In Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, Apple, Google, Yahoo!, Judge Plager criticizes the Supreme Court's caselaw on abstractness, a judicially-created exception to the broad scope of §101 permissive language as to what types of inventions are patentable. This criticism came in the form of a dissent from our court's continued application of this incoherent body of doctrine.“ Pleger lists all the reasons Alice-Mayo “abstractness” test is a failure and all the organizations and prominent individuals critical of it.
Notable quotes from the dissent-in-part:
1. A method of archiving an item in a computer processing system comprising:
presenting the item to a parser;
parsing the item into a plurality of multi-part object structures wherein portions of the structures have searchable information tags associated therewith;
evaluating the object structures in accordance with object structures previously stored in an archive;
presenting an evaluated object structure for manual reconciliation at least where there is a predetermined variance between the object and at least one of a predetermined standard and a user defined rule.
A quick note here on Berkheimer v. HP Inc. 1), which appears to be affecting examination of §101 susceptible patents. Specifically, from this author's personal experience, examiners are increasingly insisting, based on Berkheimer, that the claims include language directed specifically to the purported “improvement” the software invention brings to the computer's functionality.
At issue in Berkheimer was whether [t]he improvements in the specification, to the extent they are captured in the claims, create a factual dispute regarding whether the invention describes a well-understood, routine, and conventional activities.” The court concluded that it “must analyze the asserted claims and determine whether they capture these improvements” (citations omitted).
Although the parties disputed whether the improvements were captured in the claims, the court did not articulate how to resolve this question. With respect to claim 1, the court concluded that “Claim 1 recites a method of archiving including parsing data, analyzing and comparing the data to previously stored data, and presenting the data for reconciliation when there is a variance. It does not include limitations which incorporate eliminating redundancy of stored object structures or effecting a one-to-many change of linked documents within an archive [i.e., the alleged improvements].” So the issue remains: does Berkheimer require explicitly stating in the claim what the improvement is (as some Examiners seem to believe) or simply some features of the invention that enable or bring about the improvement?
Orrick posted an interesting commentary (cached) on a recent Federal Circuit denial for En Banc review in both Aatrix Software Inc. v. Green Shades Software, Inc. and Berkheimer v. HP Inc. The denial is important because it includes both concurring and dissenting opinions that go to the heart of the Alice framework for evaluating subject matter as being non-statutory under §101.
Summarizing points raised in the Orrick article:
On April 19, the Patent Office issued a new memo providing guidance to Examiners making Alice rejections. In summary:
The Bilskiblog by Fendwick & West is reporting on invalidations citing Alice by the Federal Circuit and district courts:
Federal Circuit Decisions |
Patents | Claims | |
---|---|---|---|
Not invalid | 1 | 1 | 27 |
Invalid | 6 | 12 | 344 |
District Circuit Decisions |
Patents | Claims | |
---|---|---|---|
Not invalid | 11 | 20 | 535 |
Invalid | 29 | 56 | 1488 |
At the Patent Office's Technology Center 3600, which covers finance, banking, health care, insurance, incentive programs and couponing, pricing, and business administration, “the allowance and issuance rate . . . has dramatically plummeted from about 47% pre-Alice to about 3.6% post-Alice.”
Writing Bilskiblog, author Robert R. Sachs further found:
“While business method patents (23) constituted the majority of the patents that were invalidated, the types of technologies ranged widely, including 3D computer animation (2), digital image management (7), document management (10), and medical records (2), database architecture (2), and networking (4). This suggests that the courts are aggressively expanding the zone of “abstract ideas” from the fundamental “building blocks” of “human ingenuity” that the Supreme Court has focused on in Alice, to just about any technological field.”
Sachs criticized the courts, led by the Federal Circuit, for ignoring or merely giving lip service preemption analysis, and relying on doctrines, such as the “mental steps” doctrine, which the Supreme Court never specifically endorsed.