Sound View Patent Narrowed After Ex Parte Reexamination

In 2020, Unified filed an ex parte reexamination (Reexam) request against patents owned by Sound View Innovations, a non-practicing entity (NPE) that has sued various companies for their use of widely-adopted Internet technologies. In early October 2021, the Reexam of U.S. Patent 6,725,456 concluded with a “Notice of intent to issue a Reexamination Certificate” (Notice of Intent) that highlights a problematic habit of NPEs like Sound View:  reading a patent broadly when accusing others of infringing and narrowly when its validity is in question.  The Notice of Intent casts serious doubt on Sound View’s infringement theories and still leaves open future questions about validity. The examiner narrowed claims that Sound View has asserted repeatedly were much broader in court complaints. The Reexam (and every ex parte reexamination since 2000) can be found on Unified’s Portal here

Challenged claim 13 of the ’456 patent relates to a method of ensuring a particular quality of service for an application in a computer system. The claim recites a “resource reservation” and the examiner credited Sound View’s arguments that the claim required “two separate and distinct values to be associated with each resource reservation[.]” Notice of Intent, p. 6;  see Office Action Response, p. 19.  In particular, the examiner took the position that the resource reservation must specify both a “weight” and a “minimum amount of resources.” Id. The examiner held that specifying a minimum amount of resources in a resource reservation, which results in a weight being associated with that resource reservation, is not sufficient to read on the claim. Conversely, specifying a weight in a resource reservation, which results in a minimum amount of resources being allocated, is also not sufficient to read on the claim. Rather, as Sound View argued, allocating both a weight and a minimum amount of resources was needed according to the examiner. See Office Action Response, p. 23.

This claim interpretation by the examiner begs the question of whether Sound View has a viable infringement case based on its narrowing arguments and the examiner’s construction of these claim elements. See Sound View Innovations, LLC v. Dish Network, LLC, Civ. Action No. 1:19-cv-03707, Paper 1 at 48-49. It will not be enough for Sound View to argue that a system includes a resource reservation having a set minimum amount of resources OR a set weight (percentage) of the total resources that results in the other value occurring. That is, the resource reservation must include BOTH a set minimum amount of resources AND a set weight (percentage) of the total resources. It is unclear whether any of the pending product accusations meet these requirements.

Reexaminations are a valuable tool, particularly with Fintiv lingering. Due to the speed of reexamination proceedings, stays in co-pending district court litigations are warranted. As the conclusion of a reexamination may come as soon as one year after the filing of a request, patentees will be hard-pressed to argue that the ex parte reexamination process is too long to wait for a streamlining of their myriad infringement claims—if the patent is valid, it should be more likely that the reexamination will end quickly, and very little burden would be faced by the applicant due to a delay. On the other hand, if the challenged claims are invalid or substantially narrowed past the point of reasonable infringement, it would be a waste of resources to litigate.

Additionally, reexaminations are also a less expensive option (and sometimes faster way) to extract claim scope disavowals and highlight infringement theory weaknesses even though there is little control over what the examiner considers. Thus, when claim construction decisions in district court proceedings are deferred pending reexamination proceedings, the court has the benefit of the patent owner’s affirmative, binding disavowal of scope, and the examiner’s basis for allowance, itself probative for claim construction. See, e.g., Salazar v. Procter & Gamble Co., 414 F. 3d 1342, 1347-48 (Fed. Cir. 2005). That is particularly true here, where the examiner concluded that Sound View’s references to the specification and discussion of the requirements of the claim amounted to a narrowing of the scope of the patent. Notice of Intent, pp. 5-8.

Five major platforms adopt standardized patent identification format, SPIF

“This is a foundational thing, which is basically knowing what patents are involved in a transaction or some kind of interaction,” argues Shawn Ambwani, the COO of Unified Patents. “Litigation and assertion and anything related to patents are always very complicated. We should all make it as easy as possible for people to see what patents are involved.”

Cipher, Unified Patents, RPX, Aon, and Google Patents will be offering the SPIF patent identification format via their platforms in a move designed to bring more efficiency to patent transactions and portfolio management. SPIF uniquely defines patent assets so that they can be used in patent analytics, M&A, transferring patent information between firms, and buying and selling patents.

Read the article HERE on IAM’s website.

$2,000 for Xperi prior art

On November 1, 2021, Unified Patents added a new PATROLL contest, with a $2,000 cash prize, seeking prior art on at least claim 1 of U.S. Patent 9,398,209. The patent is owned by Xperi Holding Corporation, an NPE. The '209 patent relates to a method of tracking faces in an image stream. The method includes receiving images from an image stream including faces, calculating corresponding integral images, and applying different subsets of face detection rectangles to the integral images to provide sets of candidate regions.

The contest will expire on January 17, 2022. Please visit PATROLL for more information and to submit an entry for this contest.

InterDigital EPO patent challenged

On October 26, 2021, Unified filed an opposition proceeding against EP 1869893 B1, currently owned by InterDigital. The EP ’893 patent is part of a family purportedly essential to HEVC and part of the Access Advance patent pool. This filing is a part of Unified’s ongoing efforts in its SEP Video Codec Zone.

Unified is represented by Andrew McGettrick at HGF Law, and by in-house counsel, Ashraf Fawzy and Jessica L.A. Marks.

With Uncertainty Brings Change: A Q3 Look at Fintiv Denials

The recent introduction of the Restoring the America Invents Act by Senate IP Subcommittee Chair Senator Patrick Leahy and Senator John Cornyn aims, in part, to remove the uncertainty that the precedential Fintiv orders have caused. Looking at the actual number of denials and frequency of the Board’s use of their discretionary line of cases, though, the consistent takeaway is that Fintiv continues to be used in unpredictable, ever-changing ways to deny otherwise-meritorious, timely challenges.

Despite the slight dip in overall filings (and decisions from last year’s also-down filings) so far in 2021, procedural denials are now used nearly 16% of the time, as compared to just 5% in 2016, before Fintiv and related cases were designated precedential. That is a 220% increase. Even with the uncertainty of Arthex over the first half of the year and the overall dip in filing decisions, the USPTO was still not shy about using procedural denials.

Section 314(a) is still being used 73% of the time for procedural denials.

Interestingly, the use of §§ 314(a) and 325(d) has jumped 6% versus last year. This year has seen these two denials 94.5% of the time in terms of overall procedural denials.

Section 314(a) denials are now 12.4% of denials, a very slight increase from last quarter.

Meanwhile, § 325(d) denials are being used 5.7% of the time, slight increase from last quarter.

The NHK Spring/Fintiv framework continues to be the dominant framework for § 314(a) denials with 77 already, 8 shy of the total last used last year.

Fintiv denials continue to be predominantly used in cases with parallel proceedings in the Eastern District of Texas.

That nearly 63% of all Fintiv-cited denials lead to a settlement begs the question of whether the PTAB might have been more effective at resolving unnecessary litigations; it would appear that, by and large, courts are being used to force settlements rather than address the merits of a patent claim.

Even despite the strategy of a given plaintiff, cases in Fintiv-cited denials are averaging almost two years (700 days) for a case to be terminated, no matter the outcome.

Relevantly, comparing the caseload of the PTAB judges versus the Western District of Texas and Judge Albright’s court docket—inarguably the single biggest patent docket for a U.S. district court judge—it becomes apparent that PTAB dockets are far less crowded and the Board has the necessary resources to hear cases efficiently while giving each cases its due attention; for instance, the highest-docketed PTAB judges have around 100-200 cases on their docket currently (with many having just a handful of PTAB cases balanced with ex parte appeals), whereas Albright has had roughly 700 patent and 1,250 total civil cases on his docket—and growing. See Ryan Davis, Albright Says He’ll Very Rarely Put Cases on Hold for PTAB, Law360, May 11, 2021 (6:50 PM EDT) https://www.law360.com/articles/1381597/albright-says-he-ll-very-rarely-put-cases-on-hold-for-ptab (Judge Albright, noting as of may that he has his civil docket has 1,250 cases, roughly 60% of which were patent cases).

This accounts for both having a certain rate of settlement and new filings, and shows a snapshot in time of the total docket of active patent cases. This suggests that even the most favorable comparisons of dockets indicate the PTAB three-APJ panels can devote much more time and many more resources to each individual ground—an observation only magnified by the myriad other issues attendant on a Federal District court judge’s docket in any particular case.