USPTO Issues Final Rejection Of Apple's Rubberbanding Patent, Which Were Among Those The Jury Said Samsung Infringed
from the oops dept
We've argued repeatedly how silly it is for courts to move forward with cases over patent infringement while the USPTO is reviewing those same patents. Considering just how often patent re-exams lead to changes in the patents (including rejecting key claims), moving forward before the USPTO has ruled is kind of silly. It's guaranteed to lead to bad rulings. The latest is that the USPTO has issued a "final" rejection of Apple's "rubberbanding" patent (US Patent 7,469,381), which was one of the patents at issue in the Samsung Apple patent fight, and which the jury said Samsung infringed. In fact, the specific claim (19) that Samsung was said to have infringed was rejected by the USPTO.We had noted a non-final rejection last fall, and now the USPTO has reiterated that with a final rejection. Of course, even "final rejection" is a bit of a misnomer, since Apple can (and probably will) still appeal to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB). Still, given the significant doubt over the quality of the patent, it seems crazy to assume that it was valid as part of the lawsuit.
Also, in the meantime, if we're going to grant massively powerful, technology-landscape-changing patents to companies, is it really so much to ask that the USPTO not get it wrong so damn often? The fact that, on second review, they suddenly realize "oops, that was a mistake!" seems like the kind of thing that we should be worried about, given just how much power there is in a single bad patent.
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Filed Under: claims, final rejection, patent, rejection, rubberbanding, uspto
Companies: apple, samsung
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What we need is a better prior art search process that is able to focus the search and is more likely to pull up the relevant art. That's not as easy to do as it sounds, though, because given the bulk of prior art out there, even well-constructed electronic searches of the art are going to miss references that use different wording to describe the subject matter.
The patent office does let a lot of patents through that should never have made it (the one that was recently shot down on a mathematical formula should have been unpatentable subject matter from the outset), but sometimes they do a decent job with the art that is before them, and once the patentee tries to enforce the patent, the accused infringer spends a lot more time and money on searching and comes up with art the examiner didn't have.
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Re-exams are not simply a "second review". They're more like a second review with help from the outside. Often, significant help from people that are the best in their field. When you put that kind of firepower on a patent of course you're going to have a better shot at rejecting/invalidating a claim.
And the PTO issuing a final rejection on a claim is not saying "opps we made a mistake!". It is simply acknowledging that there is now art (or another new issue in the newschool post-grant reviews) on the record that leads to a rejection.
The source of your misunderstanding this is your misunderstanding how and why the PTO issues patents. The how is that the PTO issues patents by default unless there is some issue at the time of review on the record. They do this at the behest of congress and nobody else. See 35 USC 102 and 151. The why is because there is nothing on the record at the time of the review (examination) that would prevent the issuance and for no other reason other than congress tells them to.
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www.google.com
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Please peddle your apologies elsewhere.
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What happens now?
What happens in the same situation if the case was closed? Do you have recourse to come back and say I'd like my money back, with interest thanks? How about licensing - I presume licensing deals would have a clause that makes says payment isn't contingent on the patent being legit
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Re: What happens now?
I don't think Samsung is likely to get any of its legal expenses back. Have they paid any of the judgment at this point?
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A problem in trying to carry out prior art searches in software is that patents are vaguely worded, and worse may not have many terms in common with a near identical patent.
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I appologise if no one has ever walked you through inductive logic before, but it would explain your involvement in the patent world.
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With respect to software, it's probably a good area for Congress to step into, but they don't seem to be willing to do it. So we'll stumble around a bit more while the courts try to figure it out.
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Isn't that a problem with the patent system, then?
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It would be nice if they could only issue one if it was clear that it was deserved.
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I don't know how you fix that completely. It could certainly be improved. Some people might argue to just get rid of patents, but that's not a practical solution because there's no serious chance of that happening any time soon. So the big question, to me, is if we're going to have a patent system how do we deal with ever-growing numbers of applications and massive increases in the prior art, when you have a finite number of people sitting in the patent office trying to examine patent applications?
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Someday maybe we'll have a political climate that will allow massive reform of the patent system or complete abolishment.
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On the other hand, we have our representatives in Congress that are supposed to handle this stuff, and that's where people should be focusing attention. I don't think the Supreme Court is going to eliminate software patents with a decision. Software has been patentable for some time in the U.S., and the Supreme Court would probably look at the fact that Congress hasn't acted as indicating a correct interpretation of statute. In fact, 35 U.S.C. 101, which define patentable subject matter, has been interpreted extremely broadly since a 1980 Supreme Court decision. So the Congress has had more than 30 years to do something about it and hasn't acted. They could eliminate software patents overnight, or place new restrictions on them, or whatever. And if we want to get rid of them, that's what Congress is supposed to do. I suspect the Supreme Court will take the view that unless Congress acts to eliminate them, there is no reason to disallow them.
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Then why not remove the presumption of validity, and make it clear that any patent brought in litigation first must go through a re-exam, where (as you admit) it will go through an adversarial review for the first time...
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tront patent
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Off Topic
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It was in plain English.
"Google and other web search engines run into the same issue of returning far more results than the patent examiner can go through."
Their job is too hard. Patent apology.
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Prior art
I hope my "effect that looks like a bouncing ball" will pass muster though.
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Maybe I should
There's clearly no prior art and the USPTO doesn't think it's obvious.
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for the rubberband man
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Mike's entire point is that the now-invalidation makes all of the extra care to "do it right" pointless since it's all retroactively not correct.
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Why would they be at a disadvantage? If the US abolished patents and say the EU kept them, US companies could still get EU patents.
Not that this discussion is anything other than academic of course.
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Psst: those aren't friends.
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But I think we're both in agreement that big reforms are needed. While we're at it, I'd knock the copyright term down to something reasonable as well, but that's another thread :)
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the presumption of validity... [is] basically a fiction at this point.
I'm confused, are you in favor of presumption of validity or not?
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The problem is with the examination process, and that needs to be fixed. I think everyone knows the presumption of validity is a bit weak in reality, because the examination process isn't as good as it needs to be.
I guess my first point of attack in solving most of the problems with the patent system would be to focus on examination. If you can actually get to a point where the only patents that are getting allowed are the ones that should be, you take care of a lot of other issues in the process.
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it doesn't get you anywhere in fact, the only real effect it has is 1 to at least acknowledge that there is a reason for the patentee to be able to bring suit, and 2 (the only really important thing) that the burden of proof in the proceedings relating to invalidity is on the accused, not on the patentee.
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more dissembling by Masnick
With such statements you only prove how little you know about patents and the way the system works. For the PTO to reject all claims in reexam is standard practice. In effect, they are punting to the courts who will make the final determination. Many who are experienced in these matters will tell you the PTO has become a rubber stamp for large infringers which is the role Apple is most often in. Sometimes it backfires on them.
Mere dissembling by thieves! It is not innovation that patents hinder, but the theft of.
Do you know how to make a Stradivarius violin? Neither does anyone else. Why? There was no protection for creations in his day so he like everyone else protected their creations by keeping them secret. Civilization has lost countless creations and discoveries over the ages for the same reason. Think we should get rid of patents? Think again...or just think!
Masnick and his monkeys have an unreported conflict of interest-
https://www.insightcommunity.com/cases.php?n=10&pg=1
They sell blog filler and "insights" to major corporations including MS, HP, IBM etc. who just happen to be some of the world’s most frequent patent suit defendants. Obviously, he has failed to report his conflicts as any reputable reporter would. But then Masnick and his monkeys are not reporters. They are hacks representing themselves as legitimate journalists receiving funding from huge corporate infringers. They cannot be trusted and have no credibility. All they know about patents is they don’t have any.
http://truereform.piausa.org/default.html#pt.
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Re: more dissembling by Masnick
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