Maxon, LLC v. Funai Corporation, Inc.
Filing
42
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order written by the Honorable Gary Feinerman on 5/23/2017.Mailed notice.(jlj, )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
MAXON, LLC,
Plaintiff,
vs.
FUNAI CORPORATION, INC.,
Defendant.
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16 C 7685
Judge Gary Feinerman
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Maxon, LLC brought this suit against Funai Corporation, Inc., alleging infringement of
four patents teaching electronic means of increasing user control over subscription entertainment
content. Doc. 1. This suit has been coordinated for pretrial proceedings with four others brought
by Maxon alleging infringement of the same patents. Doc. 13; see Maxon, LLC v. LG
Electronics U.S.A., Inc., 16 C 6840 (N.D. Ill. filed June 29, 2016); Maxon, LLC v On Corp US,
Inc., 16 C 6841 (N.D. Ill. filed June 29, 2016); Maxon, LLC v. Panasonic Corp. of N. Am., 16 C
6843 (N.D. Ill. filed June 29, 2016); Maxon, LLC v. Vizio, Inc., 16 C 6846 (N.D. Ill. filed June
29, 2016). Funai has moved to dismiss this suit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)
on the ground that the patents are invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 101, as interpreted by Alice Corp.
Pty. Ltd. v. CLS Bank International, 134 S. Ct. 2347 (2014). Doc. 21. The motion is granted.
Background
In resolving a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court assumes the truth of the complaint’s wellpleaded factual allegations, though not its legal conclusions. See Zahn v. N. Am. Power & Gas,
LLC, 815 F.3d 1082, 1087 (7th Cir. 2016). The court must also consider “documents attached to
the complaint, documents that are critical to the complaint and referred to in it, and information
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that is subject to proper judicial notice,” along with additional facts set forth in Maxon’s brief
opposing dismissal, so long as those additional facts “are consistent with the pleadings.” Phillips
v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 714 F.3d 1017, 1020 (7th Cir. 2013). The facts are set forth as
favorably to Maxon as those materials allow. See Pierce v. Zoetis, 818 F.3d 274, 277 (7th Cir.
2016).
Maxon is the exclusive owner of the four asserted patents: U.S. Patents 8,989,160 (‘160),
7,489,671 (‘671), 7,486,649 (‘649), and 7,171,194 (‘194). Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 7, 10, 13, 16. The
complaint identifies a representative claim for each patent. Id. at ¶¶ 9, 12, 15, 18. Maxon
alleges that the claims are directed to technology supporting “Smart TVs,” meaning televisions
with the capacity to connect to the internet and interact with streaming services such as Netflix.
Ibid. These are the four representative claims:
‘160 Claim 8: An audio-video device capable of sharing services with a
plurality of other devices within a personal network, the audio-video device
comprising:
a computer-readable medium having storage for a first address
corresponding to the audio-video device, a second address corresponding to
the personal network, and a third address corresponding to a service provider
network;
input/output logic configured to receive from a user a desired change to a
service capable of being provisioned to the audio-video device from at least
one service available generally to the personal network;
a processor in communication with the computer-readable medium and the
input/output logic, the processor programmed to prepare an inbound
signaling word comprising at least the first address and payload data
representing the desired change to the service capable of being provisioned
to the audio-video device from the personal network; and
a transceiver providing the inbound signaling word to the service provider
network where the service provider network comprises logic to process the
inbound signaling word including modifying stored information in a
subscriber database to effect the desired change to the service capable of
being provisioned to the audio-video device from the personal network, the
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transceiver further receiving an outbound signaling word comprising the first
address corresponding to the audio-video device and data indicating the
desired change to the personal network, the outbound signaling word
responsive to the desired change to the service capable of being provisioned
to the audio-video device from the personal network.
‘671 Claim 6: A communications device capable of sharing a network number
with other communications devices in a communications network, the
communications device comprising:
a first computer-readable medium having stored thereon a first unique
identifier that uniquely identifies the communications device within the
communications network identified by the network number, where the first
unique identifier that uniquely identifies the communications device is not a
telephone number;
a management logic that manages a database containing routing information
for an incoming communication directed at the communications network via
the network number to be routed to a particular communications device
within the communications network based on communications service
content of the incoming communication, where the routing information
relates the communications device to one or more communication services
available to the communications network from a communications services
provider by associating the first unique identifier that uniquely identifies the
communications device to the one or more communication services; and
a processor that controls the management logic to update the database to
reflect the addition of the communications device to the communications
network, to disassociate in the database the one or more communications
services from a second communications device if the one or more
communication services are determined to be connected in the database to
the second communications device, and to connect in the database the one or
more communication services to the communications device by relating in
the database the unique identifier that uniquely identifies the
communications device and data representing the one or more
communications services.
‘649 Claim 6: A communications device that shares a personal network
number with other communications devices within a personal network, the
communications device comprising:
a first computer-readable medium having stored thereon a first unique
identifier that uniquely identifies the communications device within the
personal network identified by the personal network number, where a second
communications device within the personal network comprises a second
computer-readable medium having stored thereon a second unique identifier
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that uniquely identifies the second communications device within the
personal network identified by the personal network number;
a management logic that manages a database containing routing information
for an incoming communication directed at the personal network via the
personal network number to be routed to a particular communications device
within the personal network based on communications service content of the
incoming communication, where the routing information relates the
communications device to one or more communication services available to
the personal network from a communications services provider by
associating the first unique identifier chat uniquely identifies the
communications device to the one or more communication services available
to the personal network from the communications services provider; and
a processor that controls the management logic to remove the
communications device from the personal network including modifying the
database to unrelate the one or more communication services available to the
personal network from the communications device and relate the one or
more communication services available to the personal network to the
second communications device by changing the database to disassociate the
first unique identifier that uniquely identifies the communications device and
the one or more communication services available to the personal network
and associate the second unique identifier that uniquely identifies the second
communications device with the one or more communication services
available to the personal network.
‘194 Claim 8: A device that is capable of sharing a common network address
with other devices, the device comprising:
a user interface configured to enable a user to select a service available to
but not associated with the device; and
logic in communication with the user interface configured to format a
signaling word responsive to the user’s selection, wherein the signaling word
comprises a unique identifier that uniquely identifies the device among
others sharing the common network address, and payload data configured to
associate the service to the device via the unique identifier.
Doc. 1-1 at 17 ¶ 8; Doc. 1-2 at 16 ¶ 6; Doc. 1-3 at 17 ¶ 6; Doc. 1-4 at 17 ¶ 8 (emphases added).
The claims can be described as containing the following elements: ‘160 Claim 8 includes (1) a
computer-readable medium, (2) input/output logic, (3) a processor, and (4) a transceiver; ‘671
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Claim 6 and ‘649 Claim 6 contain (1) a computer-readable medium, (2) management logic, and
(3) a processor; and ‘194 Claim 8 contains a (1) a user interface and (2) communications logic.
Maxon alleges that Funai sells televisions that directly infringe on these claims. Doc. 1 at
¶¶ 9, 12, 15, 18. It seeks reasonable royalties and interest. Id. at 10-11.
Discussion
As noted, Funai contends that the Maxon patents are invalid under Alice. The Federal
Circuit has made clear that an analysis of patent eligibility may focus on particular representative
claims. See Content Extraction and Transmission LLC v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 776 F.3d
1343, 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (“The district court … correctly determined that addressing each
claim of the asserted patents was unnecessary … because all the claims are substantially similar
and linked to the same abstract idea.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). The only claims cited
in Maxon’s complaint are the four claims set forth above and discussed below, and Funai argues
in its opening brief that those claims are representative. Doc. 21-1 at 7-8. Maxon does not
respond to this contention, thus forfeiting the point. See Affinity Labs of Tx., LLC v. DIRECTV,
LLC, 838 F.3d 1253, 1256 n.1 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“[T]he parties agreed at the hearing before the
magistrate judge that claim 1 was representative. In light of that concession and Affinity’s
failure to present any meaningful argument for the distinctive significance of any claim
limitations other than those included in claim 1, we treat claim 1 as representative of all the
claims.”) (internal quotation marks omitted); G&S Holdings LLC v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 697 F.3d
534, 538 (7th Cir. 2012) (“We have repeatedly held that a party waives an argument by failing to
make it before the district court. That is true whether it is an affirmative argument in support of
a motion to dismiss or an argument establishing that dismissal is inappropriate.”) (citations
omitted).
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Under 35 U.S.C. § 101, “[l]aws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are not
patentable.” Ass’n for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc., 133 S. Ct. 2107, 2116
(2013). Funai argues that Maxon’s patents are directed to an abstract idea without an underlying
inventive concept, and thus fail to claim patentable subject matter. Doc. 21-1 at 8-20. Under
Alice and Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc., 566 U.S. 66 (2012),
the patent eligibility inquiry has two steps. First, the court “determine[s] whether the claims at
issue are directed to [an abstract idea].” Alice, 134 S. Ct. at 2355. If so, then the court considers
the elements of each claim “both individually and as an ordered combination to determine
whether the additional elements transform the nature of the claim into a patent-eligible
application.” Ibid. In the second step, the court searches for “an inventive concept—i.e., an
element or combination of elements that is sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice amounts
to significantly more than a patent upon the ineligible concept itself.” Ibid. (internal quotation
marks and brackets omitted).
I.
Alice Step One
As noted, Alice step one requires the court to determine whether the claims are directed to
an abstract concept. Because “[t]he Supreme Court has not established a definitive rule to
determine what constitutes an ‘abstract idea’ sufficient to satisfy the first step of the Mayo/Alice
inquiry,” the appropriate analysis “compare[s] claims at issue to those claims already found to be
directed to an abstract idea in previous cases.” Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft Corp., 822 F.3d 1327,
1334 (Fed. Cir. 2016). There is no need to conduct that analysis here because Maxon concedes
that “the patent claims are directed to the abstract idea of reversing a trend of centralized service
management, allowing the consumer to control through decentralized management the services
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that the consumer chooses to enjoy across her various devices.” Doc. 30 at 9. The court
accordingly will proceed to Alice step two.
II.
Alice Step Two
Alice step two requires the court to “determine whether the claims do significantly more
than simply describe the abstract method.” Affinity Labs, 838 F.3d at 1262 (brackets omitted).
The court must “look to see whether there are any additional features in the claims that constitute
an inventive concept, thereby rendering the claims eligible for patenting even if they are directed
to an abstract idea,” and those additional features “must be more than well-understood, routine,
conventional activity.” Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). As noted, the court considers
the elements of the contested claims both “individually and as an ordered combination” to
determine if an inventive concept lies within. Alice, 134 S. Ct. at 2355 (internal quotation marks
omitted). Maxon contends that the representative claims, although directed at an abstract
concept, nonetheless combine to create an inventive concept in that they teach how to achieve the
result of decentralized service management. Doc. 30 at 10-14.
A.
The Individual Elements of the Representative Claims
The court will begin with ‘160 Claim 8, the elements of which are illustrative. The claim
has four elements: a “computer-readable medium”; “logic”; “a processor”; and a “transceiver.”
Each element is subject to limitations; for example, the claim is not for any computer-readable
medium, but for one with storage for addresses of an audio-video device, a personal network,
and a service provider network. Similarly, the logic must be capable of receiving a desired
change in service from a user (e.g., “add Netflix to this TV”). The processor must be able to
communicate with the logic and the computer-readable medium to prepare a signal representing
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the desired change in service. And, finally, the transceiver must send and receive signals to and
from the service provider.
The “computer-readable medium” element is not, by itself, inventive. The ‘160 patent’s
specification defines “computer-readable medium” as “any non-transitory medium that
participates directly or indirectly in providing signals, instructions and/or data to one or more
processors for execution.” Doc. 1-1 at 11. As examples, the specification offers media such as
disks, magnetic tape, “any other optical medium,” punch cards, “any other physical medium with
patterns of holes,” and “any other medium from which a computer, a processor or other
electronic device can read.” Id. at 11-12. The only specific attribute of the medium is storage
for “addresses” that correspond to devices and networks. The specification defines the term
“address” as “includ[ing] but … not limited to one or more network accessible addresses, device
identifiers, telephone numbers, IP addresses, url and ftp locations, e-mail addresses, names, a
distribution list including one or more addresses, network drive locations, postal addresses,
account numbers or other types of addresses that can identify a desired destination or device.”
Id. at 11. Given the breadth of these definitions, the computer-readable medium cannot be
described as inventive; in plain English, it could be described as “something that stores data that
a computer can read.” As Alice its progeny make clear, components used only for “basic
[computer] functions” are not inventive, and information storage falls into this category. Alice,
134 S. Ct. at 2359; see also Content Extraction, 776 F.3d at 1345, 1348 (noting that the concept
of “storing information” is not inventive).
Nor is the “logic” element inventive. The element is an “input/output logic” that can
“receive from a user a desired change to a service capable of being provisioned to the audiovideo device from at least one service available generally to the personal network.” Doc. 1-1 at
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17 ¶ 8. The specification defines “Logic” as including, but not limited to, “hardware, firmware,
software and/or combinations of each to perform a function(s) or an action(s), and/or to cause a
function or action from another component.” Doc. 1-1 at 12. Thus, the logic element merely
describes (again, rephrased in plain English) “some means of receiving a desired change in
available services.” It does not describe how this result is accomplished, only that it is
accomplished. That is not inventive. See Internet Patents Corp. v. Active Network, Inc., 790
F.3d 1343, 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“[The claim at issue] contains no restriction on how the result
is accomplished. The mechanism for maintaining the state is not described.”).
The “processor” element must communicate with the first two elements—the computerreadable medium and the logic—in order to prepare a signal to be sent to the service provider
indicating the desired change of service. Doc. 1-1 at 17 ¶ 8. That is not inventive. Because the
specification does not define the processor, the court is left to conclude that it is a generic
processor. The functions described in the processor element are likewise generic; it simply
processes data to reach a result. The use of conventional processors to carry out conventional
processing tasks is not inventive. See Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Symantec Corp., 838 F.3d
1307, 1320 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (describing a patent claim that featured generic processing
equipment as non-inventive); In re TLI Commc’ns LLC Patent Litig., 823 F.3d 607, 614 (Fed.
Cir. 2016) (holding that computer components carrying out “well-understood, routine, activities
previously known to the industry” are not patentable) (brackets omitted).
The final claim element, the “transceiver,” is not inventive, either. As with the processor,
the specification does not define the transceiver, so the court assumes that it is generic. The
claim describes the transceiver as both providing an inbound signal to the service provider
network indicating a desired change of service, and receiving an outbound signal responsive to
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the initial request. As with the other three elements, this, by itself, is not inventive; rather, it is
merely a generic component performing its generic role, which in this case is sending and
receiving signals. See Mortg. Grader, Inc. v. First Choice Loan Servs., 811 F.3d 1314, 1325
(Fed. Cir. 2016) (“[S]ending information over [a] network is not even arguably inventive.”)
(internal quotation marks omitted); buySAFE, Inc. v. Google, Inc., 765 F.3d 1350, 1355 (Fed.
Cir. 2014) (same).
‘194 Claim 8 differs slightly from ‘160 Claim 8; rather than claiming three or four
elements (medium, logic, processor, transceiver), it instead claims only a “user interface” and
“logic.” The “user interface” is not defined, so again the court assumes that Maxon intends a
generic user interface, with the only limitation being that it is “configured to enable a user to
select a service available to but not associated with the device.” Doc. 1-4 at 17 ¶ 8. That merely
takes a generic piece of technology and describes a result well within its normal functions, which
is not inventive. See Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Bank (USA), 792 F.3d 1363,
1370 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“[An] interactive interface limitation is a generic computer element.”).
And the claim’s “logic” element has the same flaws as the logic element of ‘160 Claim 8—it is
defined in purely functional terms, and thus describes nothing more than achieving a result,
without any limitation as to how the result is achieved.
In sum, the individual elements of ‘160 Claim 8 and ‘194 Claim 8 are not, by themselves,
inventive. The same holds true for the individual elements of ‘671 Claim 6 and ‘649 Claim 6;
although the claim language of each differs slightly from that of the ‘160 patent, the differences
are immaterial and the relevant definitions are the same. Compare Doc. 1-2 at 10, 16 ¶ 6 (‘671
patent) and Doc. 1-3 at 11, 17 ¶ 6 (‘649 patent) with Doc. 1-1 at 11-12, 17 ¶ 8 (‘160 patent). The
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core problem remains that each element of the representative claims describes generic
technology functioning in a generic manner, which is not inventive.
B.
The Ordered Combination of Elements
Because none of the individual elements is inventive, the inventive concept must be
found in an ordered combination of these elements, if it is to be found at all. Maxon contends
that the ordered combination of elements is inventive because the claims, while directed to an
abstract concept and using generic technology, nonetheless teach how to achieve the concept
using that technology. Doc. 30 at 10-14. Maxon is incorrect.
As shown above, each claim element represents a currently available generic computer
technology, used in the way in which it is commonly used. The computer-readable medium is
essentially memory, operating as it typically does. The logic is defined purely in functional
terms, making the element little more than “something that can do what it is asked to do.” The
processor processes, while the transceiver sends and receives signals.
‘160 Claim 8 contains all four elements, in that order, which purport to amount to “[a]n
audio-video device capable of sharing services with a plurality of other devices within a personal
network.” Doc. 1-1 at 17 ¶ 8. Translating the claim language into plain English, the invention
consists of some kind of memory capable of identifying the device and the networks to which it
is connected, the ability to take instructions from a user concerning the device’s capabilities, a
processor that can take those instructions and use them in connection with the stored
identification data, and the ability to send and receive signals based on the processor’s activities.
That describes only the desired result—increased user control over services available to him or
her—without describing any inventive way that the result is reached. The only method of
reaching the result the patent teaches is, in essence, use of generic computer components for their
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standard purposes to achieve the result. Nothing about the order of the elements, or the way they
are combined, suggests inventiveness. See Virginia Innovation Sciences Inc. v. Amazon.com,
Inc., ___ F. Supp. 3d ___, 2017 WL 64147, *12-13 (E.D. Va. Jan. 5, 2017) (describing as noninventive a claim that did no more than describe a result to be achieved using generic elements
operating in their typical manner).
The same holds for ‘671 Claim 6 and ‘649 Claim 6. Those claims consist of a device
comprising a computer-readable medium, management logic that directs a database containing
routing information, and a processor controlling the logic to modify the database to add or
remove devices from a network. Again, this amounts to a description of generic computer
components reaching a functional result to achieve an abstract concept, without any suggestion
that the interaction of the components is anything but conventional. The same is true of ‘194
Claim 8. The user interface and logic are generic components, and are combined in a very
simple, standard way: the user interface allows a user to give instructions to a device, and the
logic interprets those instructions. This is basic computer organization and functionality, which
is not inventive. See Intellectual Ventures, 792 F.3d at 1370 (holding that a description of
generic computing components with an instruction to do nothing more than “apply [the abstract
concept] on a computer” does not confer patent eligibility).
This result comports with that reached in Virginia Innovation Sciences Inc. v.
Amazon.com, Inc., supra, which held that claims directed toward compression technology for
converting video images on a mobile device screen to those appropriate for television are patent
ineligible. 2017 WL 64147 at *12-13. One of the claims at issue in that case was:
a means for processing the video signal to produce a converted video signal for
use by the alternative display terminal, wherein processing by the means for
processing the video signal includes converting the video signal from a
compression format appropriate for the mobile terminal to a display format for
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the alternative display terminal that is different from the compression format,
such that the converted video signal produced by the means for processing the
video signal comprises a display format and a power level appropriate for
driving the alternative display terminal.
Id. at *12 (brackets omitted). The court explained that “[t]he claim does not specify the power
level or the conversion method, aside from the fact that the signal is compressed. … [T]he
purportedly novel [invention] … describes an end[] that could be performed in any number of
ways by a variety of devices.” Id. at *13. The same is true here; the representative claims
essentially describe a functional result, without any suggestion as to any inventive technological
means of achieving that result. See Internet Patents Corp., 790 F.3d at 1348 (“[The claim]
contains no restriction on how the result is accomplished. The mechanism for [accomplishing
the result] is not described, although this is stated to be the essential innovation.”).
Maxon contends that three recent decisions support a finding of patent eligibility here:
Bascom Global Internet Services v. AT&T Mobility LLC, 827 F.3d 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2016); Enfish,
822 F.3d at 1327; and DDR Holdings, LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P., 773 F.3d 1245 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
In each case, the Federal Circuit reversed a district court’s decision that a particular patent was
directed to patent ineligible subject matter. All three cases are distinguishable.
DDR Holdings addressed a patent directed toward a particular e-commerce system in
which a website visitor clicking on an embedded advertisement is directed to a different website,
with the “look and feel” of the first website, where she could purchase the advertised product.
773 F.3d at 1249-50. Noting that the patent’s claims did not “merely recite the performance of
some business practice known from the pre-Internet world along with the requirement to perform
it on the internet,” but instead claimed solutions “necessarily rooted in computer technology in
order to overcome a problem specifically arising in the realm of computer networks,” id. at 1257,
the Federal Circuit held that the claims were directed to something more than an abstract
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concept. Id. at 1259. As the court explained, by “incorporat[ing] elements from multiple
sources in order to solve a problem faced by websites on the Internet,” the claims “amount[ed] to
an inventive concept …, rendering the claims patent-eligible.” Ibid. DDR Holdings thus
addressed a situation where the concept itself was not abstract and where, in any event, the
specific combination of claim elements resulted in an inventive solution to a problem specific to
the internet. By contrast, for Maxon’s patents, the concept is concededly abstract, and the
problem (how to improve consumer control over services) is not unique to computers and the
internet. See Affinity Labs, 838 F.3d at 1261-62 (distinguishing DDR Holdings on the ground
that the claims in DDR Holdings were directed to a “novel” challenge rather than fundamental or
longstanding principles and practices, and were directed to the solution of a technological
problem improving computer/network functionality).
Enfish concerned a patent covering a “self-referential database,” which taught a means of
configuring data in a computerized table to improve searchability and organization. 822 F.3d at
1333, 1337. The district court held that the claims were directed toward “the [abstract] concept
of organizing information using tabular formats.” Id. at 1337. The Federal Circuit reversed,
holding that this view of the claims did not consider their specificity and how they operated to
improve computer functionality in practice. Id. at 1338. Reasoning that “the self-referential
table recited in the claims on appeal is a specific type of data structure designed to improve the
way a computer stores and retrieves data in memory,” the court held that “the claims are directed
to a specific implementation of a solution to a problem in the software arts … [and] are not
directed to an abstract idea.” Id. at 1339. Like DDR Holdings, then, Enfish upheld the validity
of the challenged patent at Alice step one, not step two.
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The claims in Bascom were directed to an abstract concept, filtering internet content, so
the Federal Circuit had to reach Alice step two. 827 F.3d at 1349. The court held that although
the limitations within the patent were “well-known generic computer components,” they were
combined in such a way as to be inventive. Id. at 1349-50. Specifically, while the filtering tool
itself was not inventive, its location within the system described was inventive because it
permitted a user to obtain “both the benefits of a filter on a local computer and the benefits of a
filter on the ISP server.” Id. at 1350.
The patent in Bascom described both a technical problem (a lack of customizability in
internet filtering arising from where filtering technology was installed) and a technical solution
to that problem (locating the filtering software at a point in the system that would allow greater
customizability). Ibid. By contrast, the claims in Maxon’s patents attempt to solve not a
technical problem, but rather the broader conceptual problem of increasing user control over
various services. And the proffered means of solving that problem is not the kind of technical
solution taught by the patent in Bascom—using known computer components in an innovative
way—but rather simply a suggestion that a user of services should be able to communicate with
service providers using technological, not conventional, means.
Alice and its progeny stand for the proposition that a patent teaches patentable subject
matter only if it offers a specific technical solution to a specific technical problem, not if it offers
a sweeping recitation purporting to patent the concept of solving an abstract problem through
generic technical means. See Amdocs (Israel) Ltd. v. Openet Telecom, Inc., 841 F.3d 1288, 1299
(Fed. Cir. 2016) (describing Bascom as distinguishing “ineligible abstract-idea-based solutions
implemented with generic technical component in a conventional way” from “eligible
technology-based solution[s] and software-based invention[s] that improve the performance of
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the computer system itself”) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted); Synopsis, Inc. v.
Mentor Graphics Corp., 839 F.3d 1138, 1152 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“Unlike the claims in DDR
Holdings and Bascom, the Asserted Claims do not introduce a technical advance or
improvement.”); Virginia Innovation Sciences Inc., 2017 WL 64147, *15 (noting that in Bascom,
“each one of the steps in the ‘ordered combination’ was specific, and their organization created a
narrow solution to a computer-centric problem”). Despite their extensive verbiage, when
stripped to their core, Maxon’s patents fall on the wrong side of the line. They are directed to the
abstract concept of increasing user control over services. They do not solve a specific technical
problem in this field, but instead offer only the notion of using generic computer components for
their generic purposes in order to achieve a result, without describing any inventive way that the
result is achieved. This fails Alice step two, meaning that the patents claim patent-ineligible
subject matter and are invalid under § 101. It necessarily follows that Maxon’s infringement
claims must be dismissed.
Conclusion
Funai’s motion to dismiss is granted. Because the patents are directed at subject matter
that is not patent eligible as a matter of law, leave to amend would be futile, so the dismissal is
with prejudice. See Snowcast Solutions, LLC v. Endurance Specialty Holdings, Ltd., 2016 WL
1161299, *6 (N.D. Ill. March 23, 2016).
May 23, 2017
United States District Judge
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