Parker Vision on Functional Claim Limitations

WHDA Blogging Team | September 28, 2018

ParkerVision, Inc. v. Qualcomm Incorporated

September 13, 2018

Before O’Malley, Reyna and Taranto.  Precedential Opinion by O’Malley, joined by Reyna and Taranto.

Summary: 

Qualcomm filed three inter partes review proceedings challenging the validity of claims of ParkerVision’s U.S. Patent No. 6,091,940 (the ‘940 patent) based on obviousness.  ParkerVision appealed the PTAB’s decision holding apparatus claims of the ‘940 patent as being obvious, and Qualcomm cross-appealed the PTAB’s decision holding method claims of the ‘940 patent as being not obvious.   On the one hand, the CAFC affirmed that the apparatus  claims were invalid, denying ParkerVision’s argument that Qualcomm had not identified conditions in which the prior art device would operate to perform a function of generating “a plurality of harmonics” within the apparatus claim, explaining that only the capability to perform the function is required for an apparatus claim.  On the other hand, the CAFC affirmed that the method claims were not invalid, denying Qualcomm’s cross-appeal for failing to provide any argument or evidence as to why a person of ordinary skill would have selected operating conditions that would cause the prior art to perform the function of creating “a plurality of harmonics”  as claimed.


Read More/続きを読む

Whose Burden Is It?

WHDA Blogging Team | September 19, 2018

DuPont, Archer Daniels v. Synvina

September 17, 2018

Before Lourie, O’Malley and Chen.  Opinion by Lourie, joined by O’Malley and Chen.

Summary:

DuPont and ADM filed an inter partes review petition against Synvina’s ‘921 patent that claims a method for making 2,5-furan dicarboxylic acid (FDCA), which is useful as bio-mass.  The Board ultimately held that DuPont had failed to prove that the ‘921 patent was obvious over the prior art.  On appeal, the CAFC reversed, finding that the Board had incorrectly failed to shift the burden of production, from DuPont to the patentee Synvina and had misapplied the standard for finding whether variables are result-effective.


Read More/続きを読む

The public use bar may not be triggered even if the invention is tested publicly prior to the critical date

Sung-Hoon Kim | September 14, 2018

Polara Engineering Inc. v. Campbell Company

July 10, 2018

Before Lourie, Dyk, and Hughes.  Opinion by Lourie.

Summary:

The Federal Circuit affirmed the jury’s finding of experimental use that negates application of the public use bar by Polara because Polara’s activities were necessary to ensure that the invention would work for its intended purpose and Polara’s invention was “a life safety device” that the testing was “imperative.”  The Federal Circuit found that while it is undisputed that Polara did not enter a confidentiality agreement, Polara maintained the secrecy of the invention.  Finally, the Federal Circuit found that Polara was not commercially exploiting its invention during the test periods.


Read More/続きを読む

A claimed rule feature may not be anticipated and/or rendered obvious merely because the rule is satisfied by chance in a reference

WHDA Blogging Team | August 29, 2018

In re Facebook

August 14, 2018

Before Prost, Moore, Stoll.  Opinion by Prost.

Summary

The CAFC reversed and remanded a PTAB decision, which had affirmed an Examiner’s anticipation and obviousness rejection of a patent application for a method of arranging images contiguously in an array.  The CAFC held that anticipation of Applicants’ claimed rule is not established by an example in a cited reference, which just happens to satisfy Applicants’ claimed rule, since said rule is not satisfied all of the time in the cited reference.


Read More/続きを読む

« Previous PageNext Page »

Subscribe | 登録

Archives

Tags

词典 / 辞書 / 사전
  • dictionary
  • dictionary
  • 英語から日本語

Double click on any word on the page or type a word:

Powered by dictionarist.com