MEMORANDUM OPINION
The remaining, but still numerous, defendants
(1) Whether the patent at issue, United States Patent 6,038,295, titled an “Apparatus and Method for Recording, Communicating and Administering Digital Images” (hereinafter “ ’295 patent”), is invalid because it claims patent-ineligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101; and
(2) Whether Claims 1 and 25 of the '295 patent contain means-plus-function terms, and if so, whether these claims are fatally indefinite under 35 U.S.C. § 112(f) for failing to disclose corresponding structure.
For the reasons that follow, defendants’ motion to dismiss on § 101 and § 112(f) grounds must be granted:
(1) The '295 patent is directed to an abstract idea and lacks an inventive concept, making it ineligible for patent protection under § 101; and
(2) Claims 1 and 25 of the '295 patent contain means-plus-function terms without disclosing corresponding structure and these claims are therefore fatally indefinite pursuant to § 112(f).
I.
A.
Plaintiff TLI Communications LLC (“TLI”), a Delaware limited liability corporation, is a non-producing entity and the owner by assignment of the '295 patent.
The '295 patent, titled an “Apparatus and Method for Recording, Communicating and Administering Digital Images,” is directed to an apparatus and method that
simplifies transmission of digital images which have been recorded, optimizes the communication of the image data and provides a method for administering the storage of the digital images, which issimple, fast and surveyable so that the digital images may be archived.
'295 patent, col. 1, 1.66-col. 2, 1.4. The '295 patent has 26 claims: 3 independent claims and 23 dependent claims. Independent Claim 1 is a system claim, independent Claim 17 is a method claim, and independent Claim 25 is an apparatus claim.
Independent Claim 1, a system claim, consists of:
A communication system for recording and administering digital images, comprising:
at least one telephone unit including:
a telephone portion for making telephone call,
a digital pick up unit for recording images,
a memory for storing digital images recorded by the digital image pick up unit,
means for allocating classification information prescribed by a user of said at least one telephone unit to characterize digital images.obtained by said digital pick up unit, a processor for processing the digital images recorded by the digital image pick up unit;
a server including the following components:
a receiving unit for receiving data sent from said at least one telephone unit,
an analysis unit for analyzing the data received by the receiving unit from the telephone unit,
the data including classification information to characterize the digital images,
a memory in which at least the digital images are archived,
the archiving taken [sic] into consideration the classifying information; and a transmission system coupled to said at least one telephone unit and to the said server to provide for transmission of data from said at least one telephone unit and to the said server, the data including at least the digital images recorded by the digital image pick up unit and classification information.
The claimed communication system describes two components: (1) at least one telephone unit and (2) a server. The '295 patent specification describes the telephone unit as including the “standard features of a telephone unit including, for example, an earphone ... a keypad ... which serves as an operating field for the telephone unit ... as well as a microphone .... ” '295 patent, col. 5,11. 55-58. As Claim 1 indicates, the telephone unit consists of a digital pick up unit, a memory, a means for allocating classification information, and a processor. The digital image pick up unit is integrated into the telephone unit and operates as a “digital photo camera of the type which is known.” Id., col. 5, 11. 59-61, col. 6, 11. 1-2. Thus, “recording images” is the function of the digital image pick up unit. Id., col. 5, 1.59. These images may be compressed using “still picture image data compression methods” and are then stored using the telephone unit memory. Id., col. 6,11. 2-6. Also stored with the digital imagеs is classification information — information associated with the digital images
The second part of the communication system is the server which is comprised of a receiving unit for “receiving the data that is sent from the telephone unit,” and an analysis unit, which serves to “analyze the image content and record the image according to the meaning derived from the image analysis.” Id., col. 5, 11. 6-8, col. 6, 1.65-col. 7, 1.1. The data is sent from the telephone unit to the receiving unit “via the transmission system.” Id., col. 5,11. 6-7. The server itself then provides a “memory ... for storing the data, as well as the digital images which [are] contained in the data.” Id., col. 5, 11. 11-13. The classification information is transmitted to the server from the telephone unit and is “used for archiving the images in the server memory.” Id., col. 7, 11. 52-55. The classification information “characterize[s] the digital images.” Id., col. 2, 1.18.
Dependent claims 2-8 build upon Claim 1 by adding the following limitations to the communication system: wirelessly coupling the transmission system to a telephone unit (Claim 2),
Dependent claim 10 adds an “image analysis unit for determining quality of the digital images.” Id., col. 9, 11. 44-45. And dependent claim 11 includes a “control unit for controlling resolution of digital images in said at least one telephone unit.” Id., col. 9, 11. 47-49. Dependent claim 15 also includes a control unit, but the control unit
The next independent claim in the '295 patent is the method claim, Claim 17, which describes:
A method for recording and administering digital images, comprising the steps of:
recording images using a digital pick up unit in a telephone unit, storing the images recorded by the digital pick up unit in a digital form as digital images, transmitting data including at least the digital images and classification information to a server, wherein said classification information is prescriba-ble by a user of the telephone unit for allocation to the digital images, receiving the data by the server, extracting classification information which characterizes the digital images from the received data, and storing the digital images in the server, said step of storing taking into consideration the classification information.
Specifically, the “images are recorded with the digital image pick up unit that is integrated into the telephone unit.” Id., col. 7, 11. 57-59. The images are next “stored in digital form in the telephone unit memory ... as digital images.” id., col. 7, 11. 60-61. The images are then transmitted “from the telephone unit ... to the server ... via the transmission system.” Id., col. 7, 11. 61-64. The data is received by “the server ... and the classification information ... which characterize^] the digital images [is] extracted ... from the data received in the server.” Id., col. 7, 11. 64-67. Finally, the digital images along with “possibly the classification information ... and potentially further information that characterize[s] or describe[s] the digital images are stored ... in the server.” Id., col. 7,1. 67-col. 8, 1. 3. The specification notes that during the “storing step, the classification information ... is taken into consideration.” Id., col. 8,11. 3-5. And importantly, the “classification in format ion ... may be prescribed by a user of the telephone unit” Id., col. 8,11. 6-7.
Claims 18-24 are dependent upon Claim 17 and describe specific types of data which are recognized by the system including: compressed recognized speech (Claim 18),
The third and final independent claim in the '295 patent is Claim 25, an apparatus claim that claims:
A digital image recording and administering apparatus, comprising:
a portable telephone unit, including:
a telephone portion having a keypad, a microphone, a speaker,
an antenna, and a transmitter/receiver for telephone communications;
a digital still camera in said portable telephone unit, said digital still camera having a lens, a shutter and a digital still image pickup;
a data processor connected to receive digital still image data from said' digital still image pickup and perform a compression to generate compressed digital still image data;
a memory in said portable telephone unit, said memory connected to receive and store said compressed digital still image' data from said data processor;
a classification information unit in said portable telephone unit, said classification information unit allocating classifying information pertaining to the digital still image as prescribed by a user of the portable telephone unit to the digital still image data,
said classification information unit including means to receive audio information from the user as the classification information and to allocate the classification information to the corresponding digital still image data;
a server computer, including:
a receiving unit operable to receive data sent from said portable telephone unit, said received data including the compressed digital still image data;
an analysis unit connected to said receiving unit to extract the classification information from data sent from said portable telephone unit, said analysis unit extracting the classification information corresponding to the audio informationfrom the user and allocated to the digital still image data;
a memory in said server for storing the compressed digital still image data, said memory providing access to said compress [sic] digital still image data as an image archive in accordance with the classification information: and a transmission system operable to communicate between said portable telephone unit and server.
Claim 26, which depends upon claim 25, includes the limitation that the “classification information in said portable telephone unit includes a speech recognition unit which converts said audio information from said user to text data that is allocated to the digital still image data.” Id., col. 12,11. 9-13.
B.
Plaintiff initially brought suit for patent infringement against sixteen defendants in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware on November 18, 2013. Defendants jointly moved to dismiss plaintiffs complaints on January 17, 2014. On February 10, plaintiff filed amended complaints in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware against ten of the defendants, and voluntarily dismissed the other six pending suits. The voluntarily dismissed cases were immediately re-filed against the same defendants in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, along with an additional case which was filed against two smaller Virginia companies. In response, on February 26, defendant Facebook filed a motion with the Judicial Panel on Multi-district Litigation (“JPML”) to transfer and consolidate pretrial proceedings.
On June 12, 2014, the JPML transferred all 17 infringement suits to the Eastern District of Virginia pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1407, citing common questions of fact along with convenience as the primary reasons for consolidating all 17 individual suits into a single multidistrict litigation.
Thereafter, on July 11, defendants Face-book and Instagram moved to slay the multidistrict litigation pending a petition for inter partes review by the Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) as to the validity of the '295 patent. The remaining defendants in this MDL action subsequently joined the motion. After full briefing and argument, the motion to stay was granted pending the PTO’s decision on whether to institute an inter partes proceeding.
II.
Section 101 of Title 35, which defines the subject matter eligible for patent protection, provides as follows:
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.
In two recent decisions — Mayo Collaborative Servs. v. Prometheus Labs., Inc., — U.S.-,
Section 101’s broad language provides little specific or detailed guidance as to what constitutes patentable subject matter. Nonetheless, over the years, the Supreme Court has carved out three subject matter categories that are not patentable: (i) laws of nature, (ii) natural phenomena, and (iii) abstract ideas. See Alice,
Thus, the Supreme Court has crafted a two-step analysis to guide lower courts in the task of distinguishing subject matter eligible for patent protection under § 101 from subject matter ineligible for such protection. The first step in the analysis is to determine whether the claims at issue are directed to one of those “patent-ineligible concepts [laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract ideas].” Id. at 2355 (citing Mayo,
If it is determined that a claim is directed to an abstract idea then the next step in
Federal Circuit opinions issued since Mayo and Alice have elucidated this two-step analysis. In Ultramercial, the Federal Circuit sought to define what constitutes an abstract idea with somewhat greater precision, noting that an idea is abstract when it has “no particular concrete or tangible form,” and is “devoid of a concrete or tangible application.” Ultramercial,
Less than a month after Ultramercial issued, the Federal Circuit, in DDR Holdings Inc. v. Hotels.com, L.P.,
More recently, the Federal Circuit in Content Extraction & Transmission LLC v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
III.
A.
The first step of the § 101 analysis with respect to the '295 patent is to “determine whether the claims at issue are directed to a patent-ineligible concept.” Alice,
Here, the '295 patent claims at issue are clearly directed to the abstract idea of taking, organizing, classifying, and storing photographs. Nor is there any doubt that the idea of taking, organizing, classifying, and storing photographs qualifies as an abstract idea under Alice and Mayo. It is an abstract idea in that it describes a scheme or concept not tied to a particular concrete application. This conclusion finds firm support from the Federal Circuit’s recent decision in Cyberfone Sys., LLC v. CNN Interactive Group, Inc.,
Importantly, this conclusion applies with equal force to all of the claims in the '295 patent because where, as here, all of the
Plaintiff seeks to avoid this conclusion by arguing insistently that the '295 patent invented something new, and specifically contends (1) that the '295 patent contains novel limitations; (2) that the '295 patent represents an innovative technological development; and (3) that defendants place too much emphasis on whether the concept underlying the '295 patent could be carried out in the human mind independently of computers. Clearly, plaintiffs arguments relate chiefly to the purported novelty of the '295 patent. Yet, plaintiffs focus on novelty is misplaced; it conflates whether a patent is directed to eligible subject matter under § 101 with whether a patent meets § 102’s novelty requirement. Indeed, the Supreme Court has unequivocally stated that the two inquiries are separate and distinct: “The question therefore of whether a particular invention is novel is wholly apart from whether the invention falls into a category of statutory subject matter.” Diamond v. Diehr,
In a similar vein, plaintiff argues that the '295 patent is not directed to a longstanding praсtice or idea because the idea of telephones transmitting digital images to servers is a recent technological development. This argument, like the previous argument, fails because it improperly imports novelty into the first step of the § 101 analysis. Moreover, the argument also fails because it focuses incorrectly on a concrete application of the idea — transmitting digital images to servers — instead of properly focusing at a higher level of generality on the abstract idea or concept underlying the '295 patent. Indeed, Alice supports rejection of plaintiffs novelty arguments. In Alice, the claim at issue recited a method for creating shadow records for each counter-party to a transaction, obtaining start-of-day balances based on the parties’ accounts, and adjusting the shadow records as transactions occurred. See Alice,
Plaintiff also contends that it is irrelevant that human beings could carry out the abstract idea underlying the '295 patent independently of computers. Although plaintiff is correct that this is not disposi-tive as to whether a patent is invalid under § 101, it is nonetheless a relevant consideration in determining whether a patent is directed to an abstract idea within the meaning of Alice because as the Federal Circuit leaches in CyberSource, “a method that can be performed by human thought alone is merely an abstract idea and is not patent-eligible under § 101.” Cyber
In sum, the result of the first step of the § 101 analysis is that the '295 patent and its claims are clearly and convincingly directed to the abstract idea of taking, organizing, classifying, and storing photographs.
B.
The heart of the parties’ § 101 dispute — and in large measure, the heart of every post-Aiice § 101 dispute — is step two of the § 101 analysis, ie., whether the '295 patent contains an inventive concept such that, coupled with its claimed abstract idea, the '295 patent is eligible for patent protection under § 101. The parties’ arguments on this issue focus primarily on Claim 17, and, as such, the § 101 analysis proceeds with respect to Claim 17 before examining whether the same result applies to the other '295 patent claims.
Plaintiff contends that Claim 17 contains an inventive concept because it utilizes an “intelligent” server which performs a variety of inventive functions. Defendants, meanwhile, argue that the only functions performed by the computer in Claim 17 are the routine and generic processing and storing capabilities of computers generally, and thus, defendants contend that Claim 17 does not contain an inventive concept.
Defendants are correct that Claim 17 does not include or add an inventive concept and is therefore directed to ineligible subject matter under § 101. This is so because:
• The computer in Claim 17 performs generic, routine activity common to computers generally, and an examination of the claim language reveals that the computer is no more “intelligent” than any other generic computer;
• Relevant Federal Circuit precedent makes clear that Claim 17 is directed to ineligible subject matter under § 101;
• Claim 17 does not pass the machine- or-transformation test because the only recited machine in the claim is a generic computer, which does not operate as a meaningful limitation;
• The limitations in Claim 17 are insufficient to eliminate the monopоlization concerns presented by the '295 patent; and
• The ordered combination of steps in Claim 17 is not unique or unconventional in any way, and thus, Claim 17 is not patent-eligible as an ordered combination of steps.
Each of these points is addressed in turn.
The crux of the parties’ dispute at the second step of the § 101 analysis is the role the computer plays in Claim 17, for it is clear that the “mere recitation of a generic computer cannot transform a patent-ineligible abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention.” Alice, 134 S.Ct. at
The method claimed in Claim 17 consists of:
A method for recording and administering digital images, comprising the steps of:
recording images using a digital pick up unit in a telephone unit,
storing the images recorded by the digital pick up unit in a digital form as digital images,
transmitting data including at least the digital images and classification information to a server, wherein said classification information is prescriba-ble by a user of the telephone unit for allocation to the digital images,
receiving the data by the server,
extracting classification information which characterizes the digital images from the received data, and
storing the digital images in the server, said step of storing taking into consideration the classification information.
Thus, by the terms of Claim 17, the server performs three functions: (1) it receives data^ — digital images and classification information — entered or inputted by the user; (2) it extracts from the received data the classification information which characterizes the digital images; and (3) it stores the digital images by taking the classification information into consideration. Defendants are correct that each of these activities is a routine, conventional activity that a generic computer can perform, and therefore, Claim 17 includes no inventive concept.
It is undisputed that the ability for a “computer [to] receive[ ] and send[ ] information over a network — with no further specification — is not even arguably inventive.” buySAFE, Inc. v. Google, Inc.,
The second role the server plays in Claim 17 — extracting the classification information — is similarly unavailing for plaintiff, for this too is no more than a routine, conventional computer function
This conclusion that the extraction step can be performed by a generic computer is confirmed by the '295 patent specification, which notes that:
[T]he classification information may contain at least the time and/or time of day at which the image was recorded or at which the image data was transmitted to the server. As a result, the classification information may be extracted in a very simple way in the server.... By converting the time and dale information into a form usable by the server, the received digital images may be stored in lists or directories in the server which are classified according to the time at which the image was acquired or the time of the transmission of the digital image....
'295 patent, col. 3,11. 52-63. Distilled to its essence, the classification information described in the '295 patent, which is entered or inputted by the user, may include the time at which the pictures were taken or the time at which the pictures were transmitted to the server. The extraction step simply involves a computer receiving this classification information that applies to the photographs and using the classification information to organize the photographs. But such a step is not a meaningful limitation on the monopoly claimed in Claim 17 because, as another district court correctly noted concerning a similar computer function, “[h]umans engaged in this sort of indexing long before this patent, and the claim does not put forth an innovative and unconventional method of indexing.” Enfish,
The final role the server plays in Claim 17 is taking the classification information into account in storing the digital images. This computer function and capability is hardly groundbreaking; data storage is perhaps the textbook example of a conventional computer function. See Alice, 134
In sum, the server in Claim 17 performs the same three functions as the computer in Wells Fargo, and because the concept of “data collection, recognition, and storage is undisputedly well-known,” plaintiffs assertion that the '295 patent involves an “intelligent” server fails. Wells Fargo,
At oral argument, plaintiffs counsel presented an additional argument for labeling the server “intelligent,” namely the ability of the server in the '295 patent to “talk” with the telephone unit. But Wells Fargo also forecloses this argument. In Wells Fargo, the Federal Circuit rejected the argument that the patent at issue was valid under § 101 because it involved “not only a computer but also an additional machine — a scanner.” Id. Even though the scanner was used to extract data which was then transmitted to a computer, the Federal Circuit held that there was no inventive concept in the “use of a generic scanner and computer to perform well-understood, routine, and conventional activities commonly used in industry.” Id. at 1348 (emphasis added). Similarly here, although Claim 17 involves both a telephone unit and a server, both operate in a conventional and generic manner, and the fact that the computer can receive data from the telephone unit is insufficient to constitute an inventive concept.
Plaintiff also relies chiefly on the Federal Circuit’s opinion in DDR to support its argument. Specifically, plaintiff argues that like the patent at issue in DDR, Claim 17 is “necessarily rooted in computer technology” and is directed to “purely technological issues” instead of a “business сhallenge.”
Plaintiff further argues that Claim 17 is more inventive than the patents invalidated in Digitech Image Techs., LLC v. Elecs, for Imaging Inc.,
Plaintiff attempts to distinguish Cyber-fone by arguing that the telephone in Cy-berfone did not play an integral role in the patent at issue, whereas the server in Claim 17 is integral to the method claimed in Claim 17. This argument misses the mark; although the server in Claim 17 is indeed integral to Claim 17, it only performs generic functions which do not save Claim 17 from falling outside the ambit of § 101. Plaintiff also overlooks the fact that the patent invalidated in Cyberfone, like Claim 17, “separated] and transmits] ... information according to its classification.” Cyberfone,
For similar reasons, Claim 17 also fails the machine-or-transformation test. It is first worth noting that thе role of the machine-or-transformation analysis after Alice is, at best, unclear. The Supreme Court rejected the machine-or-transformation test as the “sole test” for patentability in Bilski, but reiterated that it remains an “important and useful clue.” Bilski,
Plaintiff contends that Claim 17 passes the machine-or-transformation test because it is- tied to a “particular intelligent server.”
Plaintiff also argues that Claim 17 contains an inventive concept based on the claim’s limitations, including (i) the server, (ii) the use of a telephone unit, and (iii) the evaluation of classification information in storing digital images, and that these limitations do not constitute a monopoly on a longstanding practice. This argument also fails.
First, the asserted limitations in Claim 17 related to the server do not make Claim 17 patentable because the functions of the server in Claim 17, as noted, can be performed by any generic computer. Thus, accepting plaintiffs argument would allow plaintiff dominion over a broad swath of technology related to automating the process of taking, organizing, classifying, and storing photographs. Nor does the use of a telephone unit place a meaningful boundary on Claim 17 because as the '295 patent specification notes, “[s]o called cellular telephones may be utilized for image transmission, as is knoum.” '295 patent, col. 1,11. 31-34 (emphasis added). As such, the' telephone unit limitation is another example of generic hardware which does not save Claim 17 because it is not inventive.
Nor is the “ordered combination” of steps in Claim 17 patentable because like the patent at issue in Alice, the steps of Claim 17 add “nothing ... that is not already present when the steps are considered separately.” Alice,
Although the Federal Circuit has held that considering every claim of a patent is unnecessary in the § 101 inquiry, it is still worth examining briefly dependent Claims 18-24. Dependent claims 18-20 limit Claim 17 to the incorporation and processing of “audio data” and “speech.” But, the Supreme Court has held that limiting “an abstract idea to one field of use ... [does]
Plaintiffs counsel, at oral аrgument on January 30, contended that the result reached with respect to Claim 17 is inapplicable to Claims 1 and 25 because Claim 17 is not representative of the other two independent claims. Specifically, plaintiffs counsel focused on the “means for allocating” limitation in Claims 1 and 25 as making those claims “substantively different” from Claim 17.
First, plaintiffs argument takes too narrow a view of what a “representative” claim is. The Federal Circuit has stated that when a “system claim and method claim contain only ‘minor differences in technology [but] require performance of the same basic process’ ... they should rise or fall together.” Accenture Global Servs., GmbH v. Guidewire Software, Inc.,
Here, the '295 patent specification describes the invention as relating to “an apparatus for recording of a digital image, communicating the digital image from the recording device to a storage device, and to administering the digital image in the storage device.” '295 patent, col. 1,11. 7-9. In discussing the method claim, the specification notes that the invention relates to a “method for recording, communicating and administering the digital image.” Id., col. 1. 11. 11-12. By the patent’s own terms, then, the apparatus and method claims require “performance of the same basic process.” Accenture,
Second, the “means for allocating” limitation in Claims 1 and 25 does not constitute an inventive concept. Although plaintiff is correct that “allocating” data is not a generic computer function in the same
Although the district court construed ‘computer aided’ as a limitation, the '427 patent does not specify how the comput- ■ er hardware and database are specially programmed to perform the steps claimed in the patent.... The claims are silent as to how a computer aids the method, the extent to which a computer aids the method, or the significance of a computer to the performance of the method. The undefined phrase ‘computer aided’ is no less abstract than the idea of a clearinghouse itself.
Id. at 1333 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Here, too, “MZ” is an undefined black box and the '295 patent is silent as to how “MZ” operates to allocate classification information. In that respect, the “means for allocating” limitation is another example of an “undefined phrase” which is “no less abstract” than the idea of taking, organizing, classifying, and storing photographs. Id.
Moreover, in its response brief, plaintiff explicitly acknowledges that allocation of classification information is “nothing more complex than simply associating classification information with digital images” and that the “patent does not purport to claim a novel method for the trivial task of how to associate one piece of digital information with another piece of digital information. Those methods were well-known at the time.”
Thus, Claims 1 and 25 of the '295 patent are not eligible for protection under § 101 merely because they describe an additional component — “MZ”—that is a complete abstraction; a contrary holding would allow patent applicants to circumvent Alice by tacking on undescribed, undefined components to otherwise patent-ineligible material. Such undefined abstract components do not supply the inventive concept required under § 101.
C.
A final issue — whether the clear and convincing evidence standard is applicable to § 101 challenges — merits mention especially becаuse the parties dispute this issue. Plaintiff contends that well-settled law requires application of the clear and convincing standard to § 101 determinations, whereas defendants contend that the clear and convincing evidentiary standard is inapplicable to § 101 determinations as such determinations are questions of law. This dispute stems in large measure from Justice Breyer’s concurrence in Microsoft v. Ui Ltd. P’Ship, — U.S.-,
IV.
In addition to arguing that the '295 patent is directed to ineligible subject matter under § 101, defendants further argue that a number of the claims in the '295 patent are fatally indefinite pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 112(f). Specifically, defendants contend that Claims 1 and 25 in the '295 patent use the term “means” and are therefore means-plus-function claims that are fatally indefinite because the '295 patent fails to disclose corresponding structure or an algorithm for performing the claimed function.
Section 112(f) of the Patent Act allows an applicant to state a claim in the form of means for performing a specific function without reciting in the claim the structure corresponding to that function.
Analysis of means-plus-function terms proceeds in two steps. First, a determination is made “if the claim limitation is drafted in the means-plus-function format.” Robert Bosch, LLC v. Snap-On Inc.,
If it is determined that the claim term is a means-plus-function term, then the second step in the analysis is to determine if there is any “corresponding structure, material, or acts described in the specification to which the claim term will be limited.” Bosch,
Importantly, and particularly pertinent to this case, Federal Circuit precedent is clear that computer implemented means-plus-function terms are subject to additional structural requirements under § 112(f). Thus, the Federal Circuit has held that in cases involving computer-implemented inventions, the structure disclosed must be “more than simply a general purpose computer or microprocessor.” Net MoneyIN, Inc. v. VeriSign, Inc.,
These principles govern the interpretation of the means-plus-function terms in the '295 patent. Claim 1 is directed to a telephone unit, which includes: “means for allocating classification. information prescribed by a user of said at least one telephone unit to characterize digital images obtained by said digital pick up unit.... ” Similarly, Claim 25 consists, in part, of “means to receive audio information from the user as the classification information and to allocate the classification information to the corresponding digital still image data.” Given the use of the word “means” in both claims, both parties agree that these terms are means-plus-function terms. And a finding that Claims 1 and 25 are invalid under § 112(f) would, by incоrporation, invalidate dependent Claims 2-16 and 26. See Blackboard, Inc. v. Desire2Learn, Inc.,
Defendants argue that the only disclosure corresponding to the means for allocating classification information in both Claims 1 and 25 is the “classification information allocator,” labeled as “MZ” in Figure 2 of the '295 patent specification. See '295 patent, Fig. 2. Defendants contend that this disclosure is a black box disclosure that does not adequately describe how the classification information is allocated, and that apart from the box labeled “MZ,” the specification neither provides nor describes any algorithm or explanation as to how the classification information is allocated. Plaintiff, in response, argues that the '295 patent specification contains numerous examples of hardware which a person of ordinary skill in the art would understand as structure for allocating classification information and that the specification does disclose an algorithm as to how classification information is allocated. A review of relevant case law, as well as both parties’ expert declarations, points clearly and convincingly to the conclusion that defendants are correct; Claims 1 and 25 are invalid as fatally indefinite because there is no discernible structure or algorithm in the specification corresponding to or describing the means for allocating clas-, sification information claimed in Claims 1 and.25 of the '295 patent.
Specifically, defendants are correct that the '295 patent’s disclosure of a “elassifica
Federal Circuit authority confirms this result, in ePlus, Inc. v. Lawson Software, Inc.,
The Federal Circuit reached a similar result in Blackboard, where the patent at issue claimed a server computer comprised of:
means for storing a plurality of data files associated with a course, means for assigning a level of access to and control of each data file based on a user of the system’s predetermined role in a course; means for determining whether access to a data file associated with the course is authorized....
Blackboard,
Plaintiff offers a number of arguments in response, none of which are persuasive. First, plaintiff argues that the specification teaches a person of ordinary skill in the art that the entry of classification information data is necessarily associated with digital images. Although this may be true, it will not save claims, as here, that disclose only a black box, “MZ,” to perform the function of allocation. Moreover, the mere fact that classification information is associated with digital images is insufficient to constitute structure; it is akin to describing the “inputs” and “outputs” from the system without disclosing structure for carrying out the claimed function. See Augme, 755 F.3d at 1338 (claim was indefinite because it disclosed “inputs to and outputs from the code assembler instructions, but [did] not include any algorithm. ...”). For similar reasons, the specification’s disclosures of a data processor for processing the digital images and a telephone unit for storing the images are inadequate because these structures are not tethered to the function of allocating classification information. See, e.g., Ergo,
Plaintiff further contends that “MZ” is ■not a black box because the specification states that “MZ” may be integrated into the keypad. But this contention misses the mark. Although it is true that the patent specification discloses that a user can use the “MZ” box to enter data through the keypad, “MZ” is still a black box with respect to how “MZ” operates to allocate classification information. The keypad, in other words, is a structure for entering data comprised in part of classification information, but is not a structure for the subsequent function of allocating that classification information. Plaintiff then argues that the specification’s disclosure of an ASCII generator is structure one of ordinary skill in the art would understand as allocating classification information- to the digital image. This argument suffers from two fatal flaws. First, plaintiffs assertion conflates the enablement and definiteness inquiries. Indeed,
For similar reasons, plaintiffs argument with respect to “header fields” must be rejected. Plaintiff contends that because the '295 patent teaches that information can be included as a header field, and that anyone of “ordinary skill in the art knows1 how to classify and allocate data with other data,” an algorithm is disclosed via the header field as this is “Computer Science 101.”
Finally, plaintiff attempts to save Claims 1 and 25 by pointing to what it believes is an algorithm: “One of ordinary skill in the art reading the specification readily understands the algorithm for allocating classification information is causing the classification information data to be associated with the digital images, e.g., to be transmitted with each other in a data stream.”
An examination of the parties’ respective expert reports confirms that Claims 1 and 25 are invalid as indefinite. Plaintiffs expert report largely parrots the arguments plaintiff made in its response brief. This expert report merely notes eonclusorily that “the specification discloses structure for allocating classification information to the digital image when a user inputs classification information through the various inputs of the phone” and that making an association “between classification information data and digital image data in view of the specification ... would have been straightforward for one of ordinary skill in the art.”
In sum, the '295 patent lacks any adequate structure or algorithm in any form that describes how classification information is allocated. Indeed, the problem is “not the adequacy of the substance or form of the disclosure, but the absence of any disclosure at all. ” ePlus,
V.
In sum, all of the claims in the '295 patent are invalid under Section § 101 as they are directed to patent-ineligible sub
An appropriate Order will issue.
Notes
. Initially, plaintiff sued 30 defendants in this consolidated MDL action. Since then, stipulations of dismissal have been filed with respect to the following defendants: (1) Max Media LLC, (2) For a Song Inc., (3) Will, Inc., (4) Photobucket.com, Inc., (5) Smugmug, Inc, (6) Lucidiom, Inc., and (7) Richmond Camera Shop, Inc.
. It is undisputed that plaintiff owns all right, title and interest in the '295 patent and is therefore a proper plaintiff. See Suffolk Technologies LLC v. AOL Inc.,
.The remaining defendants are: (1) AV Automotive, LLC, (2) Apple Inc., (3) Hall Automotive, LLC, (4) Yahoo! Inc., (5) Tumlbr, Inc., (6) Twitter, Inc., (7) Google, Inc., (8) Pinter-est, Inc., (9) Facebook, Inc., (10) Instagram, LLC, (11) Dropbox Inc., (12) IAC/InterActive-Corp., (13) CityGrid Media LLC, (14) Vimeo LLC, (15) Imgur LLC, (16) Shutterfly Inc., (17) TripAdvisor Inc., (18) TripAdvisor LLC, (19) Snapchat Inc., (20) Yelp Inc., (21) Capitol One Financial Corporation, (22) Capital One, N.A., and (23) Capital One Services, LLC.
. Importantly, the term "classification information” is a disputed claim term, as plaintiff argues that "classification information” should be given its plain and ordinary meaning and needs no further construction. Defendants argue instead that "classification information” should be construed to mean "information explicitly input by a user to characterize an individual image.”
. See '295 patent, col. 9, 11. 13-15 (“A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said transmission system is wirelessly coupled to said at least one telephone unit.”).
. See id., col. 9, 11. 16-18 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said at least one telephone unit further comprises a speech recognition unit.”).
. See id., col. 9, 11. 19-22 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said at least one telephone unit further comprises means for incorporating audio data as the classification information.”).
. See id., col. 9. 11. 23-27 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 4, wherein the audio data is language spoken into said at least one telephone unit, said at least one telephone unit including means for including spoken language as the classification information.”). •
. See id., col. 9, 11. 28-32 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said communication system includes a means for incorporating time information of image recording and/or image transmission of image data as the classification information.”).
. See id., col. 9, 11. 33-36 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said classification information includes at least a telephone number of said at least one telephone unit and/or a telephone number of said server.”).
. See id., col. 9,11. 37-40 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said classification information includes particular location information in memory at which the digital images are to be stored.”).
. See id., col. 9, 11. 50-53 (“A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said analysis unit includes means for analyzing speech signals, said speech signals being provided as portions of the classification information.”).
. See id., col. 9,11. 54-55 (“A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said server includes a speech synthesis unit.”).
. See id., col. 9,11. 56-58 ("A communication system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said server is connected to the said at least one telephone unit via the Internet.”).
. See id., col. 10, 11. 18-20 ("A method as claimed in claim 17, further comprising: recognizing speech spoken into the telephone unit and storing the compressed recognized speech.”).
. See id., col. 10, 11. 21-24 ("A method as claimed in claim 17, further comprising the step of: incorporating audio data as the classification information.”).
. See id., cоl. 10, 11. 25-26 (“A method as claimed in claim 19, wherein the audio data includes language spoken into the telephone unit.”).
. See id., col. 10, 11. 27-31 ("A method as claimed in claim 17, further comprising the step of: providing time information of recording of the image and/or transmission of the data as a part of the classification information.”).
. See id., col. 10, 11. 32-36 ("A method as claimed in claim 17, further comprising the step of: providing a telephone number of the at least one telephone unit and/or of the server as a part of the classification information.”).
. See id., col. 10, 11. 37-41 ("A method as claimed in claim 17, further comprising the step of: providing location information in memory at which the digital images to be stored as a part of the classification information.”).
. See id., col. 10, 11. 42-46 (“A method as claimed in claim 17, further comprising the step of: providing digital character information as part of the classification information.”).
. See In re: TLI Communications LLC Patent Litigation,
. See In re: TLI Communications LLC Patent Litigation, No. I:14md2534 (E.D.Va. July 10, 2014) (Initial Order).
. See In re: TLI Communications LLC Patent Litigation, No. 1:14md2534 (E.D.Va. Aug. 11, 2014) (Order).
. See Facebook, Inc. v. TLI Communications LLC, Case IPR2014-00566,
. See In re: TLI Communications LLC Patent Litigation, No. 1:14md2534 (E.D.Va. Sept. 17, 2014) (Revised Scheduling Order). .
. See In re: TLI Communications LLC Patent Litigation, No. 1:14md2534 (E.D.Va. Oct. 16, 2014) (Order).
. Notably, the parties' briefs addressing defendants’ motion to dismiss totaled more than 110 pages, not including the voluminous exhibits accompanying the briefs.
.Oral argument at the University of Virginia School of Law occurred as a result of an invitation by Professors John Duffy and Margo Bagley, well-known scholars and teachers of intellectual property law at the University of Virginia School of Law. It was their view and this court's view that it would be beneficial and perhaps even inspirational to students of their patent law class to see significant and topical issues in patent law argued by accomplished and experienced lawyers.
. It is important to note that in conjunction with applying a more stringent § 101 standard, courts are also adjudicating § 101 challenges earlier in the litigation process, as "[s]ubject matter eligibility challenges provide the most efficient and effective tool for clearing the patent thicket, weeding out those patents that stifle innovation and transgress the public domain.” Ultramercial Inc. v. Hulu, LLC,
. Nor are these exceptions new; the Supreme Court has "interpreted § 101 and its predecessors in light of [these exceptions] for more than 150 years.” Alice,
. See also id. at 722 (Mayer, J., concurring) ("An idea is impermissibly 'abstract' if it is inchoate — unbounded and still at a nascent stage of development. It can escape the realm of the abstract only through concrete application.... Precise instructions for implementing an idea confine the reach of a patent, ensuring that the scope of the claim is commensurate with [its] technological disclosure."). This is consistent with standard dictionary definitions of "abstract” and "idea.” An "idea” is a thought, plan, or scheme, while “abstract” characterizes a thought, plan or scheme considered apart from any application to a particular object or specific instance. See, e.g., Webster’s Third New International Dictionary at 8, 1122 (1993).
. The machine-or-transformation test states that an invention is patentable if: "(1) it is tied to a particular machine or apparatus, or (2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or thing.” Bilski v. Kappos,
. To the extent that novelty has any relevance to the second step of the § 101 analysis, it is subsumed by the broader inquiry into whether the patent contains an inventive concept. See Ultramercial,
. At oral argument, plaintiff's counsel urged that it is appropriate for the court, pursuant to R. 201, Fed.R.Evid., to take judicial notice of a German newspaper article purportedly lauding the novelty of the '295 patent. Judicial notice of the newspaper article is inappropriate because “[t]hat a statement of fact appears in a daily newspaper does not of itself establish that the stated fact is 'capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.' ” Cofield v. Ala. Public Serv. Comm’n,
. See also DietGoal,
. At oral argument, plaintiff's counsel ex-. pressed surprise that defendants' § 101 arguments were directed to the '295 patent as a whole, instead of just to Claim 17. This surprise is unwarranted; plaintiff was on ample notice that defendants targeted the '295 patent in its entirety under § 101 inasmuch as defendants’ consolidated motion to dismiss contains a section titled "The System and Apparatus Claims are Likewise Unpatentable.” See Defendants’ Memorandum in Support of Their Consolidated Motion to Dismiss at 27. Thus, plaintiff's counsel overlooked the fact that in their opening brief, defendants made clear that they were arguing that all of the claims in the '295 patent were invalid under § 101.
. See Plaintiffs Notice of Supplemental Authority at 3-4.
. Plaintiff’s Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 27.
. See, e.g., Ultramercial,
. Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 32. Plaintiff’s argument is confined to the machine prong of the machine-or-transformation test, and plaintiff does not argue that Claim 17 meets the transformation prong of the test.
. See also Lumen View Tech. LLC v. Findthehest.com, Inc.,
. See Every Penny Counts, Inc. v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., No. 8:11-cv-2826,
. See In re: TLI Communications LLC Patent Litigation, No. 1:14md2534 (E.D.Va. Jan. 30, 2015) at 97 (Reporter’s Transcript, January 30, 2015 Motions Hearing).
. Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 5 (emphasis added). See also Plaintiff’s Responsive Claim Construction Brief at 19 (“Anyone of ordinary skill in the art knows how to classify and allocate data with other data....”).
. Plaintiff's counsel, at oral argument, also contended that Claim 17 was not a representative claim due to the presence of additional structures in the other '295 patent claims such as an "analysis unit’’ and a "control unit.” As defendants correctly point out, however, these are generic structures per
. The applicability of the clear and convincing evidence standard to § 101 challenges has been mentioned twice in Federal Circuit opinions since Justice Breyer’s concurrence in Microsoft. In CLS Bank Int'l v. Alice Corp. Pty. Ltd., 717 F.3d 1269 (Fed.Cir.2013), aff'd, - U.S. -,
. See, e.g., Genetic Techs. Ltd. v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., No. 12-396-LPS,
. 35 U.S.C. § 112(f) states: "An element in a claim for a combination may be expressed as a means or step for performing a specified function without the recital of structure, material, or acts in support thereof, and such claim shall be construed to cover the corresponding structure, material, or acts described in the specification and equivalents thereof.” This provision was first codified as § 112 ¶6 but has since been recodified as § 112(f).
. This exception is inapplicable to this case because “allocating” is a not a fundamental computer function in the same manner as "storing,” “receiving,” and “processing,” In
. '295 patent, col. 6,11. 42-45.
. Normally, disclosure of some form of an algorithm must be judged in light of what one
. See also Augme,
. Plaintiff's Responsive Claim Construction Brief at 19.
. Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 7.
. Plaintiff also cites an excerpt from an opinion authored by one of defendants’ experts— Dr. Rhyne — in a different case involving a different patent. Plaintiff contends that Dr. Rhyne "relied heavily on the '295 patent and touted its teachings as key prior art” and that Dr. Rhyne "recognized [that] the '295 patent ... disclosed structure for allocating classification information to the digital images.” Plaintiff's Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 5-6. This excerpt is irrelevant to the § 112(f) analysis. As defendants point out, Dr. Rhyne cited the '295 patent as prior art for an unrelated patent in an unrelated case. More importantly, Dr. Rhyne did not attempt to construe the claims of the '295 patent or determine whether the '295 patent disclosed structure specifically for the “means for allocating” limitation.
. PTAB Decision at *7.
. Smith Deck at 6, 8.
. Beckmann Deck at 3 (emphasis added).
. Id. set 4.
