Polaris IP, LLC v. Google Inc. et al
Filing
444
MOTION in Limine 6 (joint) by AOL, LLC., America Online, Inc., Google Inc., Yahoo!, Inc.. (Attachments: # 1 Affidavit Declaration of M. Kammerud, # 2 Exhibit A, # 3 Exhibit B, # 4 Text of Proposed Order)(Candido, Amy)
Polaris IP, LLC v. Google Inc. et al
Doc. 444 Att. 2
Dockets.Justia.com
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS MARSHALL DIVISION BRIGHT RESPONSE, L.L.C. v. GOOGLE, INC., ET AL. § § § § § Civil Action No. 2:07-CV-00371-CE
JURY TRIAL DEMANDED
REBUTTAL EXPERT REPORT OF DR. V. THOMAS RHYNE PURSUANT TO RULE 26(a)(2)(B) OF THE FEDERAL RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE (VALIDITY OF THE ASSERTED CLAIMS OF THE '947 PATENT)
3.1
Allen and Claims 26, 28, 30, 31, and 387
3.1.1 Allen Does Not Anticipate Claim 26 50. In order to anticipate claim 26, among other things, Allen would have to disclose the
interpretation of a non-interactive electronic message that is received from a source such as a user's computer. With respect to that requirement, in ¶ 113 of his report Dr. Branting opines that: Allen explicitly discloses automatically answering problems in which the sender does not provide any additional information after the message has been received... 51. A similar statement is found on page 1 of Exhibit 3: Accordingly, if the match quality is high, Allen is able to respond to the user's message without any further interaction from the user. 52. While Allen states the possibility of "automatically answering problems in which the
sender does not provide any additional information after the message has been received," I note that the disclosure of Allen does not anticipate the "non-interactive electronic message" of claim 26 because, as disclosed, the Allen system always provides the capability of having the sender of the message provide additional information after his or her message has been received by that system. Of emphasis here is the requirement that the user "does not provide any additional information" that is found in the Court's construction of the term "non-interactive electronic message," and Allen does not disclose a system in which a user does not make that provision. Rather, while Allen does disclose that some received messages may not require further user intervention, Allen does not disclose any way that such intervention is prevented. See the Allen specification at 9:30-37:8 However, it may occur that cases 105 which are matched 30 all have low match quality 315. The application 601 may collect a set of question-answer pairs 608 from the cases 105 which are
7 8
Dr. Branting does not opine that Allen anticipates claim 33.
On page 5 of Exhibit 3 when discussing Step 26(c), the author of that claim chart stopped the citation at 9:29, thereby omitting the citation regarding the interactive processing of "low" quality messages that is described immediately thereafter as shown above.
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matched. The application 601 may present a set of questions 609 from the question-answer pairs 608 to the customer service representative 602, who would provide a set of answers 610 to the application 601 (typically by asking the customer 604). 53. As the above citation makes clear, Allen does not disclose a system wherein the user
"does not provide any additional information," and there is no way that the Allen system, in operation, can ever assure that all of the received electronic messages are of sufficiently high match quality that no subsequent interaction with the sender is needed to complete processing of those messages. Allen never suggests such a modification, as well. 54. Simply put, the Allen system is designed to operate interactively with a user.9 For
example, the user interface is described as "an interactive terminal" through which the Allen processor may present information or questions to the user. See the Allen patent at 3:23-28. Using that terminal, the Allen system presents a "sequence of questions to the user" and retrieves answers from the user about the problem to be resolved. See the Allen patent at 4:4-10 and 4:5965. In contrast, the '947 patent describes a method for automatically processing non-interactive electronic messages wherein the sender never interacts with that method once the electronic message has been sent off for processing and before the predetermined response corresponding to the interpretation of the electronic message is provided. 55. Next, in ¶ 114 of his report, Dr. Branting opines that: The second purported difference is that "the system is not capable of automatically responding to the sender of an electronic message" because "a representative or the user must interactively interpret the set of cases retrieved from the case based [sic] to obtain a response to the 'problem'" ('947 patent, 2:58-63). The "sender" of the electronic message in Allen is the customer service representative, not the customer, and Allen responds to the customer service representative as indicated above. Thus, the '947 patent's attempt to distinguish Allen due to who "created" the substance of the message in my opinion is without merit. For example, it is possible that the individual submitting emails to the system discloses [sic] by the '947 patent is a secretary or
9
Dr. Branting admits this fact in his ¶ 115 of his report where he opines that "...when none of the matches are strong enough that Allen poses additional questions to the user, i.e.[,] requests additional information after the message has been received." Also see Branting Report at ¶ 121.
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