(Informal 1-2 line summaries, which certainly should not be relied upon for legal or other research purposes)
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- In this precedential IPR estoppel decision, CAFC reverses and remands, disagreeing with the DCT that defendant was "estopped under 35 U.S.C. § 315(e)(2) from asserting two invalidity grounds." Previously, CAFC had heard the case and ruled that defendant wasn't necessarily bound by the diligence analysis of a peer ("We . . . criticized [the DCT's] use of CMG’s petition as proof against Valve . . . If, after all, CMG “employed ‘scorched earth’ tactics to find the references making up the [CMG] Grounds, then its experience may be irrelevant to a determination of what would have
been discovered by an ordinarily skilled searcher acting
with merely reasonable diligence.”"). Here, CAFC is clarifying the standard for such diligence, particularly clarifying what kind of searches do / do not effect estoppel:
"[T]here are two open disputes regarding the standard. First, we have not fully addressed whether the skilled
searcher inquiry poses a question of law, reviewable de
novo, or a question of fact, reviewable for clear error. We do
not opine on this issue here because we conclude that the
district court’s error regarding the Landon IP evidence is
apparent under either standard of review.
Separately, we have not yet had the opportunity to take
a conclusive stance on what “discover[y]” within the skilled
searcher inquiry entails . . . The district court purported to
rely on classification searches based on the Board’s application of § 315(e)(1) estoppel in the ’136 IPR, which primarily looked to classification searches in identifying the
reasonable discoverability of Wörn. The district court also
found that classification searching satisfied the standard
of reasonableness set forth in certain district court cases to
consider the issue of IPR estoppel . . . The district court’s conclusion regarding Kotkin was
error. First, as noted above, the Board in the ’136 IPR did
not consider mere classification searches, without more, to
be the endpoint of its analysis; rather, it went on to consider that these classifications would be manually
searched, or that keyword searching could have been used
to narrow the classification search results down further to
an amount capable of manual review. Similarly, we conclude that the Clearlamp standard relied upon by the district court does not go far enough when an unreviewably
large number of references are returned by a skilled
searcher’s diligent search. We do not hold that manual review of search results will in all instances be necessary to
establish discovery. We also do not go so far as to endorse Valve’s vision of the discoverability standard, though we
note the normative force of Valve’s argument that thousands of sources, not further narrowed in any way, likely
cannot be considered discovered for estoppel purposes under § 315(e)(2). We hold only that something more is required for estoppel when a classification search alone
returns an unreviewable number of search results—a demand not met here.." (emphasis added)
Thus, after finding subsequent declarations to be a matter of hindsight and therefore unaffecting the expert searcher standard, and a brief concurrence by Judge Stark, CAFC reverses / remands.
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- CAFC affirms denial of a preliminary injunction (potent doth remain that mighty specter of eBay!) for patent med device inducement, particularly a spinal nerve ablation tool, the claim reciting, in part:
"inserting an introducer through a pedicle of the
vertebral body such that an opening at a distal tip
of the introducer reaches a cancellous portion of the
vertebral body"
BSC sought a PI on the theory . . .
". . . that the OptaBlate BVN’s “access cannula” corresponded to the claimed “introducer.” Stryker argued that it did not induce
infringement of that limitation because Stryker did not instruct physicians to place the access cannula so that it
“reaches” the cancellous portion of the bone . . . The district court concluded that the
“reaches” limitation required that the distal tip of the introducer “touch[] or extend[] to” the cancellous portion of
the vertebral body and that the evidence did not sufficiently demonstrate that Stryker instructed physicians using its device to extend the access cannula to reach the
cancellous bone."
Here, CAFC acknowledges that the "contested limitation is facially ambiguous as to
whether the plain and ordinary meaning of “reaches”
means touches or also includes arriving in the proximity of" and agrees with the DCT for now. As for the likelihood of infringemnet, CAFC agrees that hte curent evidence is too nebulous:
"[A] slide show presented internally to sales personnel instructs “to enter just inside
the vertebral body past posterior wall,” but it is again unclear whether this is referring to the access cannula or the
tip of the stylet . . . The expert declarations supplied by the parties present conflicting views as to
how to interpret these documents. The district court reasonably considered evidence that Stryker instructed that
the “stylet tip should barely—if at all—enter the vertebral
body,” i.e., the cancellous bone, J.A. 17 (emphasis omitted),
and concluded that the slides’ reference to “[f]inal position
should be just inside the vertebral body” could be referring
to the final position of the stylet tip rather than the tip of
the access cannula . . . Boston Scientific appears to contend
that by instructing a physician to place the access cannula
inside the wall of the vertebral body, Stryker instructs
placing the tip of the access cannula through the wall and
inside the vertebral body rather than literally inside the
wall itself, which is made of cortical bone. As the district
court reasonably concluded, this could be read as instructing physicians to place the access cannula such that it
reaches the cortical wall rather than the cancellous portion . . . Boston Scientific relies on an internal Stryker
document that describes the access cannula as being
“placed within the cancellous bone of the spine” . . .
While this may well support Boston Scientific’s
position, it cannot carry Boston Scientific’s burden to show
no substantial question of infringement exists, as it is an
internal document, there is no contention that it was given
to users of the OptaBlate BVN, and Boston Scientific has
not proven what (if any) impact this or other internal materials have on what Stryker conveys to others."
Ergo, affirmed.
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- CAFC affirms obviousness IPR invalidity for "an arrangement for mixing and discharging fluids."
"Medmix presents two main arguments on appeal. The
principal argument is that the Board improperly construed
the term “at least two ramps” to not require an “inclined
plane” . . . Separately, medmix asserts that the Board’s motivation-to-combine findings were not supported by substantial evidence."
Regarding the construction, "the disputed limitation does not specify that the recited
ramps must be a particular shape, let alone an inclined
plane . . . The specification supports that understanding . . . No specific shape is mentioned for the
“guide groove.”" Owner points to ramp variations in the spec, but CAFC doesn't see why they should be read in, and so, after likewise finding no limitation in the prosecution history, CAFC affirms.
As for the motivation, "[t]he Board found that a skilled artisan would have been
motivated to incorporate Yu’s coarse thread design into
both Keller ’574 and Heusser because doing so provides
“mechanical advantage[s]” . . . medmix argued that a skilled artisan would
have been dissuaded from making the proposed combinations because each combination would have resulted in a
design where the backpressure generated during dispensing would cause the coarse-thread connection between the
mixer and cartridge to separate, leading to undesirable
fluid leakage."
CAFC is unmoved ("[H]ere, the Board explicitly found that a skilled artisan would have “easily” mitigated any back-pressure and
leakage concerns by using “tangs” and “flanges,” small projections on each of the mixer and cartridge which attach to
one another, to reinforce the connection between the mixer
and cartridge").
Ergo affirmed en toto.
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- CAFC affirms prejudicial dismissal of an infringement claim involving "systems and methods for user authentication in which user tokens are supplied through communication devices" based upon the claim construction. Basically, plaintiff challenges constructions on
generating a new password for said first secure computer network based at least upon the token and a
passcode, wherein the token is not known to the user
and wherein the passcode is known to the user;
setting a password associated with the user to be the
new password
Basically, CAFC agrees with the DCTs Philip's reliance on the plain claim language and specification, e.g.:
"Dynapass argues the district court erred in construing
“receiving the password” in claim 12 to preclude separate
receipt of the “passcode” and “token” components of the
password . . . While the written description discloses multiple embodiments for authenticating a user, the patentee’s chosen
claim language unambiguously does not extend to the al-
ternative embodiment where the passcode and token are
received separately . . . Claim 1 recites (1) “generating a new password . . . based at least
upon the token and a passcode;” (2) “setting a pass-
word . . . to be the new password;” and then (3) “receiving
the password from the user . . . .” This language requires generating a password from the passcode and token before
receiving the password. Receiving the passcode and token
separately would not constitute “receiving the password”
since the individual passcode and token components are
not the claimed “password.”
...
The written description supports this construction. In
the alternative embodiment, the written description never
refers to separate reception of the passcode and token as
receiving the password. ’658 patent at 4:59–61 (“In an al-
ternative embodiment, the passcode 154 and the token 156
are submitted separately.”). The written description also
repeatedly juxtaposes the password with the passcode and
token components . . . We see no error in the district court’s construction of
“receiving the password” to preclude separate reception of
the passcode and token."
Ergo, affirmed.
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- CAFC (very briefly) reverses and remands anticipation findings on claims where "[d]evices detect and process a speech command, compute a confidence score that the speech command is a hotword, and transmit the confidence score to other devices."
Basically, CAFC doesn't agree with the Board's interpretation of the references for purposes of anticipation:
"The Board’s finding “that one
device in a ‘better position’ than the other devices [to handle a subsequent user query] then exits its low power mode
and ‘wakes up’ so it can respond to any subsequent user query” is unsupported by substantial evidence because it
assumes a causal relationship between two steps Rosenberger discloses as independent alternatives . . . Sonos argues we may nevertheless affirm under its alternative theory that Rosenberger anticipates the challenged claims because Rosenberger’s devices remain in a
low power mode other than Rosenberger’s self-described,
low power “listening” mode during coordination . . . It is undisputed, however, that the Board made
no fact findings regarding this alternative “low power
mode” theory in its FWDs . . . We decline to make fact findings regarding this alternative theory in the first instance and leave this issue
for the Board to consider on remand."
So, remanded to continue the attack.
James Skelley is a solo practitioner based in Mountain View, California since 2015, focusing primarily upon technology transactions and intellectual property procurement. James' practice also serves as an "incubator" for new legal service technologies / methodologies and a "living example" of their application. To this end, James regularly partners with larger law firms and with his clients so as to improve the practice of intellectual property law.
- Utility / Design / PCT Patent Prosecution
- Open Source Diligence
- Technology Transactions (typically as a team)
- Litigation / Inter Partes Review Support (typically as a team)
- James tends NOT to handle low-volume trademark work (though referrals are available)
- USPTO - #59458 - 10/16/2006
- California - #257829 - 12/01/2008
- District Columbia - #1014986 - 08/05/2013
- James is available by email, 8x8 hangout, and in-person meetups in the Valley.
- Email is typically the best way to reach James.
- Machine Learning / Robotics
- Cryptograpy / Cryptocurrency / Smart Contracts
- Medical Device
- Computational Biology (primarily modeling and proteomics)
- Signal Processing (primarily wireless and compression)
- Quantum Physics (primarily semiconductor) / Electromagnetics (antennae, waveguides, etc.)
- Manufacturing / 3D Printing
- James tends NOT to handle pure chemistry applications (though referrals are available), however James HAS handled matters involving computational proteomics, cellular modeling, and diagnostic lab protocols
LawMux Bites are (very) short, one-page summaries of various legal concepts, cases, and technologies. As informal summaries, you certainly shouldn't rely upon them as legal advice / for business use, but they can help orient you if you're new to the subject matter.