`571.272.7822
`
`Paper No. 9
`Filed: September 14, 2015
`
`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`
`
`STARBUCKS CORPORATION,
`Petitioner,
`v.
`AMERANTH, INC.,
`Patent Owner.
`
`Case CBM2015-00091
`Patent 6,384,850 B1
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Before MEREDITH C. PETRAVICK, RICHARD E. RICE, and
`STACEY G. WHITE, Administrative Patent Judges.
`
`WHITE, Administrative Patent Judge.
`
`
`DECISION
`Institution of Covered Business Method Patent Review
`37 C.F.R. § 42.208
`
`
`
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`Apple Inc, Exhibit 1078
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`I. INTRODUCTION
`
`A. Background
`Starbucks Corporation (“Petitioner”) filed a Petition (Paper 1, “Pet.”)
`requesting covered business method patent review of claims 12–16
`(“challenged claims”) of U.S. Patent No. 6,384,850 B1 (Ex. 1001, “the ’850
`patent”) pursuant to § 18 of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (“AIA”).
`Ameranth, Inc. (“Patent Owner”) filed a Preliminary Response. Paper 7
`(“Prelim. Resp.”). We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 324, which
`provides that a covered business method patent review may not be instituted
`“unless . . . it is more likely than not that at least 1 of the claims challenged
`in the petition is unpatentable.”
`Petitioner contends, with the support of its Declarant, Dr. Abdelsalam
`Helal (Ex. 1003), that the challenged claims are unpatentable under
`35 U.S.C. §§ 101, 112, and 103 on the following grounds (Pet. 28–79):
`Reference(s)
`Basis Claims Challenged
`N/A
`§ 101
`12–16
` § 1121
`N/A
`12–16
`Brandt2 and NetHopper3
`§ 103
`12–16
`Brandt, Demers,4 and Alonso5
`§ 103
`12–16
`
`1 Petitioner asserts eight grounds based upon § 112. Grounds 1–3 focus on
`issues of enablement, indefiniteness, and lack of written description
`concerning the claim term “hospitality applications and data.” Grounds 4–6
`focus on issues of enablement, indefiniteness, and lack of written description
`concerning the claim term “communications control module.” Ground 7
`asserts lack of enablement of “software libraries.” Ground 8 focuses
`enablement of the claims as a whole. Pet. 28–44.
`2 Japanese Unexamined App. No. H10-247183 (published Sept. 14, 1998)
`(Ex. 1004) (certified translation, Ex. 1005,“Brandt”).
`3 NetHopper Version 3.2 User’s Manual, 1–24 (1997) (Ex. 1006,
`“NetHopper”).
`
`2
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`CBM2015-00091
`Patent 6,384,850 B1
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`Our factual findings and conclusions at this stage of the proceeding
`are based on the evidentiary record developed thus far (prior to Patent
`Owner’s Response). This is not a final decision as to the patentability of any
`of the claims for which a covered business method patent review is
`instituted. Our final decision will be based on the record as fully developed
`during trial. Upon consideration of the Petition and Preliminary Response,
`we determine that Petitioner has demonstrated that it is more likely than not
`that the challenged claims are unpatentable on the grounds discussed below.
`Accordingly, we institute a covered business method patent review of claims
`12–16 of the ’850 patent.
`
`B. Related Matters
`The parties indicate that the ’850 patent is the subject of the following
`district court case: Ameranth, Inc. v. Starbucks Corp., No. 3-13-cv-01072
`(S.D. Cal.) filed May 6, 2013. Pet. 2 (citing Ex. 1045). Petitioner notes that
`Patent Owner has asserted the ’850 patent against thirty-five other
`defendants in a number of civil actions that have been consolidated into
`Ameranth, Inc. v. Pizza Hut, No. 3-11-cv-01810 (S.D. Cal.). Id. at 3.
`In a previous proceeding before the Board, claims 1–11 of the ’850
`patent were held to be unpatentable. Agilysys, Inc. v. Ameranth, Inc.,
`Case CBM2014-00015 (PTAB Mar. 20, 2015) (Paper 36). Petitioner also
`filed a petition for covered business method patent review of a related
`
`
`4 Alan Demers, et al., The Bayou Architecture: Support for Data Sharing
`Among Mobile Users, Mobile Computing Systems & Applications, 1995.
`Proceedings., Workshop on. IEEE, 1–7, 1995. (Ex. 1009, “Demers”).
`5 Gustavo Alonso et al., Exotica/FMDC: A Workflow Management System
`for Mobile and Disconnected Clients, Databases & Mobile Computing, 28–
`45, 1996 (Ex. 1012, “Alonso”).
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`3
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`patent, U.S. Patent No. 6,871,325 B1. Starbucks Corp. v. Ameranth, Inc.,
`Case CBM2015-00099. Patent Owner identifies eleven covered business
`method patent reviews (both pending and completed) that it states are related
`to this Petition. Paper 5 (Notice of Related Matters). The previous and
`pending related petitions are summarized in the table below.
`
`U.S. Patent No.
`6,384,850 B1
`
`6,871,325 B1
`
`6,982,733 B1
`8,146,077 B1
`
`
`
`Previous CBM Reviews Pending CBM Reviews
`CBM2014-00015
`CBM2015-00080
`CBM2015-00096
`CBM2015-00082
`CBM2015-00097
`CBM2015-00099
`
`CBM2015-00081
`CBM2015-00095
`
`CBM2014-00016
`
`CBM2014-00013
`CBM2014-00014
`
`C. The ‘850 Patent
`The ’850 patent, titled “Information Management and Synchronous
`Communications System with Menu Generation” issued May 7, 2002 based
`on Application No. 09/400,413 filed September 21, 1999. Ex. 1001, at [21],
`[22], [45], [54]. The challenged claims are directed to an information
`management and synchronous communications system. Id. at 16:1–47. This
`system “results in a dramatic reduction in the amount of time, and hence
`cost, to generate and maintain computerized menus for, e.g., restaurants and
`other related applications that utilize non-PC-standard graphical formats,
`display sizes or applications.” Id. at 3:26–30.
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`The system includes a central database, multiple handheld devices,
`and a web server. Id. at 3:59–63. It also includes an application
`programming interface (“API”) that enables third parties, such as point-of-
`sale companies, affinity program companies, and internet content providers,
`to integrate fully with the computerized hospitality applications. Id. at 2:11–
`16; 3:64–67; 11:15–19. The system has a communications control module
`to “provide[] a single point of entry for all hospitality applications, e.g.,
`reservations, frequent customer ticketing, wait lists, etc.[,] to communicate
`with one another wirelessly and over the Web.” Id. at 4:5–8. This
`communications control module is a layer that sits on top of any
`communication protocol and acts as an interface between hospitality
`applications and the communication protocol. Id. at 4:8–11; 11:24–30.
`Claim 12 of the ’850 patent is illustrative of the claims at issue and
`read as follows:
`12. An information management and synchronous
`communications system for use with wireless handheld
`computing devices and the internet comprising:
`a. a central database containing hospitality applications and
`data,
`b. at least one wireless handheld computing device on which
`hospitality applications and data are stored,
`c. at least one Web server on which hospitality applications and
`data are stored,
`d. at least one Web page on which hospitality applications and
`data are stored,
`e. an application program interface, and
`f. a communications control module,
`wherein applications and data are synchronized between the
`central data base, at least one wireless handheld computing
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`device, at least one Web server and at least one Web page;
`wherein the application program interface enables intergration
`of outside applications with the hospitality applications and
`wherein the communications control module is an interface
`between the hospitality applications and any other
`communication protocol.
`II. ANALYSIS
`A. Grounds for Standing
`Section 18 of the America Invents Act created a transitional program,
`limited to persons or their privies that have been sued or charged with
`infringement of a “covered business method patent,” which does not include
`patents for “technological inventions.” AIA §§ 18(a)(1)(B), 18(d)(1), Pub.
`L. No. 112-29, 125 Stat. 284, 329–331 (2011); see 37 C.F.R. § 42.302.
`Regarding the first requirement, Petitioner contends that it has been
`sued for infringement of the ’850 patent in Ameranth, Inc. v. Starbucks
`Corp., No. 3-13-cv-01072 (S.D. Cal.). Pet. 2, 5. Petitioner also asserts that
`it is not barred or estopped from seeking covered business method patent
`review of the ’850 patent. Id. at 5.
`
`1. Covered Business Method
`We must determine whether the ’850 patent claims a covered business
`method, which is “a method or corresponding apparatus for performing data
`processing or other operations used in the practice, administration, or
`management of a financial product or service.” AIA § 18(d)(1); see 37
`C.F.R. § 42.301(a). A patent need have only one claim directed to a covered
`business method to be eligible for review. See Transitional Program for
`Covered Business Method Patents—Definitions of Covered Business
`Method Patent and Technological Invention; Final Rule, 77 Fed. Reg.
`48,734, 48,736 (Aug. 14, 2012) (“CBM Rules”) (Comment 8). The
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`“legislative history explains that the definition of covered business method
`patent was drafted to encompass patents ‘claiming activities that are
`financial in nature, incidental to a financial activity or complementary to a
`financial activity.’” See id. at 48,734, 48,735 (quoting 157 Cong. Rec.
`S5432 (daily ed. Sept. 8, 2011) (statement of Sen. Schumer)). Patents
`directed to technological inventions, however, are excluded from covered
`business method patent review. AIA § 18(d)(1); see 37 C.F.R. § 42.301(a).
`
`2. Financial Product or Service
`Petitioner contends that claim 12 establishes that the ’850 patent is
`eligible for covered business method patent review. Pet. 6. According to
`Petitioner, “[c]laim 12 is directed to ‘an information management and
`synchronous communications system . . .’ for computerizing hospitality
`activities such as ordering food for purchase.” Id. at 10 (citing Ex. 1001,
`1:33–37, 2:33–36); see also id. at 10 n. 1 (citing Ex. 1002, 17:4–26 (claim
`11 of a continuation of the ’850 patent wherein claim 11 is identical to claim
`12 of the ’850 patent except for the addition of language specifying that the
`claimed synchronized data relates to orders)). We note that the specification
`describes using the system in the context of online or mobile ordering and
`paying in restaurant and other hospitality contexts. See Ex. 1001, 4:5–8
`(listing hospitality applications such as “reservations, frequent customer
`ticketing, wait lists, etc.”), 1:20–24, 1:61, 3:43–52, Fig. 7. These activities
`are at least incidental to financial activity. Thus, on this record, we are
`persuaded that at least claim 12 of the ’850 patent meets the financial-in-
`nature requirement of § 18(d)(1) of the AIA.
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`3. Technological Invention
`Petitioner also must show that the ’850 patent is not directed to a
`“technological invention.” To determine whether a patent is for a
`technological invention, we consider “whether the claimed subject matter as
`a whole recites a technological feature that is novel and unobvious over the
`prior art; and solves a technical problem using a technical solution.”
`37 C.F.R. § 42.301(b). The following claim drafting techniques, for
`example, typically do not render a patent a “technological invention”:
`(a) Mere recitation of known technologies, such as
`computer hardware, communication or computer networks,
`software, memory, computer-readable storage medium,
`scanners, display devices or databases, or specialized machines,
`such as an ATM or point of sale device.
`
`
`(b) Reciting the use of known prior art technology to
`accomplish a process or method, even if that process or method
`is novel and non-obvious.
`
`
`(c) Combining prior art structures to achieve the normal,
`expected, or predictable result of that combination.
`
`
`Office Patent Trial Practice Guide, 77 Fed. Reg. 48,756, 48,763–64 (Aug.
`14, 2012).
`Petitioner argues that claim 12 recites a list of well-known computer
`technologies such as a central database, wireless handheld devices, a web
`server, a web page, an API, and a communications control module and does
`not include a novel or unobvious technological feature. Pet. 12. The
`specification describes the recited hardware as “typical” and indicates that
`all of the recited devices were known. See Ex. 1001, 1:1–32; 5:37–55;
`10:34–42; 10:63–11:3, 12:1–61. As to the software elements of claim 12,
`the specification states that “[t]he software applications for performing the
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`functions falling within the described invention can be written in any
`commonly used computer language. The discrete programming steps are
`commonly known and thus programming details are not necessary to a full
`description of the invention.” Ex. 1001, 11:43–48. Patent Owner argues
`that Petitioner overlooks the claim’s “synchronization functionality,
`application and data storage on a handheld device[, and] ‘integration’ with
`‘outside applications.’” Prelim. Resp. 12–13. Patent Owner asserts that
`without a full analysis from Petitioner of these elements Petitioner failed to
`meet its burden to analyze the claim as a whole. Id.
`We find Petitioner’s argument to be persuasive. As described in the
`specification, the software used to perform the synchronization, storage, and
`integration features discussed by the Patent Owner may be written in any
`software language and is composed of steps that are “commonly known”
`such that no discussion of the details of the software was necessary to
`describe the invention. Ex. 1001, 11:43–48. On this record, we are
`persuaded that the claimed subject matter does not recite a technological
`invention, but instead, the recited elements constitute “[m]ere recitation of
`known technologies” that, as noted in our Trial Practice Guide, do not give
`rise to a technological invention. 77 Fed. Reg. at 48,756.
`For these reasons, we conclude that claim 12 does not “recite[] a
`technological feature that is novel and unobvious over the prior art,” and
`therefore is not directed to a “technological invention.” In view of the
`foregoing, we conclude that the ’850 patent is a covered business method
`patent under AIA § 18(d)(1) and is eligible for review using the transitional
`covered business method patent review program.
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`B. Claim Construction
`As a step in our analysis for determining whether to institute a trial,
`we construe the claims. Consistent with the statute and the legislative
`history of the AIA, we analyze patentability using the broadest reasonable
`construction of the claims in light of the specification. 37 C.F.R.
`§ 42.300(b); In re Cuozzo Speed Techs., LLC, 793 F.3d 1268, 1278, 1279
`(Fed. Cir. 2015) (In considering the broadest reasonable interpretation
`standard for post-grant review proceedings, the Federal Circuit determined
`that “Congress implicitly approved the broadest reasonable interpretation
`standard in enacting the AIA” and “the standard was properly adopted by
`PTO regulation.”).
`Petitioner proposes no specific constructions and only states that the
`terms “communications control module” and “hospitality applications”
`should be given their ordinary meaning—without stating explicitly what that
`meaning should be. Pet. 24. Patent Owner discusses twelve terms in its
`Preliminary Response. Prelim. Resp. 28–36. For purposes of this decision,
`we determine that only the claim terms discussed below require express
`construction. See Vivid Techs., Inc. v. Am. Sci. & Eng’g, Inc., 200 F.3d 795,
`803 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (“[O]nly those terms need be construed that are in
`controversy, and only to the extent necessary to resolve the controversy.”).
`
`1. Web Page
`Patent Owner notes that in a previous case involving the same patent
`we determined the broadest reasonable construction of this term to be “a
`document, with associated files for graphics, scripts, and other resources,
`accessible over the internet and viewable in a web browser.” Prelim. Resp.
`29–30 (quoting Agilysys, Inc. v. Ameranth, Inc., Case CBM2014-00015, slip
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`op. at 8 (PTAB Mar. 26, 2014) (Paper 20)). Patent Owner proposes that that
`construction should be adopted in this case. Id. As in the cited case, here
`we also are persuaded that the ordinary and customary meaning of “web
`page” is consistent with Patent Owner’s proposed construction.
`Accordingly, on this record, we construe “web page” as “a document, with
`associated files for graphics, scripts, and other resources, accessible over the
`internet and viewable in a web browser.”
`
`2. Hospitality Applications
`Patent Owner argues that a previous Board decision, regarding a
`related patent, implicitly construed this term to mean “applications used to
`perform services or tasks in the hospitality industry.” Prelim. Resp. 32–33
`(citing Agilysys, Inc. v. Ameranth, Inc., Case CBM2014-00014, slip op. at
`16–17 (PTAB Mar. 26, 2014) (Paper 19)). Patent Owner argues that one of
`ordinary skill in the art would have understood “hospitality” to exclude
`travel and transportation activities and in particular a car rental application
`would not be within the scope of the claimed “hospitality applications.”
`Prelim. Resp. 33.
`Petitioner implicitly deals with this issue as part of its discussion of
`Brandt. Pet. 48–49. Petitioner asserts that “[t]he car rental applications
`described in Brandt are hospitality applications.” Id. at 49. In support of its
`position it cites a hospitality textbook. Paul R. Dittmer, Dimensions of the
`Hospitality Industry, Ex. 1035. This 1997 textbook includes a section titled
`“A Definition of Hospitality.” Id. at 5–6. Here, the authors of the text
`discuss a “traditional view” of hospitality that “refers to the act of providing
`food, beverages, or lodging to travelers.” Id. The authors then discuss a
`broader view of hospitality that includes “services primarily to travelers in a
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`broad sense of the term. By contrast, other service businesses ordinarily
`deal with customers who are local residents rather than travelers.” Id. at 6.
`The textbook notes that the definition of hospitality “is really quite broad.”
`Id. at 7; see also id. at 404 (listing car rental agencies as a business providing
`service to travelers). On this record, we are persuaded that the ordinary and
`customary meaning of hospitality is broad enough to encompass car rental
`activities.
`Further, we are persuaded that the specification does not manifest a
`clear intention on behalf of the patentee to narrow the meaning of this term.
`The specification provides several generic examples of hospitality
`applications. Ex. 1001, 4:6–7 (“hospitality applications, e.g., reservations,
`frequent customer ticketing, wait lists, etc.”). These generic applications
`could be of use in a wide variety of hospitality businesses, including travel
`and tourist related businesses. See Ex. 1003 ¶¶ 75–76 (discussing
`computing technology in the hospitality industry including reservation
`applications used by travel businesses). We are not persuaded that the
`specification limits the term in a manner that would exclude travel and
`tourism applications such as a car rental application. On this record, we are
`persuaded that the broadest reasonable construction of “hospitality
`applications” is “applications used to perform services or tasks in the
`hospitality industry.” Our construction of hospitality includes businesses,
`such as car rental agencies, that provide services to travelers.
`
`C. Asserted Ground Based on 35 U.S.C. § 101
`Petitioner argues that claims 12–16 are unpatentable under 35 U.S.C.
`§ 101, because “(1) they are directed to abstract hospitality activities such as
`ordering food and making reservations, and (2) they merely require generic
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`computer implementation.” Pet. 69. Patent Owner contends that this
`argument has already been presented and rejected in Agilysys, Inc. v.
`Ameranth, Inc., Case CBM2014-00015 (PTAB Mar. 26, 2014) (Paper 20)
`and should be rejected here for the same reasons. Prelim. Resp. 76. Upon
`review of Petitioner’s analysis and supporting evidence, we have determined
`that on this record Petitioner has not demonstrated that it is more likely than
`not that claims 12–16 are directed to patent-ineligible subject matter.
`Patent eligible subject matter is defined in § 101 of the Patent Act,
`which recites:
`Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process,
`machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new
`and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor,
`subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.
`
`There are, however, three limited, judicially created exceptions to the broad
`categories of patent-eligible subject matter in § 101: laws of nature; natural
`phenomena; and abstract ideas. Mayo Collaborative Servs. v. Prometheus
`Labs., Inc., 132 S. Ct. 1289, 1293 (2012).
`While an abstract idea by itself is not patentable, a practical
`application of an abstract idea may be deserving of patent protection. Id. at
`1293–94; Bilski v. Kappos, 130 S. Ct. 3218, 3230 (2010); Diamond v. Diehr,
`450 U.S. 175, 187 (1981). To be patent-eligible, a claim cannot state simply
`the abstract idea and add the words “apply it.” Mayo, 132 S. Ct. at 1294.
`The claim must incorporate enough meaningful limitations to ensure that it
`claims more than just an abstract idea and is not merely a “drafting effort
`designed to monopolize the [abstract idea] itself.” See id. at 1297.
`In Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank International, 134 S. Ct. 2347, 2355
`(2014), the Supreme Court referred to the Mayo framework, “for
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`distinguishing patents that claim laws of nature, natural phenomena, and
`abstract ideas from those that claim patent-eligible applications of those
`concepts.” First, “we determine whether the claims at issue are directed to
`one of those patent-ineligible concepts.” Id. “If so, we then ask, ‘[w]hat
`else is there in the claims before us?’” Id. (quoting Mayo, 132 S. Ct. at
`1297). Second, we consider 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. Id. Step
`two of the analysis may be described as a search 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. Id. (citing Mayo, 132 S. Ct. at 1294).
`Petitioner contends that the claims “are directed to fundamental and
`abstract activities in the hospitality industry such as ordering food and
`making reservations.” Pet. 69. The challenged claims are system claims,
`however, that in itself is not determinative of whether a claim is directed to
`patentable subject matter. The Federal Circuit has indicated that “a machine,
`system, medium, or the like may in some cases be equivalent to an abstract
`mental process for [the] purposes of patent ineligibility.” Bancorp Servs.
`L.L.C. v. Sun Life Assur. Co. of Canada (U.S.), 687 F.3d 1266, 1277 (Fed.
`Cir. 2012).
`Independent claim 12 recites, in relevant part, a system comprising a
`central database, at least one wireless handheld computing device, at least
`one web server, at least one web page, an API, and a communications
`control module. Ex. 1001, 16:1–15. The claim also includes limitations
`regarding the interaction between these elements. Id. at 16:1–23. For
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`example, hospitality applications and data are synchronized between the
`above recited claim elements and in addition, the claimed API enables
`integration of outside applications with hospitality applications. Id. Claims
`13–16 depend from claim 12 and add further limitations to the system of
`claim 12. For example, claim 13, in relevant part, further recites that the
`communications control module provides a single point of entry for all
`hospitality applications.
`We are not persuaded by Petitioner’s argument. The claims include
`a hospitality application, but the claims as a whole are directed to an
`information management and synchronous computing system which is
`composed of concrete, tangible elements arranged to achieve data
`synchronization in line with the stated objects of the claimed invention.
`We do not view these claims as reciting merely the abstract ideas of
`ordering food and making reservations, but rather as a particular practical
`application of the idea of application and data synchronization. Thus, we
`conclude that Petitioner has not demonstrated that it is more likely than
`not that claims 12–16 are unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 101 as directed
`to non-statutory subject matter.
`
`D. Asserted Grounds Based on “hospitality applications and data.”
`Petitioner argues that claims 12–16 are unpatentable under 35 U.S.C.
`§ 112 due to lack of enablement, indefiniteness, and lack of written
`description support for “hospitality applications and data.” Pet. 29–36.
`
`1. Asserted Lack of Enablement
`In order for a claim to be enabled, the specification must disclose
`adequately to one of ordinary skill in the art how to make the claimed
`invention without undue experimentation. Genentech, Inc. v. Novo Nordisk,
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`A/S, 108 F.3d 1361, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 1997). Petitioner argues that the
`challenged claims are not enabled because no system is described in which
`hospitality applications and data are stored in the four recited locations, (1) a
`central database, (2) at least one wireless handheld computing device, (3) at
`least one web server, and (4) at least one web page. Pet. 29. Petitioner also
`asserts that the specification is vague and abstract as to what it means for
`applications and data to be synchronized between these locations. Id. at 30.
`We are not persuaded by that the specification fails to enable the
`disputed limitation. For example, the specification provides an example of
`synchronization and storage between these locations.
`The single point of entry works to keep all wireless handheld
`devices and linked Web sites in synch with the backoffice
`server (central database) so that different components are in
`equilibrium at any given time and an overall consistency is
`achieved. For example, a reservation made online is
`automatically communicated to the backoffice server which
`then synchronizes with all the wireless handheld devices
`wirelessly. Similarly, changes made on any of the wireless
`handheld devices will be reflected instantaneously on the
`backoffice server and the other handheld devices.
`
`Ex. 1001, 11:32–42; see also id. at 2:28–32 (“Similarly, changes made on
`any of the wireless handheld devices would be reflected instantaneously on
`the backoffice server, Web pages and the other handheld devices.”).
`Petitioner also argues that the claims are not enabled because the
`“specification fails to teach how hospitality applications can be stored in a
`database.” Pet. 30. Patent Owner responds by stating that it is well-known
`in the art to be able to store software code and not just raw data in a
`database. Prelim. Resp. 40. We are not persuaded that one of skill in the art
`would have to undergo undue experimentation in order to save an executable
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`file in a database. Petitioner has not explained sufficiently why it would be
`beyond the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art at the relevant time
`to store an application file in a database as opposed to storing raw data.
`Petitioner’s Declarant testified that “it is not typical to store applications
`themselves in a database.” Ex. 1003 ¶ 94. Describing an activity as atypical
`is not evidence that an activity is something that one of skill in the art would
`not have understood how to do. Thus, we are not persuaded by Petitioner’s
`arguments on this point.
`Finally, Petitioner asserts that “[t]he notion of storing applications on
`a web page is also ambiguous. Web pages can be part of an application but
`web pages do not typically store applications on them.” Pet. 30 (emphasis
`added). Here again, arguing that something is atypical is not evidence that
`the activity would require undue experimentation. Patent Owner argues that
`storing an application on a web page was well-known by one of ordinary
`skill in the art. “Similarly, it is well-known that software code (again,
`applications) and data are temporarily stored in dynamic web pages when
`the page is generated; there is no requirement in the art (or in the patent
`specification) that a web page continue to exist permanently after it is
`generated.” Prelim. Resp. 40. We find Patent Owner’s argument to be
`persuasive. Petitioner has not shown sufficiently that one of ordinary skill in
`the art would have to undergo undue experimentation in order to store an
`application on a web page. Thus, we are not persuaded that the challenged
`claims should be held unpatentable due to lack of enablement of the term
`“hospitality applications and data.”
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`2. Asserted Indefiniteness
`Petitioner asserts that the term “hospitality applications and data”
`renders the challenged claims indefinite because the term, as used in the
`claims, does not specify the relationship between the hospitality applications
`and data in the four locations recited in the claim and the term also lacks
`sufficient antecedent basis. Pet. 30–31. The Federal Circuit stated “that a
`claim could be indefinite if a term does not have proper antecedent basis
`where such basis is not otherwise present by implication or the meaning is
`not reasonably ascertainable.” Halliburton Energy Servs., Inc. v. M-I LLC,
`514 F.3d 1244, 1249 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (citing Energizer Holdings, Inc. v. Int'l
`Trade Comm’n, 435 F.3d 1366, 1370–71 (Fed. Cir. 2006)). Petitioner,
`however, has not shown sufficiently that one of ordinary skill in the art
`would not have been able to ascertain the meaning of this term.
`Claim 12 recites “a central database containing hospitality
`applications and data.” Ex. 1001, 16:4–5. The claim includes a wireless
`handheld computing device, web server, and web page and for each of these
`elements the claim recites “on which hospitality applications and data are
`stored.” Id. at 16:6–12. Finally, claim 12 recites that the “applications and
`data are synchronized” between the above listed elements; the API “enables
`integration of outside applications with the hospitality applications;” and that
`“the communications control module is an interface between the hospitality
`applications and any other communications protocol.” Id. at 16:15–22.
`Patent Owner asserts that “[a] central purpose of the claimed
`invention, as any POSA would understand, is to ‘synchronize’ said
`applications and data so that they thus are the same.” Prelim. Resp. 41
`(citing Ex. 1001, 3:59–63). In light of the requirement that the recited
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`applications and data be synchronized we are persuaded that one of ordinary
`skill in the art would have understood that the recited applications and data
`are the same in each location. Petitioner contends that
`[u]nder this interpretation, Claims 12[–]16 fail to particularly
`point out and distinctly claim the subject matter related to the
`four separately recited ‘hospitality applications and data’ at the
`four locations, e.g., whether the four separately recited
`‘hospitality applications and data’ at the four locations are
`different components of