OPINION AND ORDER
In 2005, two sophisticated companies— Intel Corporation (“Intel”) and Sanmina-SCI Corporation (“Sanmina”) — entered into an agreement in which Intel agreed to disclose to Sanmina highly confidential information that Sanmina requested as part of its attempt to develop potentially lucrative technology that would be compatible with Intel products. In return for this information, Sanmina- agreed never to sue Intel for patent infringement based on any of Intel’s products that included any of the disclosed technologies. During Sanmina’s development efforts, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office granted to Sanmina several patents, but Sanmina failed to create any marketable products. Ultimately, San-mina ended its research using Intel’s disclosed information and sold its patents to Memory Integrity, LLC (“Memory Integrity”). In this lawsuit, Memory Integrity seeks to hold Intel liable for patent infringement, which Intel argues is prohibited by thé covenant not to sue that Memory Integrity expressly assumed when it purchased Sanmina’s patents.
Memory Integrity asserts infringement claims against Intel under five patents: U.S. Patent Nos. 7,103,636 (the “’636 patent”), 7,107,409 (the “’409 patent”), 7,296,-121 (the “’121 patent”), 8,572, 206 (the “’206 patent”), and 8,898,254 (the “’254 patent”). These patents are all directed toward maintaining cache coherence in multiprocessor. computer systems.
STANDARDS
A party is entitled to summary judgment if the “movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of,law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The
The court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant and draw all reasonable inferences in the non-movant’s favor. Clicks Billiards Inc. v. Sixshooters Inc.,
BACKGROUND
A. Sanmina’s “Project Isis” and the Covenant Not to Sue
In the mid-2000s, Sanmina and one it its subsidiaries, Newisys, Inc. (“Newi-sys”) tried to develop a “node controller” chip capable of connecting multiple Intel processors together in a multiprocessor computer system.
Before finalizing the covenant not to sue and delivering its secret documents, Intel negotiated several confidentiality agreements with Sanmina. On July 30, 2003, and August 23, 2003, Intel and Sanmina entered into two Corporate Non-Disclosure Agreements (“CNDAs”), which require
remain confidential until it becomes: (a) rightfully in the public domain other than by breach of a duty to Intel; or (b) rightfully received from a third party without any limitation on disclosure; or (c) rightfully known to Recipient without any limitation on disclosure prior to its receipt from Intel; or (d) independently developed by Recipient’s employees who have not had access to the Confidential Information, or guidance from those who have had access; or (e) generally made available to third parties by Intel without restriction on disclosure.4
Also on August 23, 2005, Intel and San-mina entered into an agreement (the “Intel-Sanmina Agreement” or “ISA”) containing the covenant not to sue. The ISA primarily concerns Intel’s disclosure of “Common System Interface” or “CSI” technology.
On March 3, 2006, Sanmina and Intel entered into a Restricted Secret Non-Disclosure Agreement (the “RS-NDA”) re
The obligations imposed by this RS-NDA shall not apply with respect to Restricted Secret information that is: (a) rightfully in the public domain other than by a breach of a duty to Intel; (b) rightfully received by [Sanmina] from a third party without any obligation of confidentiality; (c) rightfully known to [Sanmina] without any limitation on use or disclosure prior to its receipt from Intel; (d) independently developed by employees of [Sanmina]; or (e) generally made available to third parties by Intel without restriction on disclosure.12
After Sanmina signed the ISA and the several confidentiality agreements, Intel provided confidential information to San-mina specifically describing Intel’s implementation of cache coherence mechanisms used in Intel’s processors. Sanmina’s Project Isis team then held training sessions concerning Intel’s processor architecture and cache coherence protocol. Sanmina also held biweekly telephone calls with Intel’s engineers and received confidential RS documents from Intel. Intel and San-mina each handled the RS documents with extreme care. Lead Sanmina architect Eric Morton testified that Intel provided personalized hard copies of the RS documents to the Project Isis team but did not give any Sanmina employees electronic copies of the documents; if the Sanmina employees wanted to view the documents electronically, they had to access the documents directly from Intel’s servers. Further, Sanmina tracked precisely who had access. to Intel’s confidential documents and even housed the Project Isis team in a separate and secure wing at the Sanmina facilities.
Among the RS documents provided by Intel to Sanmina were: (1) “RS-Common System Interface Specification, Enterprise MP Systems” (the “CSI Specification”);
B. The Patents-in-Suit
Despite Intel’s disclosure of its confidential information to Sanmina, Project Isis failed to yield marketable products. Sanmi-na ended the project in 2007. Based upon Sanmina and Newisys’s work on solutions to the cache coherence problem, however, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued five patents to Sanmina, its subsidiaries, or its successor in interest. Newisys filed applications for the ’636, ’409, and ’121 patents on May 28, 2002, March 22, 2002, and October 15, 2004, respectively. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued the ’636, ’409, and ’121 patents on September 5, 2006, September 12, 2006, and November 13,2007, respectively. New-isys assigned these three patents to San-mina on September 28,2008. On December 15, 2011, Sanmina filed an application for the ’206 patent, but on June 4, 2013, before the ’206 patent issued, Sanmina sold all its cache coherence patents to Memory Integrity. On September 9, 2013, Memory In
The five asserted patents share common inventors and have overlapping specifics tions. The patents all describe methods of maintaining cache coherence in the same type of multiprocessor system: a system of multiple processor clusters interconnected in a “point-to-point architecture.”
Speculative probing helps ensure cache coherence, but may also generate excessive probe traffic if all remote or all. local caches are probed regardless of whether they contain the requested data. The ’636 patent is directed at speculative probing of “remote” processor clusters, ie., those that do not contain the processors requesting the data.
The ’121 patent describes a technique for further reducing probé traffic. The patent purports to reduce probe traffic by using a probe filtering unit (“PFU”). In the system claimed by the patent, the cache coherence controller receives a request for data and then sends a probe to the PFU. The PFU contains “probe filtering information,” which allows the PFU to determine if the requested data is located in cache memory within the system.
The related ’206 and ’254 patents each describe a technique for purportedly increasing the speed of memory transactions. The patents describe a multiprocessor system that has both “local memory” and “remote memory.”
C. Memory Integrity’s Infringement Contentions Against Intel
When Memory Integrity purchased the five patents-in-suit from Sanmina, Memory Integrity agreed to be bound by the covenant not to sue contained in the ISA. Memory Integrity expressly agreed “to be bound by, and to honor, all Existing Agreements” specified by Sanmina, including the covenant not to sue Intel.
In its responses to Intel’s requests for admission, Memory Integrity' acknowledges that some of its infringement claims rest, at least in part, on cache coherence functionalities that Intel asserts it disclosed to Sanmina. In Response No. 2, “Memory Integrity admits that at least one Accused Product infringes the ’636 patent in part because of its Source Snooping functionality as described in Memory Integrity’s infringement contentions.”
DISCUSSION
In response to Intel’s motion for summary judgment, Memory Integrity asserts that the ISA’s covenant not to sue does not bar Memory Integrity’s infringement claims against Intel. Memory Integrity makes several alternative arguments for this conclusion. Memory Integrity argues that the ISA is unenforceable due to its failure to include an essential term and also due to vagueness. Memory Integrity further argues that the ISA does not apply to the information purportedly disclosed by Intel to Sanmina because Intel has not shown that this information is “CSI Enabling Information.” According to Memory Integrity, Intel has failed to establish that the information is CSI Enabling Information for two alternative reasons: (1) Intel has failed to present sufficient evidence to establish that the information was useful to Sanmina in implementing CSI-related technologies; and (2) the information was not “confidential” either at the time of disclosure or at the time Memory Integrity filed its lawsuit.’ Finally, Memory Integrity argues that Intel has failed to establish that Memory Integrity’s infringement contentions are based on the information that Intel disclosed to Sanmina.
A. Whether the ISA Is Enforceable
1. General Principles of Contract Interpretation Under Delaware Law
In the ISA, the parties agree that Delaware law applies. Under Dela
When, interpreting a contractual provision, courts “will give priority to the parties’ intentions as reflected in the four corners of the agreement.” GMG Capital Invs., LLC v. Athenian Venture Partners I, L.P.,
Delaware follows the “objective” theory of contracts — meaning that “a contract’s construction should be that which would be understood by an objective, reasonable third party.” HIFN, Inc. v. Intel Corp.,
plete meeting of the minds on all material terms” in order for a contract to be enforceable. Ramone,
2. Whether the ISA Failed to Include a Material or Essential Term
Memory Integrity argues that because the parties left the phrase “CSI Patent Claim” undefined in the ISA, the parties failed to include an essential term in their
whether a reasonable negotiator in the position of one asserting the existence of a contract would have concluded, in that setting, that the agreement reached constituted agreement on all of the terms that the parties themselves regarded as essential and thus that the agreement concluded the negotiations....
Pharmathene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc.,
The ISA states:
Company [Sanmina] agrees that Company shall not Assert any CSI Patent Claim against Intel, its subsidiaries or affiliates, or their customers (direct or indirect), distributors (direct or indirect), agents (direct or indirect) and contractors (direct or indirect) for the manufacture, use, import, offer for sale- or sale of any of Intel’s Products ... ,29
The ISA uses the term “CSI Patent Claim” only one other time. The ISA’s “License Option” provision explains that if the covenant not to sue is terminated, Intel will have the option to receive a going-forward license to Sanmina’s “CSI Patent Rights” and a corresponding release of “all damages and claims, worldwide, for all liability for asserted or unasserted CSI Patent Claims against Intel.”
Memory Integrity is correct that the ISA does not specifically define “CSI Patent Claim.” “CSI Patent Claim” is a short phrase that consists of the word “CSI” followed by two other capitalized words, “Patent” and “Claim.” The ISA defines “CSI,” “CSI Enabling Information,” and “CSI Patent Rights.”
The parties would have understood the common meaning of the term “claim” at the time of contracting. Notwithstanding the fact that the word “claim” is capital
3. Whether the ISA Is Fatally Vague or Ambiguous
Memory Integrity also argues that the term “CSI Patent Claim” is susceptible to several different interpretations and that this ambiguity makes the ISA unenforceable. According to Memory Integrity, “CSI Patent Claim” could, for example, refer to a claim of a patent. Intel responds that “CSI Patent Claim” is susceptible to only one reasonable interpretation in the context of the ISA, and it means “the assertion of a legal claim based on a CSI Patent Right.”
The Court looks first to the intrinsic evidence, the ISA itself, to determine whether “CSI Patent Claim” is ambiguous. As discussed above, the ISA defines “CSI,” which means, “an electro-mechanical point-to-point information path capable of carrying cache-coherence, I/O transactions, system related transactions, configuration management transactions, interrupts and/or other related transactions between an Intel microprocessor and [other components].”
Company’s Patent Rights that: (a) now or at any time during the Capture Period are owned or controlled by Company; and (b) but for this Agreement, would be infringed by one or more of Intel’s Products due in whole or in part to those products’ inclusion or implementation of any portion of the CSI Enabling Information.36
Additionally, the License Option in the ISA couples the terms “CSI Patent Rights” and “CSI Patent Claim,” discussing a going-forward license of CSI Patent Rights that correspond to a past release of liability for CSI Patent Claims.
Memory Integrity points to unrelated agreements that Intel negotiated with unrelated parties as evidence that “CSI Patent Claim” could mean a “claim of a patent.”
B. Whether the Disclosed Information Is CSI Enabling Information Under the ISA
The ISA defines “CSI Enabling Information” as “all information provided by Intel to [Sanmina] that is (a) necessary or useful in implementing CSI-enabled, CSI-compliant, or CSI-related technologies; and (but not ‘or’) (b) restricted by a duty of confidentiality, however arising and including that provided under the RUNDA.”
1. Intel’s Disclosure to Sanmina
As a threshold matter, Memory Integrity argues that Intel has failed to identify in its motion documents that disclosed some of the information Intel purports to have conveyed to Sanmina. Intel asserts that it disclosed implementation details of six different cache. coherence technologies to Sanmina: (1) source snooping; (2) home snooping; (3) functionality for receiving a cache access request and sending a probe; (4) use of a particular hashing algorithm; (5) a caching agent (also known as a Cache Box) that processes transactions; and (6) snoop filtering. In its motion, Intel identifies three Restricted Secret documents that disclosed the way in which Intel implements these technologies: (1) the CSI Specification; (2) the Thurley Document; and (3) the Beckton Document.
Other than the caching agent technology, the technological implementations that Intel purports to have disclosed to Sanmir na or its subsidiary are undisputedly described in the three identified Restricted Secret documents. Section. 8.5.1.1 of the CSI Specification describes Intel’s source snooping protocol. Section 8.1.1 of the CSI Specification describes source snooping, home snooping, and snoop filtering. In his deposition, Mr. Morton also explains that a figure depicted an the Thurley Document illustrates the functionality for receiving
As for the technology related to a caching agent that processes transactions, Mr. Morton identifies the Beckton Document as the source of this information for San-mina. He verifies that based on the Beck-ton Document, he understood that Intel’s caching agent processes specific transactions. The questions posed to Mr. Morton are phrased slightly differently than Intel’s description of caching agents in its brief, but nonetheless, the Beckton Document and Mr. Morton’s testimony establish that Intel disclosed to Sanmina information regarding Intel’s implementation of caching agents that can process specific transactions.
Memory Integrity argues that Mr. Morton’s testimony is conclusory and that his understanding of the technologies may not embrace the technological descriptions set forth by Intel in its brief. Memory Integrity, however, offers no evidence that calls into question Mr. Morton’s testimony, which the text of the Restricted Secret documents corroborates.
2. Usefulness to Sanmina
Memory Integrity argues that even if Intel disclosed how it implements the six technologies in question, Intel has failed to show that the information is CSI Enabling Information. According to Memory Integrity, Intel has not offered evidence of how or why the information proved useful for implementing CSI-related technologies. Intel responds that Memory Integrity’s argument conflicts with the testimony of Mr. Morton, who both led the Project Isis team
With its motion, Intel offers extensive testimony from Mr. Morton concerning the usefulness of the information Intel disclosed to Sanmina. Memory Integrity does not dispute that Mr. Morton has personal knowledge of whether Intel’s disclosures proved useful to Sanmina in developing CSI-related technologies. According to Mr. Morton, as the lead architect for Project Isis, he was responsible for understanding CSI (or “QPI”) and Intel’s architecture and designing and verifying a protocol that Sanmina’s node controller chip would use to maintain cache coherence while also maintaining the requirements of Intel’s architecture. He explains how and why Intel’s source snooping technology proved useful to Sanmina, stating that the only way to understand Intel’s source snooping protocol was through Intel’s disclosures to Sanmina. Although Mr. Morton does not provide the specifics of how and why the other five technological implementations disclosed by Intel were useful to Sanmina, he does definitively state that those disclosures were indeed useful as well.
Additionally, the text of the ISA supports Mr. Morton’s testimony. The ISA included certain milestones that Intel had to meet. Among other things, the ISA required Intel to deliver the CSI Specification within '60 days of the agreement’s effective date. This requirement corroborates Mr. Morton’s testimony that Sanmi-na considered the information in the CSI Specification about source snooping, home snooping, and snoop filtering useful.
When evidence is “one-sided” on a factual matter, a court may decide the issue as a matter of law on summary judgment. Paragon Podiatry Lab., Inc. v. KLM Labs., Inc.,
Memory Integrity’s criticisms of Mr. Morton’s testimony, particularly in light of Memory Integrity’s failure to present the Court with any contrary evidence (including any other portions of Mr. Morton’s testimony), does not create a genuine issue of material fact. See, e.g., Processed Plastics Co. v. United States,
3. Confidentiality
Memory Integrity also argues that the disclosed information does not qualify as CSI Enabling Information because at the time Intel disclosed the information, it was widely known in the industry and therefore not confidential.-Alternatively, Memory Integrity argues that the disclosures do not qualify as CSI Enabling Information because the information later became widely known and thus no longer confidential before Memory Integrity filed this lawsuit. In support of these arguments, Memory Integrity cites to presentations, articles, textbooks, Intel’s patents and patr ent applications, and the declaration of Memory Integrity’s expert, Dr. Farrens. Intel first responds that the testimony provided both- by Intel’s representative, Pamela Hays, and also by Mr. Morton establish that the disclosed information was highly confidential and subject to a strict duty of confidentiality at the time it was disclosed to Sanmina. Intel next argues that regardless of whether the disclosed information later may have become publicly known, which Intel disputes, the covenant not to sue applies so long as the information was confidential at the time of disclosure to Sanmina. Intel further argues that even if the covenant not to sue does not apply to information that later becomes known in the industry, Intel’s evidence shows that the specific implementations that Intel disclosed to Sanmina have remained confidential to the present day.
a. Confidentiality at the Time Intel Disclosed the Information to Sanmina
Ms. Hays is Intel’s corporate designee in this case,- and she was involved in negotiating the ISA with Sanmina. In her declaration,- she states that the Restricted Secret documents disclosed to Sanmina required a strict duty of confidentiality-because they reveal some of Intel’s most sensitive technical information. These documents describe how Intel’s microprocessors, which are Intel’s core products, function. The first page of the documents includes a “Restricted Secret” label, and the documents’ titles show the letters “RS,” signifying that they contain 'particularly sensitive information. According to Ms. Hays, the implementation detail in these documents represents the “crown jewels” of Intel’s trade secrets.
Similarly, in his deposition, Mr. Morton repeatédly states that he regarded the information that Intel disclosed to Sanmina as confidential. He testifies that Sanmina kept the information that it received from Intel confidential and that he does not know of anyone from Sanmina who violated a duty of confidentiality with respect to the matérials received from Intel. Additionally, Mr. Morton describes how Sanmi-na personalized Intel’s documents for each team member so that the documents could be better controlled and tracked. According to Mr. Morton, Sanmina also physically isolated the Project Isis team in a separate and secured wing at the Sanmina facilities.
These undisputed circumstances surrounding Intel’s disclosures further confirm that the information given to Sanmina was confidential at the time of disclosure and was understood and treated by the parties as such. In order to develop a node controller that would work with Intel processors, Sanmina undertook years of negotiations with Intel to gain access to secret information about Intel’s cache coherence protocol. Sanmina signed four separate confidentiality agreements, in addition to a covenant not to sue, in exchange for access
Memory Integrity presents an array of citations to documents that purportedly disclosed Intel’s cache coherence technologies to the public before Intel disclosed the information to Sanmina. Memory Integrity’s citations, however, .only demonstrate that the general concepts at issue were known in the industry and show nothing about the specific proprietary implementations that Intel disclosed. An apt analogy is the difference between a, restaurant’s menu and its trade secret recipes. For example, a menu may list bucatini al savor di noci as a pasta course, and may even list its key ingredients. When the dish arrives at the table, a customer may taste walnuts, honey, ginger, black pepper, and lemon, in an olive oil base. This is all publicly available information. But the specific recipe needed to make this dish well would not necessarily be public knowledge. So, too, here; the general concepts of source snooping and other cache coherence technologies were known in the industry, but the specifics of how Intel implemented those technologies were not.
b. Confidentiality after the Disclosures Were Made
Memory Integrity also offers citations to documents that purportedly disclosed Intel’s cache coherence technologies to the public after the disclosures to Sanmina were made but before Memory Integrity filed this lawsuit. According to Memory Integrity, the two CNDAs, the RUNDA, and the RS-NDA all specify that the duty of confidentiality under the agreements no longer applies if, among other things, the disclosed information becomes rightfully in the public domain or Intel generally makes the information available to third parties without restrictions on disclosure.
Intel responds first that the ISA does not require that disclosed information remain confidential áfter disclosure in order for the covenant not to sue to continue to apply. The Court again applies Delaware contract law to determine if the terms of the ISA are ambiguous. According to the ISA, CSI Enabling Information includes “all information provided by Intel to Company that is ... restricted by a duty of confidentiality, however arising .... ”
As required by Delaware law and discussed above, the Court begins its analysis with intrinsic evidence, the contract itself, to determine if the ISA is ambiguous. The ISA uses the present tense verb “is” to describe the confidentiality requirements for CSI Enabling Information. Although the Court is unaware of any Delaware court addressing what “is” means in a contract, the Delaware Court of Chancery has found that using the present tense of a
Moreover, even the cases finding that, in the context of a specific document, the use of the present , tense is not forward-looking suggest that the context containing the present-tense verb should guide the interpretation. In Winshall, the Delaware court noted both that the contract used the present tense of verbs and that the contract referred to “current use.”
Here, the ISA contains no relevant future time references. Similar to the facts in Aspex Eyewear, the ISA contains no language indicating that future occurrences affect whether disclosed information remains CSI Enabling Information. Additionally, the ISA states that the CSI Information “is ... restricted by a duty of confidentiality, however arising .... ”
Additionally, the covenant not to sue states that it “survive[s] termination or expiration of this Agreement” unless Intel fails to meet one of the listed milestones or the parties mutually agree to terminate the covenant.
Further, even if the ISA were ambiguous concerning the temporal scope of the duty of confidentiality and its relationship to the covenant not to sue, the undisputed
Intel and Sanmina negotiated four other agreements that constitute relevant extrinsic evidence. The CNDAs discuss when confidential information will cease to be confidential for purposes of Sanmina’s liability for disclosure. The CNDAs say nothing, however, regarding termination of'the covenant not to sue or what constitutes CSI Enabling Information. Similarly, the RUNDA and RS-NDA discuss confidentiality in the context of Sanmina’s rights to use and obligations to protect the disclosed information. The RUNDA and RS-NDA give no indication that they affect the covenant not to sue or what is CSI Enabling Information.
Further, Intel negotiated similar covenants not to sue with other companies. None of the agreements allow the other company to sue Intel based on disclosed information if the previously-confidential information later becomes publicly known. Almost all of the agreements contain precisely the same text that CSI Enabling Information “is” restricted by a duty of confidentiality. It is not reasonable to conclude that Intel could have meant for all these agreements to subject it to patent infringement liability if others in the industry later independently learn the specifics of Intel’s cache coherence protocol. The additional agreements that Intel negotiated with Sanmina and other companies and the lack of any contrary evidence presented by Memory Integrity establish that there is no genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the parties intended CSI Enabling Information to exclude information that later may become generally known in the industry.
Additionally, even if the ISA remained ambiguous after considering extrinsic evidence, principles of Delaware contract law would require the court to construe the provisions at issue in Intel’s favor. A Delaware court has explained:
“Where the language of an agreement is contradictory, obscure, or ambiguous, or where its meaning is doubtful, so that the contract is fairly susceptible of two constructions, one of which makes it fair, customary, and such as prudent men would naturally execute, while the other makes it inequitable, unusual, or such as reasonable men would not be likely to enter into, the interpretation which makes it a rational and probable agreement must be preferred to that which makes it an unusual, unfair, or improbable contract.”
Holland v. Nat’l Auto. Fibres,
The only reasonable interpretation of the covenant not to sue contained in the
Finally, even if the Court were to accept Memory Integrity’s interpretation, the undisputed extrinsic evidence establishes that the specifics of Intel’s cache coherence technologies remain confidential to this day. Although Dr. Farrens points to public documents that purportedly disclose the information Intel gave to Sanmina, none of the documents explain precisely how Intel implements its specific cache coherence protocol in Intel processors. As discussed above, the documents cited by Dr, Farrens disclose the menu, whereas the information Intel gave to Sanmina discloses the secret recipe. Ms. Hays confirms that the implementation details given to Sanmina remain highly confidential. Memory Integrity has not offered any testimony or other evidence that conflicts with Ms. Hays’s statements that Intel’s specific implementations of cache coherence functionalities are still unknown to the industry. See Reeves,
C. Whether Memory Integrity’s Infringement Contentions Are Based, at Least in Part, on the Disclosed Information
Memory Integrity argues that there is insufficient evidence that, “but for” the ISA, Intel’s Accused Products would infringe the patents-in-suit “due in whole or in part to those products’ inclusion or implementation of any portion of the CSI Enabling Information.”
As with other written instruments such as contracts, patents are interpreted and construed as a matter of law. See Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc., 52 F.3d 967, 978 (Fed.Cir.1995), aff'd,
With regard to the second part of this objection, that which claims for the jury the construction of the patent, we remark that the patent itself must be taken as evidence of its meaning; that, like other written instruments, it must*1041 be interpreted as a whole, its various provisions be taken as far as practicable in connection with each other, and the legal deductions drawn therefrom must be conformable with the scope and purpose of the entire document. This construction and these deductions we hold to be within the exclusive province of the court.
Brown v. Huger,
Here, Memory Integrity’s own binding discovery admissions acknowledge that its infringement contentions are based in part on three of the implementations that Intel disclosed to Sanmina. In Response Nos. 2, 11, and 27, Memory Integrity admits that it bases its contentions in part on the Accused Products’ use of source snooping, hashing algorithm functionality, and Cache Box or caching agent functionality. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, matters admitted in response to requests for admission are deemed “conclusively established unless the court, on motion, permits the admission to be withdrawn or amended.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(b). Memory Integrity has not made any such motion to withdraw or amend its admissions. Therefore, Memory Integrity’s admissions conclusively establish that its infringement contentions are based, at least in part, on the Accused Products’ use of source snooping,
Memory Integrity’s infringement contentions also establish that Memory Integrity’s infringement claims arise from func-tionalities disclosed to Sanmina. Memory Integrity’s March 16 and December 15, 2015 infringement contentions accuse Intel of infringing based, in part, on the Accused Products’ use of home snooping,
Memory Integrity does not offer any contrary evidence. Rather, Memory Integrity argues that Intel has failed to show that Memory Integrity’s infringement contentions rely on “the same” technologies allegedly disclosed to Sanmina (or Newisys).
Finally, Memory Integrity argues that Intel has failed to show that the Accused Products infringe only because they include technologies disclosed to Sanmina.
The ISA’s covenant not to sue prohibits Memory Integrity from asserting any CSI Patent Claim, which is a legal claim based on CSI Patent Rights. CSI Patent Rights are any rights that would be infringed due to an Intel product’s inclusion of CSI Enabling Information. Under the ISA, CSI Enabling Information is any information that is, among other things, useful in implementing CSI-related technologies and restricted by a duty of confidentiality. The undisputed evidence establishes that Intel disclosed CSI Enabling Information to Sanmina at Sanmina’s request because the disclosed information would be useful to Sanmina in implementing CSI-related technologies and this information was restricted by a duty of confidentiality at the time of disclosure. Moreover, although the covenant not to sue, as contained in the ISA, does not require that CSI Enabling Information remain confidential after disclosure to Sanmina, the CSI Enabling Information actually disclosed by Intel to Sanmina has remained confidential, as of the time that Intel filed its motion. As shown by Memory Integrity’s admissions and infringement contentions, Memory Integrity’s claims of patent infringement are based, at least in part, on this CSI Enabling Information. Accordingly, the ISA’s covenant not to sue bars Memory Integrity’s patent infringement claims. No reasonable trier of fact could find otherwise, and summary judgment is appropriate.
CONCLUSION
Intel’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. 170) is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Cache coherence problems arise in multiprocessor computer systems in which the processors share a main memory, The main memory stores data needed or generated by the system, but each individual processor also uses its own smaller, faster "cache” memory to store copies of data upon which the processor regularly operates. When the data is stored in the processor’s cache, the processor may change the data. The data is then saved back to the main memory after operations conclude. In the interim, changes to data in an individual cache may cause the master copy in the main memory to become "stale” or out-of-date, and multiple processors may be using different versions of the same data, leading to cache incoherence. Methods of maintaining cache coherence, such as those described by the patents-in-suit, ensure that processors have access to the most up-to-date copies of data and that the system does not generate inconsistent versions of data. See Memory Integrity, LLC v. Intel Corp.,
. Because the parties assert that this case involves highly sensitive trade secrets, the Court limits its discussion of facts to the information included in the parties’ redacted, publicly-filed briefs. In order to avoid disclosing potentially confidential information, the Court refers to Intel’s cache coherence technologies only in broad terms.
. For ease of reference, the Court generally refers to Sanmina and Newisys collectively as "Sanmina,”
. Dkt. 171-4 ¶ 6. The CNDAs contain similar descriptions of when Sanmina’s obligation of confidentiality would terminate. See Dkt. 171-2 ¶ 4; Dkt. 171-3 ¶ 4.
. According to Erie Morton, the lead Sanmi-na architect for Project Isis, "CSI was the bus interface and protocol that Intel was designing in 2005/2006 for their future processors.” Dkt. 170-1 at 32. The ISA defines "CSI” as "an electro-mechanical point-to-point information path capable of carrying cache-coherence, I/O transactions, system related transactions, configuration management transactions, interrupts and/or other related transactions between an Intel microprocessor and [other components].” Dkt. 171-1 § 1.8. “CSI” was also referred to as “QuickPath Interconnect” or "QPI” after Intel publicly announced the processors. See Dkt. 170-1 at 36-37; Dkt. 181-7.
. The ISA defines “Assert” as "bring an action of any nature before any legal, judicial, arbitration, administrative, executive or other type of body or tribunal that has or claims to have authority to adjudicate such action in whole or in part.” Dkt. 171-1 § 1.1.
. Dkt. 171-1 §§ 1.11, 2.1.
. The "Capture Period” is "any time on or prior to the tenth anniversary of the Effective Date” of the ISA — i.e., from August 23, 2005, to August 23, 2015. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.2.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.10.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.9.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 5.1.
. Dkt. 171-5 at 15.
. Dkt. 170-16 (Revision 0.90); Dkt. 170-17 (Revision 0.8, Part A); Dkt. 170-18 (Revision 0.8, Part B).
. Dkt. 170-15.
. Dkt. 170-14.
. Dkt. 170-3 at 27 ('636 patent at 20:55-63); Dkt. 170-4 at 25 (’409 patent at 18:5-14); Dkt. 170-5 at 43.(T21 patent at 31:23-27); Dkt. 170-6 at 24 ('206 patent at 20:57-59); Dkt. 170-7 at 23 (’254 patent at 18:37-39). Docket numbers are used only in the first citation to ■ the patents-in-suit.
. '636 patent at 5:43-44; ’409 patent at 4:65-66.
. ’636 patent at 6:16-18; '409 patent at 5:38-40.
. '636 patent at 3:3-7.
. '409 patent at 2:67-3:5.
. T21 patent at 2:67-3:1.
. '206 patent at 7:32-38; '254 patent at 7:35-40.
. '206 patent at 1:48-67; '254 patent at 1:51-2:4.
. Dkt. 170-9 § 7.2; Dkt. 170-10 at 3-4.
. Dkt. 172-13 at 7.
. Dkt. 172-13 at 11.
. Dkt. 172-13 at 18.
.Memory Integrity concedes that Sanmina or its affiliates and successors owned or controlled the alleged CSI Patent Rights during the Capture Period.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 2.1.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 3.1,
. Dkt. 171-1 §§ 1.8-1.10.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.1.
.The identical definition appears in Black’s Law Dictionary 264 (8th ed, 2004), which is the year immediately before the parties used the word "claim” in the ISA.
. Dkt. 198 at 22.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.8.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.10.
. Dkt. 179 at 38.
.In the context of a motion to compel discovery, the District Court for the District of Columbia similarly addressed the relevance of contracts between, one party and non-parties to the case, In denying the motion, the court emphasized, “These contracts were made be
. Because the Court finds that the parties did not understand an expressly agreed-upon definition of "CSI Patent Claim” to be an essential term and that the ISA is not fatally vague, the Court does not reach Intel’s argument that Memory Integrity agreed that the ISA was. enforceable by purchasing the patents and agreeing "to be bound by, and to honor” the covenant not to sue.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.9.
. Memory Integrity’s expert witness, Dr. Matthew Farrens, asserts that Intel did not disclose a specific implementation regarding receiving requests and sending probes. See Dkt. 180 ¶ 20. But Dr. Farrens does not dispute that Intel disclosed its use of a functionality for receiving requests and sending probes or that Intel disclosed the Thurley Document. See id. ¶¶ 21-22. He asserts only that this more general information was publicly known. Dr. Farrens also mistakenly claims that Mr. Morton does not mention probes in the context of the Thurley Document. See Dkt. 170-1 at 59-63. Additionally, Dr. Farrens asserts that Intel's disclosure of a caching agent technology "would not have been earlier than August 16, 2016.” Id. ¶ 34. It appears from the context of this statement, however, that Dr. Farrens meant "earlier than August 16, 2006,” which Memory Integrity confirmed at oral argument on April 8, 2016.
. Although Reeves involved a motion for judgment as a matter of law and was not a summary judgment decision, the Supreme Court stressed that "the standard for granting summary judgment ‘mirrors’ the standard for judgment as a matter of law, such that ‘the inquiry under each is the same.’ ”
. Dkt. 191-1 at 17.
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.9 (emphasis added).
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.9 (emphasis added).
. Dkt. 171-1 § 2.1.
. Dkt 171-1 § 1.10.
. Memory Integrity initially accused Intel’s products of infringing the '636 patent based in part on the Accused Products' use of source snooping. See Ex. D-2 to Memory Integrity's March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the ’636 patent, Dkt. 172-1 at 6-7. Memory Integrity, however, later dropped this infringement contention. See Memory Integrity’s December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions, Cover Pleading, Dkt. 172-12 at 3.
. Memory Integrity argues that it admitted only that its infringement contentions are based on general, non-confidential concepts embraced by Intel’s disclosures to Sanmina. Memory Integrity cannot dispute, however, that infringement contentions necessarily rest on specific implementations of technology rather than broad, well-known technological concepts. When a plaintiff accuses specific products of infringing, "the evidence uncovered by the patent holder's investigation must be sufficient to permit a reasonable inference that all the accused products infringe.” Antonious v. Spalding & Evenflo Cos., Inc., 275 F.3d 1066, 1075 (Fed.Cir.2002).
. Ex. D-3 to Memory Integrity’s March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '636 patent, Dkt. 172-2 at 7; Ex. D-3 to Memory Integrity’s December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '636 patent, Dkt. 172-7 at 7-8.
. Ex. B-2 to Memory Integrity’s March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '409 patent, Dkt. 172-3 at 2; Ex. B-2 to Memory Integrity’s December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '409 patent, Dkt. 172-8 at 2.
. Ex. C-2 to Memory Integrity’s March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '206 patent, Dkt. 172-4 at 9; Ex. E-2 to Memory Integrity's March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the ’254 patent, Dkt. 172-5 at 2; Ex. C-2 to Memory Integrity's December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '206 patent, Dkt. 172-9 at 9-10; Ex. E-2 to Memory Integrity’s December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '254 patent, Dkt. 172-10 at 2-4, 8, 14, 16.
. Ex. C-2 to Memory Integrity's March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '206 patent, Dkt. 172-4 at 2; Ex. C-2 to Memory Integrity’s December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '206 patent, Dkt. 172-9 at 2.
. Ex. A-l to Memory Integrity's March 16, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '121 patent, Dkt. 172-6 at 2; Exhibit A-l to Memory Integrity’s December 15, 2015 Infringement Contentions for the '121 patent, Dkt. 172-11 at 2.
. See Dkt. 170-16 at 21.
. See Dkt, 170-15 at 3.
. See Dkt. 170-14 at 3.
. Memoiy Integrity’s Redacted Response Brief, Dkt. 199 at 14 n.3, 17.
. Memory Integrity's Redacted Response Brief, Dkt. 199 at 17 (“... Intel has not presented evidence excluding that the products would still infringe without the implementation or inclusion of the technologies allegedly disclosed to Newisys.”) (emphasis in original).
. Dkt. 171-1 § 1.10 (emphasis added).
