Showing posts with label Reexamination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reexamination. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Judge stays two Huawei patent infringement claims against Samsung due to recent Supreme Court SAS decision

In its litigation with Samsung, Huawei has been a bit hapless so far. At least it's fair to say that the chronology of events hasn't really favored the Chinese tech giant:

  • By filing its case against Samsung in the Northern District of California technically on the calendar day (though it may have been more or less the same hour) prior to its Chinese patent infringement filings, Samsung's successful anti-enforcement injunction was brought in an earlier-filed (or at least simultaneously-filed) U.S. case.

  • Huawei then tried two things, again near-simultaneously, to overturn the antisuit injunction: a motion to alter the decision as well as an appeal to the Federal Circuit. The Federal Circuit didn't like this and had a simple message to Huawei: let Judge Orrick in San Francisco rule on your motion, and if you don't like the outcome, you can ask us for help, but not before.

  • And now the Supreme Court's recent decision in SAS v. Iancu, according to which the Patent Trial & Appeal Board (PTAB) of the United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) must reexamine all challenged claims if a petitioner shows a reasonable likelihood of invalidatio for just one challenged claim, enabled Samsung to obtain a stay of two patent infringement claims brought by Huawei (this post continues below the document):

18-06-13 Order Granting Stay of Huawei Infringement Claims by Florian Mueller on Scribd

Samsung challenged multiple claims of two of Huawei's patents-in-suit. The USPTO decided to institute reexamination with respect to some of them, but it had to issue a supplemental order in the wake of SAS and look--nolens volens--at all challenged claims, though it encouraged Samsung to drop its challenge to the ones with respect to which the USPTO was originally unconvinced.

Huawei had actually focused, for the purposes of infringement litigation, on the claims the USPTO viewed more favorably, but the SAS decision changed everything.

As I wrote in my commentary on SAS, this isn't good for the efficiency of the PTAB inter-partes review (IPR) process, but the conservative Supreme Court majority was right that the way the law was worded didn't leave room for any other decision, short of legislating from the bench, which most justices declined to engage in.

Judge William H. Orrick of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California still didn't necessarily have to stay the related infringement claims. He had previously stayed a Samsung infringement claim at Huawei's request, but in that case, the USPTO instituted reexamination of the relevant patent claim because it held that Huawei had shown a reasonable likelihood of invalidation. Not so here.

Nevertheless, Samsung obtained its stay. All things (including the state of proceeding) considered, Judge Orrick felt that it made sense, and that the focus of this case was on FRAND licensing issues. Also, either party will have to narrow its case to five patent claims for the trial, and Huawei still has plenty of claims in play.

It's an interesting example of the procedural impact that the SAS ruling can have on patent infringement lawsuits.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Saturday, June 9, 2018

USPTO holds key claims of core Twitter patent invalid: Indian inventor was first

Yesterday the United States Patent and Trademark Office had bad news for a particularly broad member of Twitter's key patent family, U.S. Patent No. 9,088,532 on a "device[-]independent message disribution platform." As I reported in March, the '532 patent is being reexamined based on a patent application by independent Indian inventor Yogesh Rathod as well as a couple of other prior art references. The reexamination requested related to claims 1-3, 8, 9, 13-15, 17, 20, and 21, all of which are being reexamined. In a (first) Office communication since opening the reexamination proceedings, the USPTO has held all of the reexamined claims invalid, challenging Twitter to persuade the examiner that its patent claims should be upheld. Here's the Office communication (this post continues below the document):

18-06-08 USPTO Rejection of Twitter Core Patent Claims by Florian Mueller on Scribd

All of the claims under reexamination have been found to have been anticipated by Yogesh Rathod's international patent application. In addition, all claims but one (claim 17) are deemed non-novel in light of U.S. Patent Application with publication no. US 2011/0289574 by three Northern Californian inventors (Mark Hull, Randall Farmer, and Ellen Perelman).

Note that rejection rates are very high at this stage of proceeding. Some examiners simply reject all challenged claims in their first action in order to challenge the patentee to make the strongest case possible in defense of the patent in question. Some patent claims are rejected multiple times before finally being confirmed by the USPTO.

That said, things are looking bleak for Twitter's patent claims. To salvage those claims, Twitter would have to

  • overcome the non-novelty holding with respect to two different patent applications (Yogesh Rathod's application and the application by Mark Hull et al.); and then

  • additionally overcome any obviousness argument (the first Office action already notes that, even if one disagreed on non-novelty, a person of ordinary skill in the art could combine either one of those references with a third patent application, publication number US 2007/0105536, by George Tingo.

As for the commercial implications, let me refer you to my March post.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Supreme Court SAS ruling: higher principles decide, patent review efficiency suffers collateral damage

Someone wrote on Twitter that patent holders had something to celebrate yesterday: After the Supreme Court's Oil States (7-2 confirming constitutionality of PTAB inter partes review) and SAS (5-4 holding that PTAB must render decision on all challenged patent claims after granting review), patent holders were allegedly in a stronger position than before, which--as the same tweeter (I forgot the name) noted--is rarely the case when the Supreme Court overrules the Federal Circuit as it did in SAS.

Classical spin doctoring? A comparison of the number of amicus briefs filed shows where most of the attention was. 54 briefs in Oil States vs. only 2 in SAS. If patent holders at large had cared a lot about SAS, more of them than just the Intellectual Property Owners Association (amicus brief, PDF) would have chimed in. However, many of those who'd have preferred to have done away with PTAB IPR in the first place presumably welcome anything that adversely affects PTAB's operational efficiency--and even when (as is the case here) it's not easy to predict the fallout, someone who hates PTAB probably just thinks it can hardly get worse from that particular vantage point.

It is perfectly plausible that many experts believe the USPTO, which on average grants IPR under the America Invents Act with respect to not even half of all the claims that are challenged, may now have to hand down decisions on twice as many claims and may, in order to keep its workload at the same level, simply deny a lot of petitions that might have previously succeeded because they raised issues worthy of review with respect to one or more, but not all, challenged claims.

That would be understandable, but not desirable. At the same time, under a Republican administration and a Republican Congress it would be hard for PTAB to get a whole lot more resources. Unfortunately, some of what's going on politically aims to weaken PTAB.

The PTAB IPR timeline is tight. The AIA says a final written decision must come down within one year of instituting a review. For good cause, this can be extended by up to six months. That framework doesn't lend itself to simply taking twice as much time per case while waiting for more resources.

Whether PTAB will need to spend about twice as much time per review is, however, far from clear:

First, if challenges to claims are so weak that those claims wouldn't have been reviewed in the past, the average per-claim effort to uphold those claims on review should be less--the question is, however, how much less--than a rejection decision. Also, while the number of claims to rule on may (more than) double, all challenges already had to be looked at in the past to form an initial opinion. More work for PTAB for sure--but probably not twice as much.

Second, a much bigger factor than the previous one. It's not a static environment where all players will behave just as before, except that PTAB has to make an all-or-nothing review decision. Different types of petitioners will pursue different tactics, and as PTAB reactively (but probably rather quickly) adapts to the effects of numerous tactical decisions, the players will adjust their tactics.

In the "smartphone patent wars" I've seen some of the most extreme stalling efforts one could imagine. There was one Android device maker that had hardly any patents (especially not patents of the kind that would scare anyone) to countersue, but its lawyers were stalling artists on both sides of the Atlantic. Then there was Apple, which generally had a great deal of urgency in cases in which it was the only part asserting offensive claims, or was asserting more or potentially more impactful ones, while taking its time when defending itself--but nowhere near as extreme as some Android companies. Microsoft was pretty unique because it tried to accelerate pretty much everything (except maybe ITC proceedings in which it was the respondend). For an example, Microsoft went to a UK court to obtain a quick ruling on a Motorola patent in order to influence some German decisions, and it obtained an antisuit injunction to prevent Motorola from enforcing two German patent injunctions (arguably, an antisuit injunction is a form of stalling, but unlike traditional stalling, it requires speed in one jurisdiction).

PTAB IPR petitioners are also diverse. Some primarily want to slow down infringement proceedings, which often get stayed. Others are more focused on strategically striking down certain claims.

Some "stallers" may like parallel proceedings where they challenge some claims before PTAB and others in district court. Post-SAS, if more claims of a patent are reviewed than would have been reviewed before, litigation estoppel may result in some consolidation. That was a policy argument made by those advocating all-or-nothing. In my opinion, that was a far weaker policy argument than efficiency, especially in light of all the positive effects of PTAB on "patent hygiene," but we'll get to what the case turned on in a moment.

Statistics will show some SAS effects, but I'm quite sure many petitioners will now choose more wisely--especially once the percentage of granted petitions goes down. No one will act in the interest of the collectivity of all petitioners; as always in litigation, each party will do what serves its own interests. But sometimes that does, in the end, also serve a greater good.

If even outsiders like me can sometimes (especially if we take the necessary time for research) figure out which invalidity contentions are relatively strongest, petitioners and especially their counsel should have a clear idea of realistic priorities in most cases. Probably not immediately, but after a year or two, I guess the number of claims challenged on a per-patent basis will drop significantly.

PTAB efficiency wasn't really the Supreme Court majority's primary concern here. The Supreme Court does usually promote balance in patent litigation. But here, the efficiency impact of the procedural question at issue was of limited importance, and absolutely not outcome-determinative (as the result shows).

In Oil States, the Supreme Court had only two dissenters (Justice Gorsuch, joined by Chief Justice Roberts). All others supported PTAB IPR, with some left-wingers (Justice Breyer, joined by Justices Ginsburg and Sotomayor) filing additional thoughts in concurrence. By contrast, SAS resulted in an ideological 5-4 right-left split. The tweeter I mentioned further above would undoubtedly have preferred it the other way round: a 5-4 decision against PTAB in Oil States (then SAS would have been moot).

Justice Gorsuch has now been on the opposite side of my desired outcome in three cases (Dimaya, Oil States, and SAS) in short succession. I still like his judicial style very much--including his highly explanatory writings that others mock as #GorsuchStyle. He's an independent thinker, and despite his great background (including his family) and career, he's absolutely not an "elitist" of the kind that Trump supporters like me view skeptically. I wouldn't describe him as anti-elitist, but his take on Chevron (deference to government agencies) shows that he has less trust in unelected elites in government agencies than in elected lawmakers. And that's what SAS ended up being about more than anything else.

The Ginsburg-Breyer style is reflected by their dissenting opinions: the majority's literal reading of the statute in question is deemed "wooden," the statute is allegedly "difficult" (while to Justice Gorsuch and his entire camp its language is crystal clear), the USPTO should have the wiggle room to second-guess lawmakers (it's not just "what" Congress wanted and "why," and it comes across as extremely liberal when they suggest judges should simply take the position of "reasonable" legislators). By contrast, the majority opinion, while the outcome is inefficient, is a principled one. It's almost like saying "stupid but constitutional" (three words that Justice Scalia told his clerks and other jurists). The first Chevron hurdle requires a lack of clarity: lawmakers' intent must not be discernible. Only then can a government agency adopt its own rules, provided those are reasonable.

I honestly wish the intent of Congress had not been perfectly discernible in this context. Then the more efficient PTAB approach (reviewing only claims that face a credible challenge) could have been affirmed. But while I agree with the left wing on policy, after reading everything I can appreciate why no conservative judge would have been prepared to concur for a different set of reasons with the left camp and affirm the Federal Circuit majority.

The sole linguistic argument for a lack of clarity was centered around the reference to claims challenged in the "petition" in one place and "by the petitioner" in the relevant statute here, but that is a small difference and justified by the fact that initially there's a petition, but later the petitioner might have dropped challenges (under a settlement). The legislative record provides a few quotes from Capitol Hill lawmakers that really support the idea that all claims challenged by a petitioner should be reviewed, or none at all.

Ultimately it came down to how high the first Chevron hurdle should be. No conservative judge could have set the hurdle low enough for affirmance in SAS without spill-over effects on numerous other cases in which government agencies set their own rules.

Justice Gorsuch has a history of expressing a critical perspective on Chevron. The following passage from page 11 of yesterday's SAS decision is more than telling:

"But whether Chevron should remain is a question we may leave for another day. Even under Chevron, no affirmance]."

It's just an occasional remark, so it may not mean too much that no member of the majority dissented from it. But imagine a patent ruling in which the Supreme Court would say: "But whether eBay should remain is a question we may leave for another day. Even under eBay, [...]"

Chevron may be history at some point as the friends of Big Government and DC elites don't have a majority on the current Supreme Court. With such a strategic target in mind, there was no way that conservative justices could have widened the applicability of Chevron in a patent case that wasn't really about life or death of the innovation economy (unlike eBay, or even the Samsung design patent damages case, by way of comparison).

Justice Gorsuch has finally positioned himself as the thought leader of the Chevron-critical movement. What's remarkable is that Chevron upheld an air quality standards regulation by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which at the time was headed by Anne Gorsuch Burford, Justice Gorsuch's mother. The Chevron opinion by the Supreme Court refers, in the context of the history of the case, to Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. Gorsuch, an appeal (of an EPA decision, thus Mrs. Gorsuch was formally the defendant) decided by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Monday, March 12, 2018

USPTO taking another look at core Twitter patent: Indian inventor has priority but is facing Alice

It's been almost seven years since I reported on an India-based company putting a long list of companies on notice with respect to a patent application that it credibly alleges relate to Twitter/Facebook-style feeds:

"Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Apple, Bharti Airtel Ltd., Webaroo Technology (India) Pvt. Ltd., Amazon, AOL, Nokia, Bebo Inc., ExactTarget Inc., Ford Motor, Foursquare Inc., IBM, Linkedin, MySpace, NING Inc., Research In Motion Inc., Quora Inc., Salesforce.com Inc., Seesmic Inc., Siemens Enterprise Communications Inc., Sina.com Technology Co. Ltd., StatusNet Inc., PopBox Inc., Twitpic Inc., Peek Inc., The Iconfactory Inc., Ubermedia Inc., Yammer Inc., Facebook and Twitter."

I haven't seen any infringement litigation since then, but the last company on the list above, Twitter, faces the risk of losing its own core patent family--and, if not saved by Alice, the risk of owing damages/royalties--because of an earlier priority date of Yogesh Rathod's patent application (18 July 2006 - PCT/IN2006/000260) vs. Twitter's "Dorsey et al." patent (23 July 2007):

  1. On March 25, 2013, a submission of prior art under 37 CFR1.501 was made with respect to Twitter's United States Patent No. 8,401,009 on a "device independent message distribution platform." The submission pointed to Yogesh Rathod's patent and was not a reexamination request, but is somewhat close to one.

  2. On February 25, 2016, Mr. Rathod filed a suggestion for an interference with respect to Twitter's broader U.S. Patent No. 9,088,532 (a divisional of the '009 patent). His attorneys explained why their client's patent application has priority over the one underlying that Twitter patent.

  3. The latest and most significant development so far bears today's date: the United States Patent & Trademark Office agreed to reexamine Twitter's (broader) '532 patent based on prior art including, most notably, the Rathod patent application (this post continues below the document):

    18-03-12 Reexam of Twitter Patent Ordered by Florian Mueller on Scribd

A finding that one or more substantial new questions for patentability have been raised is obviously still a far cry from holding Twitter's broader '532 patent invalid, and even if the broader '532 patent died, the narrower '009 patent might survive. But it is significant progress for Yogesh Rathod.

Mr. Rathod is trying to get the very same claims as Twitter's core patent claims granted, but based on what credibly appears to be an earlier priority date.

It could be that an Indian patentee ends up owning what was considered a core Twitter patent. But he's not quite there yet. His U.S. Patent Application No. 15/053,889 is facing an Alice (§101) rejection by the examiner, which he is appealing (the appeal was filed in late November). Most recently, the examiner sought to defend his rejection in his mid-February answer to the appeal brief.

Twitter's older and narrower patent was granted at a pre-Alice time; but the broader one was granted in 2015. The USPTO is clearly applying double standards so far, holding the same claims abstract in one case after not holding them abstract in another. That's not good.

I doubt that Twitter stands much to gain from its own patents. Twitter's business is based on network effects and a strong brand. Twitter's primary challenges relate to growth (both user base and revenues), and patents are not going to be the answer.

So the best that Twitter can hope for is that the patent application with an older priority date than its own will continue to be rejected on Alice grounds. What might otherwise happen is that an Indian inventor would own some key patent claims that Twitter temporarily owned, and sue Twitter (and others) for infringement over that patent.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, September 18, 2015

Judge enters partial final judgment for Apple against Samsung -- Samsung said it would appeal

For the factual background of this Apple v. Samsung matter, I would like to refer you to my previous post on this one and just sum it up like this: two key Apple patents underlying the 2012 and 2013 jury verdict against Samsung have serious validity issues, one of them even at a rather advanced stage of proceeding, but the Federal Circuit had not held those patents invalid and Apple, on that basis, requested entry of partial final judgment.

Judge Lucy Koh of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California has just denied Samsung's motion for judgment as a matter of law on the '915 patent as well as Samsung's alternative request for a stay, and has entered the following partial final judgment for Apple to the tune of $548 million (this post continues below the document with a quote from a previous Samsung filing announcing an immediate appeal):

15-09-18 Partial Final Judgment Over 548 Million Dollars by Florian Mueller

In preparation of a hearing held a few hours ago, Judge Koh had asked Samsung whether it would, in the event of partial final judgment for Apple, use a bond posted back in 2012 to make a payment. Samsung replied as follows (in a supplemental case management statement):

"Samsung objects to the entry of partial final judgment and, were such judgment entered, would appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1), arguing, among other things, that the judgment is not authorized by Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). See, e.g., Unitherm Food Sys. v. Swift-Eckrich [...]. Because Samsung's existing supersedeas bond [...] remains in effect, during Samsung’s appeal any partial final judgment would remain secured by the bond or any modified bond that the Court may approve, and execution of the judgment therefore would be automatically stayed pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(d). If any partial final judgment were affirmed on appeal, Samsung would satisfy that judgment when it becomes executable and then move to release the bond."

It will be interesting to see how the Federal Circuit now addresses the issue that the United States Patent and Trademark Office has changed its mind and believes it shouldn't have granted Apple the '915 patent in the first place. The D'677 iPhone design patent is also deemed invalid on the current basis, at an earlier stage of proceeding.

It's disappointing that Apple is trying to collect money (partly) over patents it doesn't even rightfully hold based on the USPTO's current analysis. Over all these years Apple struggled to achieve a breakthrough in its patent spats with three major Android device makers (HTC, Motorola, Samsung), but recently U.S. courts, especially the Federal Circuit, have handed down some controversial decisions that may give Apple some leverage in forthcoming settlement talks. However, that leverage has its limits: it's not like Apple could prevent anyone from selling highly functional Android-based multitoch smartphones in the U.S., and it remains to be seen what comes out of those recent decisions in the months ahead. Apple is closer than ever to actually receiving a payment, but it's not there yet.

I've said repeatedly that this thing should finally be settled, but I have no idea whether those rulings make it more likely to work out (because a settlement at this stage would make Apple look stronger than it could have expected at any time since the spring 2014 trial) or less likely to happen (because Samsung and other industry players may see a pressing need to get clarification on some key legal issues, such as how to deal with patents deemed invalid by the patent office or on the value of design patents).

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Thursday, September 17, 2015

Samsung presents legal argument against 'manifest injustice' that would result from Apple's proposal

Apple and Samsung have agreed to try to resolve whatever little is left of their patent spat by means of mediation before Magistrate Judge Spero. But for now, they are fighting over whether or not Apple can collect more than $540 million in damages in the near term despite a USPTO decision according to which Apple's most valuable software patent in the 2012 trial (and 2013 retrial) shouldn't have been granted in the first place.

Apple says: "Enough is enough." It wants to finally get something out of almost four-and-a-half years of litigation with Samsung. There are, however, various ways to look at this situation. On the one hand, the fact that it takes Apple so many years to get paid calls into question the efficiency of the overall process. On the other hand, Apple also has itself to blame for a substantial part of the problem. If Apple had gone into those Android lawsuits (not just with Samsung, and not just in the U.S.) with more modest expectations, asserting its most defensible patent claims (even if those are usually not broad) and presenting reasonable damages theories (consistent with Apple's FRAND defenses, for example), then it would have received something a while ago. Apple, however, engaged in moonshot-style litigation.

Most of the time, I also believe that "justice delayed is justice denied," as the saying goes. But the solution to that problem is not an outright denial of justice. Ultimately, delayed enforcement is the lesser evil when compared to premature enforcement, as proposed by Apple, which could lead to irrecoverable payments over non-property. The Apple that demands this is not the Apple that so many people like.

Late on Wednesday, Samsung filed a reply in support of its motion to either hold the '915 (pinch-to-zoom API) patent invalid as a matter of law or stay the first California case so the USPTO can finish its job (this post continues below the document):

15-09-16 Samsung Reply in Support of '915 JMOL or Stay by Florian Mueller

It's easy to disagree with Apple philosophically on the wider issue. Invalid patents should not entitle anyone to a payment of any kind. But Apple never addressed the question of what was right or wrong: it argued that the law simply entitled it to this. Samsung's reply brief contains stronger arguments against Apple's demand for immediate (i.e., premature) enforcement than I would have expected.

Apple argued that the Federal Circuit's appellate ruling required the court to enter partial final judgment for Apple "immediately" and that the appeals court had implicitly rejected Samsung's argument that Apple's defeat before a Patent Trial and Appeals Board (PTAB) last year had the effect of collateral estoppel on the parties' first California litigation. Samsung's latest filing now points out that its notice to the appeals court came after briefing and even after the oral hearing, and no briefing took place.

Samsung's reply brief points to case law that says a district court "should not be foreclosed from considering [an] issue on remand" if there is substantial doubt as to whether it had actually been decided by the appellate panel, and then goes on to say the following:

"It is highly unlikely that the Federal Circuit chose to resolve the merits of the collateral estoppel (or stay) issues without briefing, and there is at a minimum substantial doubt as to whether these issues were decided. The issues certainly were not necessarily decided when they were raised only in a Rule 28(j) letter and were not addressed by the appellate court at all. The issues thus fall outside the scope of the mandate rule."

"Rule 28(j)" means "supplemental authority": Samsung showed the PTAB decision to the Federal Circuit in order to increase the likelihood of the appeals court holding the '915 patent invalid (which it didn't). That's different from a collateral estoppel argument or a motion for a stay.

Even this traditionally rather patentee-friendly appeals court has held that "a district court must apply intervening legal developments affecting [an] asserted patent's validity, even if the court of appeals already decided the validity issue the other way." (emphasis added) The Federal Circuit said so in its mid-2013 Fresenius decision and based this holding on "[t]he Supreme Court's decision in Simmons Co. v. Grier Bros. Co. (from 1922).

Even though the case law Samsung cites gives Judge Koh more than enough ammunition to at least stay the case, Samsung's lawyers also present an argument that would enable the district court to reject Apple's demand for premature enforcement even if the court interpreted the Federal Circuit's mandate the way Apple proposes: "Manifest injustice would warrant deviation from a decision rejecting, without briefing, collateral estoppel or a stay"

"Manifest injustice" is an accurate description of what Apple unfortunately wants here.

The second part of Samsung's reply brief argues that case law supports Samsung's theory of collateral estoppel here rather than Apple's argument that the technically non-final nature of the USPTO decision makes estoppel a non-option. That part of Samsung's argument is more about what the decisions cited by Apple did not specifically say than about what they did say. Finally, the third part explains that there should at least be a stay, considering that the Federal Circuit remanded for "any further proceedings necessitated" by its decision, giving (in Samsung's lawyers' opinion) Judge Koh every opportunity to stay those proceedings.

Toward the end of Samsung's brief I found a quote from what Judge Koh said at an April 29, 2013 hearing in this case:

"If the examiner decides not to reopen the case and Apple is forced to file a notice of appeal, then I think that that third factor may then swing into Samsung's favor, because if this an invalid patent, then certainly it would be more prejudicial and more of a tactical disadvantage to Samsung to have to do a second trial and to have to do, you know, further litigation on I.P. that may ultimately not be valid."

Considering where the '915 proceedings stood then, Samsung has made lots of headway. The examiner refused to reopen the case, and a PTAB decision affirmed the rejection.

I have previously said that the problem with some of Apple's arguments in the Samsung litigation (design patent damages, for example) are even against Apple's own interests with respect to other litigation, especially where Apple has to defend itself against patent trolls. Less than two weeks ago, Apple made the following argument in the Eastern District of Texas for a stay of case brought by a company named Smartflash LLC. Apple's argument for a stay of that case was merely based on the fact that the USPTO had initiated reexamination proceedings. Nevertheless, Apple stated all the reasons for which Samsung (on a stronger basis, since the proceedings concerning Apple's '915 patent are more advanced) is now also asking for a stay:

"Apple argues there that '[t]his is a case about money, and money would be an adequate remedy for any compensable injury to Smartflash resulting from delay,' [..] and that 'although a trial date was recently set, numerous discovery tasks remain to be completed, including the exchange of supplemental or amended expert reports for the damages retrial and related depositions, as well as motions practice, jury selection, and trial,' [...]"

I wish Apple could just put the remainder of the Samsung dispute aside and then work with companies like Samsung to defend the interests of operating companies (and I also wish Samsung would then support Apple on FRAND licensing questions such as the availability of injunctive relief and the royalty base).

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, September 11, 2015

Apple to court: let us collect hundreds of millions of dollars regardless of how weak some patents are

Due to previous press reports on what Apple was going to show at Wednesday's event, there were no surprises for an informed audience, but I actually liked--as an app developer and as a user--what I saw. Before the official announcement of 3D touch I had already discussed with the lead user interface programmer on one of my projects how we were going to make use of 3D touch in that app. In my opinion, many people understimate how the lack of "right-clicks", hovering and similar alternatives has really limited smartphone app UIs for some time.

But Apple wasn't first to come up with this. As The Verge noted, Huawei brought a comparable technology to market first. That is so symptomatic of Apple's problems in patent litigation: Apple is often first to do it right, no doubt about that. But the patent system is about being first, period, and the difference between "first" and "first to do it right" is either not patentable at all or, where it is, it usually doesn't result in a scope of protection that gives a right holder serious leverage in court.

I wouldn't have thought so. I learned it over the years watching those Apple v. Android cases unfold. There came a point at which I had to face this reality, even at the risk of being portrayed as a flip-flopper on some Apple investor discussion board or wherever.

At least it's comforting to know Steve Jobs himself apparently used to think that his patents were nuclear weapons.

Apple may be an even better company under Tim Cook than it was under Steve Jobs. I just can't reconcile with Apple's aspirations to be the greatest company in human history its inexplicable approach to honor and justice in connection with invalid patents. I have no idea whether Steve Jobs would have done the same, but according to his biography, he wanted to sue Android device makers "to right this wrong" (of Google having imitated iOS; "a stolen product" in Steve Jobs's opinion) as opposed to committing a whole new wrong. The latter is, regrettably, what Apple is doing now.

Simply put, Apple wants to cash in to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars over intellectual property rights some of which shouldn't have been granted in the first place. The one who set out in 2010 to chase thieves would become a large-scale thief himself if this happened, not in a purely legalistic sense, but in ethical terms.

The contrast between the two Apples--the one people all over the world love and the one whose patents just haven't proven to be strong enough--has never been clearer than on Wednesday. Within hours of Apple's San Francisco product event, its lawyers filed the following document, telling the United States District Court for the Northern District of California that Apple wants $540 million from Samsung irrespectively of the fact that two key patents underlying that partial award are invalid in the (latest) opinion of the very patent office that granted them (this post continues below the document):

15-09-09 Apple Opposition to Samsung Motion for Stay by Florian Mueller

In a nutshell, Apple wants a license to steal. I'm not saying that what Apple demands isn't possible under U.S. patent law: unfortunately, it could happen, especially since invalidations resulting from reexamination proceedings don't have retroactive effect with respect to damage awards in previously-concluded cases. But as the saying goes, it takes good people to do nothing in order for bad things to happen. Some people at Apple have unfortunately chosen to keep pushing for something that would be bad. Now the ball is in the court of... the court.

A little over three years ago, within only five days of the 2012 verdict in this case, I already wrote a blog post with the following headline: "The biggest issue with the Apple-Samsung jury verdict: are all those patents really valid as granted?" In that post I already offered the following prediction:

Samsung accurately noted in its post-verdict reaction that at least some of these patents are being reexamined by the patent office, and I think we are definitely going to see some invalidations there.

The invalidations have indeed happened. The '915 patent, which Apple considered its most valuable software patent in the 2012 trial, has been held invalid by the USPTO's Central Reexamination Division, a decision that has been affirmed by a Patent Trial and Appeals Board (PTAB). The reexamination of the D'677 iPhone design patent is at an earlier stage, but it took more than two years for a first Office action to come down, and it appears very solid.

Apple now argues that the '915 rejection isn't formally final because Apple will appeal any rejection decisions further. It wants a rehearing. Should the rehearing be denied or not change the outcome, Apple will appeal the case on to the Federal Circuit.

No matter how right Apple may be on any formal aspects of this, I don't understand why Apple thinks it's a good idea to request a partial final judgment in order to collect money over what appears to be, in part, non-property. Some of the patents Apple holds will, unless things change in the further process, be ultimately found never to have rightfully belonged to Apple in the first place. Apple is not entitled to a payment over such "rights" any more than it would be to the price of an iPhone from someone who never got an iPhone.

The key legal argument with which Apple's filing, shown further above, urges Judge Koh to enter a partial final judgment is that the Federal Circuit, in its mandate to the district court, directed "immediate entry of final judgment on all damages awards not predicated on Apple's trade dress claims." Apple says that the court should therefore reject Samsung's motion for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) that the '915 patent is invalid as well as a motion for a stay.

Apple obviously wasn't going to become the first patent holder not to oppose JMOL on invalidity. But the alternative request for a stay would not hurt Apple. After the 2012 verdict Samsung already posted a billion-dollar bond (which was adjusted after the retrial). There's no risk--none at all, even if Samsung theoretically went out of business--that Apple wouldn't get paid. Apple will get paid with interest.

Since there is really no need for immediate enforcement of a partial final judgment, I wonder why the Federal Circuit ordered it at all. It benefits Apple, but it just doesn't seem right. I defended the U.S. government's FRAND-based veto of an ITC import ban in 2013 and wrote that allegations of protectionism failed the plausibility test. If U.S. courts simply allowed Apple to cash in on patents that shouldn't have been granted in the first place, instead of letting the USPTO finish its job, the question of protectionism would be on the agenda again, and the answer would be a different one than two years ago in a disparate context.

I also found it a bit strange that Judge Koh recently set a retrial date, given that Samsung's intention to appeal the design patents-related part of the case to the Supreme Court is well known. By contrast, in Oracle v. Google the district court did absolutely nothing on remand from the Federal Circuit in light of Google's Supreme Court petition, much less set a retrial date.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Thursday, August 27, 2015

Before Apple collects a dime from Samsung, its first California case may already have fallen apart

Apple's anti-Android/anti-Samsung patents are an endangered species in every jurisdiction in which they get challenged (and may soon be an extinct species in Europe), except for the Northern District of California, where Judge Lucy Koh has so far acted as if she was the World Wildlife Fund for Apple patents. But a tipping point may have been reached at which conservation will come to an end even in her district court.

A few days ago the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit denied Samsung's motion to stay issuance of a mandate (pending a Supreme Court petition) following a recent appellate ruling on the first California Apple v. Samsung case. As a result, proceedings are now continuing in California, where they could still be put on hold. Apple's smart and hard-working lawyers were quick to request a partial final judgment because they must have realized that time and truth are not on Apple's side: the truth is that two key patents-in-suit are going down the tubes, which takes some time if all appeals are exhausted but will probably happen anyway. If Apple isn't allowed to physically collect money (so far, Samsung has merely posted a bond) now, it may take years and the amount is more likely than not to go down (with a successful Supreme Court appeal, it could even go down to less than 10% of the original billion-dollar damages award).

Basically, Apple is now behaving (with its efforts to be allowed to collect money prematurely, just to have at least something symbolic to show for years of suing) like the citizens of Greece this summer when they tried to bring home as much cash as possible before the banks would close.

There have been situations in which I have blamed Apple's adversaries--HTC more so than Samsung, but Samsung still more so than Motorola--of stalling. However, at this stage I can't accuse Samsung of dilatory tactics for two reasons:

Samsung's lawyers have now filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) holding the '915 patent invalid or, alternatively, a stay (and in that motion they've also announced their forthcoming opposition to Apple's request for a partial final judgment).

While it would simply be the correct outcome to declare the '915 patent invalid, the problem here (at least in psychological and potentially also in procedural terms) is that Judge Koh previously had a JMOL motion about that patent before her, so she would now have to disagree with herself. It's actually great if people modify their stance based on new knowledge, but none of us finds it easy to do. However, a stay should be a no-brainer under the circumstances, and it would provide some relief for a busy court. Apple is going to oppose that plan vehemently, but again, time and truth are not on Apple's side in this case. If Apple's patents were as great as its products, this here would be a different story, but they aren't.

Finally, here's Samsung's motion:

15-08-26 Samsung Motion for JMOL or Stay by Florian Mueller

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Monday, August 17, 2015

U.S. patent office considers Apple's D'677 iPhone design patent invalid on multiple grounds

Interesting things are still happening from time to time in connection with the generally much less interesting patent dispute between Apple and Samsung. Three months after the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit vacated $380 million in damages, thus necessitating a third trial in the first California case between these parties, but upheld approximately $547 million in mostly design patent-related damages, it looks like one of the patents underlying that damages claim should never have been granted in the first place.

On August 5, 2015, the Central Reexamination Division of the United States Patent and Trademark Office issued a non-final action in the reexamination (requested anonymously, by Samsung in all likelihood, in mid-2013) of U.S. Design Patent No. 618,677, an iPhone-related design patent. While technically non-final, the odds are long against Apple getting this patent, shortly referred to as "D'677" in the Samsung litigation, upheld. I'm so very skeptical because the USPTO has taken a long time since the filing of the reexamination requests to issue this Office action and, which is far more meaningful, it has determined that this design patent's single claim "stands twice rejected under 35 U.S.C. 103(a) [obviousness], rejected under 35 U.S.C. 103(a)/102(e) [obviousness in connection with a published patent application], and rejected under 35 U.S.C. 102(e)."

The problem the D'677 patent faces here is that the USPTO has determined (for now) that this patent "is not entitled to benefit of the filing date" of two previous Apple design patent applications because the design at issue was not disclosed in those earlier applications. As a result, certain prior art is eligible now, and against the background of that additional prior art, the USPTO believes the patent shouldn't have been granted.

The first rejection for obviousness is based on the combination of U.S. Design Patent No. D546,313 (obtained by LG, another Korean device maker) with either this Sharp patent application or some Japanese design patent application (JPD1235888).

The second rejection cites another Japanese design patent, JPD1204221, in combination with various other prior art, including among others a Samsung design patent (U.S. Design Patent No. D546,313).

The third rejection for obviousness combines one of Apple's own design patents, U.S. Design Patent No. D602,014 with other prior art.

Yet another Apple design patent, U.S. Design Patent No. D618,204, forms the basis of the fourth rejection.

The USPTO's holdings and findings call into question the legitimacy of Apple's intent to collect roughly half a billion dollars in design patent damages from Samsung. Apple's design patent damages claims have been considered outsized by 27 U.S. law professors as well as several of Apple's most significant Silicon Valley neighbors including Google, Facebook, and HP.

Just last Friday, the Patently-O blog published a guest post by Gary L. Griswold, former President and Chief Intellectual Property Counsel for 3M Innovative Properties Company, who disagrees with the Federal Circuit's decision to deny Samsung's request for a rehearing. To me, that denial was no surprise after a unanimous panel decision, and the only interesting question here is whether Samsung will file a petition for writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court. The Patently-O blog believes "Samsung will almost certainly" do so, and while I can't offer a prediction here, I strongly hope that it will because this issue is a serious threat to innovators. Mr. Griswold fears an "explosion" of design patent lawsuits and sees "troubling signs that increased assertion activity has already begun." If that is so, the Supreme Court may actually be interested in looking into this issue now and may overrule the Federal Circuit.

Mr. Griswold argues that courts should not allow a disgorgement of total infringer's profits over a design patent unless the patented design at issue really drives demand for the product. That is an interesting approach but there are other ways to solve the problem, such as the one proposed by industry body CCIA last year.

The bottom line is that Apple's design patent enforcement faces two kinds of legitimacy problems: widespread opposition against the idea that unapportioned disgorgement of profits is an appropriate remedy for design patent infringement by highly complex technology product (imagine what would happen if someone tried to collect all of Facebook's profits over a single icon) and now the USPTO's assessment that one of those iPhone design patents is actually invalid.

Finally, here's the USPTO's assessment of the D'677 patent:

15-08-05 Non-final Rejection of Apple D'677 Patent by Florian Mueller

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Saturday, March 21, 2015

Revival of Oracle patent claims is another reason for Google to consider Java license agreement

If one applies "If you can't beat them, join them" to intellectual property rights (IPRs), the formula reads like this: "If you can't beat them and still need them, license them."

When Google's Android team decided to use Oracle's (at the time, Sun Microsystems') Java technology without a license, it knew pretty well that this could spell trouble. Andy Rubin himself wrote in an internal email that "[doing] Java anyway" would make it necessary to "defend [that] decision, perhaps making enemies along the way." I wouldn't consider parties to every legal dispute enemies, and in my view Oracle and Google could and should be great partners. But adversaries they are. Until they settle, that is.

More than 4 1/2 years ago, Oracle (after acquiring Sun Microsystems) sued Google for alleged patent and copyright infringement. Initially, the public perception (including mine) was that the seven patents in the case were more important than the copyright part. The initial complaint stated a set of specific patents and we were all able to look at them, while the copyright claim was initially unspecified (Oracle even had to amend its complaint for that reason). But as the dispute progressed, Oracle's lawyers placed an ever clearer emphasis on the copyright part of the case. I have no idea whether this had also been the priority from the get-go, but even though it might have been misperceived as a "throw in the kitchen sink" claim, I'm quite sure Oracle knew all along that the copyright claim all by itself had the potential to convince Google of the benefits of a license agreement.

In parallel to the district court case, Google challenged all of Oracle's patents-in-suit through reexamination requests filed with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. Depending on the rules applicable to each patent, Google requested either an inter partes (where the requester remains formally involved throughout the process) or an ex parte (where the requester triggers the proceedings without becoming a party to them) reexamination. Then a variety of first Office actions (which are sometimes just meant to challenge the patentee without necessarily indicating that a patent is doomed) and of "final" (but, in reality, far from final) decisions came down. It looked like Oracle's Java patents were falling apart. The district judge was unwilling to take patent claims to trial as long as the USPTO deemed those claims invalid. Oracle took only two patents to trial (on which it didn't prevail in district court and which it didn't even care to pursue on appeal) and dropped five with prejudice in order to save time.

Even while the trial was ongoing, one of the dropped patents rose like Phoenix from the ashes, but the judge said this reversal came too late for the patent to be reasserted.

As I explained then, this still doesn't mean Google would never have to worry about that patent: even if one assumed for the sake of the argument that Judge Alsup succeeded in getting Oracle to drop certain patents without any exception as far as Google itself is concerned, Android device makers might still be liable for infringing that patent with their devices.

The same holds true for any other patents that Oracle could salvage, and one other patent is now on the road to recovery. Yesterday (Friday), the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit handed down a ruling (PDF) on Oracle's appeal of the USPTO's rejection (affirmed in November 2013 by a Patent Trial and Appeal Board, basically a USPTO-internal court) of various claims of U.S. Patent No. 6,910,205 on "interpreting functions utilizing a hybrid of virtual and native machine instructions." While claims 1 and 8 remain invalidated, the Federal Circuit has held that the USPTO (to be more precise, the PTAB) had misconstrued a key claim term (which relates to overwriting data) and therefore remands for a new decision with respect to the claims for which the interpretation of that term is outcome-determinative: claims 2–4, 15, 16, and 18–21.

Like the aforementioned "Phoenix" patent, this one has a 1997 priority date, so it won't expire before the year after next. Theoretically there would still be time (after the USPTO reaches a new decision) for Oracle to seek injunctive relief (such as an ITC import ban) over it--but in more practical terms, any assertion would likely be about damages. This is actually still more hypothetical than anything else. I guess the parties will continue to focus their litigation efforts on the copyright part of the case and just sort out the patent-related aspect as one of various items whenever they settle. In settlement negotiations all options of both litigants must obviously be considered.

For Oracle (represented by a Morrison & Foerster team led by Marc Hearron), yesterday's ruling is another appellate victory over Google that demonstrates its determination to defend its Java IP. No matter how many years it may take.

Many patents asserted in the major smartphone patent disputes have faced uphill battles when their validity was challenged by defendants. It happened to those Java patents as well. But the longer it takes, the clearer it is that some "rejections" of claims were wrong.

I plan to write about the copyright part of Oracle v. Google again soon. In January, the Supreme Court asked the Obama Administration for input. After the SCOTUS receives the Administration's brief, it will decide on whether to hear the case (if it doesn't, or if it does grant certiorari but later affirms the Federal Circuit, Oracle will have prevailed definitively on copyrightability and the case will go back to district court for "fair use" proceedings).

Just yesterday, the Wall Street Journal described Google as "one of the White House's closest corporate allies." The Journal went on to note that "Google was the second-largest corporate source of campaign donations to President Barack Obama's re-election effort" and that "Google executives have visited the White House scores of times since Mr. Obama has been in office, according to visitor logs." But Google is pretty much isolated in the U.S. economy (with the greatest respect for the likes of Oracle foe HP and Java free-rider Red Hat). The software industry is overwhelmingly on Oracle's side.

In order to support Google here, the Department of Justice would have to take outlier legal positions. As the Copyright Alliance's TerryHart wrote, "Despite legal gymnastics, Google can't land split in Oracle cert petition." Not only would the DoJ have to subscribe to daring legal theories to do Google a favor (which I'm absolutely not suggesting that it even intends to do) but it would also have to act against broader U.S. interests. By and large, the world's most valuable application programming interfaces (APIs) belong to U.S. high-tech companies or they belong to no one (because they're available on open source terms). Again, I'm going to talk about that soon.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, September 12, 2014

U.S. patent office upholds one half of Apple patent on missed telephone call management

There continues to be a discrepancy between Apple's ability to have its patents upheld on its home turf and the fate that its patents suffer in other jurisdictions, particularly in Europe. The last two posts showed this again: Judge Koh declined to hold even the slide-to-unlock patent invalid despite prior art that convinced ten (of ten) European judges to invalidate the European member of the same patent family. That decision may well represent a new low in patent quality standards in the Northern District of California, and it comes from a judge who's not biased in Apple's favor with respect to permanent injunctions and engaged in downright blasphemy by Silicon Valley standards when she recently wrote in the "no poaching" case that "[t]here is substantial and compelling evidence that Steve Jobs [you know, the one who wanted to wage thermonuclear patent war on Android] was a, if not the, central figure in the alleged conspiracy." In retrospect it's ridiculous that Steve Jobs reportedly even threatened another industry player (Palm) with patent assertions should they continue to poach Apple employees -- after Apple's patents turned out far weaker than Steve Jobs thought, I doubt that this threat would impress anyone today. Anyway, Judge Koh does seem to consider Apple's patents more sacrosanct than the memory of Steve Jobs no matter what record those claimed inventions have in the rest of the world or what evidence is presented.

A day earlier I had reported on a preliminary opinion by the European Patent Office that Apple's iconic "rubberbanding" (or "overscroll bounce") patent is invalid as granted. As a Europe-based Android user I now have hopes that the feature may be reactivated here at some point (for example, after the EPO decision in March 2015, or maybe after the related appeal). Last year the USPTO had upheld three of its claims, including the one asserted against Samsung in the first California case.

Now there's good news for Apple again on the validity side, and as always, in the United States. Last year the USPTO decided to reexamine U.S. Patent No. 8,014,760, an Apple patent on missed telephone call management, further to an anonymous reexamination request. A few months later, in September 2013, Apple dropped that patent from its second California case against Samsung well ahead of the spring 2014 trial. At the time I speculated that Apple might have wanted to avoid the negative effects of bad news from the reexamination front on the infringement case. In fact, that's what happened to a patent Apple elected not to withdraw: last month it became known that the USPTO has (on a non-final basis) rejected various claims, including the asserted claim, of the autocomplete patent.

Before Apple withdrew this patent from the second Samsung case in California, it was asserting its claims 10, 11, and 19. Late in August, the USPTO has now issued a reexamination certificate upholding claims 1-11 and canceling claims 12-22. Therefore, two of the three claims Apple had in the California case (claims 10 and 11), have actually survived and now enjoy an enhanced presumption of validity over the prior art presented to the USPTO.

The withdrawal in the first one was without prejudice, but in order to benefit from the enhanced presumption of validity, Apple would have to bring a new lawsuit. At this point there appears to be too much litigation fatigue to do this. The parties' priority is currently on various appeals, including a couple (resulting from the second California case) that have yet to be filed.

There's no European decision on Apple's autocomplete patent, but the pattern is always the same: Apple's patents do way better in the U.S. than elsewhere. In Judge Koh's case, it's not a bias in Apple's favor (for the reasons I outlined further above and many more), but with her approach the Northern District of California becomes a nature reserve for weak patents. The USPTO applies the rules it has in place. The patent reform movement has for a long time been arguing that it must be easier to shoot down weak patents. It's not clear yet where Apple stands on this question. On the one hand, it joined a lobbying group that opposes such reform. On the other hand, it announced an intent to work with Google on patent reform, and Google is on the good side in this context (as well as in some but not all others).

There's an interesting parallel between Apple's approach to the Samsung litigation -- withdrawing cases in all other jurisdictions but fighting on in the U.S. -- and its product and services strategy. I liked the stuff I saw at this week's Apple presentation, though there was nothing there that got me absolutely excited (to me the best news Apple delivered this year was the Swift programming language). I think the Apple Watch will do better than other smartwatches, just that it's hard to predict how much better. The iPhone price still seems very high to me. Apparently the U.S. and Japan are the only markets in which Apple can stil have a high market share despite those price points, while Android has a worldwide market share of 85%. Is Apple's focus increasingly on maximizing U.S. revenue while giving up entire continents -- almost the whole rest of the world -- to Android? Apple Pay is the most America-centric service Apple has ever launched (though it may at some point also find partners in the rest of the world, despite its very limited market share in places like Europe). I don't remember where I saw it, but somewhere on the Internet someone commented on a study that attributed U.S. economic growth mostly to Apple and other tech giants and said that "Americans get rich selling themselves gadgets made in China." That was obviously just a joke and doesn't consider that the real value is not in manufacturing. Still, if the trend continues in the rest of the world, Apple's success story will increasingly be one of Americans selling themselves their products -- and protecting that market with American patents upheld by American judges and patent examiners but not in the rest of the world.

Finally, a hat tip: I wish to thank an anonymous reader for drawing my attention (via my contact form) to the 8,014,760 reexamination certificate but reply here (since I can't contact him directly) to his assertion that I "don't post anything about the Apple patents that survive reexamination or the Samsung, Motorola, HTC, Xiaomi, Microsoft patents that are killed." That is absolutely not true. Whenever I became aware of a reexamination (or similar) kind of decision involving a patent-in-suit in the cases I watch, I reported on it, and that will continue to be the case. The problem is just that there are way too many patents for me to keep track of everything proactively. I now spend significantly less time on this kind of research than in the past because of my focus on app development, so I depend to a greater extent than before on official notices parties file with district courts about reexamination decisions (which didn't happen here because Apple had withdrawn the patent).

I really do appreciate heads-ups of this kind (even more so if allegations of bias are left out because they are unfounded) regardless of who loses a patent, provided that it's a major player (not just a troll) and that the patent was asserted in at least one "big company vs. big company" dispute I cover(ed) on this blog. Xiaomi patents aren't of interest to me because I haven't blogged about any patent case involving them, and HTC has settled with Apple and Nokia and took a license from Microsoft a long time ago, so HTC's patents are not of interest to me either at this point. But if any Samsung, Motorola or Microsoft patents-in-suit are invalidated or rejected, please do -- do -- do let me know. On October 1 I will publish a blog post on the outcome of the major cases I've watched so far, and it will show that none of those major players has established in court an entitlement to huge balancing payments in cross-license deals with other major players, suggesting that large players should return to (more or less) zero-zero cross-license deals between them. My overview of what happened to all those lawsuits will show that everyone's offensive cases have been a disaster, at least so far, with very few assertions having had merit at all and with workarounds having prevented significant commercial impact.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Thursday, August 7, 2014

U.S. patent office rejects Apple's autocomplete patent claim Samsung was found to infringe

Apple has just given up its thermonuclear ambitions and practically agreed with Google's 2011 statement that "bad software patent litigation is a wasteful war that no one can win", but even in the U.S., the only jurisdiction in which Apple is still trying to at least collect a face-saving amount of money, there's bad news. The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has very recently rejected multiple claims of Apple's '172 autocomplete patent, including claim 18, the one asserted against Samsung in the second California litigation.

Judge Koh had ruled on summary judgment (i.e., ahead of the spring trial) that Samsung infringed it -- but infringement of an invalid patent doesn't matter, and only because the jury was grossly misled about the validity of issued patents in general and Apple's patents-in-suit in particular doesn't mean that Judge Koh couldn't still agree with Samsung's post-trial motion and hold claim 18 of the '172 patent invalid. The legal standard is stricter in the infringement case (especially now at the JMOL stage) than in reexamination, where clear and convincing evidence is sufficient to reject a patent claim, but it looks awkward that Judge Koh held Samsung to infringe a patent claim that the USPTO probably wouldn't have granted if it had been aware of all of the relevant prior art. In a new filing, Samsung just drew Judge Koh's attention to this decision and stressed the fact that "the USPTO concluded that the prior art identified in the Office Action is the same or in the same family as the prior art asserted by Samsung in this case."

The $119 million verdict in the second California case was disappointing enough for Apple when it came down a few months ago and may have played a role in its decisions to agree to ceasefires with Google/Motorola and (in eight countries) Samsung, but it could be further reduced as a result of patents being held invalid (or not infringed).

Here's Samsung's notice to Judge Koh, with the USPTO Office Action (which is not final, and it would take several years if Apple exhausted all appeals) included in the same PDF file:

14-08-07 Samsung Filing on Office Action in Reexamination of Apple's '172 Patent by Florian Mueller

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, August 1, 2014

Apple responds to Samsung appeal of first California ruling, defends jury verdict all the way

On Monday, Apple had a deadline for its opening brief in the appeal of the final ruling in the first Apple v. Samsung case and somewhat surprisingly dropped its cross-appeal. As a result, Apple's opening brief, filed later in the day, was all about defending the jury verdict. The part that was not surprising is that Apple decided to consistently defend the jury verdict rather than run into any contradiction with itself by saying the jury got things wrong there it sided with Samsung but was absolutely right wherever it agreed with Apple. The unexpected part is that Apple finally gave up its pursuit of a permanent injunction in its first Samsung case. Apple could still seek an injunction over the same patents in connection with different products (and then try to present stronger evidence of irreparable harm), but a new complaint and a whole new liability ruling would be needed (which would take time).

Apple's defense of the 2012 jury verdict would be futile if the things certain jurors later told the media (about intentional ignorance of the prior art, for example) were a basis for setting the verdict aside. Fortunately for Apple, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, while aware of what the media reported, will (have to) rule on a different basis.

I don't disagree with Apple philosophically. It's true that Apple presented a pretty strong "copying" story at the 2012 trial, a story that would likely have persuaded many other juries to come down on Apple's side, even if not necessarily to the same extent. This year's trial in the second California case between these parties didn't go nearly as well for Apple because there was a bit of a disconnect between Apple's copying rhetoric on the one hand and the merits of its infringement assertions on the other hand.

There's a lot that one could say about a brief of approximately 100 pages (Samsung had also been granted additional pages for its opening brief in this appeal). I'll just share a few observations below the document:

14-07-28 Apple Responsive Brief to Samsung Appeal by Florian Mueller

Usually the table of authorities does not warrant any comment. Here, however, it's interesting that Apple's brief cites to writings by several of the 27 law professors who filed an amicus curiae brief a few months ago in support of Samsung's efforts to get the design patents-related part (i.e., the bulk) of the $929 million damages award reduced. In the "Other Authorities" section you can find writings by Professors Thomas Cotter (author of the Comparative Patent Remedies blog, which I have recommended previously), Mark Lemley, Mark McKenna & Katherine Strandburg, Michael Risch, and Ryan Vacca. It's a nice idea that Apple tries to leverage previous writings by those amici against their recent brief. (I'm sure the amici would disagree that there is any contradiction between their earlier writings and their brief.)

With respect to design patent-specific legal issues, I tend to agree with Apple that the concept of "purely functional" design elements should be interpreted more narrowly than Samsung suggests in its brief -- protection should be denied only if a design element is truly "dictated" by functional requirements. (If you have read my posts on Oracle v. Google, you know that I have a similar perspective on functional restrictions in connection with software copyright.)

Apple argues that there is no "risk of double recovery" if an unapportioned disgorgement of infringer's profits is awarded. I still believe that Samsung and its amici are right that unapportioned disgorgement is nonsensical in a world in which products, unlike some old non-tech products such as carpets, may be found to infringe more than one design patent at the same time. Apple focuses on the scenario in which "a patentee with multiple overlapping design patents could recover an infringer's profits several times over." Apple indeed didn't try this: it sought a disgorgement of infringer's profits (and not a multiple thereof) despite asserting, and establishing in the eyes of the jury, infringements of multiple design patents. But what if the same product infringes two (or more) design patents held by two (or more) entities? Apple does address this possibility: "if that hypothetical concern ever materialized, an infringer could always invoke impleader, as one of Samsung's amici [Prof. Lemley] explains." This does not seem to be a great solution, and in any event, even if a procedural solution existed, there is a conceptual problem with a rule that results in excessive remedies. Also, let's not forget that the issue is not only one of potential infringement of multiple design patents but that a high-tech product involves other intellectual property rights than just design patents. Apportionment is the only sensible solution, and it appears that the jury (which granted Apple less than half of what it wanted) somehow also felt that a complete disgorgement was over the top, but Apple now seeks to defend the verdict and, therefore, the instructions Judge Koh gave two years ago.

There are two issues with the first sentence of the introductory part (page 2) of Apple's brief, both of which show that Apple now attempts to defend a mostly design patent-based damages award by conflating design and technology:

"Apple spent years and millions of dollars developing innovative designs and features for its iconic iPhone and iPad, which revolutionized the smartphone and tablet computer markets."

First, while the iPhone and the iPad undoubtedly revolutionized the smartphone and tablet computer markets (in fact, the iPad even created the tablet computer market, practically speaking), the designs per se (which the bulk of the $930 million damages award relates to) did not revolutionize anything.

Second, the designs themselves only cost "millions". That is not a strong point when asking an appeals court to uphold a damages award amounting to almost a billion dollars. The million-billion discrepancy actually indicates that there is a risk of massive overcompensation in this case.

Having read Apple's appellate brief, I actually feel more strongly than before that the reduction of the damages award Samsung is seeking is really warranted.

Finally, I have to acknowledge that I had previously missed an important detail that footnote 22 (page 78) has now drawn my attention to: the USPTO's rejection of the '915 pinch-to-zoom API patent claims (which Apple is appealing, but which the examiner is still defending) is based on partly different prior art than theone Samsung presented at the 2012 trial. Technically, this could help Apple defend the patent in the appeal of the California ruling despite whatever else is going on in the USPTO reexamination proceedings. Still, the fact of the matter is that the '915 patent, based on where things currently stand at the USPTO, would not have been granted in the first place if the examiner had been aware of all of the relevant prior art. There are sometimes multiple ways to invalidate a given patent, so the '915 patent is still at risk in this appeal, and invalidation would most probably be the correct outcome.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn: