May 8, 2008

Claim Stink

Lucent sued Microsoft, Gateway, and Dell for infringing 5,649,131 and 4,701,954, claiming two very different technologies. '131 claims a communications protocol between a web server (host) and a terminal. '954 is for digitizing speech. Another claim construction tussle, again illustrating the awkward immaturity of claim construction case law, floundering on the bedrock of bad claim language, pitiable prosecution, and disingenuity by the patent owner.

Continue reading "Claim Stink"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:00 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

Squealing

It's official. Elvis Costello to the contrary, clown time is not over. The USPTO is appealing dénouement of illegality accorded its proposed examination rule changes.

Continue reading "Squealing"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:04 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (0)

What Adam Smith taught the Founding Fathers

As evidenced by his lecture on discoveries and inventions, Abraham Lincoln had a deep understanding of the patent system.  It is amazing how his lecture, which is now well over 150 years old, can seem so fresh today.  He and Charlie Munger have inspired me to undertake a historical review of other important lessons of the imminent dead.  Today the lesson is from Scottish enlightenment thinker Adam Smith, famous for his authorship of The Wealth of Nations.

Continue reading "What Adam Smith taught the Founding Fathers"

Posted by Michael Martin at 9:09 AM | Patents In Business | Comments (0)

Kiosk Mirage

6,105,007 is a bastard child. Its parent was for interfacing to a loan processing system, user interfaces requiring "varying degrees of human interaction." '007 was more Cylon, seeking "to capture a system that processed financial accounts 'without human intervention.'" The '007 claims mutated as well during prosecution. Predictably, '007 assertion created a claim construction dilemma requiring human intervention. In construing the crucial term, the CAFC acquitted itself poorly, defying case law by applying a ginned gimp, displaying again a distaste for broad claims.

Continue reading "Kiosk Mirage"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:01 AM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

May 7, 2008

Out of Gear

Solomon Technologies took Toyota to the ITC over 5,067,932, accusing the transaxles on Toyota's hybrid models. An ITC judge found no infringement, and the asserted claim not enabled. Solomon appealed.

Continue reading "Out of Gear"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:10 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

May 6, 2008

Toothless Vampire

4,579,530 "claims a method of fabricating porcelain veneers for teeth." Most of its teeth were pulled during reexamination, leaving only one independent claim. Owner PSN Illinois asserted '530 against Ivoclar Vivadent. The patent had no bite. But necromancer CAFC did. The appeals court raises dead claims as a way to damn claim scope.

Continue reading "Toothless Vampire"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 7:23 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

An Inconvenient Truth

The New York Times gives pesky perfectionist professor John F. Duffy his 15 minutes of fame. Duffy had the temerity to finger the criminal gang commonly known as Congress for passing a law in 1999 letting the USPTO director appoint appeal board judges. Only one thing wrong with that: it's unconstitutional.

Continue reading "An Inconvenient Truth"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:58 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (1)

May 5, 2008

EPO Oppositions & Appeals

From HLBBshaw: "After grant of a European patent, there is a nine-month window in which a person may file centrally at the EPO a notice of opposition to the patent, alleging that the patent was wrongly granted. Oppositions are relatively common because they represent an economically attractive way of removing an IP obstacle to a planned commercial activity over a substantial market place."

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:47 PM | International | Comments (6)

May 4, 2008

Righting Whitening

Procter & Gamble sued Johnson & Johnson for patent infringement over Listerine Whitening ® Quick Dissolving Strips, marketed as superior to P&G's Crest Whitestrips ®, because they dissolve more quickly. You wouldn't want to have patience in whitening your teeth, because you need a smoke, or cup of coffee, or some other neurotransmitting tooth-staining jones you can't shuck off, you vain but weak-willed Pavlovian simian.

Continue reading "Righting Whitening"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:14 PM | Litigation | Comments (0)

May 2, 2008

Finite Genus Killer

Xerox filed a patent related to electrophotography. The examiner piled on §103(a) combos. Appeal before the BPAI, arguing against 'obvious to try.' The issue was whether a "claimed species is obvious over prior art which discloses a genus containing the species." Obvious if the genus is defined by a "finite number" of possibilities, and the prior art does not teach away. KSR strikes again.

Continue reading "Finite Genus Killer"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 9:03 PM | Prior Art | Comments (3)

Patent Prosecution Highway - Bridge Two

After recent finalization of the Patent Prosecution Highway across the Pacific, construction will soon begin on a route spanning the Atlantic. The USPTO and EPO have announced a cooperative program to "leverage fast-track patent examination procedures already available in both offices to allow applicants to obtain corresponding patents faster and more efficiently", adding another bridge to the developing global patent prosecution highway network.

Continue reading "Patent Prosecution Highway - Bridge Two"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 12:08 PM | Prosecution | Comments (0)

Stranded R&D

In 1980, Congress passed the Bayh-Dole Act. Overnight with its passage, universities and government-funded R&D labs gained a comparative advantage in funding R&D. Universities and government labs have a cost advantage in that many had already spent tens of billions of dollars setting up research labs for non-commercial purposes, including teaching and curious exploration. Many scientists and engineers found the prestige of academia, and the increase in professional freedom it promises, a compelling offer. The result has been a gradual shutting down of corporate R&D labs, and an expansion of industry collaboration with scientists and engineers now employed by universities and government labs.

Continue reading "Stranded R&D"

Posted by Michael Martin at 10:27 AM | The Patent System | Comments (6)

May 1, 2008

Appeal Brief Summary

In the past few years, patent examiners increasingly nitpick, sticklers for the rules and beyond. Appeals are burgeoning, as are non-compliance notices for appeal briefs under MPEP 1205.03. A common area for complaint is the summary: either too little or too much. A good answer is to give both.

Continue reading "Appeal Brief Summary"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 8:16 PM | Prosecution | Comments (4)

April 30, 2008

Garbage In

Jon W. Dudas, USPTO numero uno: "We are getting more and more unpatentable ideas, worse and worse quality applications." Craven worm lying through his teeth, or imbecile trying to impress the rubes? You be the judge.

Continue reading "Garbage In"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:28 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (14)

Every Patent Affects Two Different Markets

There are two different markets relevant to every valuable patent. First, there is the market for the R&D work that results in the patent. Prices in this market are set by the opportunity costs for the time of scientists and engineers who are capable of theorizing about and experimenting with the technology. Second, there is the market for the claimed products or services that the R&D work opened up. The second market is the one that everyone naturally thinks about. In fact, our whole nation has had a blind spot for the first market for a long time because corporate R&D divisions were serving that market very well until the Bayh-Dole Act was passed in 1980. But most universities have not been able to consistently match pre-product funding with the flow of R&D produced by their faculty. One former R&D employee from Apple and Microsoft blames Silicon Valley, saying "Silicon Valley forgot how to do R&D."

Continue reading "Every Patent Affects Two Different Markets"

Posted by Michael Martin at 3:37 PM | Patents In Business | Comments (0)

Paying for Garbage

The New York Times reports $4.3 million spent in the past 15 months lobbying at the wounded Patent Act. The anti-patent Coalition for Patent Fairness alone forked out $2.5 million, lining the pockets of Sen. Leahy & Sen. Hatch. Pro-patent rival Coalition for 21st Century Patent Reform spent $1.8 million.

Continue reading "Paying for Garbage"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:06 PM | The Patent System | Comments (1)

April 29, 2008

To Naught

Rambus, having participated in proceedings leading to the industry standard for dynamic memory chips, patented portions of it. As chronicled in the Patent Prospector, that bit of seeming unseemliness has not been altogether well received during Rambus' patent enforcement campaigns. In this episode, the court of appeals washes away Rambus' aborted assertion against pig-headed Samsung.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 3:26 PM | Declaratory Judgment | Comments (0)

How Patent Reform is like a Sombrero

With much of the intense pressure to put patent reform into law past, now is an opportune moment in time to step back and reflect on the bigger picture of patent law in the United States. What bigger picture is there to be seen? Our vision of the patent system, and of the need for its reform, can be understood better upon consideration of the sombrero.

Continue reading "How Patent Reform is like a Sombrero"

Posted by Michael Martin at 1:19 PM | The Patent System | Comments (0)

April 28, 2008

Nothing Doing

CAFC Judge Linn wondered out loud last week about the quality of BPAI, the patent appeals board. Small wonder. Last year, John Duffy opined that a  35 U.S.C. §6, enacted in 1999, is unconstitutional under Article 2. The 1999 Act allowed the PTO Director to appoint BPAI judges, but Article 2 requires that such "inferior" officials be appointed, at the least, by a department head, which the PTO honcho is not.  Translogic took up the cudgel, petitioning the Supreme Court after the CAFC demurred. It's an easy bet that SCOTUS won't weigh in.

Continue reading "Nothing Doing"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 7:21 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (0)

Sleep Lite

LiteCubes sued Canada-based GlowProducts for infringing 6,416,198, as well as copyright infringement. '198 claims a light that looks like an ice cube. After found infringing, GlowProducts filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. On appeal, the CAFC unleashed a gratuitous stem-winder on jurisdiction. Simply, an allegation of patent infringement "creates a federal cause of action."

Continue reading "Sleep Lite"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:26 PM | Case Law | Comments (1)

Grinding

Congress Daily reported last Thursday that "more than 20 high-tech and financial services industry executives, as well as corporate patent counsels," met "with Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah... to discuss controversial components of a bill that would overhaul the U.S. patent system." Proponents for eviscerating patent enforcement are relentless and unbounded financially in effecting the corruption of corruptible. While 2008 may pass with further damage to the U.S. patent regime limited to case law conniptions, 2009 is likely to bring again the beast to savage the integrity of this nation's patent system. A glimmer of hope flickers that 2009 brings a change of USPTO management that returns a semblance of sanity to the agency, and thus a counterbalance to the inexorable grind for deformation.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:25 AM | The Patent System | Comments (2)

April 26, 2008

21st Century Schizoid Everyman

Sitrick v. Dreamworks stirred muddy water. Marc Brown of McDermott Will & Emery worries: "Without realizing it, a recent series of Federal Circuit decisions has established a standard for enablement that may arguably be higher than any patent can meet." Is the concern justified? Why hasn't enablement had a head-on collision with its alter ego behind obviousness and the doctrine of equivalents?

Continue reading "21st Century Schizoid Everyman"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 3:40 PM | § 112 | Comments (4)

International IP Dictionary

Research and Markets announced an international intellectual property law dictionary for €266. Covers patents, copyright, and trademarks, both U.S. and international terms. For patents, has a "Short History of Patent Law in the United States," and "Charts on Sources of United States Domestic Patent Law." Measly web site with little information about the dictionary itself, but, by comparison, extensive biographies of the authors. In other words, pathetic marketing, unless you think promulgating cult of personality for relative unknowns for a dictionary qualifies as good marketing.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:23 PM | Patents In Business | Comments (0)

April 25, 2008

Judicial Disappointment

In an otherwise less than remarkable non-precedential decision by the CAFC, Circuit Judge Richard Linn took the opportunity in a concurring opinion to express "disappointment" and "concern" over the current state of the patent system, suggesting that "the circumstances that led up to this appeal may be more symptomatic of certain failures of the patent system than merely reflective of the peculiar facts of this case". You don't say.

Continue reading "Judicial Disappointment"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 12:23 PM | The Patent System | Comments (0)

April 24, 2008

Lincoln's Famous Words

On February 11, 1859, Abraham Lincoln gave a lecture to the inhabitants of Jacksonville, Illinois on the topic of discoveries and inventions.  His most famous words from this lecture are the last few that were recorded:

"Next came the Patent laws.  These began in England in 1624;* and, in this country, with the adoption of our constitution.  Before then, any man might instantly use what another had invented; so that the inventor had no special advantage from his own invention.  The patent system changed this; secured to the inventor, for a limited time, the exclusive use of his invention; and thereby added the fuel of interest to the fire of genius, in the discovery and production of new and useful things."

Continue reading "Lincoln's Famous Words"

Posted by Michael Martin at 9:34 AM | Patents In Business | Comments (2)

Objectively Baseless

Dominant Semiconductors, being found to infringe a number of LED patents owned by OSRAM GmbH, filed suit against OSRAM alleging unfair competition, intentional interference with contractual relations, interference with prospective economic advantage, and trade libel arising from OSRAM's communication to customers regarding Dominant's possible infringement. Dominant, apparently forgetting that they lost the infringement battle, claimed OSRAM's communications regarding possible infringement were "objectively baseless". Turns out, the only thing objectively baseless was Dominant's suit. Summary judgment granted in favor of OSRAM. CAFC affirmed.

Continue reading "Objectively Baseless"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 7:52 AM | Case Law | Comments (0)

April 23, 2008

Three Strikes

Bayer Bioscience appealed to the CAFC in a third round of the battle against Monsanto, pleading for the reversal of the district court decision granting attorney fees to Monsanto under 35 U.S.C. § 285, warranted due to Bayer's exceptional inequitable conduct. Not wanting to disappoint, Bayer failed to challenge the district court's discretionary determination to award attorney fees, instead clinging to battles already lost, only to lose again.

Continue reading "Three Strikes"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 12:15 PM | Inequitable Conduct | Comments (0)

April 22, 2008

Antecedent Basis

They killed the bunny patent. It's enough to make you cling to your guns and religion. Energizer tried to zap Chinese battery makers using the ITC, but the ITC pulled the plug. Twice. On appeal, a non-precedential decision, owing to all-around discord in the panel. A badly drafted claim loses its juice on antecedent disconnect.

Continue reading "Antecedent Basis"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:17 AM | § 112 | Comments (3)

April 21, 2008

Facile Treatment

Here we go again. "There should be greater penalties in respect of patent holders who make unjustified threats of legal proceedings. "Patent trolls" should not be allowed to flourish and to hold public and private investors in research and development to ransom." - Australian academic Matthew Rimmer

Continue reading "Facile Treatment"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:09 AM | The Patent System | Comments (0)

April 20, 2008

A New Kind of Patent Boutique?

The state of the legal profession is in flux. The exogenous forces of globalization and technology are straining and breaking the traditional business frameworks for the provision of legal services. How might the future look?

Continue reading "A New Kind of Patent Boutique?"

Posted by Michael Martin at 2:51 PM | The Patent System | Comments (15)

Avoiding Consistency Traps

"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds." -Ralph Waldo Emerson

At Patent Prospector, we're not shy about speaking out when we see academics, business people, or government officials doing silly things. Because of that, it's really a pleasure to be able to give kudos to the same people when praise is deserved. I believe that the new pilot program designed to promote Examiner interviews before first Office Actions is an excellent idea, which PTO Director Dudas and his team deserve praise for trying out.

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Posted by Michael Martin at 1:03 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (0)

Beaming Down

Finisar sued DirecTV in East Texas for infringing 5,404,505, garnering from a jury a $78.9 million reasonable royalty damages award for willful infringement. The district court tacked on $25 million while denying injunctive relief. On appeal, a claim construction error vacated the verdict, as well as raising from the grave potentially invalidating prior art.

Continue reading "Beaming Down"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:31 AM | Prior Art | Comments (0)

April 19, 2008

Made in China

China's free-for-all in intellectual property is becoming past tense. The number of patents and patent lawsuits has doubled in the past five years. Over 850,000 Chinese patents are now active. The big winners are Chinese patent lawyers.

Continue reading "Made in China"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:54 PM | International | Comments (0)

April 18, 2008

Tilt

Peter Detkin of Intellectual Ventures, at an IP Symposium in San Jose this week: "Small inventors, defined as those entities that have less than 500 employees, are responsible for 60% of US patents, while the remaining 40% are granted to large companies. On the other hand, large companies collect over 90% of revenues derived from patents, while small companies are left with the 'crumbs'."

Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:32 PM | Patents In Business | Comments (1)

Unforseeable

Honeywell sued Hamilton Sundstrand over 4,380,893 and 4,428,194. One of asserted claims had been an unamended dependent rewritten into independent form, triggering presumption of prosecution estoppel, though why that should be is the locus of dispute. In a previous CAFC appearance, infringement from doctrine of equivalents (DOE) had been vacated, with the district court to examine whether the Festo presumption could be rebutted. This episode, a 2-1 panel majority oversteps applying DOE.

Continue reading "Unforseeable"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:04 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (1)

Abandoning His Post

John Whealan, former solicitor of the USPTO, has been soliciting PTO-favorable legislation for the past year, "assisting" Sen. Leahy in bungling patent reform. In a signal of defeat for the bill, S. 1145, Whealan, who has been on leave from the PTO, is abandoning his temporary post with the Senate May 1. Self-absorbed, Leahy has called his efforts a waste of "thousands of hours."

Continue reading "Abandoning His Post"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 11:01 AM | The Patent System | Comments (1)

April 17, 2008

Lazy Man Insults His Customers

The USPTO is storing up trouble. PTO honcho Jon Dudas said Wednesday that patent applications are "skyrocketing," but quality is suffering "as corporations and individuals increasingly seek to turn intellectual property into a legal asset rather than a means to technology innovation."

Continue reading "Lazy Man Insults His Customers"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 5:41 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (5)

Hospital TV

Zenith has a couple patents (5,495,301; 5,502,513) for TV remote controls for hospital room use. Zenith sued PDI for infringement. PDI won a summary judgment of prior art invalidity on claim 1 of '301, and non-infringement on both patents. Zenith appealed. Herein reminders that: 1) practicing the prior art does not prove anticipation; 2) determining anticipation by public use doesn't require an enablement finding. "We must simply determine whether the public use related to a device that embodied the invention."

Continue reading "Hospital TV"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:49 AM | Prior Art | Comments (0)

Bank Holdup

Wells Fargo inked a software license agreement with WMR in December 2003. In 2004, a patent license agreement (PLA) followed. In early February 2006, WMR sold four patents to DataTreasury: 5,265,007; 5,583,759; 5,717,868; and 5,930,778, patents encompassing what would become federally-mandated digital check processing under the law known as Check 21. DataTreasury then embarked on a massive patent enforcement campaign against a slew of banks, including Wells Fargo. Wells Fargo thought that DataTreasury was bound by the PLA it had with WMR.

Continue reading "Bank Holdup"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:37 AM | Litigation | Comments (0)

April 16, 2008

Sauce for the Goose

The USPTO electronic filing system (EFS) requires that all submitted pdf documents have embedded fonts. EFS provides acknowledgment receipts for all EFS customer submissions. The receipts are not compliant with EFS standards, as they don't have the requisite Arial font embedded.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 3:21 AM | Prosecution | Comments (1)

April 15, 2008

Ravenous Hordes

The USPTO is hosting a webcast on Wednesday, April 30, 2008, at 3:00 p.m. ET "to discuss recent disruptions in the availability of Public PAIR" owing to "service disruptions caused by bulk downloading of data by the public, commonly referred to as 'data mining.'" Details.

Continue reading "Ravenous Hordes"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 8:41 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (2)

First Action Interview Pilot

The USPTO is launching a new pilot program granting examiner interviews prior to a first office action on the merits. The PTO claims the program will "reduce pendency and improve patent quality" by "enhancing information exchange between applicant and examiner and promoting early resolution of outstanding issues". Increasing communication between applicant and examiner is finally a step in the right direction, but it remains to be seen if this early interview process will effectuate any real change, or if the already present "reject, reject, reject" mentality will cause the interview process to be as difficult as selling ice to Eskimos.

Continue reading "First Action Interview Pilot"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 3:54 PM | Prosecution | Comments (4)

Complex Work Unit Pilot

The USPTO has a new pilot program, guaranteed to become standard practice, to facilitate electronic document submission for what it calls "complex work units:" chemical structure drawings, mathematical formulae, three-dimensional protein crystalline structure data, and table data. The program lets applicants submit such data electronically in a variety of file formats. The thrust is facilitating prior art searching by giving examiners ready access to the data, as opposed to fiddling with conversion of paper submissions, as has been done in the past.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 3:40 PM | Prosecution | Comments (0)

April 14, 2008

i-©®eaTM

The above title reads like junk email in a foreign language that your computer can't decipher. How appropriate, because that's the name of the USPTO's new curriculum to teach rug rats about intellectual property. i-©®eaTM educates educators to educate "tweens" (ages 8-11) "to be creative and invent." Like they don't get into enough trouble as is. To launch the program, the agency has radio and TV commercials with the message, "Anything's possible. Keep thinking." Hey PTO, how about something crazily creative, like "examination on the merits"?!

Continue reading "i-©®eaTM"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:44 PM | The Patent Office | Comments (4)

Dropped Dish

The CAFC brushed off an en banc appeal rehearing request from Dish Network for a $74 million award to TiVo for patent infringement, as well as a permanent injunction. Dish had also gone the reexam route, but that only bullet-proofed the patent (6,233,389). Denial is a long, lonely road. Dish is going to hoof it to the Supreme Court.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:02 PM | Litigation | Comments (0)

Color Within the Guidelines

The USPTO recently published updated Written Description Training Materials, as a revision to training materials from 1999, to reflect changes in case law and technology.

Continue reading "Color Within the Guidelines"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 1:26 PM | Prosecution | Comments (0)

CIP Junk

PowerOasis had a dysfunctional family of patents, notably 6,466,658 and 6,721,400. The patents claim telecommunications access via a vending machine. PowerOasis went after T-Mobile, who successfully broke the family lineage, that these CIP children weren't entitled to their parent's birth date. On appeal, the written description requirement is recited as part and parcel of determining priority date for a CIP. There is no presumption that a CIP is entitled to an earlier filing date.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:10 AM | Claim Construction | Comments (4)

April 13, 2008

Platinum Patents

Patent Hawk is delighted to announce Platinum Patents, the prosecution branch of Patent Hawk. The same folk who have been wreaking havoc on patents for years for litigation defense, facilitating monetizing patents for patent holders, and providing patent intelligence to gain an unfair competitive edge, now offer prosecution services for inventors. The same excellence our existing clientele experience is now honed to providing superior patent protection.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 7:05 PM | Prosecution | Comments (0)

Dulling the Edge

The International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers, damning S. 1145: 

It would threaten our nation's competitive edge in a number of significant ways - including allowing foreign based companies to challenge the U.S. patents of American manufacturers... Patent reform must not undermine our manufacturing base by diminishing the returns for those whose creativity and ingenuity has been one of the key ingredients to America's economic strength.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:09 AM | The Patent System | Comments (0)

April 12, 2008

Viral

Hilgraeve Corporation, owner of computer virus detector patent 5,319,776, sued McAffee and lost on non-infringement. Next, it sued Symantec and lost again in district court, but had an unfavorable claim construction reversed on appeal. Symantec settled, buying the patent. In that process, Symantec picked up the lawsuit Hillgraeve had brought against Computer Associates (CA).

Continue reading "Viral"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 3:51 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

Disappointed

Sen. Patrick Leahy appears left holding a sack of shat - S. 1145, the Patent Putrefaction Act. Referring to the lobbyists who have bought him, Leahy lamented, "we have been working on these reforms for years." Leahy called the thwarted bill "a missed opportunity." The real missed opportunity is that such pathetic and corrupt legislation actually received sustained attention from lawmakers, when there is real work to be done in improving the patent system.

Continue reading "Disappointed"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:08 PM | The Patent System | Comments (3)

April 11, 2008

Profit From Loss

Hoping to reap a windfall from another 9/11, a patent application was filed in 2006 to patent response to chaos, claiming a method and computer program for "optimizing the skills and the resources" "for a chaotic event." Perhaps the applicant anticipated passage of pending patent legislation. The assignee is IBM.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:58 AM | Prosecution | Comments (0)

April 10, 2008

Down to History

Luma sued Stryker and Karl Storz Endoscopy for infringing its medical imaging patent 5,740,801. The claim construction went to a special master, who construed the contested terms "graphical objects" and "still frame buffer." Summary judgment motions for noninfringement and invalidity followed and were granted. Luma appealed. The CAFC delved into the prosecution history to get to the bottom line.

Continue reading "Down to History"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 5:52 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (1)

Quid Pro Quo

Senate Republicans are threatening inaction if nominations for appellate court judges are not acted on, the pace of which has been described as "glacial." Numerous judicial nominations languish under the jaundiced eye of Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. Sen. Arlen Spector,R-Pa., who yesterday pulled his support for Leahy's Putrid Patent Act, suggested that GOP senators retaliate by blocking the bill, S.1145, a specter that Leahy acknowledged. And a fine idea indeed.

Continue reading "Quid Pro Quo"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:37 PM | The Patent System | Comments (0)

Checking Out

At the behest of the big banker boys, Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala. sponsored an amendment to the Putrid Patent Act, exempting banks from paying damages for infringing patents covering the mandated "Check 21" check imaging law. Sessions has now dropped support for the provision over constitutional legality concerns. Some things money can't buy, though the banking lobby certainly tried to buy this.

Continue reading "Checking Out"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:54 AM | The Patent System | Comments (9)

Is There An Echo In Here?

David Boundy, IP VP at Cantor Fitzgerald, burned the midnight oil to rail against USPTO rule changes, using the proposed Markush rule revision as a springboard. "The Markush Rule violates the Patent Act." Boundy thereupon listed further PTO legal transgressions for all its recent rule changes, insisting the PTO must start again from scratch. "Further action by the PTO is illegal until it has made some good faith attempt to comply with the law."

Continue reading "Is There An Echo In Here?"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:21 AM | The Patent Office | Comments (4)

April 9, 2008

Crumbling

Like a rat leaving a sinking ship, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., has pulled his support for S. 1145 over damages apportionment. According to Congressional Quarterly, sponsor Sen. Patrick Leahy, Senate Judiciary Committee chair, "reserved the Senate television studio for a news conference two days in a row this week, only to cancel both times." Leary had previously acknowledged the vote count problematic, though he had been hoping to get it to the floor. Leahy and cosponsor Sen. Orrin Hatch are still haggling over the inequitable conduct provision. Hatch's support for the bill is contingent on changes being made.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:02 PM | The Patent System | Comments (0)

Budens On The Real Deal

Back in February, USPTO Director Jon Dudas testified before Congress as to the "progress" of the agency. The PTO press release offered up a mirage banquet of statistical successes. The April newsletter of POPA, the patent office union, dishes out the testimony of POPA president Robert Budens, who slices through Dudas's claimed "success." Ah, finally, some unbiased declarations.

Continue reading "Budens On The Real Deal"

Posted by Mr. Platinum at 8:28 AM | The Patent Office | Comments (6)

Uncovered

Ren Judkins sued HT Window Fashion for infringing window covering patent 7,182,120, which he had gotten via a circuitous route. HT counterclaimed unfair competition under the Lanham Act, and sought a preliminary injunction, because Judkins had sent letters to HT customers, warning of infringement. Denied. Appeal. HT argued that Judkins acted in bad faith because he knew that his patent was unenforceable.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:19 AM | Case Law | Comments (0)

April 8, 2008

Bought

The Coalition for Patent Fairness has just rented Congressional heavy hitters Trent Lott, R-Miss, John Breaux, D-La, and former House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo, as a cluster contingent to shove the Patent Deform Act to ramming speed. As one wag mused: "If patent reform is going anywhere this year, it will happen either this week or next week. The CPF has been saying it's very confident that the bill will pass. If this is the case, why hire three of the most expensive lobbyists in Washington for a 1-2 week job?"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:05 PM | The Patent System | Comments (5)

Sold

Patent auctioneer Ocean Tomo had a roomful of happy campers at its April 2nd auction. One portfolio, for processing digital bit streams, sold for $6.6 million. Four lots sold for over $1 million. 53 of 85 lots offered sold, a 62% success rate. A total of $19.6 million raked in. About 450 people attended the San Francisco event. Ocean Tomo takes a 25% cut: 15% from sellers, 10% from buyers.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:52 PM | Patents In Business | Comments (0)