Google LLC v. Nobots LLC
Google LLC v. Nobots LLC
Opinion
Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 1 Filed: 11/20/2025
NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________
GOOGLE LLC, Appellant
v.
NOBOTS LLC, Appellee ______________________
2024-1432 ______________________
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2022- 00940. ______________________
Decided: November 20, 2025 ______________________
NATHAN R. SPEED, Wolf, Greenfield & Sacks, P.C., Bos- ton, MA, argued for appellant. Also represented by ELISABETH H. HUNT.
STEPHEN D. ZINDA, Cabello Hall Zinda PLLC, Houston, TX, argued for appellee. Also represented by JAMES H. HALL. ______________________ Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 2 Filed: 11/20/2025
2 GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC
Before MOORE, Chief Judge, TARANTO, Circuit Judge, and CHUN, District Judge. 1 TARANTO, Circuit Judge. Nobots LLC is the owner of U.S. Patent No. 9,595,008, titled “Systems, Methods, Apparatus for Evaluating Status of Computing Device User.” Google LLC successfully peti- tioned the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) to institute an inter partes review (IPR), under 35 U.S.C. §§ 311–19, of all twenty claims of the ’008 patent. The PTO’s Patent Trial and Appeal Board (Board), upon conducting that re- view, rejected Google’s challenges to claims 18 and 19 while holding all other claims to be unpatentable. Google LLC v. Nobots LLC, No. IPR2022-00940, 2023 WL 8269284, at *24 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 29, 2023) (Final Written Decision). Google appeals the upholding of claim 19, whose patenta- bility is the only issue before us. Google disputes the Board’s claim construction of the claim phrase “acquiring interest data.” Nobots defends the Board’s construction and does not dispute that unpatenta- bility follows if we reject the Board’s construction in favor of Google’s position. We hold that the Board’s claim con- struction was erroneous, and we therefore reverse the Board’s determination that claim 19 is not unpatentable. I A The ’008 patent describes and claims methods of de- tecting whether a computing device accessing a remote server (to visit a website the server hosts, e.g.) is being op- erated by a person or an automated program (robot or “bot”). ’008 patent, col. 2, lines 12–18; id., col. 1, lines 10–
1 Honorable John H. Chun, District Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Washing- ton, sitting by designation. Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 3 Filed: 11/20/2025
GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC 3
13. The patent describes the prior-art Completely Auto- mated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart (“CAPTCHA”), which identifies a user as a “human” or “bot” based on whether the user’s response to a query is correct or incorrect. Id., col. 1, lines 22–27; id., col. 2, lines 25–29. The patent’s proposed advance involves comparing various attributes of a user to those of an expected human user, and, in most embodiments, computing a likelihood that a device is bot-operated, with access denied if that likelihood exceeds a specified threshold. Id., col. 2, lines 18–25. In one of several categorizations the patent makes for data used for its process, the patent distinguishes “passive data” from “active data.” See id., Abstract. It identifies passive data as data typically stored onto a user’s device or transmitted to a remote location, such as the internet pro- tocol address or geographic location of the device. See id., col. 3, lines 9–24. And it identifies active data as data not typically so stored or transmitted, such as a user’s key- strokes or time of response to stimuli. See id., col. 2, line 60, through col. 3, line 5; id., col. 3, lines 24–32. Over three consecutive paragraphs, the patent defines the following six two-word phrases: “model data,” “availa- ble data,” “acquired data,” “issued data,” “monitored data,” and “interest data.” Id., col. 2, line 54, through col. 3, line 46. The section starts with “[a]s used herein,” id., col. 2, line 54, and concludes with, “[w]ith the foregoing defini- tions in mind,” id., col. 3, line 47. The patent places each phrase in quotation marks to confirm that lexicography is afoot. E.g., id., col. 2, line 54. For each of the six phrases, the patent extends the definition to “its equivalents and verb forms,” e.g., id., col. 3, line 25, without specifying what constitutes either an equivalent or a verb form. The patent defines “model data” (and “its equivalents and verb forms”) as comprising attributes of a hypothetical human user accessing a website—providing comparators for evaluating the scrutinized user. Id., col. 2, lines 20–21, Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 4 Filed: 11/20/2025
4 GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC
54–58. Those attributes include both active data and pas- sive data, which, when used as model data, are “active model data” and “passive model data.” Id., col. 2, line 58, through col. 3, line 17. The “available data” and “acquired data” phrases refer to the scrutinized-user side of the comparison—infor- mation about that user’s device or interaction with the server the user seeks to access. Id., col. 3, lines 18–32. The patent defines “available data” (and “its equivalents and verb forms”) and says that this category is a type of passive data. Id., col. 3, lines 18–24. The patent defines “acquired data” (and “its equivalents and verb forms”), which it says is a type of active data, as follows: data associated with a computing device’s opera- tion and its interaction with a computing environ- ment, such as the Internet, that is generally not recorded within the computing device and/or by other devices that have been affected by the com- puting device’s operation, but at least some data of which has/have been recorded and/or transmitted to a remote location, such as a server—this is a type of active data. Id., col. 3, lines 24–32 (emphasis added). In the Summary of the Invention, the patent describes comparing “acquired and/or available data” with “model data.” Id., col. 2, lines 18–21. In most embodiments, that comparison yields a probability whether the user is a bot. Id., col. 2, lines 21–25. In the definitions section, the comparison process is further categorized. The patent defines “issued data” (and “its equivalents and verb forms”) as comprising data gen- erated by the server or another device distinct from the scrutinized user’s device. Id. col. 3, lines 33–37. It then defines “monitored data” (and “its equivalents and verb forms”) as comprising “active or passive data, whether available or acquired, obtained” from the scrutinized user’s Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 5 Filed: 11/20/2025
GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC 5
device or external interactions “after the generation of is- sued data.” Id., col. 3, lines 37–41. Finally, the patent de- fines “interest data” (and “its equivalents and verb forms”) as comprising the following: active or passive data, whether available or acquired, that correlates to any data within model data, whether obtained prior to or after the generation of issued data. Thus, interest data includes time independent available data and ac- quired data, unless qualified differently. Id., col. 3, lines 41–46 (emphases added). Immediately after the three definition-stating para- graphs, the patent identifies two sets of embodiments it contemplates. In the first set, a comparison between interest data, acquired prior to delivery of issued data to the client de- vice, and model data is performed to ascertain the likely status of the client computing device, i.e., hu- man user or bot[.] Id., col. 3, lines 49–53 (emphasis added). In the second set, the same comparison is done for “monitored data, by defi- nition acquired after delivery of issued data” to the scrutinized user’s device. Id., col. 3, lines 53–58. “In both series of embodiments,” the patent adds, “acquired and/or available data may be used for comparison with suitable model data.” Id., col. 3, lines 58–60. Independent claim 19 recites: 19. A method for assessing a confidence level that an operator of a client computing device interacting with a server is a human being rather than an au- tonomic computer application, the method compris- ing: Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 6 Filed: 11/20/2025
6 GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC
a) acquiring interest data from the client com- puting device prior to delivery of issued data by the server to the client computing device; b) comparing the interest data to model data re- lating to human interaction with a computing de- vice prior to the time in which the interest data is acquired; and c) generating a value that represents a confi- dence level that a human user rather than an au- tonomic user operated the client computing device prior to the time in which the interest data is ac- quired. Id., col. 6, lines 44–57 (emphases added as relevant to the challenged claim construction). B In April 2022, after having been sued for infringement by Nobots, Google petitioned the PTO for institution of an IPR of the ’008 patent, challenging all twenty claims. As relevant here, one ground invoked U.S. Patent Application No. 2008/0114624 (Kitts) to render claim 19 unpatentable for anticipation or obviousness. Kitts, titled “Click-Fraud Protector,” describes a method of using data attributes to estimate a likelihood of whether a user seeking access to a website on a remote server is a bot. J.A. 585; 587, fig. 2; 588, fig. 3; see J.A. 593 ¶ 9; 594 ¶ 19. The attributes may include the user’s internet protocol address and residence, J.A. 596–97 ¶¶ 46–48, which are “passive data” under the ’008 patent. After the Board instituted the IPR, Nobots sought to overcome Kitts by arguing that claim 19’s reference to “ac- quiring interest data” requires that at least some of the in- terest data acquired be “active data,” even though the ’008 patent defines “interest data” as “active or passive data, whether available or acquired data.” J.A. 1220–26. Ac- cording to Nobots, the definition of the phrase “acquired Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 7 Filed: 11/20/2025
GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC 7
data,” which limits that phrase to active data, carries over to limit the three-word verb-with-object phrase “acquiring interest data” to require that at least some active data be acquired. J.A. 1226–28. Google disagreed, arguing that the verb “acquiring” has its ordinary meaning and the verb’s object, the two-word phrase “interest data,” is ex- pressly defined such that wholly passive data qualifies, so the three-word verb-and-object phrase is properly con- strued to mean the process of getting any data, including passive data, that otherwise qualifies as “interest data” (like an internet protocol address or residence information, as in Kitts). J.A. 1378–82. The Board agreed with Nobots about the construction of “acquiring interest data” in its final written decision, is- sued on November 29, 2023. Final Written Decision, at *6– 8. In an analysis of the Kitts reference not challenged here, see Google Opening Br. at 45; Nobots Response Br. at 12– 13, the Board found that Kitts discloses obtaining exclu- sively “passive data” under the ’008 patent’s definition. Fi- nal Written Decision, at *16, 24. The Board, applying its construction of “acquiring interest data” as requiring some active data, concluded that Google had not shown that Kitts discloses or rendered obvious that element of claim 19 and thus had failed to show claim 19’s unpatentability. Id. at *23–24. Google timely appealed on January 30, 2024. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. §§ 141(c), 319 and 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A). II On appeal, Google asserts that the Board erroneously construed “acquiring interest data” in its determination that claim 19 is not unpatentable. In this case, intrinsic evidence is determinative of the proper claim construction. Accordingly, we decide the claim-construction issue de novo. Intel Corp. v. Qualcomm Inc., 21 F.4th 801, 808 (Fed. Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 8 Filed: 11/20/2025
8 GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC
Cir. 2021). We hold that the Board erred in its claim con- struction. “We generally give words of a claim their ordinary meaning in the context of the claim and the whole patent document.” World Class Technology Corp. v. Ormco Corp., 769 F.3d 1120, 1123 (Fed. Cir. 2014); see Thorner v. Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC, 669 F.3d 1362, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2012). “When a patentee explicitly defines a claim term in the patent specification, the patentee’s def- inition controls.” Martek Biosciences Corp. v. Nutrinova, Inc., 579 F.3d 1363, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2009); see Continental Circuits LLC v. Intel Corp., 915 F.3d 788, 796 (Fed. Cir. 2019). To overcome a clear ordinary meaning, the specifi- cation must be “clear” in giving a contrary definition or dis- claimer. World Class, 769 F.3d at 1123; Thorner, 669 F.3d at 1365. Application of those principles here leads to a straightforward construction. The three-word phrase, “acquiring interest data,” con- sists of two parts: the verb “acquiring” and its object “inter- est data.” It is proper to divide the phrase in that way. The syntactic structure is one of verb and object. There is evi- dent parallelism with the language of the other steps of the method—“acquiring” (interest data), “comparing” (to model data), and “generating” (a confidence level). And the phrase as a whole has no familiar, ordinary meaning as a unit that is different from the sum of its two parts. Cf. Intel Corp. v. Qualcomm Inc., 21 F.4th 784, 791–92 (Fed. Cir. 2021) (citing FCC v. AT&T, 562 U.S. 397, 406 (2011)). The verb “acquiring” has a plain and ordinary meaning of obtaining, getting, gaining possession, or the like (all rel- evantly synonymous). It is not limiting as to what must be obtained. That question is addressed in the phrase’s sec- ond part, “interest data,” which is a two-word noun phrase and which has no ordinary meaning. It is a phrase that is expressly defined in the specification. See ’008 patent, col. 3, lines 41–46. Under that definition, which governs, “in- terest data” undisputedly can be “passive data.” Id., col. 3, Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 9 Filed: 11/20/2025
GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC 9
line 42 (“active or passive data”). The overall three-word phrase in dispute simply means gaining possession of whatever is within the category of “interest data,” which can be passive data alone. There is no sound basis for departing from that straightforward analysis. Critically, this three-word- phrase is not defined in the specification. As relevant here, “interest data” is defined, and “acquired data” is defined, but “acquiring interest data” is not. At a minimum, the high standard for redefinition is not met for this three-word phrase—at all or, more particularly, to replace the mean- ing it clearly has as a phrase joining an ordinary verb with a defined term. The specification strongly undermines a contrary con- clusion. It uses “acquired” (not followed by “data”) in its ordinary gained-possession sense. In particular, it uses the free-standing word when it describes two sets of embodi- ments, respectively involving “interest data” and “moni- tored data,” ’008 patent, col. 3, lines 48–58, having just defined those phrases broadly, each one covering “active or passive data,” id., col. 3, lines 37–46. It is implausible that the patentee, by using the ordinary verb “acquire,” was suddenly cutting back on the breadth just asserted defini- tionally. Indeed, that usage naturally means the same thing as “obtained” used in the definitions of “monitored data” and “interest data.” Id., col. 3, lines 39, 44. The patent also affirmatively declares that in “both em- bodiments” (for monitored data and interest data), “ac- quired and/or available data”—the first active, the second passive—“may be used for comparison with suitable model data.” Id., col. 3, line 58–60 (emphasis added). The Sum- mary of the Invention makes the same point using the same “and/or” language. Id., col. 2, lines 18–25. That lan- guage, in its ordinary meaning, says that either acquired data alone or available data alone or both may be used. See Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (2d ed. 2001) at 77 (and/or); Nobots Response Br. at 21 (so Case: 24-1432 Document: 34 Page: 10 Filed: 11/20/2025
10 GOOGLE LLC v. NOBOTS LLC
acknowledging for the comparing phrases); J.A. 1226. Be- cause the “acquiring” step precedes and supplies the mate- rial for the “comparing” step, this usage for “comparing” indicates that the “acquiring” step itself can apply to data that are entirely available data (hence passive data). Nobots relies on the specification’s repeated use of the phrase “its equivalents and verb forms” in setting forth def- initions, including for “acquired data,” as quoted supra. That use is, at a minimum, not clear enough to justify Nobots’s construction in light of all that undermines it. The phrase at issue, “acquiring interest data,” is not an equivalent or verb form of “acquired data.” The middle word clearly is joined to the third word to form “interest data” as a defined unit; and disregarding it so as to affix “acquiring” directly to “data” and then treating the result as limited to “acquired data” would contradict the express definition of “interest data” as not limited to acquired data. Moreover, it is not clear just what the “its equivalent and verb forms” phrase means, and sometimes it is used where it does not seem to make sense (e.g., “available data,” “in- terest data,” ’008 patent, col. 3, lines 18–19, 41). A skilled artisan could only reasonably understand that the phrase was dropped in repeatedly as a stock phrase for some un- specified broadening and should not be given weight to override the otherwise-compelled meaning. We conclude that “acquiring interest data” applies even when only passive data are obtained, and we reverse the Board’s contrary claim construction. Nobots has not dis- puted Google’s contention that, under the claim construc- tion we adopt, Kitts anticipates claim 19. We therefore reverse the Board’s upholding of claim 19. III The decision of the Board is reversed. REVERSED
Reference
- Status
- Unpublished