Monday, December 31, 2012

Patent Planet's Most Popular Posts - December 2011 - 2012

Almost midnight in Los Altos, California. I am struggling with the task of writing up a summary of the most important patent news in 2012. Hmm lots of material to consider (212 published posts plus 11 draft posts). Finally, I decided to take the easier route: let Blogger Stats do the work. Yes, that's my ticket out of here!

Based on total pageviews - the top ten posts on Patent Planet from December 2011 - 2012:

1. WildTangent v. Ultramercial - Supreme Court Rejects Federal Circuit Decision on 35 USC 101

2. Failure to Patent Mark - Losing Easy Money

3. Third Party Preissuance Submissions of Prior Art

4. The Banana Grab - Market Share Can Change

5. Patent Reexamination Has Arrived for Both Parties - Oracle v. Google

6. America Invents Act - Ex Parte Reexamination Fees Increase & Inter Partes Review Replaces Inter Partes Reexamination on September 16, 2012

7. Board of Patent Appeals Backlog Enormous and Growing

8. USPTO Satellite Office in San Jose Delayed

9. Richard Stallman and Professor Duffy Clash - Solutions to the Software Patent Problem - Santa Clara University - November 16, 2012

10. America Invents Act - Final Rules for Third Party Preissuance Submissions

Happy New Year!

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

USPTO Annual Report 2012

The USPTO released its annual report: USPTO Performance and Accountability fiscal year 2012 on it's strategy, operation and performance.

Here are some findings from the report:

The patent applications filed have mostly increased the last five years (FY 2008 - 496,886, FY 2009 - 486,499, FY 2010 - 509,367, FY 2011 - 537,171, and FY 2012 - 565,406).

The total backlog of over a million applications pending is basically undiminished from 2008 to 2012.

The approach of increasing the number of examiner (e.g., 7,935 examiners in FY 2012) has reduced the backlog of cases awaiting a first action from about 750,000 in FY 2008 to about 600,000 in FY 2012.

The first action pendency was 21.9 months in FY 2012, which although not "fast" looks good compared to FY 2011 - 28 months, FY 2010 - 25.7 months, FY 2009 - 25.8 months, and FY 2008 - 25.6 months.

The 12 month rolling average allowance rate is 51% in September 2012 which is higher than the same allowance rate of 44% in October 2008.

The total patent pendency FY 2012 - 32.4 months, the result of a decrease the last few years, matches FY 2008 - 32.2 months.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

USPTO Opens Patent Prosecution Highway with Taiwan Intellectual Property Office

On December 21, 2012, the USPTO announced its Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) partnership with the Taiwan Intellectual Property Office.

The USPTO says, "Under the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH), an applicant receiving a ruling from the Office of First Filing (OFF) that at least one claim in an application filed in the OFF is patentable may request that the Office of Second Filing (OSF) fast track the examination of corresponding claims in corresponding applications filed in the OSF. PPH will leverage fast-track examination procedures already available in the OSF to allow applicants in the OSF to obtain corresponding patents faster and more efficiently."

Note on May 25, 2010, the USPTO eliminated the fee for a petition to make special under PPH so it sounds like a good deal.

However, I am not sure how certain circumstances would play out under the US-Taiwan PPH partnership, because PPH is not mentioned in 37 CFR nor in Title 35. For example, if you initially file in the USPTO then file in Taiwan can you use a favorable Taiwanese ruling to fast track the US prosecution (i.e., swap who is the first Office)? This would be desirable, given the USPTO is backlogged and Taiwan is not a member of the PCT and requires a Taiwanese filing within 12 months of the US filing date. Admittedly this issue may only pertain to this PPH partnership because other partnerships among PCT members permit a second application filing up to 30 months from the priority date.

PPH seems to assume participating countries have similar patentability standard. Otherwise, why fast track examination of one country's application based on another country's patentability rulings? Yet even the USPTO and EPO have important differences especially on patentability of software related invention.

In addition, the USPTO has high standards on the content of applicant's petition to expedite examination of an application. Given this is it factually correct to say all claims of a second application "correspond" to a single allowable claim in a first filed application? PPH seems to stretch the term "correspond." Is it a problem? What if the applications overlap but are not identical? Could a defendant successfully argue applicant's statement that claims correspond is false rendering the US patent unenforceable in court? I am not sure and litigation is a harsh place to find out.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Apple v. Samsung - European Commission Accuses Samsung of Patent Abuse

Today, the BBC reports EU accuses Samsung of  patent abuse in Apple lawsuits. Note this is the European Commission's preliminary view and a final ruling will issue after Samsung presents its defense.

Thanks to Alan Cooper for forwarding this article just now.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Nokia and RIM Settle All Patent Disputes

Nokia and RIM enter into new patent license agreement.

Not much detail in the press release, but sounds like Nokia owner of 10,000 patent families is the winner. "The financial structure of the agreement includes a one-time payment and on-going payments, all from RIM to Nokia." 

I expect more patent settlements of a global nature in 2013. Companies have gotten over the hurdle of thinking they can use other companies patents without a license and are well aware of the expense of patent litigation.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Monday, December 17, 2012

CLS Bank v. Alice Corp. - US Government's Amicus Brief Addressing Software Patents

On December 9, I posted CLS Bank v. Alice Corp. - Amici Briefs Addressing Software Patents that gave links to Google et al. and EFF's amici briefs that attempt to guide the Federal Circuit on the topic of software patent eligibility.

Today, Professor Crouch states in his article Patenting Software: Obama Administration Argues "Sometimes" that the United States amicus brief "rejects the idea that software per se represents patentable subject matter but is favorable toward the patenting of computerized applications that either improve computer performance, use technology in a unique technologic way, or transform the local environment." The U.S. brief "suggests a claim-by-claim subject matter analysis that begins with claim construction and only then asks whether the challenged claim, properly construed, incorporates enough meaningful limitations to ensure that it amounts to more than a claim for the abstract idea itself."

Professor Crouch notes the U.S. brief lists "factors that the government sees as important in making that determination:
  • Is the computer only nominally or tangentially related to the performance of the invention?
  • Is the computer generically recited or, instead are specific, unconventional computer equipment or tools required?
  • Is the invention focused primarily on non-technological fields or does the invention improve the ability of a computer to function as a computer?
  • Is the computer used generically for its automation or communication functions or does the computer manipulate particular data in particular, specific, and useful ways?
  • Is the abstract idea merely described within a particular environment or is the abstract idea part of an invention that transforms its environment.
  • Are the computer related elements merely conventional steps described at a high level of generality in a way that would be employed by anyone wanting to apply the abstract idea." 
About the USPTO supporting this brief, I couldn't help but notice how the brief compares to outgoing United States Patent and Trademark Office Director Kappos recent speech about software patents where he addressed the question 'should we treat software differently than hardware when it comes to patentability?' His answer: 'No. Absolutely not."

To this I add a few observations on the proposed test and factors:
  • The U.S amici brief is designated as not in favor of either party, but seems to favor the defendant when you consider how the factors might apply to the representative claim 1:
       1. A data processing system to enable the exchange of an obligation between parties, the system comprising:

       a data storage unit having stored therein information about a shadow credit record and shadow debit record for a party, independent from a credit record and debit record maintained by an exchange institution; and

       a computer, coupled to said data storage unit, that is configured to (a) receive a transaction; (b) electronically adjust said shadow credit record and/or said shadow debit record in order to effect an exchange obligation arising from said transaction, allowing only those transactions that do not result in a value of said shadow debit record being less than a value of said shadow credit record; and (c) generate an instruction to said exchange institution at the end of a period of time to adjust said credit record and/or said debit record in accordance with the adjustment of said shadow credit record and/or said shadow debit record, wherein said instruction being an irrevocable, time invariant obligation placed on said exchange institution.
  • What unconventional computer equipment or tools do you require for patent eligibility?
  • Trying to resolve whether a claim is too abstract by analyzing if the computer is only nominally or tangentially related to the performance of the invention may engender arguments: "my client's invention is substantially and directly related to the performance of the invention," to which the defendant replies "it is not" and "it is too!"
  • The only way to avoid falling into a non-technological field is to improve the ability of a computer to function as a computer? Computer performance based patent eligibility? And in terms of improving the ability, doesn't software improve the ability of a general purpose computer to function as a computer? If we mean only hardware performance doesn't this eliminate many software patents and much of the subject matter described in U.S. Patent Class 707 Data Processing: Database and File Management, Data Structures, or Document Processing? 
  • Is the computer used generically for its automation or communication functions or does the computer manipulate particular data in particular, specific, and useful ways? Referring to the first condition, computer software is often used for "automation" and "communication" functions so it sounds like many software patent claims would be ineligible. On the other hand, the second condition implies a claim need only recite the software manipulates particular data in a particular, specific and useful way. Thank God, my software doesn't manipulate just any old data, it's particular, yes and it's not manipulating non-particular data in a non-useful way either. Good, my patent claim must be eligible! But wait my claim also involves automation and communication, now what? 
  • Is this abstract idea merely described within a particular environment or is the abstract idea part of an invention that transforms its environment. Now you have me confused ... I thought abstract meant not patent eligible and not abstract meant eligible. But now you tell me it is all about transforming the environment, and doing it in a particular environment is not going to help out? I must transform the environment? Okay,  how about this: my computer software runs on a bunch of servers that kick out a lot of heat. Doesn't raising the temperature in my server room transform (i.e., cold to hot) the environment? What's transform mean again? 
The problem is these factors shift the focus away from the fundamental question on whether the subject matter is abstract (patent ineligible) or not abstract (patent eligible).

Maybe we should return to the Inventions Patentable statute, 35 USC 101, that Judge Giles Rich and P.J. Federico drafted in 1952: Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture ... or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title." No, we can't do that - it's much too simple.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

FTC and DOJ Workshop - Patent Assertion Entities - Revisited

On November 25, 2012, I posted an article that the FTC and DOJ was hosting a free workshop on December 10 to consider the impact of patent assertion entities (PAEs) on innovation and competition and if the PAEs raise antitrust issues.

If you are interested in what leading academics, attorneys, economists, and industry representatives had to say, please see their videos and slide presentations at the Patent Assertion Entity Activities Workshop Page.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Europe Patent System - Unitary Patent and Patent Court

Today, the European Parliament approved a patent package that includes a unitary patent, a language regime, and a unified patent court. The unitary patent would give protection in 25 EP member states. The application would be in English, French, German, or require translation into one of these languages. The unified patent would be enforced in one of a set of trial courts. This patent package would enter into force on January 1, 2014 or after the United Kingdom, Germany, and France and ten other countries ratify the package, whichever is latest. It's hard to predict if this package will be ratified given Europe's debate on this topic for over 30 years. However, if  it's ratified, it's expected to reduce the large cost of patent protection in Europe up to 80%. Spain and Italy are outside this regime but may join later.

See the EP press release: Parliament approves EU unitary patent rules

See ars technica: After decades of discussion, EU votes for unified patent system

See NY Times: Europe Reaches Agreement on System for Patents

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

CLS Bank v. Alice Corp. - Amici Briefs Addressing Software Patents

Software patent eligibility is a controversial topic today. 

The Federal Circuit opinions in July 2012: CLS Bank International v. Alice Corporation in favor of patent eligibility and Bancorp Services v. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada against patent eligibility highlight this controversy.

The Federal Circuit granted CLS Bank International's petition for a rehearing en banc, vacated the decision on software patent eligibility, reinstated the appeal, and invited the parties and amici to file briefs addressing the following questions:

a. What test should the court adopt to determine whether a computer-implemented invention is a patent ineligible "abstract idea”; and when, if ever, does the presence of a computer in a claim lend patent eligibility to an otherwise patent-ineligible idea?

b. In assessing patent eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101 of a computer-implemented invention, should it matter whether the invention is claimed as a method, system, or storage medium; and should such claims at times be considered equivalent for § 101 purposes?

Now the amici briefs are arriving. On December 6, King & Spalding filed an amicus brief on behalf of some leading tech companies: Google Inc., Dell Inc., Facebook, Inc., Homeaway, Inc., Intuit Inc., Rackspace Hosting, Inc. Red Hat, Inc., and Zynga Inc. at the Court of Appeals for Federal Circuit.

See the Google et al. brief as well as the Electronic Frontier Foundation's brief in the Wall Street Journal AllThingsD.com article: Facebook, Google and Others Rally Against Sweeping Claims in Financial Patent Case. Thanks to Alan Cooper for sending this article!

For details see my earlier post: CLS Bank v. Alice - Federal Circuit Revisits Test for Software Patent Eligibility

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Patent Law Treaty and Hague Agreement Regarding International Registrations of Industrial Designs

On December 5, the House of Representatives passed S. 3486 to implement the Hague Agreement Concerning Industrial Designs Patent Law Treaty (Hague Agreement) and the Patent Law Treaty (PLT). The bill awaits President Obama's signature.

The Hague Agreement lengthens the current design patent term from 14 to 15 years from the grant date. It also allows filing for protection of up to 100 designs in a single application at the USPTO as long as in the same classification under Locarno Agreement to obtain design protection in all countries that adopt the treaty. Note this is expect to help protect design owners against knockoffs. Further, it retains the current nonobvious requirement for design patents, which patent scholar Harold Wegner suggests is inconsistent with TRIPS. A request and payment at WIPO's International Bureau will renew a design registration. The bill will add Chapter 38 International Design Applications, 35 USC 381-390.

The PLT amends 35 USC 111(a) to reduce some requirements for a nonprovisional to get a filing date. For example, a nonprovisional application will no longer require at least one claim for a filing date, but still requires payment of fees, an oath or declaration, and at least one claims within the time set by the Director to avoid abandonment.

Under new 35 USC 111(c), the Director may prescribe the conditions for filing an application with a reference to a prior filed application, but will abandon an application for failure to submit a specification within the prescribed period.

Updated February 11, 2014: The Patent Law Treaties Implementation Act of 2012.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

America Invents Act - Proposed Bill H.R. 6621 Technical Amendment to AIA

On November 30, Congressman Smith introduced a bill H.R. 6621 to change language in the America Invents Act (AIA).

Some refer to it as a "technical amendment" that corrects errors in the AIA. However, it buries a provision that will eliminate many if not all pre-GATT applications (i.e., about 200 applications filed before June 7, 1995) if they fail to issue as US patents within one year of the bill's enactment. It does this by rendering them ineligible for a patent term that runs 17 years from grant date. Instead their patent term would only run 20 years from filing date. Even if only 0.02% of all pending applications (e.g., 1.2M) are affected, it sounds like some want to eliminate or greatly reduce their patent terms. Do the math!

On the other hand, it doesn't seek to change the estoppel standard for post grant review, which is wise given the arguments raised in its favor. See e.g., Robert L. Stoll, Maintaining Post-Grant Review Estoppel in the America Invents Act: A Call for Legislative Restraint.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Jeruss - Effects of Patent Monetization Entities on US Litigation

In The America Invents Act 500: Effects of Patent Monetization Entities on US Litigation Sara Jeruss of Lex Machina Inc., Robin Cooper Feldman of University of California Hastings College of the Law, Joshua H. Walker of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP, Stanford Law School wrote an interesting paper that will be published in Duke Law & Technology Review.

The article explores non-practicing entities (NPE) or patent trolls or what they call patent monetizers affect on U.S. patent litigation. Although Professor Feldman is not the lead author, it bears her signature in terms of meticulous research, transparent assumptions, and careful conclusions.

The article flowed out of Congress' mandate for the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to study the effects of non-practicing entities on patent litigation. Using Lex Machina's database they collected and coded a set of patent lawsuits filed over the past five years then analyzed what it meant.

Key findings? Patent monetizers' lawsuits increased from 22% to nearly 40% of the cases in the last five years. Universities are not that big of a player, accounting for only 0.2% of the lawsuits. Patent monetizers tend to settle prior to a summary judgment decision, which points to what may be involved. Even though it calls NPE's "modern villains" of the system, it doesn't resolve for me whether patent monetizers are bad or good for the US, but does confirm their rising participation in patent litigation.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Friday, November 30, 2012

PTO Seeking Transparency in Patent Ownership Roundtable

The PTO is considering regulations to require greater transparency concerning ownership of patents and patent applications. I am interested to see patent aggregators or patent monetizers views on this topic.

For details see Notice of Roundtable on Proposed Requirements for Recordation of Real-Party-in-Interest Information Throughout Application Pendency and Patent Term.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Microsoft v. Motorola Mobility - Google's Motorola Standard Essential Patents Not Entitled to Injunction or Hefty Royalty Rate

Today, in Microsoft v. Motorola Mobility, the federal district court judge granted Microsoft's summary judgment motion that Motorola Mobility's standard essential patents (SEP) are not entitled to injunctive relief and will be subject to FRAND. We may see a consensus that we cannot have patent hold ups on SEPs since that gives SEP owners too much negotiating leverage against competitors.

I am a little surprised at how this case evolved. Google's Motorola Mobility would not sign up under  Microsoft's patent licensing program despite the vast majority of Android makers doing so. Second, after Motorola Mobility was sued it didn't think maybe it should settle. Instead it counterclaims that Microsoft XBox infringed patents essential to the H.264 (video codec) or IEEE 802.11 (WiFI, or WLAN) standards. We were talking about my Android, but let's talk about your XBox? Then Motorola insists on injunctive relief and unreasonably high royalty rates on those SEPs?

Despite this Groklaw suggests the judge's decision is based on local bias: Surprise Surprise ... Seattle Judge Grants MS Motion, Bans Injunctions for Motorola's RAND Patents

Groklaw argues the Seattle judge is in Microsoft's home court and handed out a predictable victory to Microsoft based on a sealed motion (i.e., who knows what) that is likely to be appealed. In my opinion, the judge is being unfairly impugned. Motorola lost because it pushed beyond the outer limits of remedies available for SEPs.

Also see other reviews of this decision such as Joe Mullin' In a blow to Android, judge says Moto patents can't get injunctions - Motorola can't use standard-based patents to enjoin Microsoft's Xbox and FOSS Patents' Google's Motorola loses a summary judgment decision after Microsoft FRAND trial.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

American Invents Act Driving More Provisional Application Filings

Professor Dennis Crouch's Provisional Patent Applications as a Flash in the Pan: Many are Filed and Many are Abandoned contains a graph showing provisionals have steadily increased from 1995 to 2012. In FY 2012, we are up to 160,000 filings! In a smaller study he found that 35% of provisionals do not include a single claim. Claims aren't required so this is not surprising, but it is surprising that 15% of the provisionals are a stack of presentation materials (e.g., PowerPoint?) since a provisional must enable the claimed invention. See my articles for an explanation:

The Benefits of Provisional Applications: Slip, Sliding Away

Leader Technologies v. FaceBook - Provisional Fails to Save Patent from On Sale Bar and Public Use

Whether or not we love or hate provisionals, we should expect the annual filing rates to rise. The AIA first inventor to file provisions contained in 35 USC 102 and effective on March 16, 2013 retain a one year grace period for inventor (and inventor derived) disclosures, but do not expressly shield a pre-filing offer for sale, a public use, or a publication that cannot be traced back to one of the inventors.

Harold Wegner says the scope of the AIA grace period is an open question. See Wegner, The 2011 Patent Law: "Leahy-Smith maintains the concept of a one year grace period for inventor's pre-filing activities but defines the grace period as limited to the applicant's 'disclosures' of the invention, making it an open question whether a secret commercialization or other 'public use' or 'on sale' events fall under the grace period because they may not constitute 'disclosures' of the invention."

For now it's safer to take a narrow view of the grace period. Thus, a provisional or a nonprovisional satisfying 35 USC 112 must be filed before an offer for sale or public use of the invention. If an examiner assumes a nonprovisional is entitled to the provisional filing date, a sketchy provisional may as well have a flag: "litigators here is a promising date range for prior art to invalidate a patent-- between the provisional and the nonprovisional filing dates" (i.e., when the technology is most developed and time-wise qualified). Many provisionals do not satisfy 35 USC 112 and nonprovisionals depending on them for priority may find the effective filing date is the nonprovisional filing date.

The fact more than half of provisionals are abandoned without the filing of a nonprovisional is consistent with the PTO's stated purpose: to give inventors one year to explore whether the invention has commercial prospects before filing a more expensive nonprovisional. The AIPLA Report of the Economic Survey 2011 says a typical charge for a provisional is $3,500, while the typical charge for a nonprovisional is $7,000 - $12,000. I see the cost savings, but given the price difference note it isn't realistic to expect both are equal to the task of satisfying 35 USC 112.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Oracle v. Google - Patent and Copyright Cases - Groklaw's Timeline and Court Papers

Wikipedia says "Groklaw is an award-winning website covering legal news of interest to the free and open source software community." Its slogan: "digging for the truth" is accurate in that Groklaw does a great job of posting legal documents that would be typically not found inexpensively; it seems less accurate if it means the opinions of a blog that functions as a bully pulpit for paralegal Pamela Jones ("PJ") to articulate the rightness of the free and open source software communities opposition to intellectual property and particularly software patents.

Still Groklaw is an excellent resource for tech people having to deal with intellectual property law. For example, I spent many evenings reading about the Oracle v. Google patent and copyright trials then news coverage vanished after Oracle lost its case. Thus, I appreciate Groklaw's effort in doubling back and posting the complete trial transcripts: Oracle v. Google Timeline when it is not a hot topic. There is lot to learn from them.

The trial transcripts suggest why billing by the hour is so profitable for litigation attorneys: "If you are paying by the hour, I see where I can file another paper to advance your cause." Joking aside, they don't have much choice. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and modern patent litigation dictate a number of the filings. If an attorney files a motion, the opposing litigator must reply to avoid conceding unless the client authorizes it.  And when you have mobile computing at stake, and Oracle's and Google's financial resources, the massive transcripts are inevitable and indicates why this litigation was so expensive despite reexamination eliminating all but two Oracle patents.

Updated November 30, 2012: FOSS Patents reports: Oracle's appeal of ruling in Google/Java case focuses entirely on copyright, drop patents

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Director David Kappos to Leave USPTO in January 2013

Professor Dennis Crouch reports: USPTO Director Kappos will leave in January 2013. Many in the patent community will miss his leadership of the USPTO over the last three and half years.

Hopefully, USPTO Deputy Director Ms. Teresa Stanek Rea will continue his standard of excellence, which helped the USPTO tackle the application backlog, work with applicants to determine patentable subject matter, and adopt reasonable final rules implementing the America Invents Act.

Thanks for such a great job Director David Kappos!

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

FTC and DOJ Workshop - Patent Assertion Entities

The FTC and DOJ is hosting a workshop to consider the impact of patent assertion entities (PAE) on innovation, competition, and any implications for antitrust enforcement.

It's a free workshop, with a great set of panelists, including academics, attorneys, economists, and industry representatives in Washington DC on December 10, 2012.

If you are interested in attending, submitting comments, or learning more, see Federal Trade Commission, Department of Justice to Hold Workshop on Patent Assertion Entity Activities and Patent Assertion Entity Activities Workshop Page.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Richard Stallman and Professor Duffy Clash - Solutions to the Software Patent Problem - Santa Clara University - November 16, 2012

I signed up for the Santa Clara University Law School conference Solutions to the Software Patent Problem then nearly decided to skip it. I didn't need the MCLE and I didn't want to take the day off. It sounded like rain, traffic, etc. Further, I didn't feel like listening to proposals all day long to eliminate or reduce the value of software patents. I didn't expect a warm welcome as a software patent attorney either. Maybe I would be viewed as part of the problem! Yet I felt compelled to attend to hear how others might eliminate my job fixing the "software patent problem."

Despite these misgivings, it was a good conference with 34 presentations! The caliber of the speakers made it interesting and each had ten minutes to propose a solution to the software patent problem.

Of course part of any good conference is meeting people and seeing old friends at the breaks. I talked with my colleague and friend Michael Barclay about his hobby of learning difficult guitar pieces, Eric Clapton's habit of self-recording before he joined John Mayall, the book Guitar Zero about a NYU professor's sabbatical learning the guitar and to check out Eric Clapton's isolated track of "While my guitar gentle weeps" on Youtube.

I didn't convince Joe Mullin, the prolific journalist at ars technica, that Apple's damage award against Samsung is needed to address the free riding problem. Joe said all of the similarities between the Samsung products and Apples patents were just the result of competition.

I met Richard Stallman, founder of the Free Software movement, and fabulous hacker of Emacs and GNU used with the Linux OS. He convinced me that the latest revision of his book was worth getting and gave me "GNU and Linux - the Dynamic Duo" stickers for my kids. We have to convince the kids, right? I had an interesting talk with a patent damages expert, Elvir Causevic of Ocean Tumo, and met SCU law students such as Michael Quinn and William Jacobs, and others. No one seemed to cared if you were an academic, an executive, a public interest advocate, a businessman, an entrepreneur, or even a software patent attorney.

It is too late tonight to summarize all the proposed solutions but if you are interested, I would start by reviewing Santa Clara Law School's conference resources page. Note the conference was both streamed (except for Richard Stallman's talk - he did not want to use any Microsoft product) and videotaped.

Most speakers proposed various changes to US patent law, PTO rules, and/or how they are implemented today. For example, Professor Love argued patent trolls often assert patents near the end of the term so we could cut that problem off by increasing the cost or frequency of maintenance fees. Professor Arti Rai argued the PTO needed to rigorously apply the written description requirement. Professor Lemley argued that we need to eliminate functional claiming. Claims should not be interpreted to cover all implementations of a given function, but just the structures and equivalents described in the specification that perform the function. Some of the solutions were thought provoking, but as the day wore on, some speakers noted there would be no silver bullet.

Professor John Duffy of University of Virginia Law School proposed we must raise the nonobvious requirement. It seemed persuasive and likely to be adopted in practice. He had read some speech recognition patents and saw the value in patent protection of such complex computer software related inventions. He said patents are needed to induce these types of inventions. To Professor Duffy "worse than a patented technology that burdens the public is not having a technology at all."

Professor Duffy seemed to be building upon his paper with Professor Abramowicz's The Inducement Standard of Patentability, Yale Law Journal, 2010 that noted in Graham v. Deere the Supreme Court held the nonobviousness requirement was intended to limit patents to only those inventions which would not be disclosed or devised but for the inducement of a patent.

During the Q&A following Professor Duffy's presentation, Professor Duffy suggested something that could be taken as criticism of Richard Stallman's proposal. Richard raced from the back of the room to the front and was handed a microphone. He shouted "So many stupid insults—and mistakes! I proposed a way to solve the problem! It's elegant, and it gets right to the point. Your criticisms are completely wrong." His proposal? Deem all computer related patents not infringed. For details see: Stallman, Let's Limit the Effect of Software Patents, Since We Can't Eliminate Them

As to the need to induce inventions? Mr. Stallman's response: Consider the MP3 patent that caused a lot of harm. It's not trivial, it came from a research institute. But we can fund research institutes in other ways. Okay, but before we abolish software patent protection tell me exactly what are the other ways and how do we know it will be better? Will falling back to a trade secret regime be better?

Professor John Duffy seemed to be taken aback by Mr. Stallman's heart felt comments, but noted he respected Mr. Stallman's views to which Mr. Stallman responded don't give me your irrelevant flattery. I like Mr. Stallman's bracing honesty and he is a very smart guy, but Professor Duffy's proposal seemed more likely to be adopted than Richard Stallman's.

Given this type of exchange, the money involved, I don't expect the software patent controversy to end. We have debated solutions, and the PTO, federal courts, the CAFC, and even the Supreme Court have given inconsistent and confusing guidance on software patents for 40 years. I hear we don't even agree on the definition of a software patent. This conference was worthwhile, but mainly gave notice the software patent debate is not likely to end soon.

Updated Nov. 27, 2012: Professor Risch does a great job of articulating the software patent debate in his article today: Two Software Worlds

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Director Kappos: An Examination of Software Patents Speech on Nov 20, 2012

Under Secretary of Commerce for IP and Director of the USPTO, David Kappos strongly defended valid software patents in a keynote address at the Center for American Progress on November 20, 2012.

Director Kappos' speech: An Examination of Software Patents sets forth a convincing case for software patenting and the U.S. patent system. This speech should be considered by all who think or hear the U.S. patent system is broken.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Vringo v. Google - Laches Dashing Expectations - From $493M to $31M?

The recent Vringo v. Google patent infringement case illustrates an issue that may arise for prospective licensors and licensees. In a nutshell, Vringo purchased U.S. Patent No. 6,314,420 and U.S. Patent No. 6,775,664 from Lycos, filed a lawsuit in September 2011 claiming Google's system of advertising infringed the patents, and stated it expect to recover $493 million. At the end of trial, the jury held the patents infringed and not invalid, but only awarded $31 million against Google et al. based on a 3.5% royalty rate on a 20% increase attributable to the invention.

Why didn't Vringo receive $493 million? You might think it wasn't realistic and mere saber rattling to encourage Google to settle before trial. But as I looked further, I learned Vringo assumed it would get damages for infringement from 2005 to 2011, since U.S. patent law permits damages up to six year prior to the filing of the lawsuit (i.e., September 2011).

During this trial, there was a fair amount of trading going on. On the last day of a two-week trial, Mr. Dan Ravicher disclosed he was shorting Vringo (VRNG) in Vringo vs. Google: Outcome Probabilities. In his opinion, Vringo had not established Google was aware of the patents and had failed to elicit sufficient jury sympathy to support damages of $493 million. He estimated the net present value to Vringo was $95 million.

Vringo's facts would not generate much jury sympathy. Vringo had not invented anything and had bought the patents from a search engine company that Google had passed long ago. Its press releases saying Google's revenue would go to zero and Vringo would make billions sounded of hubris. Vringo trial slides were cartoon-like. Vringo told the jury Google's SmartAdServingSystem ("Google's SmartASS") infringed the patents. For some of the slides see Mr. Mullin's article: Google infringes old Lycos patents, must pay $30 million.

Much more than lack of jury sympathy, laches reduced Vringo's damages. Under the equitable doctrine of laches defense: (1) if a patent owner unreasonably and inexcusably delays filing an infringement suit, and (2) the alleged infringer has been materially prejudiced by the delay, a patent owner cannot recover damages that occurred before the complaint was filed. The statute says Vringo could get damages up to six years prior to filing the complaint, but a judge can rule in equity to supplement statutory law to achieve a fair result.

The Vringo lawsuit had laches written all over it from the beginning. The '420 patent issued 11 years ago, November 6, 2001, and the '664 patent issued over eight years ago, August 10, 2004. Even six years of delay raises a rebuttal presumption of laches. It's true a patent owner may "burst" the presumption by producing evidence sufficient to raise an issue the delay was reasonable or excusable under the circumstances, but Vringo was unable to do it. Thus, laches precluded recovery before the complaint was filed in September 2011. A six year period of infringement was reduced to one year. I guess the judge wasn't sympathetic.

Whenever a patent is enforced near the end of its term, you must consider laches. For more about laches, I suggest the Federal Circuit's case A.C. Aukerman Co. v. R.L Chaides Construction and cases citing Aukerman.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Solutions to the Software Patent Problem - Santa Clara University - November 16, 2012

Tonight, I signed up for the Santa Clara University conference Solutions to the Software Patent Problem, which is premised on the idea software patents are a problem, and asks what should be done. Whether or not you agree with the premise, I think it is a good to listen to what this group has to say.

Wired has published two of the speakers' opinions in The Patent Fix series: Richard Stallman, founder of GNU and the Free Software Foundation, and Stanford professor Mark Lemley:

Stallman, Let's Limit the Effect of Software Patents, Since We Can't Eliminate Them

Lemley, Let's Go Back to Patenting the 'Solution,' Not the 'Problem'

If you wish to register to attend the Solutions to the Software Patent Problem conference, here's the link. It will be held at the Locatelli Center, Santa Clara University, 8:45 am - 5:30 pm.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

ITC Judge Decides Samsung Infringes Four Apple Patents

Today, Joe Mullin reports Samsung loses another big patent case to Apple, this time at ITC.

Mr. Mullin asserts the ITC judge's decision Samsung infringes four U.S. patents is "another sign Samsung is losing its global patent battle with Apple" and that the decision may result in a ban of Samsung products in 2013.

I am not so certain this much can be drawn from the ITC judge's decision. The ITC Commission must approve the ITC judge's decision, which may not happen. Even if approved, the Federal Circuit may reverse the Commission's decision. All the legal machinations give Samsung time to design around the Apple patents.

Apple and Samsung have many lawsuits around the globe. Apple has won some key battles, but recently lost in the Netherlands and in the UK. Even when Apple wins Samsung fights back: in Apple's victorious $1B case in San Jose, Samsung managed to get the Federal Circuit to reverse the entry of an injunction against the Samsung Galaxy Nexus. Samsung alleged jury misconduct that could cause a mistrial in San Jose. And just this month the PTO rejected all the claims of Apple's rubber band patent.

So I am not seeing signs Samsung is losing the global patent battle with Apple. Does it matter? Both companies have made and will continue to make great products. However, if Apple and Samsung let the patent battles affect their customer-supplier relationship, perhaps we will have losers: consumers who get less than the best products.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Belkin International v. Kappos - Inter Partes Reexamination - Scope Limited to Prior Art Raising the Substantial New Question of Patentability

On September 16, 2012, the America Invents Act ended the ability to request inter partes reexamination.

However, inter partes reexamination requests filed prior to September 16 could remain for years. So it is worth looking at In Belkin v. Kappos and Optimum Path. In this case, the Federal Circuit affirmed the Board cannot consider prior art references that don't raise a substantial new question of patentability.

A policy limiting the scope of reexamination may seem harsh, but you have to consider the PTO's burden in examining all the arguments and prior art in requests for inter partes reexamination even when they don't raise a substantial new question of patentability. I reviewed one request that was over 600 pages!

Here's what the Federal Circuit had to say:

If the Director determines that any references does not raise a substantial new question of patentability, one must petition the Director to review the determination pursuant to 37 C.F.C. § 1.927. If this is not done that decision becomes final and nonappealable, and renders those issues beyond the scope of the reexamination.

Belkin requested inter partes reexamination of U.S. Patent No. 7,035,281 stating four prior art references raised new questions of patentability regarding claims 1-32. The Director determined the first three references did not raise a substantial new question of patentability, but the fourth reference did with respect to claims 1-3 and 8-10. Thus, the Director ordered reexamination of claims 1-3 and 8-10.

The Director denied Belkin's petition to review the denial of reexamination of claims 4-7 and 11-32. Belkin for reasons stated below, did not, however, file a petition to review the determination that the first three prior art references failed to raise substantial new questions of patentability concerning claims 1-3 and 8-10.

The examiner issued an action closing prosecution in the reexamination addressing only Belkin's proposed rejection of claims 1-3 and 8-10 as anticipated by the fourth reference and a right of appeal notice issued addressing only the fourth reference. Belkin appealed to the Board to challenge the examiner's not rejecting claims based on the first three references.

The Board determined that it lacked jurisdiction to decide whether a substantial new question of patentability existed regarding the first three references since that determination is non-appealable under 35 U.S.C. § 312(c). The Board held that it had no final decision on patentability and nothing to appeal regarding the three references. The Board affirmed the examiner's regarding the fourth reference. On rehearing, the Board declined to modify its decision and noted Belkin had not petitioned under 37 C.F.R. § 1.927 to review the Director's determination that there was no substantial new question of patentability for the issues based on the three references regarding claims 1-3 and 8-10.

Belkin unsuccessfully argued the Board has jurisdiction to consider the first three prior art references because once a substantial new question of patentability affecting a claim is found, all prior art must be considered including prior art found previously not to raise a substantial new question of patentability.

The Director responded 35 USC § 312(c) bars the Board from considering prior art not found to raise a substantial new question of patentability even if a substantial new question of patentability was found with respect to other references. The Director argued reexamination is limited to resolve the substantial new question of patentability, not questions raised by the requester that have been determined not to rise to that level. As only one reference raised a substantial new question of patentability, the Director argued the reexamination was limited to that question.

The Federal Circuit agreed and stated such an issue is nonappealable. At the outset, an inter partes reexamination is a two-step process. First, the Director must determine whether a substantial new question of patentability affecting any claim of the patent is raised by the request under § 311, with or without consideration of other patents or printed publications. 35 U.S.C. § 312(a). The statute is clear that decision is final and nonappealable. § 312(c).

The Federal Circuit noted the statute requires the Director order reexamination for resolution of the substantial new question of patentability found by the Director under § 312(a). The statute thus requires that an issue must raise a "substantial new" question of patentability with respect to cited prior art before it can be considered during inter partes reexamination. And an issue that has been determined to raise a substantial new question of patentability with respect to certain other prior art cannot be considered by the examiner and ultimately the Board. Instead if a requester disagrees with the decision that no substantial new question of patentability has been raised, 37 C.F.R. § 1.927 only permits the requester to petition the Director for review of that decision. Belkin didn't file a petition with respect to claims 1-3 and 8-10.

The Federal Circuit held:

Inter partes reexamination is not totally limited to those issues suggested by the requester that present a substantial new question of patentability. Indeed, the PTO may make any new rejection, as long as that rejection also meets the substantial new question of patentability requirement. See 35 U.S.C. § 303(a) ("On his own initiative, and any time, the Director may determine whether a substantial new question of patentability is raised by patents and publications discovered by him . . .."). Thus, the scope of reexamination may encompass those issues that raise a substantial new question of patentability, whether proposed by the requester or the Director, but, unless it is raised by the Director on his own initiative, it only includes issues of patentability raised in the request under § 311 that the Director has determined raise such an issue. It otherwise may not include other prior art than what constituted the basis of the Director's determination of a substantial question of patentability.

Belkin unsuccessfully argued that such a result is inconsistent with the appeals statutes, 35 U.S.C. §§ 134(c) and 315(b), and regulations such as 37 C.F.R. § 41.61(a)(2). Those statutes grant rights to the requester to appeal a "final decision. . . favorable to the patentability of any . . . claim." §§ 134(c), 315(b). Similarly, § 41.61(a)(2) specifically allows the requester to appeal "any final decision favorable to the patentability, including any final determination not to make a proposed rejection, of any . . . claim." Id. Belkin argues that the examiner's decision not to reject claims 1-3 and 8-10 based on the issues determined not to raise a substantial new question was a decision favorable to patentability.

Belkin argued it did not petition for review of claims 1-3 and 8-10 because the Manual of Patent Examination and Procedure ("MPEP") § 2648 states: No petition may be filed requesting review of a decision granting a request for reexamination even if the decision grants the request as to a specific claim for reasons other than those advanced by the third party requester. No right to review exists as to that claim, because it will be reexamined in view of all prior art during the reexamination under 37 CFR 1.937.

The Federal Circuit responded that provision does not discuss the preclusive effect of a determination that an issue does not raise a substantial new question of patentability. Instead, MPEP § 2648 states the uncontroversial proposition that no petition may be filed to review a decision granting a request for reexamination.

Belkin also argued that 37 C.F.R. § 1.104 supports its interpretation because that regulation requires the examiner to make a "thorough investigation of the available prior art" during reexamination. The Federal Circuit maintained section 1.104 wouldn't help Belkin as the "available prior art" is only that which the Director has indicated constitutes a substantial new question of patentability.

The Federal Circuit noted a reference to "all prior art" in the MPEP or the regulations cannot trump the statute. Statutes rank higher than regulations, which rank higher than the MPEP.

Belkin relies on a decision of the Director denying a petition for review of the denial of four substantial new questions of patentability relating to a different patent to assert that it could not have petitioned the Director concerning his decision on the substantial question of patentability. Decision Expunging Petitions, In re Schwindt, Reexamination Control No. 95/001,743 (Mar. 5, 2012) (J.A. 1840-43). Belkin notes that the decision denied the petition because reexamination was ordered for the same claims on a different ground than proposed by the requester pursuant to MPEP § 2648. However inconsistent that decision may or may not be with the Director's current position, it must yield to the statute, which denies appealability of the Director's decisions on substantial questions.

Belkin raised concerns a third-party requester in an inter partes reexamination is estopped from later asserting the invalidity of any claim "finally determined to be valid and patentable on any ground which the thirdparty requester raised or could have raised" during the reexamination. Belkin argues that once reexamination has been granted, the requester must put forward all eligible prior art or face that estoppel. Belkin's concerns are unwarranted.

The Federal Circuit replied the estoppel was not before it. As Belkin merely asserted that the three references raised substantial new questions of patentability as to claims 1-3 and 8-10— which the Director rejected—Belkin's arguments regarding estoppel are thus not persuasive.

The Federal Circuit concluded Belkin should have petitioned the Director to review the determination that the arguments relying on the other references did not raise a substantial new question of patentability pursuant to 37 C.F.C. § 1.927. Belkin didn't and the decision became final and nonappealable, rendering those issues beyond the scope of the reexamination. Accordingly, it affirmed the Board.

The Federal Circuit also cautioned that America Invents Act amended the inter partes reexamination provisions and the request for inter partes reexamination in this case was filed before the date of enactment, September 16, 2011. Thus, the Federal Circuit expressed no opinion on the applicability of the AIA to the case, and did not reach the issue of what prior art references the PTO may or may not consider during reexamination in response to an amended or substituted claim.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Moll. All rights reserved.