January 24, 2012

No Credit

Dealertrack sued Huber and Finance Express, along with other auto dealers, for infringing its network-based credit application processing patents: 6,587,841 & 7,181,427. A biased Judge Guilford in Central California inexcusably construed "network," which had been broadly disclosed, as "not including the internet." Defendants drove away with non-infringement. Other inanity ensued, only some of which was corrected by the CAFC on appeal.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 7:43 PM | Claim Construction

January 22, 2012

Power Balance

The tripartite balance of power between the President, Congress, and Supreme Court is only partly constitutionally enshrined. The courts were cut out of a clear share. The Supreme Court stole its power base fair and square in Marbury v. Madison (1803), when it unilaterally declared to have the authority to review acts of Congress and determine whether they are unconstitutional and therefore void. The bluff never got called. But that owes to the Supreme Court being very selective in punching its weight against the other branches. In Golan v. Holder (2012), SCOTUS 6-2 refused to call Congress on enacting copyright provisions retroactively. The new patent act has a slice of that same cheese, but any challenge is likely only to add to its ripening. The U.S. police state does as it pleases, the branches of government holding hands, velvet gloves over mailed fists.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 7:13 PM | Case Law

January 19, 2012

A Kodak Moment

By failing to keep up with the times, Eastman Kodak drove itself into the ground, declaring bankruptcy. By stark contrast, competitor FujiFilm has done quite well for itself, including making wonderful digital cameras. Kodak's death rattle turned into a whine: "Kodak Chief Financial Officer Antoinette McCorvey said Apple, RIM and HTC Corp. took advantage of Kodak's weakened financial condition to drag out litigation over alleged violations of the company's intellectual property." Take a picture of this - a decent patent portfolio is no salvation from clueless management, with which the world is brimming, in every sector of commerce and government. The exceptions prove the rule. Kodak was no exception. Those same companies that held Kodak off patent licensing at arm's length will be the ones ponying up to buy Kodak's patent portfolio on the cheap in a bankruptcy auction, to use to bludgeon competitors like a money pinata, just as Kodak tried to.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:16 PM | Patents In Business

January 15, 2012

Blood Sample

New Jersey based Abbot sued competitor Epocal for infringing blood test patents 6,845,327 and 6,896,778, which it scurrilously claimed to own, though Epocal is the assignee. Epocal was founded by Dr. Imants Lauks. Lauks had done contractual work for Abbott's predecessors. The district court rightly found the contracts that might have given assignment to Abbott expired, as did the majority of a CAFC panel (CAFC 2011-1024). In dissent, Judge Bryson displayed his muddle-headed misunderstanding of contract law, or more simply his corrupt bias for Abbot, a U.S. corporation, up against a Canadian competitor, by arguing perpetual assignment.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:34 PM | Case Law

January 11, 2012

Bleeding

Streck sued Research & Diagnostic Systems (R&D) for infringing hematology control patents 6,200,500 and 6,221,668. R&D counterclaimed a declaratory judgment action of noninfringement and invalidity. The two competitors were innovating in stride, but Streck had the edge, at least with the favor of the courts, which is really all that matters.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:02 PM | § 112

January 9, 2012

Frozen Out

Celsis In Vitro sued Life Technologies Corp. (LTC) for infringing 7,604,929, which claims methods for freezing hepatocytes, "an art well-known for its unpredictability." LTC got a preliminary injunction, which was appealed, arguing non-infringement and obviousness (CAFC 2010-1547). The bias was strong against LTC. LTC's infringement expert "really didn't offer anything in the way of opinions to address the proper interpretation of the patent's claims." Its claim construction arguments were "hokum." Its cited prior art was entirely off point ("not a single one of the astonishingly large body of literature was devoted to the [relevant] subject [matter]"). LTC's obviousness expert, having been found making much of "a wisp of a term that is buried in [an] article," was "unpersuasive." LTC's obviousness arguments were "nothing more than second guessing and hindsight." LTC is frozen out.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 8:42 PM | Injunction

January 4, 2012

Senselessy Sassy

MarcTec sued Johnson & Johnson for infringing 7,128,753 & 7,217,290, which claim surgical implants. MarcTec sought a claim construction of "plain and ordinary meaning." That sassy remark cost $4.7 million. The plain meaning blithely ignored the specification and prosecution history of a narrowed lynchpin term ("bonded"). Plaintiff expert witness testimony was declared "junk science." After claim construction and a summary judgment finding of noninfringment, the judge found the case exceptional under 35 U.S.C. § 285, finding the assertion "baseless" and "frivolous," in "bad faith," and awarding J&J all expenses and attorneys fees. The CAFC affirmed (10-1285). The lawyers who devised and implemented the strategy went unmentioned.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:30 PM | Case Law

January 1, 2012

Hostage

The Wall Street Journal reports that mobile phone patent cases before the ITC "hold the economy hostage," because the ITC's sole power is "to ban imports of foreign products that infringe on U.S. patents." The ITC was granted this power in the notorious (for its economical insensibility) 1930 Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, the passage of which rightly sent the stock market into a nose dive. More generally, in this age of rapid technological advancement, patents, regardless of technology, impose an unjustified tax on consumers and smaller companies, demolishing competition and snuffing start-up prospects. The ITC has a built-in bias against foreign-based corporations. The corrupt courts, including (especially) the CAFC & Supreme Court, find ways to let the largest corporations prevail (in all cases except where the corruption would be most egregiously apparent, in which case the toll to the infringing corporation is lowered). This costly crooked game needs to be abolished.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 5:19 PM | Patents In Business

December 25, 2011

The Art of the Patent

A patent disclosure often describes the drawings, which are required "where necessary for the understanding of the subject matter sought to be patented." 35 U.S.C. 113. Kevin Price celebrates the art form in The Art of the Patent. The book is a nicely done picture book, and well thought out, though slight. The text is juvenille, written for junior high school level, both in content and gee-whiz attitude. The opportunity to explain the craft of patent illustration is foregone. This would have been a much better book with more maturity, and truer appreciation of skill by exposition, rather than mere illustration. That might have made the book a reference worth returning to, rather than something consumed in a sitting or two, and then left on the shelf. That said, it is the perfect book for the lobby coffee table of a patent prosecution firm. Perhaps that was the target audience all along.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 11:43 AM | Prosecution

December 22, 2011

Assembly

Consider an apparatus claim to an "assembly," with structures "bonded" to each other at surfaces (4,884,631). One would construe the claim to be of a single thing. But the courts are disingenuous, exercising bias by nuanced misconstruction. In this case, that the claimed assembly "must be separate parts," when the claim clearly states otherwise. The asserting plaintiff: a mere patent holder. The defendants: household name corporations Sony & Lenovo, neither American, but both large corporations facing a court-despised species: "patent troll." Now there's an excuse for injustice.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 9:33 PM | Claim Construction

December 18, 2011

Terminal Disclaimer

The patent office's failure to deliver renders the post office an amateur shambles, leaving the PTO pros at incompetence. Then there are the courts, which use case law as a subterfuge, rather than the creation of a body of consistent case law, as the legal profession naturally expects. In understated outrage, Hal Wegner considers a recent case of chemical obviousness before the patent board (BPAI).

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:06 PM | Prosecution

December 12, 2011

Stabilising Coat

The corrupt plutocratic governance in this country saves its skin from mass revolt by long-con shading: maintaining the appearance of playing it jake, while keeping the dice loaded for the money players when it matters. The courts in patent cases do this through nuanced rulings, with the assistance of double-speak case law. When a dumb judge steps over the line of indiscretion, it is checked by slicker fixers from above. Case in point:  New Jersey Judge William ("Little Willie") Martini, who likes his martini dry, but made a ruling that was all wet.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:28 PM | Case Law

December 8, 2011

Patent Debris

Construction Equipment Company (CEC) sued Powerscreen for infringing 5,234,564, which claims a construction site debris sifter. "The district court ruled that the '564 patent was valid, enforceable, and willfully infringed by Powerscreen, and entered final judgment... The Federal Circuit affirmed the district court's judgment. Constr. Equip. Co. v. Powerscreen Int'l Distrib. Ltd., 243 F.3d 559 (Fed. Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 531 U.S. 1148 (2001)." That should have been the end of it, but it was only the beginning. The USPTO and CAFC demonstrate an abject disregard for the law and the constitution, as the anti-patent juggernaught rolls on, leaving only debris from intellectual property.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 9:13 PM | Prior Art

December 2, 2011

Beforehand

Teva sued AstraZeneca for infringing RE39,502, claiming drug treatment for lazy meat eaters (dyslipidemia). But AstraZenaca had manufactured the patented drug first. Summany judgment of anticipation was the defendant's remedy. Teva complained that it deserved the patent because AstraZenaca hadn't appreciated what it had done. No need for that, the CAFC reminds.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:11 PM | Prior Art

November 29, 2011

As The Wheel Turns

Docket Navigator, which is a great patent service, reports: "The court granted defendants' motion for a new damages trial following remand even though defendants had not objected to the use of the 25% rule at trial. "Given the widespread acceptance of the 25 percent rule, it would not have been unreasonable for [defendant] to have failed to raise the issue before the Court. . . . [T]he Federal Circuit had implicitly upheld the use of the 25 percent rule prior to [Uniloc USA, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 632 F.3d 1292 (Fed. Cir. 2011)], and Defendant had no notice that an objection to its use would have been fruitful in light of the Federal Circuit's previous treatment of the rule. The law does not speak in absolutes and recognizes that a litigant might not be aware of the necessity of making an objection at trial where the great weight of the case law suggests that an objection is not worth making." Spine Solutions, Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc., et. al., 2-07-cv-02175 (TNWD November 23, 2011, Order) (McCalla, J.)."

Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:09 PM | Damages

November 23, 2011

Experience

While the old saw of "practice makes perfect" has teeth, it's a mistake to equate experience with quality. But some old farts will have none of that sharp discrimination. Hal Wegner joins a lament over the green young bucks: "A knowledgeable senior partner in a southwestern United States firm commented: 'It is a tragedy that we license practitioners with no real practice or knowledge beyond what can be learned in a two-day course - particularly because most clients have no way to distinguish between those that have experience and those that don't.'"

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:42 PM | Prosecution

Costs

Ricoh sued Synopsys for infringing 4,922,432. Synopsys got off the hook seven years later on a summary judgment motion for noninfringement. The wheels of injustice in this country turn slowly. Costs go to the prevailing party in civil litigation. Synopsis filed a bill of costs for $1.375 million. Ricoh objected, all the way to the CAFC, over document copying and translation costs, along with transcription and video costs. The appeals court precedentially ruled: pay up. (CAFC 2011-1199).

Posted by Patent Hawk at 11:20 AM | Case Law

November 21, 2011

Kentucky Bluegrass

The Federal bench is well stocked with judges too stupid to rule prudentially, instead indulging their bias. Case in point: Stephen Byrne v. Wood Herron & Evans (WHE). Grass trimmer inventor Byrne sued Black & Decker for infringement in Eastern Kentucky, getting mowed down in summary judgment on non-infringement. The district judge showed himself a rube in thrall to the corporation by using a plain dictionary for claim construction rather than follow Phillips v. AWH. Byrne then sued his firm, WHE, for not getting him the patent coverage he deserved. The judge then showed blatant bias to the attorneys.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:10 PM | Litigation

November 17, 2011

Lube Job

Money oils the machinary of politics, and so it should come as no surprise that hundreds of millions of dollars were spent lobbying the corrupt politicians on Capitol Hill to pass the "America Invents Act," the greatest invention of which is the claim that there was any improvement to existing law. There wasn't. The law still allows Americans to patent inventions first created overseas, while disadvantaging small entity inventors. The First Street Research Group has done a remarkable job documenting the swirling cesspool more diplomatically known as U.S. democracy in action, as it pertains to the patent act. Check it out.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:33 PM | The Patent System

November 15, 2011

The Troll Toll

Corporate apologist PC World patronizes its techno-peon readership while appreciating those that butter its bread - its advertisers. "Patents are a touchy subject lately thanks to all the litigation going on over software patents. This is particularly true in the mobile arena, where companies including Apple and Microsoft have been especially enthusiastic in their use of patents as leverage over their competitors. Of course, it's one thing for a company with products to protect to begin asserting patents against others; it's quite another, however, for companies to buy and assert patents without producing any goods of their own." PC World considers intellectual property rights an alienable right - copasetic for corporations, insufferable for individuals. PC World's punch line is positively delusional, as well as statistical fiction: "'Patent troll' is the name typically given to firms in this latter category, and - according to a new study - they're depriving technology businesses of more than $80 billion per year, to the detriment of small inventors and society as a whole." Because mega-corporations are inherently sociopaths incarnate, they won't license or buy patents from small inventors, instead preferring to legally crush like them bugs after stealing their ideas if an inventor tries to enforce a patent, so inventors must sell their inventions to "trolls" to realize any return.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:48 PM | The Patent System