ROTHSCHILD DIGITAL MEDIA INNOVATIONS, LLC, Plaintiff, v. SONY COMPUTER ENTERTAINMENT AMERICA LLC, Defendant.
Case No. 5:14-cv-03928-PSG
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA SAN JOSE DIVISION
April 2, 2015
ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT‘S MOTION AND PLAINTIFF‘S CROSS MOTION FOR RULE 11 SANCTIONS
(Re: Docket Nos. 43, 53)
Defendant Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC moves for
I.
When making a
The ‘534 patent, issued in 2000 and assigned to Rothschild, describes an online computer interface system.7 Claim 1 of the ‘534 Patent recites:
1. An interactive, remote, computer interface system comprising:
a remote server assembly, said remote server assembly including a quantity of primary site data;
said remote server assembly including at least one primary site address, said primary site address including at least a portion of said primary site data and being distinct so as to identify a location thereof on a computer network;
a local processor assembly;
said local processor assembly being coupled in data transmitting and receiving communication with said remote server assembly;
at least one data storage assembly associated with said local processor assembly and structured to contain a quantity of auxiliary site data thereon, said auxiliary site data being associated with said primary site data;
said data storage assembly including a compact, portable and interchangeable computer readable medium;
said compact, portable and interchangeable computer readable medium including a plurality of remotely accessible, auxiliary site addresses, encoded therein, each of said remotely accessible, auxiliary site addresses, including select portions of said quantity of auxiliary site data; and
said remotely accessible, auxiliary site addresses being structured to be remotely accessed by said remote server assembly so as to initiate utilization of said select portions of said
quantity of auxiliary site data by said local processor assembly in conjunction with said primary site data.
In an ex parte reexamination of the ‘534 patent, the examiner focused on the following limitation: “said remotely accessible, auxiliary site addresses being structured to be remotely accessed by said remote server assembly so as to initiate utilization of said select portions of said quantity of auxiliary site data by said local processor assembly in conjunction with said primary site data.”8 The examiner construed “remotely accessed by said remote server” to include both direct and indirect access to the auxiliary site addresses by the remote server assembly and determined that the claims were anticipated by four prior art references.9 Rothschild appealed to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, arguing that a construction that includes indirect access “encompasses situations in which the remote server assembly is not remotely accessing the auxiliary site addresses” and that “‘to allow access’ [to auxiliary site data] is not the same as ‘accessing.‘”10 The BPAI agreed, adopting Rothschild‘s narrower construction and finding the claims patentable over the prior art.11
This suit followed. Sony now argues that because the ‘534 claims were narrowed at Rothschild‘s urging to include only direct access by the remote server, and Sony‘s accused products only include indirect access through the local processor to the consoles, Rothschild‘s complaint against Sony violates
II.
This court has jurisdiction under
III.
At issue is whether a party in a patent infringement case can move for
First, the case law makes clear that
Second,
Sony asserts that the claim language covers only the “situation where a remote server directly accesses the auxiliary site addresses in order to initiate utilization of the data stored
Since the language of claim 1 requires that the encoded auxiliary site addresses are structured to be accessed by the remote server, we find, according to that claim, that the addresses are directly accessed by the remote server. The scope of claim 1 does not cover encoded auxiliary site addresses that are structured to be accessed by a local processor or any other intermediary, ultimately resulting in the addresses being indirectly accessed by the remote server.26
Sony thus interprets direct access to mean the absence of any intermediary steps—i.e. a process which starts at the remote server and goes straight to the auxiliary site addresses without passing go or collecting $200. For Sony, the dispositive inquiry is about the path of the process.
But Rothschild‘s construction does not put any stock in this path. Rothschild asserts that “[d]irect access of auxiliary site data by the remote server includes the situation where the remote server is directing the local processor to access the auxiliary site data. Indeed, there is no other way the remote server could access the auxiliary data.”27 In other words, for Rothschild, the dispositive inquiry is about which device is directing the access regardless of path.
To better understand the distinction, imagine that whatever device is directing the access is the “brain” of the operation. Under Rothschild‘s construction, as long as the remote server is the brain, whether the path passes through no other devices or through one thousand other devices is irrelevant. It is on this basis that Rothschild successfully distinguished the Mages, Reisman, Uranaka and Fidelibus prior art references from the ‘534 patent at the Board.28 Taking Mages as an example, the remote server sends a key to the local processor, but no actions are ever directed by the remote server.29 It is only by initiation of the local processor—or perhaps a user operating
Like Sony‘s, Rothschild‘s construction is supported by the OCV.32 In particular, the Board explicitly referenced the importance of the remote server as the brain:
[B]roadly interpreting claim 1 to include auxiliary site addresses that are structured to be accessed by a local processor would not be consistent with Patentee‘s Specification. The Specification discloses that “the remotely accessible, auxiliary site addresses are specifically encoded so as to restrict access by the local processor assembly [] unless the access is directed by the remote server assembly [].”33
From this, it is reasonable to conclude that access by the local processor is permitted, so long as the brain is in the remote server, substantiating Rothschild‘s construction.
In sum, while Sony has represented that its products include only access by the local processor, Rothschild has a reasonable claim that Sony nevertheless infringes the ‘534 patent because access is directed by the remote server assembly. With such a wide yet reasonable divide in constructions between the parties—each drawing support from the OCV—the court cannot yet say that this case is frivolous. A Markman hearing and full claim construction is required.34
Dated: April 2, 2015
PAUL S. GREWAL
United States Magistrate Judge
Notes
1. Patent [‘534] discloses that the “interchangeable computer readable medium [] is preferable structured such that only the remote server assembly [] can access the auxiliary site data at the auxiliary site addresses.” Col. 13, ll. 59-62.
2. “[T]he remotely accessible, auxiliary site addresses are specifically encoded so as to restrict access by the local processor assembly [] unless the access is directed by the remote server assembly [].” Col. 14, ll. 34-37.
