Voluntary Dismissals and Attorney Fees

by Dennis Crouch

The Copyright Act and the Patent Act each include an attorney fee provision — permitting the district court to award “a reasonable attorney’s fee to the prevailing party.”  Because of similarities in the provisions, they tend to be interpreted together — at least with regard to what qualifies as a “prevailing party” under the statute.  (Unlike in copyright law, the patent law limits fees to “exceptional case[s]”).

On the Copyright side, there is a growing circuit split on the issue of whether defendants can recover attorney’s fees after a plaintiff voluntarily dismisses under Rule 41(a)(1).   That rule permits for voluntary dismissal and does not require a court order.  Affordable Aerial Photography, Inc. v. Property Matters USA, LLC, 108 F.4th 1358 (11th Cir. 2024), the 11th Circuit held that “some judicial action rejecting or rebuffing a plaintiff’s claim is necessary to endow a defendant with prevailing party status.”  In a parallel decision, the 11th Circuit clarified that a plainttif’s voluntary dismissal does not create a prevailing party status even if made “with prejudice.” Affordable Aerial Photography, Inc. v. Reyes, No. 23-12051, 2024 WL 4024619 (11th Cir. Sep. 3, 2024).

The Federal Circuit has developed a body of law holding that voluntary dismissals with prejudice can support prevailing party status and fee awards in patent cases. See O.F. Mossberg & Sons, Inc. v. Timney Triggers, LLC, 955 F.3d 990 (Fed. Cir. 2020). However, the Federal Circuit generally denies prevailing party status after Rule 41(a)(1) dismissals without prejudice.  The Ninth Circuit approach looks to the general question of preclusion – asking whether the plaintiff is “judicially precluded from refiling the claim.”  If so, then the defendant qualifies as the prevailing party. Cadkin v. Loose, 569 F.3d 1142 (9th Cir. 2009). So, we have something of a split here between the various circuits. (more…)

Trade Secret Protection in the Digital Age: When Does Web Scraping Cross the Line?

by Dennis Crouch

I'm following a new cert petition that asks the Supreme Court to examine when web scraping becomes an improper means of obtaining trade secret information under the the DTSA. I regularly use web scraping for academic research, and so this case caught my attention for more than just the intellectual property curiosity.

The specific question presented to the Supreme Court is "whether an action that is not unlawful under the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act ('DTSA') when performed manually by a human (or humans) is unlawful when performed by a computer robot." This framing presents a parallel to the seminal 1970 aerial photography case of E. I. duPont deNemours & Co. v. Christopher, 431 F.2d 1012 (5th Cir. 1970).


To continue reading, become a Patently-O member. Already a member? Simply log in to access the full post.

TikTok – A First Look at the Briefs

Briefs are trickling in for the Supreme Court’s fast-paced battle over the upcoming TikTok ban.   The outcome of TikTok v. Garland will likely be a watershed moment for free speech in the digital age — especially with respect to non-US media.  This post walks through the six amicus briefs all filed early.  Three support TikTok and its content creator co-petitioners; and three agree with the appellate court and U.S. government that the ban is appropriate.

As background: TikTok has over 170 million U.S. users but is ultimately owned by Chinese company ByteDance, which under Chinese law must share data and comply with Chinese Communist Party directives. After years of bipartisan concern about TikTok’s data collection practices and potential for content manipulation, Congress passed the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act (PAFACAA) in April 2024 with strong support from both parties, and President Biden signed it into law. The Act effectively requires ByteDance to sell TikTok to non-Chinese owners by January 19, 2025, or face a ban on U.S. operations. TikTok and several content creators immediately challenged the law as violating the First Amendment, but the D.C. Circuit upheld the ban in December 2024, finding that even if strict scrutiny applied, the government’s national security interests justified the restriction. With the divestiture deadline looming, the Supreme Court took the extraordinary step of granting immediate review and scheduling arguments for January 10, 2025, just nine days before the law would take effect. The case presents novel questions about how traditional First Amendment doctrines apply to social media platforms controlled by potentially hostile foreign powers and tests the limits of Congress’s authority to restrict foreign ownership of communications infrastructure. (more…)

Some numbers from this week

by Dennis Crouch:

  • On December 24, 2026 2024, the USPTO issued 6,920 utility patents and 800 design patents. The vast majority of utility patents are published prior to issuance - this week the numbers were 94%.
  • The utility allowance rate was 86% for the week - calculated as the number patented divided by the number disposed of (patented / (patented + abandoned)). 90% of abandoned cases were - as you might expect - for failure to respond to an office action. A distant #2 was failure to pay the issue fee.
  • For the week, patent applications in semiconductor and display technologies (AU groups 2620, 2820) show extremely high allowance rates of 97-98%. In contrast, business methods, GUI, and AI-modeling patent applications (AU groups 3680, 2140, 2120) face much lower allowance rates around 59-62%, reflecting stricter scrutiny in these software and "abstract-idea" focused domains.

To continue reading, become a Patently-O member. Already a member? Simply log in to access the full post.

Non-Patent IP Cases at the Supreme Court: December 2024 Update

by Dennis Crouch

I recently posted about pending patent cases before the Supreme Court, this post goes into the non-patent intellectual property cases:

On December 11, 2024, the Court heard arguments in Dewberry Group, Inc. v. Dewberry Engineers Inc., No. 23-900, addressing profit calculations for trademark misappropriation under Section 35(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a). This is the only IP case that has been granted certiorari this term. The dispute stems from a $43 million disgorgement award based on profits earned by companies affiliated with, but legally distinct from, the defendant. The central question is whether courts can consider affiliate revenues without first “piercing the corporate veil.”

During oral argument, the Justices focused heavily on corporate law fundamentals. Several appeared skeptical of the respondent’s argument that courts can treat affiliate profits as evidence of a defendant’s “true financial gain” without disregarding corporate separateness. The Court’s ultimate resolution could significantly impact how companies structure their IP holdings and licensing arrangements between related entities.

Two interrelated petitions examine internet service provider liability for copyright infringement. In Cox Communications, Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment, No. 24-171, and Sony Music Entertainment v. Cox Communications, Inc., No. 24-181, the Court confronts important questions about secondary liability following a $1 billion jury verdict. The Cox petition challenges the Fourth Circuit’s holding that an ISP “materially contributes” to infringement merely by continuing service to known infringing subscribers. This arguably conflicts with decisions requiring either active promotion of infringement (Second and Tenth Circuits) or at least failure to implement simple preventive measures (Ninth Circuit).

Sony’s cross-petition addresses when ISP infringement qualifies as “willful” under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c). The Fourth Circuit held that knowledge of subscriber infringement suffices, while the Eighth Circuit requires evidence the ISP knew its own conduct was unlawful. This distinction has enormous practical impact—under the Fourth Circuit’s approach, the statutory damages ceiling automatically increases from $30,000 to $150,000 per work for contributory infringers. The Court has invited the Solicitor General to weigh in on both petitions — this will likely be submitted by the Trump Administration after January 20, 2025.

In King for Congress v. Griner, No. 24-321, the Court is presented with a circuit split regarding Rule 68 offers of judgment in copyright cases. The dispute involves the viral “Success Kid” meme, where a congressional campaign was found to be an innocent infringer (i.e., non-willful) yet sought to recover post-offer attorney’s fees under Rule 68. The Eighth Circuit joined the First, Seventh and Ninth Circuits in holding that copyright defendants cannot recover Rule 68 attorney’s fees because the Copyright Act limits fee awards to “prevailing parties.” Griner arguably won, but the total award was just $750.

Canadian Standards Association v. P.S. Knight Co., No. 24-537 asks whether privately-developed technical standards lose copyright protection when incorporated by reference into law. The Fifth Circuit, applying its prior decision in Veeck v. Southern Building Code Congress Int’l, Inc., 293 F.3d 791 (5th Cir. 2002), held that both the government edicts doctrine and merger doctrine strip such standards of protection, regardless of their private authorship. The petitioner argues this conflicts with Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc., 140 S. Ct. 1498 (2020), which emphasized that copyrightability turns on the identity of the author rather than whether content carries legal force. The case has significant implications for U.S. treaty obligations under the Berne Convention and the sustainability of private standards development, as many technical codes relied upon by federal agencies are created by organizations seeking copyright licensing revenue.

The dispute in BMC Software v. IBM, No. 24-569 arose when IBM used its IT outsourcing position to help customer AT&T replace BMC’s licensed mainframe software with IBM’s competing products—violating a license provision prohibiting IBM from using its access to “displace” BMC’s software. The Fifth Circuit reversed a $1.6 billion damages award, holding the license restriction was likely unenforceable as a restraint on trade because it could limit AT&T’s software choices. BMC argues this creates a circuit split with four courts of appeals that recognize software owners have a “presumptively valid business justification” for license restrictions. The case raises fundamental questions about the intersection of copyright and antitrust law, particularly regarding restrictions designed to prevent competitors from leveraging privileged access to unfairly compete.

Rutstein v. Compulife Software, No. 24-634 raises a novel trade secret issue: whether automated web scraping should be treated differently than manual data collection under the Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA). The Eleventh Circuit held that using automated tools to collect insurance premium quotes from Compulife’s public website constituted misappropriation by “improper means,” even though manually collecting the same data would be legal. Critics argue this creates an arbitrary distinction based on collection efficiency rather than the nature of information access. The case could provide crucial guidance on how trade secret law should adapt to automated data collection technologies that power much of the modern internet.

Finally, T-Mobile v. Simply Wireless, No. 24-637, presents a circuit split over maintaining common law trademark rights. The Fourth Circuit held that once rights are established through “extensive use,” they persist until abandoned under Section 45 of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1127—even during extended periods of non-use. This allowed Simply Wireless to pursue infringement claims against T-Mobile despite having made no use of its mark during multiple multi-year periods. This approach conflicts with other circuits requiring continuous use until alleged infringement begins. The case could resolve whether the continuous use requirement applies only to establishing common law rights or extends to maintaining them, with significant implications for dormant mark enforcement.

The Federal Circuit’s Divided Path on Divided Infringement

by Dennis Crouch

The Federal Circuit recently issued an important decision refining how courts should analyze infringement of system claims when multiple parties are involved in operating different components of the claimed system. This post looks at the court’s  new decision in CloudofChange, LLC v. NCR Corp., No. 23-1111 (Fed. Cir. Dec. 18, 2024) and contrasts it Centillion Data Systems, LLC v. Qwest Communications International, Inc., 631 F.3d 1279 (Fed. Cir. 2011).

These cases highlight a recurring challenge in patent law – how to analyze infringement when a claim requires components controlled by different actors. The issue is particularly salient for modern technology systems that often involve both vendor-operated backend servers and customer-operated frontend devices. (more…)

Federal Circuit Appellate court Grants Emergency Stay of Apple Watch Ban

by Dennis Crouch

The patent battle between Masimo and Apple over pulse oximetry technology in the Apple Watch took a new turn on December 27th. Despite the recent import ban imposed by the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), Apple was granted a temporary stay by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. For now, this emergency ruling blocks the government from enforcing the exclusion order on certain Apple Watch models through at least mid-January. However, the legal fight is far from over. For Masimo, this short-term win for Apple weakens its bargaining position as the two companies continue their protracted patent dispute in courts and before regulatory agencies.


To continue reading, become a Patently-O member. Already a member? Simply log in to access the full post.

Emergency Appeal of the Apple Watch Ban

by Dennis Crouch

December 25th, marked the deadline for President Biden to reject the U.S. International Trade Commission's (USITC) ruling banning imports of certain Apple Watch models. With no action from the White House, Apple now faces a federal government order to halt imports and sales of Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 devices because it incorporates light-based pulse oximetry technology covered by the claims of Masimo's U.S. Patent Nos. 10,945,648 (claims 24 and 30) and 10,912,502 (claim 22).


To continue reading, become a Patently-O member. Already a member? Simply log in to access the full post.