` Filed: June 27, 2016
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`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`__________________
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`__________________
`IBG LLC; INTERACTIVE BROKERS LLC;
`TRADESTATION GROUP, INC.; TRADESTATION SECURITIES, INC.;
`TRADESTATION TECHNOLOGIES, INC.;
`and IBFX, INC.
`
`Petitioners
`v.
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` TRADING TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL, INC.
`
`Patent Owner
`_________________
`Case CBM2015-00182
`U.S. Patent 6,772,132
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`PATENT OWNER’S RESPONSE
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`I.
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`II.
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`CBM2015-00182
`U.S. Patent 6,772,132
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`
`TABLE OF CONTENTS
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`Overview of Claimed Invention ...................................................................... 1
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`Section 101 ...................................................................................................... 5
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`A.
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`TT’S Claims Are Not Directed to an “Abstract Idea” Under
`Alice Prong One ..................................................................................... 5
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`1.
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`2.
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`3.
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`4.
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`5.
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`Petitioners Ignore and Overgeneralize the Claim
`Elements ...................................................................................... 5
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`TT’s Claims Pass Part I of Alice Because They Improve
`the Functioning of the Computer ................................................ 8
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`TT’s Claims Pass Prong One of Alice Because They Are
`Undoubtedly Not Abstract ........................................................ 10
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`TT’s Claims Pass Part I of Alice Because GUIs Are
`Technology ................................................................................ 12
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`TT’s Claims Pass Part I of Alice Because They Are Not
`Directed to a Fundamental Economic or Longstanding
`Commercial Practice, a Business Method, or a Generic
`GUI ............................................................................................ 13
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`B.
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`C.
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`The Claims Pass Part 2 of Alice Because They Recite an
`Inventive Concept ................................................................................ 17
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`The Claimed Invention Is Patent-Eligible Under §101 Because
`the Claims Do Not Cover Signals ....................................................... 21
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`III. CBM Review ................................................................................................. 22
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`A.
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`The ’132 Patent Does Not Claim “Data Processing” or “Other
`Operation[]” (e.g., a Business Method) .............................................. 23
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`B.
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`The ’132 Patent Falls Under the Technological Exception ................ 24
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`IV. Claim Construction ........................................................................................ 27
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`A.
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`“Order entry region” ............................................................................ 27
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`ii
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`B.
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`U.S. Patent 6,772,132
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`“Selecting a particular area in the order entry region through
`single action of the user input device… to set a plurality of
`additional parameters for the trade order and send the trade
`order to the electronic exchange” ........................................................ 27
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`C.
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`“Working orders in alignment with prices corresponding
`thereto” ................................................................................................ 29
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`D.
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`“Re-Centering Instruction” ................................................................. 29
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`V.
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`Real-World Evidence Proves The Claimed Invention Is Not Obvious ......... 30
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`A.
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`The Claimed Invention Went Against Conventional Wisdom ........... 30
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`B. Overwhelming Secondary Considerations Prove That The
`Invention Is Not Obvious .................................................................... 37
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`1.
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`2.
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`3.
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`4.
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`5.
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`6.
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`7.
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`8.
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`9.
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`Problems with the Conventional GUI Tools Went
`Unrecognized ............................................................................ 38
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`The Invention Provided Unexpected Results............................ 39
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`The Invention Was Received with Initial Skepticism, but
`Ultimately Demanded by Traders ............................................. 41
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`The Invention’s Tremendous Commercial Success ................. 44
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`The Invention Was Widely Copied .......................................... 48
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`The Invention Received Widespread Praise In the
`Industry ..................................................................................... 53
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`The Invention Also Received Widespread Industry
`Acquiescence ............................................................................ 54
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`Others Failed To Make The Invention ...................................... 56
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`Other Evidence Proves Non-Obviousness ................................ 58
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`VI. The Petition Fails to Establish TSE Is Prior Art ........................................... 59
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`A.
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`The Evidence Fails to Prove TSE Was Publicly Accessible .............. 60
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`iii
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`TSE Was Not Distributed to POSAs ........................................ 61
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`There Is No Evidence TSE Was Available to the POSA
`Exercising Reasonable Diligence ............................................. 62
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`1.
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`2.
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`B. Kawashima’s Testimony Is Uncorroborated and Biased, and
`Therefore Legally Insufficient ............................................................ 64
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`1.
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`2.
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`Kawashima’s Testimony Is Uncorroborated ............................ 64
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`Kawashima Is Not Disinterested ............................................... 65
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`VII. The Claims of The ’132 Patent Are Not Rendered By TSE and Belden ...... 66
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`A.
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`TSE and Belden Fail to Disclose or Suggest the Claimed
`“Order Entry Region” and “Selecting… Through single Action” ...... 68
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`B. Dependent Claims ............................................................................... 70
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`1.
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`2.
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`3.
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`4.
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`5.
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`6.
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`Claims 3, 10, and 16 ................................................................. 70
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`Claims 24, 34, and 44 ............................................................... 71
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`Claims 25, 35, and 45 ............................................................... 71
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`Claims 26, 36, and 46 ............................................................... 73
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`Claims 29, 39, and 49 ............................................................... 75
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`Petitioners Failed to Set Forth a Prima Facie Case of
`Obviousness .............................................................................. 77
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`VIII. Due Process Issues and Non-Obviousness Evidence .................................... 78
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`IX. Conclusion ..................................................................................................... 85
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`iv
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`Petitioners fail to establish that U.S. Patent No. 6,772,132 (“the ’132 patent,”
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`Ex.1001) is eligible for covered business method (“CBM”) patent review. The ’132
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`patent is directed to statutory subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. Finally,
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`Petitioners fail to prove that the claims of the ’132 patent are obvious because TSE
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`(Ex.1016) is not prior art, because the cited references do not render obvious all
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`elements of the claims, and because the real-world evidence of secondary
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`considerations demonstrate the nonobviousness of the invention.
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`I.
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`OVERVIEW OF CLAIMED INVENTION
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`The electronic trading industry, both prior to the invention the ’132 patent
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`and for a period thereafter, maintained a widely accepted conventional wisdom
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`regarding the design of a graphical user interface tool (“GUI tool”) for order entry
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`on electronic exchanges. Ex.2169, ¶48. Specifically, conventional GUIs provided
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`the ability to enter and send orders to an electronic exchange using order entry
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`tickets or dynamic order entry screens. Ex.2169, ¶49. Order tickets were known to
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`be accurate but slow. Id. Figure 2 of the ’132 patent (with annotations below)
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`exemplifies another GUI tool where users entered and sent orders by directly
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`interfacing with displayed prices (e.g., using a mouse). Like the overwhelming
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`majority of GUI tools for rapid entry, it was constructed with designated locations
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`for displaying the best bid/ask prices. See Ex.1001; Ex.2169, ¶50.
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`1
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`Best Bid Price is
`Always Displayed
`Here
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`Best Ask Price is
`Always Displayed
`Here
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`While these types of order entry tools were widely used and accepted,
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`Brumfield noticed that the structure, make-up, and functionality of Figure 2-style
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`GUIs caused him a significant problem—the potential to miss his intended price.
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`Ex.2169, ¶¶83-84. Brumfield was uniquely positioned to recognize this problem as
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`his trading focused on particular prices, as opposed to other traders that focused on
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`market prices. Ex.2169, ¶84.
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`As shown below (Time 1), the trader intends to get the price of 111175.
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`However, because of the structure, make-up, and functionality of the GUI tool—
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`namely, the best bid and best ask are located in the same location—the intended
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`price of 111175 unpredictably moves just before the trader clicks on it and he
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`misses his intended price, instead sending an order at the higher price of 111180
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`(Time 2). Id.
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`2
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`3
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`Time 1
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` Time 2
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`The Federal Circuit describes this problem as follows:
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`U.S. Patent 6,772,132
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`Returning to the prior art, these displays had grids for the inside
`market that never changed.… A trader who wished to place an order
`at a particular price would miss that market opportunity if the inside
`market moved as the trader tried to enter an order. In a fast moving
`market, missing an intended price could happen often and have very
`significant economic consequences.
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`Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. eSpeed, Inc., 595 F.3d 1340, 1345-46 (Fed.
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`Cir. 2010).
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`Recognizing problems caused by the construction of the order ticket
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`(accurate but slow) and Figure 2-style (fast but less accurate) GUI tools, Brumfield
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`invented a GUI tool with new structure, make-up and functionality. The invention
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`radically diverged from the conventional GUI tools of the time and turned out to
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`provide significant advantages over the prior art by combining a static display of
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`prices, a dynamic display of bids and asks aligned with the static display, and an
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`order entry region aligned with the static display with areas corresponding to prices
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`of the static display that can be selected via a single action of a user input device to
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`set a plurality of parameters and send an order message to the electronic exchange.
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`See Ex.1001, 2:66-3:20, cl.1; Ex.2169, ¶¶72-73. Compared to dynamic GUI tools
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`where the location of the inside market remains fixed and the values displayed at
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`those locations change with every inside market update, the inventive GUI’s
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`4
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`construction permits the display of the inside market to move relative to the static
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`display of prices when the inside market changes. Ex.2169, ¶¶72-73.
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`The Federal Circuit summarized the invention’s advantages over the pre-
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`existing technology as allowing a trader to “visually follow the market movement”
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`and providing a trader with “confidence in making an offer at the intended price.”
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`eSpeed, 595 F.3d at 1347.
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`II.
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`SECTION 101
`A. TT’S Claims Are Not Directed to an “Abstract Idea” Under Alice
`Prong One
`1.
`Petitioners ignore nearly all of the claim elements in arguing that the claims
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`Petitioners Ignore and Overgeneralize the Claim Elements
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`are directed to an abstract idea. The Federal Circuit has rejected this practice
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`because “describing the claims at such a high level of abstraction and untethered
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`from the language of the claims all but ensures that the exceptions to § 101
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`swallow the rule.” Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft Corp., No. 2015-1244, 2016 WL
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`2756255, at *6 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank Int’l, 134 S. Ct.
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`2347, 2354 (2014) (noting that “we tread carefully in construing this exclusionary
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`principle [of laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas] lest it swallow
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`all of patent law”).
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`Based on this overgeneralization, Petitioners allege the abstract idea is
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`“placing an order based on observed (plotted) market information, as well as
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`5
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`updating market information.” Pet. 15. However, even assuming this is an abstract
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`idea, it is “untethered” from the claim elements because it ignores nearly all of the
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`claim elements, particularly the claimed GUI construction.
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`7
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`Petitioners’ abstract-idea analysis fails because it ignores the claimed
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`invention’s core features. See Enfish, 2016 WL 2756255, at *6 (rejecting practice
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`of “describing the claims at such a high level of abstraction and untethered from
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`the language of the claim”); Ex.2180, 6 (rejecting that TT’s claims are directed to
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`abstract idea of displaying and updating marketing information and placing an
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`order because this “ignores much of the detail of the representative claims”). The
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`Board found no error in the CQG court’s reasoning for this patent, and should
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`follow that court’s guidance here for the additional reasons below.
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`The purported abstract idea is further “untethered” from the claim elements
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`because it uses words/features that are not recited in the claims. For example,
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`“placing an order,” “observed,” “plotted,” and “updating market information” are
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`not recited in the claims.
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`Therefore, the claimed invention is not directed to “placing an order based
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`on observed (plotted) market information, as well as updating market information”
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`or any abstract idea.
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`2.
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`TT’s Claims Pass Part I of Alice Because They Improve the
`Functioning of the Computer
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`A GUI is an integral component of a computer, just like a processor,
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`memory, and network interface. See Ex.2168, ¶¶25-29; Ex.2174, ¶¶12-14; see also
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`Mortg. Grader, Inc. v. First Choice Loan Servs., Inc., 811 F.3d 1314, 1324 (Fed.
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`8
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`Cir. 2016) (identifying an “interface” as a computer component); Intellectual
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`Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Bank (USA), 792 F.3d 1363, 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2015)
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`(same)
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`First, at the most basic level, the claimed GUI improves the computer
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`because it allows the computer to be used in new and inventive ways. Ex.2168,
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`¶¶25-29; Ex.2174, ¶¶12-15. A specific improvement to the claimed GUI
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`construction, as claimed, improves the functioning of the computer. Ex.2168, ¶¶25-
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`29; Ex.2174, ¶¶6-27; Enfish, 2016 WL 2756255, at *4 (“Software can make non-
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`abstract improvements to computer technology just as hardware improvements
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`can, and sometimes the improvements can be accomplished through either route.”).
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`Using GUIs on the iPhone, the computer can function as a phone, compass,
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`calculator, etc. Ex.2174, ¶12. Without these GUIs, the iPhone and most personal
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`computers are useless. Id. Claims that set forth a new GUI construction that causes
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`the computer to function differently improve the computer.
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`Second, the invention improves computer functioning because it solves
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`problems caused by the computer components. Technological problems with the
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`pre-existing Figure 2-type GUIs were the impetus for the invention. Without the
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`GUI structure, make-up, and functionality of Figure 2-type GUIs, the problem
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`would not have existed. The invention solves that problem with a new GUI
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`construction (e.g., new structure, make-up, and functionality). Accordingly, the
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`invention improves computer functionality because it solves problems caused by
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`the prior computer’s GUI tool. The claimed invention also improves the
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`visualization of the GUI tool. Ex.2168, ¶¶34-38, 41; Ex.2169, ¶¶74, 82, 88, 89,
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`172; Ex.1001, 7:6-51; Figs. 3, 4.
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`Finally, the claimed invention improves the computer functioning because it
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`sets forth structure and make-up that improves the speed, accuracy and
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`visualization of a GUI (as discussed above). These are appreciable improvements
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`to a user. Ex.2168, ¶¶34-38, 41; Ex.2174, ¶¶6-27. These classic engineering
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`problems are indisputably technical. Ex.2169, ¶84; Ex.2174, ¶¶12-14. They require
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`the computer to function differently to achieve these improved results. Ex.2168,
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`¶49.
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`Petitioners’ expert, Roman, testified as to the importance of these features to
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`a user. Ex.2166, 181:7-182:3). As such, solving these technical problems clearly
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`improves the computer’s functioning. Id.
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`3.
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` TT’s Claims Pass Prong One of Alice Because They Are
`Undoubtedly Not Abstract
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`“Some improvements in computer-related technology when appropriately
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`claimed are undoubtedly not abstract, such as a chip architecture, an LED display,
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`and the like.” See Enfish, 2016 WL 2756255, at *4. The structure, make-up, and
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`functionality of a GUI is as much a physical and integral part of a computer as a
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`10
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`processor or memory, and improvements to GUIs are just as eligible for patent
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`protection as any other computer-related technology. See, e.g., Mortg. Grader, 811
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`F.3d at 1324; Capital One, 792 F.3d at 1370.
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`In the Industrial Age, interfaces used physical or other tangible components
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`(e.g., knobs, buttons, levers, dials, gauges, etc.) to control machines. See Bilski v.
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`Kappos, 130 S.Ct. 3218, 3227 (2010). A patent in the Industrial Age would have
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`claimed the structure, make-up, and functionality of the physical device (e.g.,
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`describing a novel/nonobvious wooden lever and dial system). Few would argue
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`that these types of physical, tangible interfaces are abstract ideas. Id.
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`Interfaces that previously used physical knobs and levers are now
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`implemented via GUI components, such as indicators and icons. Ex.2169, ¶22; see
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`Ex.2174, ¶12. These GUI components are analogous to interface components of
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`the Industrial Age, and GUIs built with them are likewise undoubtedly not abstract.
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`See Bilski, 130 S.Ct. at 3227. Similarly, TT’s claims recite the construction of a
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`novel/nonobvious GUI. TT’s claims are analogous to a physical device and are,
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`therefore, not abstract. Ex.2169, ¶¶22-23, 178-182; Ex.2174, ¶16.
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`11
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`TT’s Claims Pass Part I of Alice Because GUIs Are
`Technology
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`4.
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`GUIs are technology. Accordingly, improvements to GUI construction, such
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`as TT’s, are deeply rooted in technology and patent eligible. See Enfish, 2016 WL
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`2756255, at *6.
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`The Association for Computing Machinery, a leading computing
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`organization, recognizes the importance of the human-computer interaction (HCI)
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`technology field. “Research in [HCI]… has fundamentally changed computing.”
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`Ex.2003, 2. “Even the remarkable growth of the World Wide Web is a direct result
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`of HCI research: applying hypertext technology to browsers allows one to traverse
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`a link across the world with a click of the mouse. More than anything else,
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`improvements to interfaces have triggered this explosive growth.” Id.
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`Leading scientific research centers also recognize the importance of user
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`interface design. For example, NASA’s Ames Research Center contains an entire
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`HCI Group focused on interface functionality and design. Ex.2004; Ex.2005. Also,
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`many colleges and universities offer courses and programs centered on interface
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`design to train engineers and programmers. Ex.2006-Ex.2012.
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`Experts also agree that GUIs are technology. Dr. Olsen states that “graphical
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`user interfaces are a technology with specific technical problems,” Ex.2174, ¶7,
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`and Mr. Bear states that “graphical user interfaces are inherently technology,”
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`12
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`Ex.2168, ¶3. Furthermore, Petitioners’ expert, Dr. Mellor, agreed that “the
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`underlying technology is the graphical user interface.” See, e.g., Ex.2294, 45.
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`Likewise, an expert for one of Petitioner’s joint defense partners, Van Dusen,
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`agreed that the “technology described in the patents is directed to a specific type of
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`graphical user interface for order entry.” Ex.2169, ¶173; Ex.2292, 110-11.
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`Experts also agree that the claimed invention improves the GUI tool.
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`Ex.2168, ¶38; Ex.2174, ¶¶15, 16, 27-32. Furthermore, Roman admitted that the
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`claimed invention “trades one set of problems for [another].” Ex.2166, 178:14-
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`182:3. The courts have also acknowledged the improvements. E.g., eSpeed, 595
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`F.3d at 1347; Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. Open E Cry, LLC, 728 F.3d 1309, 1312-
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`14 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (affirming that the ’132 patent “concern[s] a graphical user
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`interface” that is more intuitive and efficient than prior GUIs). Thus, there is no
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`real dispute that the claimed invention is directed to technology that improves the
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`pre-existing technology (e.g., the pre-existing GUI tools). Therefore,
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`improvements to the structure, make-up, and functionality of the GUI are
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`improvements to technology.
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`5.
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`TT’s Claims Pass Part I of Alice Because They Are Not
`Directed to a Fundamental Economic or Longstanding
`Commercial Practice, a Business Method, or a Generic GUI
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`The claimed invention is not directed to “placing a trade order in an
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`exchange.” In fact, such a conclusion would improperly ignore and overgeneralize
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`nearly all of the claim elements. See Enfish, 2016 WL 2756255, at *6; Ex.2180,
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`*6.
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`The ’132 patent’s claims are directed to the construction of a GUI tool; not a
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`fundamental economic practice or business method (e.g., hedging or intermediated
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`settlement). While the GUI tool may be used in the practice of trading
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`(fundamental economic practice), that is not what is claimed. Indeed, the European
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`Patent Office (“EPO”), which bans patents on business methods, granted claims to
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`the foreign counterpart, finding the claims “solve[] a technical problem which is to
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`improve the operation of the system in terms of increasing the accuracy for placing
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`orders. In fact, this problem is independent from the business aspects of the
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`claims.” Ex.2062, 6.
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`Nor do the claims merely take a fundamental economic practice and migrate
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`it to a new technological environment, as was the case in Ultramercial.
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`Ultramercial, Inc. v. Hulu, LLC, 772 F.3d 709, 722 (Fed. Cir. 2014). The claims do
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`not merely add conventional computer components post-hoc to longstanding
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`business or economic practices, as was the case in Alice and Versata. Enfish, 2016
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`WL 2756255, at *7 (“In contrast, the claims at issue in Alice and Versata can
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`readily be understood as simply adding conventional computer components to
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`well-known business practices.”). Rather, “the claims are directed to a specific
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`implementation of a solution to a problem in the software arts.” Id., *8.
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`Accordingly, “the claims at issue are not directed to an abstract idea.” See id.
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`Further, the claims are not merely directed to “data gathering” as was the
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`case in CyberSource, where the claims merely took known data-gathering steps
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`and applied them to the technological environment of the Internet. CyberSource
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`Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc., 654 F.3d 1366, 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2011). Indeed,
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`analogizing the claims to CyberSource reflects an overgeneralization and
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`misunderstanding of TT’s claims, which provide a new structure, make-up, and
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`functionality for a GUI.
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`Finally, the claims do not recite data processing by a computer as was the
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`case in Bancorp Services, L.L.C. v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada (U.S.), 687
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`F.3d 1266, 1278 (Fed. Cir. 2012), or a business method with the mere addition of
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`displaying data on a generic GUI, Capital One, 792 F.3d at 1370.
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`The claimed GUI is unlike the generic GUIs mentioned in other cases, such
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`as Mortgage Grader or Capital One. Id. at 1365. In Mortgage Grader, the Federal
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`Circuit found a claim to a “computer-implemented system” comprising a “first
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`interface” and a “second interface” was directed to generic computer components.
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`Mortg. Grader, 811 F.3d at 1318, 1324-25. In Capital One, the claims were
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`ineligible because they merely recited a generic webpage and that via that webpage
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`information was displayed or customized. 792 F.3d at 1370. The patentee in
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`Capital One agreed that its claims were directed to the practice of customizing
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`information, a “fundamental… practice long prevalent in our system.” Id. at 1369.
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`Accordingly, such recitations were merely “generic” GUIs. Id. at 1368.
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`In contrast, the claims here are directed to the claimed GUI construction.
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`Rather than taking a fundamental practice and simply reciting “displaying with a
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`GUI” or “allowing a change with the GUI,” the claims recite how information is
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`displayed via the GUI in combination with specific features that define how a user
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`can interact with the GUI in a way that improves the operation of the GUI and,
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`therefore, the computer.
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`As discussed below, the claimed invention went against conventional
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`wisdom at the time of the invention. Supreme Court and Federal Circuit precedent
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`establish that consideration of the unconventionality of the claims is relevant to the
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`determination of eligibility. The Federal Circuit has maintained this position in
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`the only two cases where it found patent-eligible claims: Enfish LLC v. Microsoft
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`Corp., No. 2015-1244, 2016 WL 2756255 (Fed. Cir. May 12, 2016), and DDR
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`Holdings, LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P., 773 F.3d 1245 (Fed. Cir. 2014). Therefore, the
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`claimed invention is patent eligible.
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`16
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`The Claims Pass Part 2 of Alice Because They Recite an Inventive
`Concept
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`B.
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`While the inventive concept analysis “is facilitated by considerations
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`analogous to those of §§ 102 and 103,” it is not a substitute for those statutory
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`requirements. See Internet Patents Corp. v. Active Network, Inc., 790 F.3d 1343,
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`1347 (Fed. Cir. 2015). This is because, rather than requiring novelty or
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`nonobviousness, the concern undergirding § 101 is preemption of fundamental
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`concepts. See Alice, 134 S.Ct. at 2358. Thus, to pass Alice prong 2, a claim need
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`only contain elements “sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice amounts to
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`significantly more than a patent upon the [abstract idea] itself.” Id. at 2355.
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`For computer-implemented inventions, this prong focuses on whether the
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`claims recite something more than limiting the abstract idea to a generic computer
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`environment or components. The courts make that determination based on whether
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`the claimed combination comprises only “conventional steps, specified at a high
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`level of generality,” id. at 2357 (emphasis added), unrelated to the problem being
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`solved (i.e., pre-solution or post-solution activities), Enfish, 2016 WL 2756255, at
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`*7. For example, indisputably known computing elements and functions, such as
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`“a computer,” a “memory,” a “CPU,” or generic “processing,” “displaying,”
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`“storing,” fall within this exclusion. E.g., Mortg. Grader, 811 F.3d at 1324; cf.
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`Affinity Labs of Tex., LLC v. DirecTV, LLC, 109 F. Supp. 3d 916, 942 (W.D. Tex.
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`17
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`2015) (“Trading Techs. is distinguishable because unlike in the instant case, the
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`[’304 and ’132 patents]… explained the ‘how’ and ‘specific functionality’ of the
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`graphical user interface resulting in a technological improvement. As explained
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`above, the claims of the [patent] present the graphical user interface as merely a
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`generic computer component.”). But claims to a solution resting in claimed
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`computer functionality are patent eligible, DDR, 773 F.3d at 1257, even if
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`implemented on a general-purpose computer, Enfish, 2016 WL 2756255, at *7.
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`Here, the claims clearly recite significantly more for three, compounding
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`reasons. First, the claimed combination specifies the GUI features and
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`functionality with great detail rather than at a high level of generality. Second, the
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`claimed combination of GUI features and functionality is the solution rather than
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`pre-solution or post-solution activity. Third, there is no evidence that the claimed
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`combination of GUI functionality was routine and conventional, because they were
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`not. Indeed, even if some features were known, that fails to establish that the
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`combination was routine and conventional. See DDR, 773 F.3d at 1250, 1252-53,
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`1258-59.
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`Further, combining known features is a way that allegedly produces a
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`“predictable” result is not a § 101 analysis, but instead falls under § 103.
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`Petitioners’ attempt to rely on its obviousness arguments to show that the claimed
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`combination was routine and conventional is improper. See Pet. 21-22.
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`18
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`Even if TT’s claims were improperly viewed as being directed to an abstract
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`U.S. Patent 6,772,132
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`idea, they pass Alice prong two because they recite an inventive concept, i.e., “an
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`element or combination of elements that is ‘sufficient to ensure that the patent in
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`practice amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the [ineligible concept]
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`itself.” Alice, 134 S. Ct. at 2355 (quoting Mayo, 132 S.Ct. at 1294). Claims that
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`solve technological problems, “improve the functioning of [a] computer itself,” or
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`“effect an improvement in any other technology or technical field” likely meet this
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`test. Id. at 2351.
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`The claims here, read as a whole, solve technological problems that existed
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`only in the realm of electronic trading with respect to prior art GUIs. Specifically,
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`TT’s claims recite structural details of a specific GUI that functions differently
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`from prior art GUIs to solve GUI-centric problems. The solution to these problems
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`is not only rooted in computer technology, but is new computer technology itself: a
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`new GUI with the claimed structure, make-up, and functionality. Thus, the claims
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`here would meet a stringent technological-arts test, as well as satisfy the test that
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`they be “necessarily rooted in computer technology in order to overcome a
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`problem specifically arising in the realm of computer[s].” DDR, 773 F.3d at 1257.
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`Petitioners’ assertion that the claimed GUI is only about aesthetics is facially
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`wrong. Multiple experts agree that GUI design is a technological field and that the
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`claims are directed to a technological improvement in that field. Ex.2168, ¶39;
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`19
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`
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`Ex.2174, ¶12. This includes Roman, who agrees that the claimed invention solves
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`the problem of a user missing their intended price. Ex.2166, 177:6-182:3. The
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`reason the claimed construction of a GUI is viewed as better from the user’s
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`perspective lies in the science of human-computer interactions. Ex.2168, ¶42;
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`Ex.2174, ¶¶12, 15, 16, 23, 27-33. The experts confirm that, because the user’s
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`mental activities are not claimed, the claimed GUI construction is not directed to a
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`user’s decision-making process on when to place a trade or automating the user’s
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`decision-making process. Ex.2168, ¶35; Ex.2174, ¶¶27-33.
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`Like DDR, the claims here cannot be conceptually separated from the
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`technological environment in which they exist. DDR, 773 F.3d at 1257. For
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`instance, the claims here do not “merely recite the performance of some business
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`practice known from” before computers “along with the requirement to perform it
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`on” a computer. Id. The claims do more than simply make use of generic computer
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`components. Instead, they provide a new technological tool. Compare Alice,
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`134 S. Ct. at 2359 with DDR, 773 F.3d at 1257.
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`TT’s claims are more technological than those found to be eligible in DDR.
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`The claims found to be eligible in DDR, which were directed to the problem of
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`retaining website visitors, recited far less detail regarding computer technology
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`than the claims here. 773 F.3d at 1248-49. The claims merely recited storing
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`“visually perceptible elements” corresponding to websites and displaying such
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`20
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`
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`elements “visually corresponding to the source page.” Id. at 1249-50. The claims
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`did not require any more particular details about what is displayed. The court
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`found that a claim need not recite an invention that is “technologically complex” to
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`be patent eligible. Id. at 1259.
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`The claims are agnostic as to whether the GUI runs on a desktop, a laptop, or
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`an iPhone (or any other terminal). And any argument that the mere u