. Robins, the Supreme Court explained:

When we have used the adjective “concrete,” we have meant to convey the usual meaning of the term—“real,” and not “abstract.” . . . “Concrete” is not, however, necessarily synonymous with “tangible.” Although tangible injuries are perhaps easier to recognize, we have confirmed in many of our previous cases that intangible injuries can nevertheless be concrete.

The use of “abstract” here is strikingly similar to that used by the Supreme Court in its eligibility analysis.  A concrete harm (or invention) must be sufficiently real, but need not actually be a tangible harm. [Decision]

Spokeo-Logo1-copy[1]

Spokeo is a ‘people search engine’ often used by potential employers.  They substantially screwed up Robins’ information and he sued — alleging willful failure to comply with the Fair Credit Reporting Act’s requirements.  The issue before the Supreme Court was whether the plaintiff could establish any concrete harm based upon the online errors.  After the Supreme Court clarified the standard, on remand the Ninth Circuit held that the reputational harm associated with false information was sufficiently real, concrete, and not abstract – even if not tangible.

Although Spokeo offers a parallel abstract-ness analysis, it doses not actually get us closer to a straightforward definition of the term.  What it may do, though is open the analysis to a wider set of precedent.

USPTO Launches Two Year Diversion Pilot Program

Press Release:

WASHINGTON – The Department of Commerce’s United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is initiating a two-year Diversion Pilot Program for patent and trademark practitioners. Implemented by the Office of Enrollment and Discipline (OED), the program aligns USPTO with the practices of more than 30 state attorney discipline systems. It will help OED accomplish its mission of protecting the public from practitioners who fail to comply with the USPTO’s standards for ethics and professionalism.

OED’s Diversion Pilot Program offers practitioners who engaged in minor misconduct the opportunity to avoid formal discipline by implementing specific remedial measures. The Diversion Pilot Program will be available to practitioners whose physical, mental, or emotional health issues (including substance or alcohol abuse) or law practice management issues resulted in minor misconduct and little, if any, harm to a client. In appropriate cases, a practitioner will be offered the opportunity to enter into a diversion agreement with the OED Director, which will require the practitioner to take affirmative steps to rectify the issue which led to the minor misconduct.

“We’re hopeful that this pilot program will align our agency with best practices established in other states while allowing practitioners a fair chance to rectify previous misconduct and allow them to move forward in a productive manner,” said Joseph Matal, Performing the Functions and Duties of the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

The criteria for participation will initially be based upon criteria recommended by the American Bar Association. To participate in the Diversion Pilot Program, practitioners must not have not been publicly disciplined by the USPTO or another jurisdiction in the past three years, and must be willing and able to participate in the program. In addition, the conduct at issue must not (1) involve the misappropriation of funds or dishonesty, deceit, fraud or misrepresentation, (2) result in or likely result in substantial prejudice to a client or other person, (3) constitute a “serious crime,” as defined by 37 C.F.R. § 11.1; or (4) be part of a pattern of similar misconduct or be of the same nature as misconduct for which the practitioner has been disciplined within the past five years. Once it is determined that both the practitioner and misconduct at issue are eligible, other factors will be considered in determining whether diversion is appropriate.

OED is enthusiastic to join the over 30 state attorney discipline systems that have implemented diversion programs. OED expects that the diversion program will further its mission of protecting the public by strengthening the skills and abilities of individuals who practice before the USPTO.

 

Role of the Specification and Prosecution History in Patent Eligibility Analysis

by Dennis Crouch

The Federal Circuit’s decision in Two-Way Media is in some amount of tension with the court’s 2016 decision in Amdocs v. Openet Telecom.   In Amdocs, the court noted that the claims appeared problematic under Section 101 (abstract ideas), but that the architecture – as specifically described in the specification but more generically claimed – showed that the invention was actually a technological improvement.  In Two-Way Media, the court faced the same dilemma but arrived at the opposite conclusion — holding that although the specification described a technological improvement, the claims were written at too abstract a level to be patent eligible.

Note here that Judge Reyna dissented in Amdocs.  However, rather than accepting the Amdocs precedent, Reyna is now the author of Two-Way Media – a decision that does not cite Amdocs.  Wow.

Other cases in this intra-circuit-split include Smart Sys. Innovations, LLC v. Chicago Transit Auth.,(Fed. Cir. Oct. 18, 2017); Synopsys Inc. v. Mentor Graphics Corp., 839 F.3d 1138 (Fed. Cir. 2016); and Visual Memory LLC v. NVIDIA Corp., 867 F.3d 1253 (Fed. Cir. 2017).   The chart below shows these results with the invalidity opinion in blue, and validity opinion in orange.

SpitOnClaims

Now pending before the U.S. Supreme Court is Openet’s petition for writ of certiorari asking the following question:

To be patent eligible, a patent must claim “the means or method of producing a certain result, or effect, and not [the] result or effect produced.” Corning v. Burden, 56 U.S. 252, 267-68 (1854). This principle has driven this Court’s patentable subject matter jurisprudence for over 150 years, including most recently the “search for an inventive concept” described in the second step of the Alice/Mayo framework. Alice Corp. Pty. Ltd. v. CLS Bank Int’l, 134 S. Ct. 2347, 2355 (2014) (quoting Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc., 566 U.S. 66, 72 (2012)). Because a patent’s claims define the scope of the invention, this Court stated in both Alice and Mayo that this second step of the eligibility analysis turns on what is “in the claims.” The question presented is:

Whether the Federal Circuit erred by looking beyond the claims to the patent specification to assess patent eligibility

In the pending case, petition-stage briefs are in and the court is scheduled for conference later this month.

 

I should note here that the patentee Amdocs disagrees with Openet’s characterization of what happened.  Rather, the patentee argues that “The Federal Circuit’s decision on patent eligibility thus rested not on material drawn willy-nilly from the specifications, but on the scope of the claims as construed in Amdocs I at Openet’s urging.”

Will the Supreme Court react to a Business Method Patent Held Valid?

Eligibility: Novelty and Nonobviousness Evidence is Irrelevant to the Inventive Concept Question

by Dennis Crouch

Two-Way Media v. Comcast (Fed. Cir. 2017)

Most internet communications involve unicast communications – one point to one point.  Although Patently-O is accessed by many thousands each day, each HTTP request is treated separately and uniquely.   In some circumstances, you might imagine that multi-casting would be more efficient and capable of reducing certain network traffic.  Two-Way’s  asserted patents (U.S. Patent No. 5,778,187; 5,983,005; 6,434,622; and 7,266,686) are directed to system and methods for multicasting communications over a network.

Claim 1 of the ‘187 patent, for instance, is directed toward a “method for transmitting message packets over a communications network” and includes steps of “converting a plurality of streams of audio and/or visual information into a plurality of streams of
addressed digital packets;” “routing” the streams to “one or more users” based upon “selection signals” received from the users; and “monitoring” the receipt on a user-by-user basis with information about “the time that a user starts [and] stops receiving” the A/V stream.

Two-Way sued Comcast (and others) for infringement. However, the district court granted the defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings – holding that the claims were invalid as ineligible under 35 U.S.C. Section 101 as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Alice and Mayo.   In that process, the district court refused to consider evidence of the patents’ novelty and nonobviousness – holding that such evidence would be irrelevant to a Section 101 inquiry.

The proffered materials are irrelevant to the § 101 motion for judgment on the pleadings. None of the materials addresses a § 101 challenge to claims of the asserted patents. The novelty and nonobviousness of the claims under §§ 102 and 103 does not bear on whether the claims are directed to patent-eligible subject matter under § 101. . . . Because the proffered materials are irrelevant to the instant§ 101 issue, I have not considered them.

[District Court Judgement: Two-Way Dismissal].

The district court then went-on to find that the claims were directed to a collection of abstract ideas, including sending information; directing information; and monitoring receipt of information.  The court then went on to hold that the claims lacked any ‘inventive concept’ beyond the abstract idea itself.

On appeal, the Federal Circuit has fully affirmed these holdings – noting particularly that novelty and non-obviousness evidence is not relevant to the inventive concept question:

[The district] court correctly concluded that the [submitted evidence] was relevant to a novelty and obviousness analysis, and not whether the claims were directed to eligible subject matter. Eligibility and novelty are separate inquiries. Affinity Labs (holding that “even assuming” that a particular claimed feature was novel does not “avoid the problem of abstractness”).

Note here that the court seemingly offered a road-map for the patentee — a technological arts test — noting that the specifications appear to describe a “system architecture as a technological innovation” but “the claim—as opposed to something purportedly described in the specification—is missing an inventive concept.”

Invalidity judgment affirmed.

Two-Way Media & the Doctrine of Equivalents

Claim 1 of the ‘187 patent:

1. A method for transmitting message packets over a communications network comprising the steps of:

converting a plurality of streams of audio and/or visual information into a plurality of streams of addressed digital packets complying with the specifications of a network communication protocol, for each stream, routing such stream to one or more users,

controlling the routing of the stream of packets in response to selection signals received from the users, and

monitoring the reception of packets by the users and accumulating records that indicate which streams of packets were received by which users,

wherein at least one stream of packets comprises an audio and/or visual selection and the records that are accumulated indicate the time that a user starts receiving the audio and/or visual selection and the time that the user stops receiving the audio and/or visual selection.