Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Plurality

Wednesday, October 17th, 2012

I was wondering how many patents have issued over the years that contain claim language referring back to a plurality of something.

Using the FreePatentsOnline search site last week I generated these results:

plurality — 1,663,532 patents

each of a plurality — 43,650

each of the plurality — 96,169*

each and every of the plurality — 5*

every one of the plurality — 105*

everyone of the plurality — 2*

all of the plurality — 5,056

at least one of the plurality — 33,431

one or more of the plurality — 7,456

any of the plurality — 4,314

at least two of the plurality — 4,864

two or more of the plurality — 1,129

plurality of the plurality — 423

sub-plurality of the plurality — 33

subplurality of the plurality — 14

some of the plurality — 5,037

several of the plurality — 87

few of the plurality — 5

most of the plurality — 35

either of the plurality — 43

none of the plurality — 628

enough of the plurality — 5

*One would think that if “each” were so well understood to mean “every one” that there would be a more even distribution between patents that recite “each of the plurality” (96,169) and patents that recite “every one of the plurality” (112).

Justice Breyer Announcing the Mayo v. Prometheus Decision

Tuesday, October 9th, 2012

At the beginning of each Supreme Court term, the Court releases the audio of the announcements of the decisions from the previous Supreme Court term.  An announcement is not an actual word for word reading of the Court’s opinion.  It is a short synopsis of the opinion.  One of those announcements was for the Mayo v. Prometheus decision.  You can listen to Justice Breyer read that announcement of the opinion here.

The announcement ran about seven minutes.  So, if you are pressed for time, you can listen to a speedier version here.

Beer … here.

Friday, October 5th, 2012

The Federal Circuit issued its en banc opinion in Beer v. U.S., __ F.3d __ (Fed. Cir. 2012) this afternoon.  The Beer opinion is not a patent case — it concerns judicial pay.

It is interesting that while the en banc Akamai case took a rather long time to decide by Federal Circuit en banc standards (Akamai took roughly nine months following oral argument), the Beer decision was on tap for public consumption pretty quickly (a mere five weeks following oral argument).

I’ve noted in the past that since becoming Chief Judge, Chief Judge Rader has not asked substantive questions during oral arguments of en banc cases.  This is odd as he doesn’t hesitate to ask questions during oral arguments of panel cases where he always serves as presiding judge.  The oral argument in Beer was no exception to this growing pattern.  If I ever attend a conference where  CJ Rader is speaking about en banc cases, I should ask him what the story is.

The Beer opinion along with its dissent and concurring opinions is available here.

You can listen to the oral argument here: [Listen].

Live Stream of Patent/Antitrust Program at University of Colorado

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

Update:

The recorded program from the University of Colorado Law School program is available here.  Circuit Judges Lourie and Reyna were surprise participants in the program.  You can watch Circuit Judge Lourie beginning at about the 23:12 minute mark of the first video segment.  You can listen to Circuit Judge Reyna beginning at about the 1:21:40 mark of the first video segment.

——————————————————————————————

As part of the Federal Circuit’s visit to hear oral arguments at the University of Colorado Law School, a patent/antitrust program is being held today.  You can watch a live stream of the program here:  [Link].

Speakers include:  John Duffy (UVA), Ray Chen (Solicitor, USPTO), (Chad Hilyard (Chief IP Counsel, RockStar Consortium), Arti Rai (Duke), Fabian Gonell (Qualcomm), as well as a host of other interesting speakers.  Times listed below are Mountain time.

Welcome
1:00pm – 1:10pm

  • Phil Weiser
    Dean
    University of Colorado Law School
    Executive Director
    Silicon Flatirons Center

Keynote
1:10pm – 1:25pm

Panel 1: The Institutional Roles of the PTO, the Federal Government, and the Judiciary in Shaping Patent Law
1:25pm – 2:25pm

  • Philip Brimmer
    U.S. District Judge
    District of Colorado
  • William Cavanaugh
    Partner
    Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP
  • Raymond Chen
    Deputy General Counsel for Intellectual Property Law and Solicitor
    United States Patent and Trademark Office
  • John Duffy
    Armistead M. Dobie Professor of Law
    University of Virginia School of Law

Moderator

Panel 2: Scope of Patentability and Other Patent Policy Levers
2:25pm – 3:25pm

Moderator

  • Harry Surden
    Associate Professor of Law
    University of Colorado

Break
3:25pm – 3:40pmPanel 3: Competition Policy and Patents
3:40pm – 4:40pm

  • Terrell McSweeny
    Senior Counsel, Antitrust Division
    United States Department of Justice
  • Scott Partridge
    Chief Deputy General Counsel
    Monsanto
  • John Ryan
    Chief Legal Officer
    Level 3 Communications
  • Greg Sivinski
    Assistant General Counsel, Antitrust Group
    Microsoft

Moderator

  • Phil Weiser
    Dean
    University of Colorado Law School
    Executive Director
    Silicon Flatirons Center

Panel 4: Case Study of the Changing Wireless Landscape: Patent Portfolio Development and Acquisition and Litigation
4:40pm – 5:40pm

  • John L. Cooper
    Partner
    Farella Braun + Martel LLP
  • Fabian Gonell
    Vice President, Legal Counsel
    Qualcomm
  • Chad Hilyard
    Chief IP Counsel
    Rockstar Consortium US LP
  • Suzanne Michel
    Senior Patent Counsel
    Google
  • Sharis Pozen
    Partner
    Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP

Moderator

  • Jonathan Sallet
    Silicon Flatirons Senior Adjunct Fellow
    University of Colorado
    Partner
    O’Melveny & Myers LLP

Live Stream of Federal Circuit Oral Arguments

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012

The Federal Circuit is sitting at the University of Colorado Law School today.  You can catch the live video stream of the program here:  [Link].

Update:  The live video stream of the oral arguments has now concluded.

Odds and Ends

Sunday, September 30th, 2012

1)  The Honorable Pauline Newman was named a Fellow of the American Chemical Society in August.  You can read more about it here: [Link].  Congratulations to Judge Newman!

2)  The Federal Circuit reinstated portions of the original panel decision in Akamai v. Limelight.  [Link].  You may recall that the previous opinion was vacated when en banc review was granted.  The original panel opinion was previously removed from the Federal Circuit web site; but, it is available here.

3)  Upon remand from the Supreme Court, an en banc hearing was requested in the Ultramercial v. Hulu case (sometimes referred to as WildTangent).  The petition for an en banc hearing was denied last week.  [Link].  A request for rehearing en banc was filed on the same day  (August 22, 2012) in CLS v. Alice.  That petition was not addressed last week.

Federal Circuit Panel to Discuss Splits within the Federal Circuit

Wednesday, September 26th, 2012

The Federal Circuit is sitting in Colorado next week to hear oral arguments.  There are numerous activities being held by the IP community during the week.  One of the events that looks quite interesting is a panel to be held at the University of Denver comprised of Federal Circuit judges discussing splits within the Federal Circuit.  The agenda for the event is as follows:

MORNING AGENDA: ORAL ARGUMENTS

University of Denver College of Law

Room 165

Oral arguments begin at 10:00 a.m.

AFTERNOON AGENDA: PATENT PERSPECTIVES FROM THE INSIDE

University of Denver College of Law

Room 165

2:15 – 5:00 p.m.

(CLE credits pending)

“Patent Perspectives from the Inside.” This conference will bring together two very different sets of “inside” perspectives, those of the judiciary and in-house counsel, to discuss specific issues in patent law.

Panel 1: 2:15 – 3:30 p.m.

“Addressing Splits within the Federal Circuit,” with Federal Circuit Judges (not yet announced).

The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals is made up of twelve judges. Although the Court often helps clarify patent doctrine, the judges also occasionally disagree about the law. Examples of recent intra-circuit splits have occurred in the context of subject matter patentability, enablement, claim construction, and divided infringement. Join our panel of distinguished judges in a discussion about how they deal with differences of opinions within the Federal Circuit. The panel will be moderated by Denver Law Assistant Professor Bernard Chao.

Panel 2: 3:45 — 5:00 p.m.

“Cease and Desist Letters: The Law and The Tactics,” with Cynthia Bright, HP; Aaron Brodsky, Oracle; Chris Byrne, formerly with Tessera Technologies; and Stephen Perkins, Covidien.

Preparing and responding to cease and desist letters typically falls on the shoulders of in-house counsel. These letters have surprising number of different legal and practical implications. These letters can provide declaratory judgment jurisdiction. They also give the recipient notice of the patent and show that the patent holder knew about the recipient’s products. This in turn can affect determinations of damages and willfulness. Join a panel of experienced in-house counsel from around the country to discuss what goes into preparing and responding to cease and desist letters. This panel will be moderated by Professor Tim Holbrook from Emory University School of Law.

Patent Litigation Statistics 2012

Sunday, September 16th, 2012

PriceWaterhouseCoopers has released its annual publication on patent litigation statistics.  You can access the study at the PWC site: [here].

Federal Circuit Hears En Banc Oral Argument over Beer

Sunday, September 9th, 2012

The Federal Circuit sat en banc this past Friday and heard the oral argument in Beer v. U.S. That case concerns judicial pay for Article III judges.  The judges of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit are Article III judges; so, the outcome of the appeal could affect their pay.

Chief Judge Randall Rader made a statement immediately before the oral argument began acknowledging the fact that this case could affect the judges of the Federal Circuit themselves.  However, he noted that the “Rule of Necessity” required them to adjudicate the case:  [Listen].

Judge Rader’s statement:

Today’s appeal presents a somewhat unusual circumstance.  Any decision by this court may directly affect every member of not only the Federal Circuit but of the entire federal judiciary.  To some of us this is more than unusual, it is a little uncomfortable.  Yet the Supreme Court has stated that under the Rule of Necessity, we have a duty to decide cases involving judicial compensation in spite of any potential personal interest.  The Rule of Necessity states “although a judge had better not, if it can be avoided, take part in a decision of a case in which he has any personal interest, yet he not only may but must do so if the case cannot be heard otherwise.”

These appellants have brought a cognizable claim and are entitled to their day in court.  As noted by perhaps the greatest American judge, Chief Justice John Marshall, in 1821 the judiciary unlike the legislature does not have the luxury of inaction when faced with difficult decisions.  Whatever difficulties a case may bring “we have no more right to decline the exercise of jurisdiction which is given than to usurp that which is not given.”  It is under this mandate that we sit and hear this case today.

You can listen to the entire oral argument here: [Listen].

“Sufficiently Interrelated”

Saturday, September 8th, 2012

You might recall that in the KSR v. Teleflex opinion that the Supreme Court used the language “interrelated teachings.”  To the best of my knowledge, the Federal Circuit has not yet weighed in on the meaning of that phrase.  In the recently decided appeal of Sirona v. Kappos, a Federal Circuit panel actually had an opportunity to address the meaning of “interrelated teachings” as well as the phrase  “sufficiently interrelated.”  But, the panel opted not to write an opinion and issued a Rule 36 opinion instead.

Sirona v. Kappos concerned an appeal of a Board decision from an inter partes reexamination.  The Board found some of the claims under reexam patentable.  So, the appeal to the Federal Circuit pitted the inter partes reexam requestor against the patent owner (3M) and the Solicitor’s Office of the USPTO.

Because the Board found in favor of the patentee with respect to some claims by finding those claims patentable, the Solicitor’s Office was in the unique position of arguing in favor of patentability at the CAFC. Had 3M cross-appealed the Board’s rejection of other claims, I suppose the Solicitor’s Office would have been in the even more unique position of  having to argue in favor of the patentability of the allowed claims and in favor of unpatentability of the rejected claims!  I wonder which counsel’s table the PTO sits at in that instance.

With respect to the “interrelatedness” issue, the Board stated the following in its “Decision on Request for Rehearing”:

Sirona misunderstands the basis of our decision. Rather than determining that JP ‘966 and US ‘585 were not analogous art, our statement merely highlighted the deficiencies in Sirona’s attempt to establish a prima facie case of obviousness.

As we pointed out in our decision (Dec. 14 ), “a patent composed of several elements is not proved obvious merely by demonstrating that each of its elements was, independently, known in the prior art.” KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398,418 (2007). The Supreme Court made it abundantly clear that an obviousness analysis “must ask whether the improvement is more than the predictable use of prior art elements according to their established function.” !d. at 417. “Often, it will be necessary … to look to interrelated teachings of multiple patents; the effects of demands known to the design community or present in the marketplace; and the background knowledge possessed by a person having ordinary skill in the art, all in order to determine whether there was an apparent reason to combine the known elements in the fashion claimed by the patent at issue.” !d. at 418 (emphasis added).

Sirona did not provide any meaningful analysis on any of these factors. For example, other than conclusory statements that wholly disregard significant differences in the teachings of the prior art references and a vague reference to a “vast body of prior art pertaining to crowns, frameworks, and similar items” designed to fill the gaps (TPR Req. Reh’g 6), Sirona did not establish that JP ‘966 and US ‘585 are sufficiently interrelated to support their combination in the manner claimed in view of the differences present in the evidence and reasoning of record.

Specifically, while Sirona argues that the ‘694 Patent under reexamination describes the coloring of ceramics generally (TPR Req. Reh’g 4 ), such argument ignores the fact that the claims are not directed to the coloring of ceramics generally but rather the coloring of translucent dental ceramics obtained from a “pre-sintered dental ceramic workpiece” (claim 1 ). Here, neither Sirona nor the Examiner demonstrated that the prior art “greenware” or ”bisque phase of the ceramic article” would inherently or . necessarily be suitable as a pre-sintered dental ceramic workpiece (JP ‘966, ,-r,-r [0012], [0013]).  Sirona’s failure to satisfy its initial burden stands in stark contrast to the detailed analysis provided by 3M on this matter (Patent Owner’s Appeal Brief filed March 15, 2010 at 9-13; Patent Owner’s Opposition 1-4 ).

Sirona’s reliance on cases such as Wyers v. Master Lock Co., 616 F.3d 1231 (Fed. Cir. 201 0) and In re ICON Health and Fitness, Inc., 496 F .3d 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2007) is misplaced. Those cases involved simple mechanical inventions in which a person of ordinary skill in the art would have reasonably expected that the element in dispute (e.g., the gas spring designed to stably retain a structure in the vertical position as in ICON Health) would serve the same or similar function in either the invention or the prior art. In this case, in light of the deficiencies in Sirona’ s position that JP ‘966 and US ‘585 are sufficiently interrelated as discussed supra, Sirona did not persuasively demonstrate that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have predicted that the metal salt solutions of JP ‘966 would impart the same chemical and/or physical effects on dental products of the type here claimed, as explained by 3M (Opposition at 2-3). Accordingly, Sirona failed to articulate some reasoning with some rational underpinning to support its proposed obviousness rejection. KSR at 418.

The panel at the Federal Circuit (Judges Newman, Prost, and Moore) issued a Rule 36 opinion in this case.  That was surprising because there were a number of interesting issues that could have been addressed in a written opinion:

1)  Is the interrelatedness of references a question of law or fact and accordingly what is the proper standard of review on the issue?

2) Is interrelatedness relevant to “motivation to combine”?

3)  Is a “lacks interrelatedness” argument different from a “non-analogous art” argument?

4)  What is the test for determining when two references are interrelated “enough” to be deemed “sufficiently interrelated”?

5)  How should the Federal Circuit review a compound finding of fact by the Board?

You can listen to the Solicitor’s Office for the PTO argue here: [Listen].

You can listen to the counsel for the third party requestor argue here: [Listen].

The entire oral argument is available here: [Listen].

One takeaway from the Board decision is that “interrelatedness” is different from a non-analogous art argument.  Thus, even if all cited references are determined to be analogous art, one might still want to argue that the references are not sufficiently interrelated to establish a prima facie case of obviousness.

Site for Denver Patent Office Announced

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2012

Byron Rogers Federal BuildingThe Denver media is reporting that the Byron Rogers Federal Building has been selected as the site for the Denver Office of the USPTO.

The site is located in downtown Denver at 19th and Stout streets.

The link to the Denver Post article is available here: [Link].

Denver, Dallas-Fort Worth, and San Jose Patent Offices Hiring Judges for BPAI

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2012

The PTO is already starting the hiring process for administrative patent law judges for its new Denver, Dallas-Ft. Worth, and San Jose offices.  You can see the job listings here: [Denver], [Dallas – Fort Worth], and [San Jose].

The deadline for these particular listings is apparently Sunday, August 26, 2012.

Salary range:  $134,498-$165,300 per year.

No Mud-Slingers

Monday, August 20th, 2012

The Federal Circuit heard oral argument yesterday in the appeal of the order granting a preliminary injunction in Apple v. Samsung.  The court previously granted expedited oral argument for this appeal.  You can listen to yesterday’s oral argument here:  [Listen].

Much of the oral argument was spent arguing about how to define the size of the market for the smart phones at issue.

What intrigued me, though, is that this is another “each” case.

The claim being discussed in the oral argument reads as follows:

An apparatus for locating information in a network, comprising:
an interface module configured to receive an inputted information descriptor
from a user-input device;

a plurality of heuristic modules configured to search for information that corresponds to the received information descriptor, wherein:

each heuristic module corresponds to a respective area of search and employs a different, predetermined heuristic algorithm corresponding to said respective area, and the search areas include storage media accessible by the apparatus; and

a display module configured to display one or more candidate items of information located by the plurality of heuristic modules on a display device.

Each

You can listen to Apple’s attorney argue about the meaning of “each” in this sound bite [Listen]. The link to the order granting the preliminary injunction at the beginning of this post gives more of a discussion on the claim construction of “each” for the above claim.  See page 19 of the order.

Mud-slinging

Judge Moore also had some tips for brief writers at the end of the oral argument.  She noted that mud-slinging in the briefs turns off appellate judges.  [Listen].

Plurality

The claim above also uses the word “plurality.”  Use of the word “plurality” is ubiquitous in patent claim drafting.  In his post last week about the Federal Circuit’s  Magsil Corp. v. Hitachi, __ F.3d __ (Fed. Cir. 2012) decision, Dennis Crouch observed that the word “plurality” could be deemed an open-ended range term with no upper bound.  In Magsil, the court invalidated a claim for not fully enabling an open-ended range claim that recited “at least 10%.”

“Siri, will the Federal Circuit officially recognize that “plurality” is a legal term of art — just as it did with the word “comprising” in Genentech v. Chiron, 112 F.3d 495 (Fed. Cir. 1997) — and that it has an implicitly finite upper bound?”

Mary’s Magic Microscope

Sunday, August 19th, 2012

I thought this was kind of a fun coincidence with the Myriad case.  The book “Mary’s Magic Microscope” was published in May of 2011.  The book is described as follows:

Mary’s Magic Microscope is the first in a series of books for children of middle-school age. It follows the journey of Mary McDoogle, a 12-year-old girl who finds a magic microscope in her grandpa’s attic that allows her to be transported into the micro world. Here, Mary discovers many new and wonderful adventures. She uses her microscope to fight crime, and help her dad, an FBI chief, capture the Sand Bandit, who stole the precious Star of Africa diamond. Imagine Nancy Drew meeting Alice in Wonderland on a Fantastic Journey. This book provides a unique insight into an amazing new scientific world.

You can order the book at this [Link].  Actor Stacy Keach is one of the co-authors.

“We’re from the Solicitor General’s Office and We’re Here to Help You”

Saturday, August 18th, 2012

The AMP et al. v. USPTO et al. case decided this past week (aka Myriad II) puts a new twist on the dreaded words “We’re from the government and we’re here to help you.”  In Myriad II it was the USPTO that was afflicted by the words “We’re from the Government Solicitor General’s Office and We’re Here to Help You.”

The Myriad case is unique in that the US Solicitor General’s Office pulled rank on the USPTO Solicitor’s Office for purposes of briefing and oral argument.  In the first oral argument of Myriad at the Federal Circuit (Myriad I), the SG’s Office brought unintended comic relief to the proceedings by proposing a “magic microscope” test.

One of the first questions asked at the oral argument of Myriad II in July was whether the SG’s Office was still advocating such a test.  Unwilling to distance itself entirely from its “magic microscope,”  the SG’s Office stated that it still found the “magic microscope” to be a useful metaphor.

One thing that interested me about the oral argument of Myriad II was Judge Bryson’s comment that in the past the US Attorney General’s Office has allowed an administrative agency to file, as an appendix to the SG’s brief, a brief that dissents  from the SG’s position.  Judge Bryson cited the TVA v. Hill, 437 U.S. 153 (1978) case as one example. [Listen].  (Judge Bryson worked for the US Solicitor General’s Office before being appointed to the court and argued many cases at the Supreme Court.)

At any rate, I took Judge Bryson’s comment as a suggestion that the US Solicitor General’s Office should allow the PTO to file its own dissenting brief in any subsequent appeals of Myriad II.  Whether the SG’s Office has enough confidence in the merits of its own position that it allows the PTO to file such a dissenting brief remains to be seen.

You can read the Federal Circuit’s Myriad II opinion here:  [Link].

You can listen to the oral argument of Myriad II here:  [Listen].

You can listen to the oral argument of Myriad I here:  [Listen].