Interval Licensing LLC v. Aol, Inc.
Opinion
Chen, Circuit Judge.
In our previous decision in
Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, Inc.
, we upheld the district court's judgment invalidating claims 1-4 and 7-15 of
We affirm. Claims 15-18 are directed to an abstract idea: the presentation of two sets of information, in a non-overlapping way, on a display screen. The claimed "attention manager," broadly construed as any "system" for producing that result, is not limited to a means of locating space on the screen unused by a first set of displayed information and then displaying the second set of information in that space. The claim limitations for accessing, scheduling, and then displaying the second information set are conventional functions stated in general terms and do not further define how the attention manager segregates the display of two sets of data on a display screen. Considered as a whole, the claims fail under § 101's abstract idea exception because they lack any arguable technical advance over conventional computer and network technology for performing the recited functions of acquiring and displaying information.
BACKGROUND
A. The '652 Patent
The '652 patent describes and claims the operation of an "attention manager [that] makes use of 'unused capacity' " of a display device, by displaying content in that unused capacity. '652 patent col. 2 ll. 7-8. Generally, the attention manager can use a display device's "unused capacity" in two different situations: (1) it displays content when the display device is turned on but the user is not actively engaged with the display device; and (2) it displays content in an area of the display screen not used by already-displayed content with which the user is actively engaged.
Id
. col. 2 ll. 7-19. While the specification labels the first situation as the "screen saver embodiment" and the second situation as the "wallpaper embodiment," we explained in our previous
Interval
Licensing
opinion that, for the "wallpaper embodiment," neither the claims nor the specification contemplates integrating the content-to-be-displayed into the background display of the screen, as is the case with traditional computer screen wallpaper.
See
Interval Licensing
,
Consistent with that understanding of the disclosed wallpaper embodiment, we also construed "attention manager" as "a system that displays images to a user either when the user is not engaged in a primary interaction or in an area of the display screen that is not used by the user's primary activity."
The specification explains that the operation of the attention manager relies on acquiring content from a content provider which is used to produce "images" that are then displayed on "unused capacity" of the display device.
According to the specification, the attention manager coordinates the display of this acquired content through a set of instructions that enable, inter alia , the following: (i) acquiring content from a content-providing information source, (ii) controlling the timing of the display of the acquired content, (iii) displaying the content, and (iv) acquiring an updated version of the previously-acquired content whenever the information source updates its content. Id . col. 4 ll. 26-59.
Representative claim 18 is directed to the implementation of an attention manager through the use of these instructions to acquire and then display content on the unused capacity of a display:
18. A computer readable medium, for use by a content display system, encoded with one or more computer programs for enabling acquisition of a set of content data and display of an image or images generated from the set of content data on a display device during operation of an attention manager , comprising:
[1] acquisition instructions for enabling acquisition of a set of content data from a specified information source;
[2] user interface installation instructions for enabling provision of a user interface that allows a person to request the set of content data from the specified information source;
[3] content data scheduling instructions for providing temporal constraints on the display of the image or images generated from the set of content data;
[4] display instructions for enabling display of the image or images generated from the set of content data;
*1340 [5] content data update instructions for enabling acquisition of an updated set of content data from an information source that corresponds to a previously acquired set of content data;
[6] operating instructions for beginning, managing and terminating the display on the display device of an image generated from a set of content data;
[7] content display system scheduling instructions for scheduling the display of the image or images on the display device;
[8] installation instructions for installing the operating instructions and content display system scheduling instructions on the content display system; and
[9] audit instructions for monitoring usage of the content display system to selectively display an image or images generated from a set of content data.
Moreover, the specification describes the claimed instructions as routine and conventional. "Each of the ... instructions could be acquired from a content provider, or any one or all of the sets of instructions could be acquired from an application manager that provides generic sets of instructions ...."
The '652 patent, however, offers no clues on how the "attention manager" manages the display of the acquired content in a manner that avoids overlapping with the already-displayed content with which the user is actively engaged. For example, neither the specification nor the claims specify: whether a second window is created for the new content to be displayed; whether the new content always is displayed in a particular corner or location of the screen; or whether the attention manager performs an initial scan for where on the display screen "unused capacity" exists, and then, wherever that space is, defines a boundary on the screen to display the new content there. Instead, the claimed "attention manager," as construed, calls for an undefined "system" that produces the result of presenting two non-overlapping sets of data.
B. The District Court Opinion
The district court held that the asserted claims failed to meet the patent-eligibility standard set forth in
Alice Corp. Pty. v. CLS Bank International
. --- U.S. ----,
The court then concluded that the claims lack an inventive concept for implementing the abstract idea, reasoning that "the elements of the asserted claims are purely conventional and do no more than apply the abstract idea ... in the particular technological environment of networked computers."
Interval Licensing
,
DISCUSSION
We have jurisdiction over this appeal under
Section 101 allows inventors to obtain patents on "any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof."
A. Alice Step 1: Abstract Idea
The judicial exception in patent law against claiming abstract ideas dates as far back as 1840.
See
Wyeth v. Stone
,
In
O'Reilly v. Morse
, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 62,
In both Wyeth and Morse , then, the inventors received a patent containing at least one claim directed to a particular technical solution to a problem, whether for cutting ice or for printing at a distance using electromagnetism; but each inventor also lost a claim that encompassed all solutions for achieving a desired result, whether for cutting ice or for printing at a distance using electromagnetism. In other words, those latter claims failed to recite a practical way of applying an underlying idea; they instead were drafted in such a result-oriented way that they amounted to encompassing the "principle in the abstract" no matter how implemented.
In more recent years, the Supreme Court has reaffirmed the principles it espoused in
Morse
, continually citing
Morse
and other cases from its era as authority for the implicit exceptions to section 101, and then applying those exceptions to modern-day technologies.
See
Alice
,
At the same time, courts must "tread carefully" when wielding this invalidity tool, since "all inventions ... embody, use, reflect, rest upon, or apply laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract ideas."
Alice
,
Other software-based claimed inventions, however, have failed to pass section 101 muster, because they did not recite any assertedly inventive technology for improving computers as tools and/or because the elements of the asserted invention were so result-based that they amounted to patenting the patent-ineligible concept itself.
See
Elec. Power Grp.
,
In this case, Interval Licensing contends that the claimed "attention manager" provides a technological improvement to a computer system. We disagree. The focus of the claims here is directed to "providing information to a person without interfering with the person's primary activity," i.e., the result-centric construction of the claimed "attention manager."
Interval Licensing
,
Furthermore, in light of the broad, result-oriented construction for "attention manager," we agree with the district court that the claimed "attention manager" encompasses a patent-ineligible abstract concept rather than an arguably technical improvement to display devices, because the term as properly construed simply demands the production of a desired result (non-interfering display of two information sets) without any limitation on how to produce that result. Instead of claiming a solution for producing that result, the claim in effect encompasses all solutions. This result-centric construction for "attention manager" conforms with the specification, which lacks any description for how a display device would ensure the segregation of the two sets of information presented on a display screen.
Next, Interval Licensing argues that its claims are not directed to an abstract idea in light of the claimed instructions. This argument also fails. As an initial matter, the claimed instructions do not identify how the attention manager performs the function of ensuring a defined boundary between two data sets co-displayed on a screen. Instead, the instructions limitations are for either collecting a second data set or controlling the order and timing of when to display the collected second data set, not for
how
to engineer or program the display of the second data set in a way that does not interfere with the first data set, wherever that first data set may exist on a screen. Although the claims include "display instructions," those instructions are simply for "displaying the image" generated from the acquired content, and have no bearing on how to display the "image" in a section of the screen that is unused. Moreover, acquiring and organizing information, as broadly recited by some of the instructions limitations, is an abstract idea, not an improvement in how computers and networks carry out their basic functions.
See
Elec. Power Grp.
,
Furthermore, the claimed instructions do not impose meaningful limitations on the purported solution of an attention manager that would improve a computer as a tool, but merely recite routine and conventional steps in carrying out the well-established practice of accessing data from an external source and displaying that data on a user's device. In the words of the district court, they offer "nothing more than generic, pre-existing computer functionality."
Interval Licensing
,
The instructions limitations Interval Licensing high-lights in its appeal as representing an improvement in computing devices are unavailing. For example, the specification admits the acquisition instructions are "generic,"
id
. col 3 ll. 3-8, and are, in any event, a necessary aspect of carrying out any conception of providing one set of information to be displayed next to another. The claimed "user interface installation instructions" "are conventional" instructions previously employed for permitting users to request content on a computer.
Id
. col. 16 l. 15. The content data scheduling instructions and content display system scheduling instructions limitations control the duration, order, and timing of presentation of acquired content. The specification explains that "[a]ny appropriate set of rules" can "be used for establishing a display schedule."
Id
. col. 10 ll. 43-45. Finally, the content data update instructions, which enable updating the displayed information, are recited only at the broadest, functional level, without explaining how that is accomplished, let alone providing a technical means for performing that function. Because the instructions discuss only broad functions and are not directed to any technological improvement for performing those functions, Interval Licensing's reliance on
McRO
is inapposite. In
McRO
, the claim limitations at issue were "limited rules" which "improved technological result[s]."
In sum, the recited claims are directed to an abstract idea because they consist of generic and conventional information acquisition and organization steps that are connected to, but do not convert, the abstract idea-displaying a second set of data without interfering with a first set of data-into a particular conception of how to carry out that concept. "[S]imply appending conventional steps, specified at a high level of generality, to laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas cannot make those laws, phenomena, and ideas patentable."
Mayo Collaborative Servs.,
B. Alice Step 2: Inventive Concept
Whether considering the claim elements of representative claim 18 individually or as an ordered combination, nothing in the claim converts the abstract idea to an inventive concept. It is well-settled that placing an abstract idea in the context of a computer does not "improve" the computer or convert the idea into a patent-eligible application of that idea.
See
Alice
,
Interval Licensing re-raises its claimed instructions in the form of an alleged inventive concept. But, for the reasons we have already given
supra
, the instructions are recited at a high level of generality and conventional, and are not the kinds of limitations we have held to "solve a technology-based problem, even with conventional, generic components, combined in an unconventional manner."
Amdocs (Israel) Ltd. v. Openet Telecom, Inc.
,
Interval Licensing next argues that the claims provide a specific technological improvement which is "rooted in computer technology" in that they "improve computer display devices by combining the acquired information with the user's primary display interaction." Appellant Br. 51-52 (quoting
DDR Holdings, LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P.
,
Interval Licensing also argues that the acquisition of specific information desired by the user represents an inventive concept (e.g., the limitation "user interface installation instructions" construed as "installation instructions for enabling provision of an interface that
enables a person to request
the set of content data from a specific source of information."). Appellant's Br. at 35. We once again disagree. Offering a user the ability to select information to be displayed is one of the "most basic functions of a computer."
Alice
,
Interval Licensing further argues that the claims at issue are for a "distributed architecture" similar to that found patent eligible in
Amdocs.
CONCLUSION
We have considered all of Interval Licensing's other arguments and find them unpersuasive. For the foregoing reasons, the determination of the district court that claims 15-18 of the '652 patent are directed to patent-ineligible subject matter is
AFFIRMED
Plager, Circuit Judge, concurring-in-part and dissenting-in-part.
Today we are called upon to decide the fate of some inventor's efforts, whether for good or ill, on the basis of criteria that provide no insight into whether the invention is good or ill. Given the current state of the law regarding what inventions are patent eligible, and in light of our governing precedents, I concur in the carefully reasoned opinion by my colleagues in the majority, even though the state of the law is such as to give little confidence that the outcome is necessarily correct. The law, as I shall explain, renders it near impossible to know with any certainty whether the invention is or is not patent eligible. Accordingly, I also respectfully dissent from our court's continued application of this incoherent body of doctrine.
The Three Exceptions
The majority opinion, after reviewing in detail the district court's decision and the patent's written description and claims, goes through the obligatory review of the history of
However, as the majority opinion notes, any recourse to § 101 must take into account *1349 not only the words of the statute but also the Supreme Court's judicially created three exceptions to the statute's description of what is patent eligible. Of these three Court-created exceptions-"laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas"-the one at issue in this case is the one that causes the most trouble: "abstract ideas."
That "abstract ideas" is the only one of the three at issue here is a critical point, in need of emphasizing. All too often courts discussing these three judicially created exceptions to patent eligibility lump them together, as if all three present the same set of issues to be conceptualized and analyzed. 2 They do not. 'Laws of nature' and 'natural phenomena' have understandable referents, and thus have proven more amenable to workable definitions, or at least a reasonable degree of boundary-setting, and thus are more amenable to analysis. 3
However, when it comes to applying the concept of "abstract ideas" to a challenged patent (or application for patent) as a distinct test of patent eligibility, the issues are different, and require close examination. The analytical structure which we now are to employ is provided by the Supreme Court's recent teachings in Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank International . 4 ( Alice is often linked at citation-time to an earlier case, Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc. ; 5 that case did not turn on the "abstract ideas" formula, and is an example of the blending that can cause analytical confusion.)
I. Abstract Idea(s)
The majority opinion, following the structure dictated by Alice , first steps through " Alice Step 1: Abstract Idea." The court recites a bit of the history of the "abstract ideas" idea from its origins in the 19th century, and then reviews the more recent cases that wander through it, lining the cases up as they explain themselves on both sides of the divide between good and ill. (In Amdocs (Israel) Ltd. v. Openet Telecom, Inc ., 6 I explained the reason for this evolved decision-by-example technique; the verbal nature of the distinctions drawn becomes quite apparent.)
The majority opinion concludes that "the recited claims are directed to an abstract idea because they consist of generic and conventional information acquisition and organization steps that are connected to, but do not convert, the abstract idea." Maj. Op. at 1346. This often-seen language is familiar from
Alice
.
See
Alice
,
But what makes an idea found in a claim an "abstract idea"? An idea itself by definition is "[s]omething, such as a thought or conception, that is the product of mental activity." 7 The definitions of "abstract" include "[c]onsidered apart from concrete existence," "[d]ifficult to understand; abstruse," and "[n]ot applied or practical; theoretical." 8 An idea, whether abstract or not, is something that lives in the interstices of someone's brain, a psychophysiological area not fully understood to this day. 9
And ideas can have an infinite range of abstractness, if by that we imply concreteness-for example, compare "I have an idea-let's have hamburgers for dinner," with "I have an idea-I am going to invent how to make time go backwards." 10 How much of abstractness is a function of concreteness? How do we pick the line where the articulation and explication of an idea is sufficiently concrete to be 'non-abstract,' but not so much as to be 'generic and conventional'? Does it help to phrase the notion as the difference between claiming a desired result and claiming how to produce that same result? Or are we just substituting one set of vague notions for the other, with the same line-drawing problem?
That the phrase "abstract ideas" is a definitional morass can be seen in one simple fact-a search for a definition of "abstract ideas" in the cases on § 101 from the Supreme Court, as well as from this court, reveals that there is no single, succinct, usable definition anywhere available. The problem with trying to define "abstract ideas," and why no court has succeeded in defining it, is that, as applied to as-yet-unknown cases with as-yet-unknown inventions, it cannot be done except through the use of equally abstract terms. 11 As explained in Amdocs , the closest our cases come to a definition is to state examples of what prior cases have contained, and which way they were decided. But what anecdotal cases reveal, a definition does not make.
The "abstract ideas" idea, when used for denying a claimed invention's patent eligibility either before or after a patent is issued, cannot thus function as a valid rule of law. As a fundamental policy, a legal *1351 term such as "abstract ideas," if the exclusionary standards of § 101 are to function as a valid rule of law, must provide concise guidance for the future. In that sense, a rule of law is a prediction of how courts will decide future cases. 12 "Abstract ideas," like the term 'obscenity,' may provide a cultural consensus in a given instance regarding whether a past event qualifies, but it fails to provide the kind of specificity and clarity that makes it useful for future prediction of outcome. And from the viewpoint of decisional law, the "abstract ideas" idea falls short in the sense of providing a trial judge with confidence that the judgment will be understood by the judges who come after, since only the judges who have the final say in the matter can say with finality that they know it when they see it.
II. Inventive Concept
Having determined the claims at issue to be directed to nothing more than "abstract ideas," the majority opinion, following the Alice analysis, segues to " Alice Step 2: Inventive Concept." Here the court explores whether the invention's claims, determined in Step 1 to be abstract, are not really abstract because they limit the abstractness by an 'inventive concept.' In the case before us, no such concept is seen; the trial court's determination of fatal abstraction is affirmed.
A small puzzle-if a court, after reviewing challenged claims in light of their terminology and written description, determines the claims to be "abstract" in Step 1, how can the same court be expected to determine on a second reading that the same claims have become "unabstract" via Step 2? Could it be that an "inventive concept" cannot exist until the court reads the patent at least one more time? Perhaps courts cannot be expected to read the claims carefully enough the first time?
A bigger puzzle regarding the 'inventive concept' concept: Those who are familiar with the history of the Patent Act, when in 1952 the law of patenting was given a major statutory overhaul, will be the most puzzled. Is it the case that now, some 65 years later, we really have resurrected the concept of an 'inventive concept'? 13 The late Judge Giles Rich, the grand old man of patent law, whose portrait hangs in the place of honor in the Federal Circuit courthouse-how can he rest in peace? He was one of the acclaimed authors of the new Patent Act. At the time he, along with many others, thought that the undefinable-truly abstract-concept of 'inventive concept' had been put into the dustbin of history by the specific criteria for a valid patent in the new Patent Act, specifically § 103, non-obvious subject matter.
Judge Rich wrote extensively on the point.
See, e.g.
, Giles S. Rich,
Laying the Ghost of the "Invention" Requirement
, 1 APLA Q.J. 26 (1972); Giles S. Rich,
The
*1352
Vague Concept of "Invention" as Replaced by Sec. 103 of the 1952 Patent Act
, 46 J. Pat. Off. Soc'y 855 (1964).
14
In his 1964 article, based on a speech he gave twelve years after the statutory changes were enacted, Judge Rich reviewed the long and sorry history during the 19th century of the "injection into the law of what has ever since been called the 'requirement for invention.' " 46 J. Pat. Off. Soc'y at 860. "This proliferation of views on what did and did not amount to 'invention' went on for 100 years. We were enlightened with the view that 'invention' resulted from the exercise of the 'inventive faculties' and other circular reasoning."
Judge Rich bemoaned the fact that, even after the statutory enactment of § 103 of the Patent Act, some still used the meaningless 'invention' or 'inventive requirement' phrase. He concluded his article with a series of propositions to reinforce "that when 103 has been complied with, there is no further and different requirement called 'invention'; that compliance with 103 is the policy judgment of Congress on how to bring the invention within the Constitutional purpose." Id. at 875.
Without referring to this history, the Supreme Court in
Alice
instructed that we ask whether there is such structure or something in the patent claim(s) that recites an "inventive concept" "sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the [ineligible concept] itself."
Alice
,
And adding a little more complexity to the matter, the Supreme Court has recognized that "[a]t some level, 'all inventions ... embody, use, reflect, rest upon, or apply laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract ideas.' "
Id.
at 2354 (quoting
Mayo
,
When the "abstract idea" notion appeared in the law back in the 19th century, the requirement for 'invention' in its many variants-currently 'inventive concept'-was also part of patent law. Then, as now, it seemed logical that something claiming to be an invention should have something called an 'inventive concept' at its core.
*1353 And as a literary construct that is unexceptional.
As a decisional construct for validation of a property right-a patent-the idea of a necessarily underlying 'inventive concept' proved unworkable. The concept provided no discernable boundaries for decision-making in specific cases, resulting in an incoherent legal rule that led to arbitrary outcomes. Judge Rich, who devoted his life to patent law, saw this clearly, and gave the Congress a workable alternative-nonobvious subject matter-which they adopted.
The modern Supreme Court inherited this body of formulaic doctrine, and we now expect the Court to make sense of it. That they have failed is less a commentary on their efforts than on the absence of recognition of the problem on the part of the lawyers and judges who continue to treat these doctrines as if they were gospel. 15
The Emperor Has No Clothes
My purpose in this discussion is not to critique the Court's handiwork, but rather to highlight the number of unsettled matters as well as the fundamental problems that inhere in this formulation of "abstract ideas." In the short expanse available in a court opinion (and in the reader's patience), it is not possible for me to recite all the issues and all the problems with the current law of "abstract ideas" and its 'inventive concept' offspring.
I do, however, want to go on record as joining my colleagues who have recently expressed similar views about the current state of our patent eligibility jurisprudence, and to incorporate by reference their wisdom concerning the matter. Judge Richard Linn, concurring and dissenting in Smart Systems Innovations, LLC v. Chicago Trans-t Authority , 16 critiqued at length the "abstract ideas" idea, both in general and as specifically applied in that case. More recently, Judge Alan Lourie, concurring in the denial of en banc rehearing in Berkheimer v. HP Inc. , and referring to the complex of issues in our current § 101 jurisprudence, wrote that "the law needs clarification by higher authority, perhaps by Congress, to work its way out of what so many in the innovation field consider are § 101 problems." 17
I welcome their attention to this-when two of our leading judges who have devoted their careers to the practice and explication of patent law publicly proclaim that there is a real problem, there is a real problem. I do not mean to suggest that they are the only two such judges on the court-to my knowledge, other than myself, they are the only two who have gone on record in such clear terms regarding the law of "abstract ideas."
There is almost universal criticism among commentators and academicians *1354 that the "abstract idea" idea has created havoc in the patent law. The testimonials in the blogs and elsewhere to the current mess regarding our § 101 jurisprudence have been legion. 18 There has even been a call for abolishing § 101 by the former head of the Patent and Trademark Office. 19
This view is shared by many patent practitioners.
20
A § 101 defense is widely employed, and often successful. For example, in the period following
Alice
until April 30, 2017, one study reported that the federal courts invalidated patents on § 101 grounds in 330 out of 488 decisions.
See
Bilski Blog,
#Alicestorm: April Update and the Impact of TC Heartland on Patent Eligibility
(June 1, 2017).
21
According to the same report, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board has invalidated patents on § 101 grounds in 90 out of 92 covered business method review final written decisions.
These defenses are a shortcut way for alleged infringers to try for a quick dismissal of the infringement charge on the grounds that the invention underlying the infringement suit was never entitled to a patent. If successful, it saves having to go to the effort of proving in a full-dress law suit one of the statutory invalidity defenses found in §§ 102, 103, and 112 of the Patent Act. 22
Indeed, some of these shortcut cases now arrive on appeal following a trial court's summary judgment, or in some cases, even following a judgment on the pleadings or motion for dismissal. This has the effect of ensuring a minimal record or virtually no record at all on which an appeal can sensibly be judged. 23
There is little consensus among trial judges (or appellate judges for that matter)
*1355 regarding whether a particular case will prove to have a patent with claims directed to an abstract idea, and if so whether there is an "inventive concept" in the patent to save it. In such an environment, from the viewpoint of counsel for the defense, there is little to be lost in trying the § 101 defense. We are left with a process for finding abstract ideas that involves two redundant steps and culminates with a search for a concept-inventiveness-that some 65 years or so ago was determined by Congress to be too elusive to be fruitful. Is it any wonder that the results of this process are less than satisfactory?
It would not be useful, or even fair, to fault today's Supreme Court for trying to find some way to decide what is an abstract idea, or at the least for trying to find a way to decide the question. Or to fault this court for doing its best to honor the Supreme Court's formula, even when the results demonstrated that the test did not produce coherent, readily understandable, replicable, and demonstrably just outcomes. The Supreme Court inherited the "abstract ideas" idea from cases decided at a time when it probably sounded reasonable and had little impact. With the rise of software and business method patents, the "abstract idea" became a weapon of choice for summary execution of what many decried as 'bad' patents. The problem is that it does not distinguish good from ill in any coherent sense, and thus does not serve well either patent law or the public.
When the lawyers and judges bring to the Supreme Court a shared belief in the uselessness of the abstract notion of "abstract ideas" as a criterion for patent eligibility, we can hope that the Court will respond sensibly. In light of the statutory criteria for patent validity established in the Patent Act, there is no need, and indeed no place in today's patent law, for this abstract (and indefinable) doctrine. Something as simple as a declaration by the Court that the concept of "abstract ideas" has proven unworkable in the context of modern technological patenting, and adds nothing to ensuring patent quality that the statutory requirements do not already provide, would remove this distraction from the salutary system of patent issuance and enforcement provided by the Congress in the 1952 Patent Act.
The problem with hoping for this solution is that there is no particular incentive for the Supreme Court to immerse itself again in this intellectual morass. The Court, unlike this court, is not called upon daily to address the consequences of an incoherent doctrine that has taken on a life of its own. It will take a special effort by the judges and the patent bar to gain the Court's attention. Failing that, a legislative fix is a possibility, though waiting for that may be the ultimate test of patience.
In the interim, a district court in an appropriate case might choose to exercise control over its docket by instructing a defendant who raises an "abstract ideas" § 101 defense that the court will defer addressing that defense until first having the issues in §§ 102, 103, and 112 ad-dressed. This need not be viewed as offending existing law since the "abstract ideas" test would remain in the case, as would the Alice process; only the timing would change.
There would be a shift in trial court process from the current notion, held by some, that a determination of patent eligibility under § 101 is necessarily the first thing to be decided in every case. That notion can still remain true for cases challenging a patent on laws of nature and *1356 natural phenomenon grounds; only because of the problems inherent in testing for "abstract ideas" would the § 101 test be delayed until determinations are made under the statutory standards that Congress established.
What would be the consequences of such a procedural delay? Even a cursory look at the claims in our recent § 101"abstract ideas" cases suggests how many of those cases would just go away as soon as the well-understood statutory criteria are applied to the challenged claims, especially the question of whether the claimed invention is new or just a replay of prior art (see § 103). Those who would quail at the supposed burden this might place on the trial judges should remember that is what trial judges do. And besides, the trial judges have already started using an alternative along the same lines: many patent infringement suits are now being stayed by the trial courts when there is a reference of the patent eligibility and validity issues (depending on the kind of case) to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board under the expedited procedures of the America Invents Act. 24
Whether this court should take the initiative and instruct the trial courts to follow such a procedure raises somewhat more difficult questions. We have generally left the case management of those courts to the courts themselves, or to the circuit courts of appeal to which they normally report. For these reasons among others, our court presumably should have little difficulty with respecting a district court's decision about how best to manage its own docket.
Regardless of what other courts may do, an appellate court's job is not only to decide the immediate case before it, but also to rationalize and regularize the law to be applied in future similar cases. Judge Rich believed that words have meaning; 25 years earlier Professor Wittgenstein expressed well that same thought: "What can be said at all can be said clearly, and what we cannot talk about we must pass over in silence. ... The limits of my language mean the limits of my world." 26
This emperor clearly has no clothes; we need not wait for our children to tell us this. 27 The legitimate expectations of the innovation community, as well as basic notions of fairness and due process, compel us to address this § 101 conundrum.
As Interval Licensing's counsel noted during oral argument, the '652 patent states that "primary interaction" or "primary user interaction" "is to be construed broadly," and "includes any operation of the computer (or other apparatus with which the user is engaging in an interaction)," thus encompassing any computer interaction other than interacting with the second data set supplied by the attention manager. Oral Arg. at 34:26-35:00 (citing '652 patent col. 8 ll. 10-20).
The [9] audit instructions are ancillary to the operation of the attention manager in that they merely store information about the "usage of the attention manager," including the identity of the content displayed and when it was displayed.
While the patent specification refers to limitations [6]-[8] as "application instructions," by their terms, these instructions relate to controlling the display of content.
Our court recently held that disposition on § 101 is inappropriate at the summary judgment stage when there are genuine disputes of material fact as to whether elements of the challenged claims are "well-understood, routine and conventional to a skilled artisan in the relevant field."
Berkheimer v. HP Inc
.,
See, e.g.,
Bilski v. Kappos
,
The Supreme Court itself is not always consistent.
Compare
That does not, however, preclude controversy.
See, e.g.
,
Ariosa Diagnostics, Inc. v. Sequenom, Inc.
,
--- U.S. ----,
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 872 (5th ed. 2011).
Id. at 7.
Cf. John Medina, Brain Rules (2d ed. 2014).
See, e.g. , Dava Sobel, Longitude 34 (1st ed. 1995) ("Time is to clock as mind is to brain. The clock or watch somehow contains the time. And yet time refuses to be bottled up like a genie stuffed in a lamp. ... [I]t flows as sand or turns on wheels within wheels, time escapes irretrievably ....").
For example, compare
In re Bilski
,
See
Oliver W. Holmes,
The Path of the Law
, in Collected Legal Papers 167, 173 (1920) (noting that rules of law are "prophecies of what the courts will do in fact, and nothing more pretentious");
see also
Karl N. Llewellyn,
The Bramble Bush: Some Lectures on Law and Its Study
3 (1930) ("What these officials do about disputes is, to my mind, the law itself.").
But cf.
Michael C. Dorf,
Prediction and the Rule of Law
,
Some authorities attribute the resurrection of 'inventive concept' to
Mayo
, and to Justice Stevens in his earlier opinion in
Parker v. Flook
,
See also
In re Bergy
,
See Amy L. Landers,
Patentable Subject Matter as a Policy Driver
,
Regarding patent blogs, see just about any issue of Law360; regarding the innovation community, see, e.g., Intellectual Prop. Owners Ass'n, Section 101 Legislation Task Force, Proposed Amendments to Patent Eligible Subject Matter Under
See Ryan Davis, Kappos Calls for Abolition of Section 101 of Patent Act , Law360 (Apr. 12, 2016), http://www.law360.com/articles/783604/kappos-calls-for-abolition-of-section-101-of-patent-act.
See, e.g. , Peter Leung, The Federal Circuit's Section 101 Uncertainty , Managing Intellectual Prop. (Sept. 29, 2015) ("Frustrated IP practitioners are hoping the court will soon change from telling them what is not eligible to providing some guidance on what is."), http://www.managingip.com/Article/3491780/Latest-News-Magazine/The-Federal-Circuits-Section-101-uncertainty.html; Ryan Davis, Major [Companies], IP Groups Call For Clearer USPTO Alice Rules , Law360 (Nov. 2, 2015), https://www.law360.com/articles/722015/major-cos-ip-groups-call-for-clearer-uspto-alice-rules.
http://www.bilskiblog.com/blog/2017/06/alicestorm-april-update-and-the-impact-of-tc-heartland.html.
See Paul R. Gugliuzza & Mark A. Lemley,
Can a Court Change the Law by Saying Nothing?
,
But see
Berkheimer v. HP Inc.
,
See Harness Dickey, A Look at Forty-Five Months of Inter Partes Review Proceedings Before the United States Patent and Trademark Office , http://ipr-pgr.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/IPR-PGR-Report-Vol-14.pdf (Aug. 24, 2016) (finding that 61% of all contested requests to stay were granted from September 16, 2012 to June 16, 2016 in the inter partes review context); Morgan Lewis, 2017 PTAB Digest: The Latest Trends and Developments in Post-Grant Proceedings , at 26, https://www.morganlewis.com/-/media/files/publication/report/ptab-post-grant-proceedings_fin_screen.ashx (2017) (estimating that 58% of all contested requests to stay were granted as of June 1, 2016 in the inter partes review context and that 61% of all contested requests to stay were granted in the same period in the covered business method review context).
Giles S. Rich, Escaping the Tyranny of Words-Is Evolution in Legal Thinking Impossible? - in Nonobviousness-The Ultimate Condition of Patentability 3:301.
Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, Preface at 3, Proposition 5.6 (1922).
See Hans Christian Andersen, The Annotated Hans Christian Andersen 3-16 (Maria Tatar, ed., trans., & contributor, Julie Allen, trans. & contributor, 1st ed. 2008).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- INTERVAL LICENSING LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant v. AOL, INC., Apple, Inc., Google LLC, Yahoo!, Inc., Defendants-Appellees
- Cited By
- 113 cases
- Status
- Published