In a victory for aerospace company SpaceX,
the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB)
issued
a decision on August 27
th canceling 13 claims in a rocket sea-landing
patent owned by competitor Blue Origin, a space venture backed by Amazon’s Jeff
Bezos.
The patent at issue, U.S. Patent No. 8,678,321 B2 (the “’321
patent”), describes a method of vertically landing a rocket booster on a
floating platform after launch. SpaceX’s recent attempts to vertically land
their Falcon 9 rocket booster on a floating, ocean-based platform have been
widely publicized. The company cites the successful landing of a booster as a
breakthrough for space travel— the ability of aerospace companies to reuse
undamaged, safely landed boosters would significantly lower the cost of
launches.
SpaceX filed a
petition
for inter partes review (“IPR”) challenging
the ’321 patent in August of 2014, which was prompted by the patent's granting in
March of 2014. In its petition, the company stated that the “rocket science”
described in the ’321 patent was “old-hat”, and was well known and widely
understood by the scientific community long before the patent’s 2009 priority
filing date. They also stated that the reusable launch vehicle techniques
described in the patent were known by those skilled in the art as far back as
the late 1990’s.
SpaceX challenged 13 of the 15 claims, citing numerous references
that, they argued, described elements of the claims. Accordingly, the company argued the references
anticipated and/or rendered the claims obvious in light of the prior art. The references included published technical papers and patents that date back ten
years or more before the filing date of the ‘321 patent.
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