(Informal 1-2 line summaries, which certainly should not be relied upon for legal or other research purposes)
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- CAFC affirms this jury verdict for indirect and willful infringement for claims on "direct-current–direct
current (“DC-DC”) converters" ("The
jury found that Vicor did not infringe claim 2 of the ’190 patent but indirectly and willfully infringed claims 55 and 67
of the ’702 patent, awarding $6.5 million in damages"). Defendant actually began the process by seeking a declaration of noninfringement, but plaintiff not only prevailed, but then sought attorneys fees:
"SynQor argued that the case before the district court
was exceptional because Vicor’s infringement merits defenses, infringement equitable defenses, and counterclaims
were exceptionally weak. SynQor further argued that Vicor litigated the case in an exceptional manner by filing a
series of ex parte reexamination petitions after its inter
partes review petition had been denied and using its counterclaims to introduce inflammatory and prejudicial allegations (including SynQor’s so-called “Kill Vicor”
campaign) . . . As to enhanced damages,
SynQor argued that the case was exceptional because Vicor
had no good-faith belief of noninfringement or invalidity
and litigated the case in bad faith. The district court
granted both motions"
CAFC affirms as to infringement:
"As to indirect infringement, Vicor’s arguments amount
to no more than an invitation for us to reweigh the evidence
before the jury and make various inferences in Vicor’s favor. This we decline to do. As to willful infringement, the
district court correctly found that the jury’s verdict was
supported by substantial evidence. While we agree with
Vicor that the standards for willful infringement and willful blindness are different, we hold that the evidence in the
record, taken in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, was sufficient to prove both indirect infringement and
willfulness . . . The problem with Vicor’s argument at bottom is that it
relies on drawing inferences from the evidence that the
jury was simply not required to make . . . The jury heard extensive evidence that Vicor monitored and reverse engineered SynQor’s patent-marked
products . . . was made aware of SynQor’s position
that Vicor’s products were not a noninfringing alternative . . . and chose
to indemnify Cisco rather than provide a legal opinion that
its products did not infringe . . . On this
record, the “requisite intent to induce infringement may be
inferred from all the circumstances.”"
After likewise affirming willfulness ("the jury was
properly instructed that it could only find willful infringement") CAFC concludes by affirming the attorneys fees ("The district court walked through the Read factors and
awarded enhanced damages well within the statutory treble damages permitted by statute.").
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- CAFC precedentially reverses the claim construction in this matter involving "systems and methods for streaming partly encrypted media content" ("The patent indicates that
one way to reduce resources needed for encryption/decryption processes (while still effectively reducing unauthorized access or copying) is to encrypt only parts of streamed
media, such as “portions of frames of video,” and to furnish
the playback device information about which portions are
encrypted as well as “common” decryption information
(e.g., encryption keys), not unique to each encrypted portion."), focusing on the term:
"locating encryption information that
identifies encrypted portions of frames of
video within the requested portions of the
selected stream of protected video;"
Looking to the "“precepts of English grammar” to determine the ordinary meaning of the phrase as a whole" CAFC notes:
"The principle is that (where commas or other textual
signals are not used) the modifier is presumptively understood to be tied to the nearest available semantically
plausible modificand."
Accordingly, here, "only the “encrypted portions of frames of video” (not the “encryption information”)
need be “within the requested portions of the selected
stream of protected video.”" However, this merely creates a presumptive interpretation, but CAFC finds not persuasive evidence to void the presumption:
"Netflix’s interpretation thus makes a straightforward
and coherent whole out of the final three limitations, which
have the focus of the parties’ arguments about the interpretive choice at issue . . . The specification does not overcome the presumptive
meaning . . . Netflix does not dispute that several embodiments described in the specification involve the location of encryption information within the requested portions of the
selected stream of protected video . . . But we agree with Netflix that the specification
does not limit the invention to that arrangement—that, indeed, it positively indicates that the invention covers (though it does not elaborate on) embodiments in which encryption information is not so located . . . The prosecution history provides one additional bit of
support for reading the specification as confirming that, as
Netflix urges . . . U.S. Patent No. 9,621,522 is the grandparent of the ’588
patent . . . Claim 1 of the ’522 patent calls for “DRM Information” (a type of encryption
information) to be located within a “top level index file” (“identif[ying] a plurality of alternative streams of protected video” stored in container files), which is different
from being located within the “requested portions of selected streams.”"
Ergo, CAFC vacates and remands for analysis based upon the new construction.
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- CAFC reverses the Board's determination that Claim 15 (involving "generating and sending a
hot link to a device") is not unpatentable. Basically, the Board didn't address the Claim's "instant messaging" requirement, which was recited in the alternative to the SMS message requirement, which the Board did address:
"The Board is required to
“articulate a satisfactory explanation . . . [that] enables the
court to exercise its duty to review the [Board’s] decisions
to assess whether those decisions are ‘arbitrary, capricious,
an abuse of discretion, or . . . unsupported by substantial
evidence.’” . . . Here, the Board’s silence on the IM limitation of claim 15 does not meet this requirement. Claim
15 explicitly recites generating a hot link message either
as an SMS message or an IM message. A petitioner can
therefore satisfy either of these two disjunctive limitations
to show unpatentability.
Ergo, vacated and remanded to consider the IM limitation.
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- In this precedential decision, CAFC affirms antitrust violations for patents involving "carbon honeycombs, an activated carbon structure that can be used to
filter airborne pollutants in a variety of application" ("Specifically, the
’844 patent is directed to a dual-stage fuel-vapor canister
system that combines a higher-capacity gas-tank-side adsorbent with a lower-capacity vent-side adsorbent."). Defendant asserted that plaintiff required parties to purchase its (allegedly noninfringing) filters to receive a patent license and the jury below agreed. Plaintiff responds here:
- "First, Ingevity asserts a statutory patent misuse defense under § 271(d) of the Patent Act supported by the
related “staple article” doctrine;"
- "Second, Ingevity argues that its purported tying conduct is immune from antitrust liability under the patent
laws and Noerr-Pennington"; and
- "Third, Ingevity argues that the jury’s antitrust damages award should be vacated because BASF failed to disaggregate the damages caused by Ingevity’s unlawful
conduct from those resulting from its lawful patent enforcement and that such disaggregation was required and feasible"
Regarding 1), plaintiff argues that its alleged "tying" was merely control over of contributorily infringing product components ("35 U.S.C. § 271(d) . . . expressly shields conduct that would otherwise be characterized as tying or exclusionary when it is undertaken to
prevent contributory infringement as defined in § 271(c)."). However, CAFC finds that the jury considered the factual question whether the articles were contributorily infringing product components and had adequate grounds to conclude that they were not ("That testimony regarding honeycomb use in non-infringing air-intake systems,
together with the Park patent, gave the jury sufficient reason to discount Ingevity executives’ testimony and favor
BASF’s evidence . . . the jury’s verdict rested on permissible
inferences and credibility determinations supported by the
record, substantial evidence supports the finding that Ingevity’s honeycombs are staple goods").
Regarding 2), CAFC considers the argument here different from what was argued below ("Ingevity’s immunity argument
is no longer in the alternative; it now subsumes its patent misuse defense . . . We may not consider such
new and improperly preserved arguments . . . At summary judgment, Ingevity’s immunity argument
was based on the theory that what BASF had alleged as
tying conduct was actually mere patent enforcement activity and thus immune, and it further agreed that conduct
beyond mere enforcement activity was not immune . . . But now, for the first time on appeal, Ingevity erases
that distinction . . . It argues that even if the jury found
that its honeycomb products are staple goods, its tying conduct is still immune."). Accordingly, CAFC sets the new argument aside (n.b., the DCT's caution, cited approvingly by CAFC, that "the Noerr-Pennington doctrine
will [not] help Ingevity if BASF proves the Ingevity product . . . is a staple article of commerce").
Regarding 3), CAFC agrees with the DCT that "“[t]o establish an antitrust injury, BASF was not required to show that the accused conduct was the sole cause of its injury; BASF needed
to show that Ingevity’s conduct was a material or substantial cause of its injury.”" As the jury instructions and conclusions were consistent with that analysis ("In light of this evidence and Dr.
Mathur’s reliance on a broad set of record documents rather than speculative projections, the jury could reasonably have found both material causation and non-speculative
damages"), CAFC affirms.
-
- CAFC affirms utility noninfringement for "antiballistic armored panels having commercial and military
uses." Below, the DCT construed the preamble term "for resisting" as "requiring that the
“edge protection should function to resist edge impact penetrations at a level similar to the main body of the panel’s
resistance to penetrations of non-edge impacts”" resulting in noninfringement SJ. Here, "LTC argues that the district court erred in finding the
entirety of the preamble, including its “for resisting”
clause, is limiting." CAFC, however, agrees with the DCT that the preamble is limiting as the "specification emphasizes that the main purpose of the invention is to solve" the problem of delamination ("Treating the “for resisting” clause as limiting is needed to
ensure that the claim scope is commensurate with “what
the inventors actually invented and intended to encompass
by the claim."). CAFC contends that adopting the plaintiff's reading would instead read the term out of the claim ("[I]f adopted, it would render the “for resisting”
portion of the preamble essentially a nullity."). Ergo, after briefly confirming that there was procedural opportunity to contest the SJ ruling, CAFC affirms.
James Skelley is a solo practitioner based in Mountain View, California since 2015, focusing primarily upon technology transactions and intellectual property procurement. James' practice also serves as an "incubator" for new legal service technologies / methodologies and a "living example" of their application. To this end, James regularly partners with larger law firms and with his clients so as to improve the practice of intellectual property law.
- Utility / Design / PCT Patent Prosecution
- Open Source Diligence
- Technology Transactions (typically as a team)
- Litigation / Inter Partes Review Support (typically as a team)
- James tends NOT to handle low-volume trademark work (though referrals are available)
- USPTO - #59458 - 10/16/2006
- California - #257829 - 12/01/2008
- District Columbia - #1014986 - 08/05/2013
- James is available by email, 8x8 hangout, and in-person meetups in the Valley.
- Email is typically the best way to reach James.
- Machine Learning / Robotics
- Cryptograpy / Cryptocurrency / Smart Contracts
- Medical Device
- Computational Biology (primarily modeling and proteomics)
- Signal Processing (primarily wireless and compression)
- Quantum Physics (primarily semiconductor) / Electromagnetics (antennae, waveguides, etc.)
- Manufacturing / 3D Printing
- James tends NOT to handle pure chemistry applications (though referrals are available), however James HAS handled matters involving computational proteomics, cellular modeling, and diagnostic lab protocols
LawMux Bites are (very) short, one-page summaries of various legal concepts, cases, and technologies. As informal summaries, you certainly shouldn't rely upon them as legal advice / for business use, but they can help orient you if you're new to the subject matter.