`Filed: September 3, 2014
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`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
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`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
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`TD AMERITRADE HOLDING CORP., TD AMERITRADE, INC.,
`AND TD AMERITRADE ONLINE HOLDINGS CORP.
`Petitioners
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`v.
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`TRADING TECHNOLOGIES INTERNATIONAL, INC.
`Patent Owner
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`Case CBM2014-00135
`Patent 6,772,132
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`Patent Owner’s Preliminary Response
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`IBG 1031
`CBM of U.S. Pat. No. 6,772,132
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`I.
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`(cid:3)
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`Case No. CBM2014-00135
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`TABLE OF CONTENTS
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`PRELIMINARY STATEMENT ............................................................................... 1(cid:3)
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`A.
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`(cid:3)
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`The Patented Technology ................................................................................. 4(cid:3)
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`1.
`(cid:3)
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`2.
`(cid:3)
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`3.
`(cid:3)
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`4.
`(cid:3)
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`Technical Problems with the Prior Art ............................................... 5(cid:3)
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`The Inventors Created New Technology that Provides
`Improved Accuracy While Maintaining Speed ................................ 10(cid:3)
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`The Claims Recite the Technical Elements of the
`Inventive Tool ...................................................................................... 17(cid:3)
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`The Prosecution History Confirms that the ’132
`Patent’s Novelty Is GUI Technology, Not Conducting a
`Trade ...................................................................................................... 24(cid:3)
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`II.
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`(cid:3)
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`TRIAL SHOULD NOT BE INSTITUTED BECAUSE THE
`INVENTIVE ASPECT OF THE CLAIMS DOES NOT
`INVOLVE A METHOD OF DOING BUSINESS ............................................ 26(cid:3)
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`A.
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`(cid:3)
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`B.
`(cid:3)
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`Patents to Novel GUI Tools, Even If Used in the Field of
`Trading, Are Not Within the Scope of AIA § 18 ....................................... 27(cid:3)
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`The Congressional Record Confirms that Patents to Novel
`GUIs, Even If Used for Trading, Are Not Within the Scope of
`AIA § 18 ............................................................................................................ 32(cid:3)
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`III.
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`(cid:3) THE PETITION’S CONCLUSORY STATEMENTS ARE
`INSUFFICIENT TO SHOW THE CLAIMS ARE NOT FOR A
`“TECHNOLOGICAL INVENTION” ................................................................. 38(cid:3)
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`IV.
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`(cid:3) THE CLAIMS ARE FOR A TECHNOLOGICAL INVENTION,
`SO THE STATUTE PROHIBITS CBM REVIEW ............................................. 41(cid:3)
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`A.
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`(cid:3)
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`The Patent Is a Technological Invention in Every Way: It
`Solves a Technical Problem with a Technical Solution and
`Recites Novel and Nonobvious Technical Features .................................. 42(cid:3)
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`1.
`(cid:3)
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`Technical Problem: Prior Systems Required Significant
`Sacrificing of Accuracy for Speed and Vice Versa .......................... 42(cid:3)
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`Case No. CBM2014-0013
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`2.
`(cid:3)
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`3.
`(cid:3)
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`The Claimed Invention Provides a Technical Solution
`to the Technical Problems: A New GUI Tool that
`Increases Accuracy While Maintaining Speed and
`Improves Visualization ........................................................................ 44(cid:3)
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`The Claimed Subject Matter that Solves the Above
`Technical Problems Using a Technical Solution Recites
`a Technical Feature that Is Novel and Nonobvious ...................... 51(cid:3)
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`V.
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`(cid:3)
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`PETITIONERS’ PETITION FAILS TO SATISFY THE
`THRESHOLD REQUIREMENTS FOR INSTITUTION OF ITS
`PROPOSED PRIOR ART GROUNDS ................................................................ 54(cid:3)
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`A.
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`(cid:3)
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`Petitioners’ Petition Fails to Articulate Where the “Single
`Action” Elements of the Independent Claims Are Found in
`the Cited References ........................................................................................ 55(cid:3)
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`1.
`(cid:3)
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`2.
`(cid:3)
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`Petitioners’ Petition Fails to Articulate Where the
`“Single Action” Elements of the Independent Claims
`Are Found in the Cited References of the TSE
`Combinations ........................................................................................ 56(cid:3)
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`Petitioners’ Petition Fails to Articulate Where the
`“Single Action” Elements of the Independent Claims
`Are Found in the Cited References of the
`Silverman/Gutterman Combinations ............................................... 59(cid:3)
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`B.
`(cid:3)
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`Petitioners’ Petition Fails to Articulate a Complete
`Obviousness Analysis for Independent Claim 14 in Any of Its
`Proposed Grounds .......................................................................................... 61(cid:3)
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`C.
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`(cid:3)
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`Petitioners’ 35 U.S.C. § 101 Challenge Is Uninstitutable ........................... 63(cid:3)
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`VI.
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`(cid:3)
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`PETITIONERS CANNOT SHOW THEY ARE “MORE LIKELY
`THAN NOT” TO PREVAIL ON THEIR OBVIOUSNESS
`GROUNDS 3-8, WHEN THE SAME ARGUMENTS HAVE
`BEEN REJECTED REPEATEDLY BY THE OFFICE AND THE
`COURTS ....................................................................................................................... 64(cid:3)
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`VII.
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`(cid:3) CONCLUSION........................................................................................................... 66(cid:3)
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`ii
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`Cases
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`Case No. CBM2014-0013
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`TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
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` Page(s)
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`KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex, Inc.,
`550 U.S. 398 (2007) .................................................................................................... 54, 62
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`Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. eSpeed, Inc.,
`595 F.3d 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2010) .................................................................... 18, 50, 57, 64
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`Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. Open E Cry, LLC,
`728 F.3d 1309 (Fed. Cir. 2013) .......................................................................................... 4
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`Statutes
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`35 U.S.C. § 101 ......................................................................................................................... 63
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`35 U.S.C. § 103(a) .................................................................................................................... 62
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`35 U.S.C. § 322 ................................................................................................................. passim
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`35 U.S.C. § 324(a) .................................................................................................................... 54
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`35 U.S.C. § 325(d) .................................................................................................................... 64
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`AIA § 18 ............................................................................................................................ passim
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`Rules
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.22(a)(2) ..................................................................................................... 54, 61
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.301 ................................................................................................................... 41
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.304(b)(4) ............................................................................................ 54, 55, 56
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`Other Authorities
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`77 Fed. Reg. 48620 (Aug. 14, 2012) .................................................................................... 54
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`Agilysys, Inc. v. Ameranth, Inc.,
` CBM2014-00015, Paper 20 (Mar. 26, 2014) ............................................................ 3, 30
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`iii
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`Conopco, Inc. v. The Proctor & Gamble Co.,
`IPR2013-00510, Paper 9 (Feb. 12, 2014) ....................................................................... 63
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`Case No. CBM2014-0013
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`Experian Mktg Solutions, Inc. v. Rpost Commc’ns Ltd.,
`CBM2014-00064, Paper 13 (July 31, 2014) ................................................................... 40
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`Heart Failure Techs., LLC v. CardioKinetix, Inc.,
`IPR2013-00183, Paper 12 (July 31, 2013) ...................................................................... 62
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`iv
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`I.
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`PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
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`Case No. CBM2014-00135
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`The Patent Owner, Trading Technologies International, Inc. (“TT” or “Patent
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`Owner”), has been in business since 1994 and currently employs around 400 people.
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`Ex. 2007, Litigation Tutorial, p. 2. Headquartered in Chicago with offices around the
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`world, TT develops and sells electronic trading software. Id. TT’s products include an
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`innovative order entry tool embodied in a graphical user interface (“GUI”) called MD
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`Trader® that permits users to interact with and send orders to electronic exchanges
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`around the world. Id., p. 8. MD Trader is the commercial embodiment of the
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`inventions claimed in U.S. Patent No. 6,772,132 (“the ’132 patent”). Id., pp. 35-61.
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`MD Trader is sold to and used by thousands of customers around the world,
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`including almost every major international bank. Id., slide 2.
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`The petition should be denied because it provides only unsupported,
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`conclusory statements insufficient to meet the Petitioners’ burden of showing the
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`claims are directed to a covered business method (“CBM”). First, the petition fails to
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`address the claims as a whole or explain why the claimed combination of features—
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`directed to a tool with particular structural and functional features embodied in a GUI
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`and not a business method—should be treated as a CBM patent. Second, even
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`assuming that the claims involve a business method of the sort intended to be
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`captured by AIA § 18, the petition fails to show why the claims do not meet the
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`technological exception in Section 18 (“term [covered business method] does not
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`include patents for technological inventions”). Petitioners also do not address the
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`combination of technical structural and functional features that the Patent Office
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`Case No. CBM2014-00135
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`found made the claims novel and nonobvious.
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`An analysis of the claims shows that the ’132 patent is not a CBM patent. The
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`petition presents what TT believes to be a case of first impression (along with Case
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`Nos. CBM2014-00131, CBM2014-00133, CBM2014-00136, and CBM2014-00137
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`concurrently filed by Petitioners). The ’132 patent claims a novel GUI tool, not a
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`method of doing business. The ’132 patent claims specific features of a device
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`(embodied in a GUI) that happen to be used in the financial industry. The inventive
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`aspects of this tool have nothing to do with a business method or practice. The claims
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`do not merely cover “placing a trade order” or sending an order based on a single
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`click of a mouse. Rather, the claims require specific structural and functional features
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`of a tool embodied in a GUI. There are countless embodiments of graphical order
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`entry tools that are not covered by the claims of the ’132 patent.
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`TT is not aware of any other CBM petition directed to such a patent. To TT’s
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`knowledge, other petitions have been directed to patents where at least arguably some
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`inventive aspect of the claims is directed to a business method or practice. TT submits
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`that claims where all inventive aspects reside in claimed technical features and
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`structure, such as the graphical order entry tool of the ’132 patent, or a money-sorting
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`machine or a stapler, fail to qualify as a CBM as a threshold matter and should not
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`even need to be analyzed under the technological exception (which they would
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`necessarily meet). Indeed, as shown below, the Congressional Record gives claims of
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`the sort at issue here, where the inventive aspect lies in a GUI tool used for trading, as
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`a specific example of claims not subject to Section 18. Ex. 2009, S5428. A different
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`result would be illogical given the statutory requirement for a “covered business
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`method,” contradict Congress’s purposes for enacting the statute, and subject owners
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`of purely technological patents to the unnecessary time and expense of responding to
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`improper CBM petitions.
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`The ’132 patent also meets the technological exception. At the time of the
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`invention, the main inventor (Mr. Brumfield) recognized that trading screen
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`technologies suffered from a significant, technical problem—conventional trading
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`screens required a significant sacrifice in accuracy to achieve speed and vice versa. The
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`’132 patent provided a technical solution to this problem: a novel and nonobvious
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`GUI tool that not only improved accuracy while maintaining speed, but also
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`presented an interface that better visualized market changes, making the tool more
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`precise and efficient to use. The claimed novel and nonobvious technical features
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`(explained below) address and provide a solution to these technical problems. The
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`’132 patent does not involve claims directed to a business practice (or a method of
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`data processing) that merely recite a conventional GUI element, such as generically
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`displaying data. See, e.g., Agilysys, Inc. v. Ameranth, Inc., CBM2014-00015, Paper 20 (Mar.
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`26, 2014). Rather, the claims are directed to specific technical structural and functional
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`features of a GUI tool that apply technology to overcome technical problems in the
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`art. Congress never intended technical inventions like those claimed in the ’132 patent
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`to be within the purview of CBM patent review. Ex. 2009, S5428.
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`The assertion in the petition that the claims are obvious fails to address the
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`technical features of the claims and simply rehashes old arguments based on
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`references that have been considered—and overcome—many times before both the
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`Patent Office, during original examination and the related examination and
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`reexaminations of the ’132 patent and its children, and in the courts. Petitioners’
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`arguments provide only an illusion of propriety, glossing over the detailed, technical
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`features of the claims and ignoring many key facts. Notably, the petition fails to
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`disclose pertinent contrary information related to this past litigation and prosecution
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`history.
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`A.
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`The Patented Technology
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`The general field of art of the ’132 patent is order entry tools embodied in a
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`GUI. See Ex. 1001, 1:11-18 (“Specifically, the invention provides a trader with a
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`versatile and efficient tool for executing trades. It facilitates the display of and the
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`rapid placement of trade orders . . . .”); Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. Open E Cry, LLC,
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`728 F.3d 1309, 1312-13 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (describing subject matter of patent (in an
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`appeal involving a continuation of the ’132 patent with the same specification) as
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`“a graphical user interface that can display essential data from a commodities market
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`and allow a user to enter electronic trade orders on an exchange. Drawings [Figures 3
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`and 4] exemplify several key aspects of the disclosed displays.”). These screens are
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`highly specialized tools used for mission-critical applications. Many companies have
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`invested, and continue to invest, significant amounts of research and development on
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`designing improved graphical order entry tools. Ex. 2010, ¶¶ 35-38.
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`As set forth below, the ’132 patent claims are directed to technical features of
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`such a tool that are novel and nonobvious. The substance of what is inventive about
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`all of the claims—including the method and computer-readable medium claims—are
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`the features of a GUI tool, and not practicing a method of doing business or data
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`processing. The claimed tool can be used to implement trading strategies (e.g., buy
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`low/sell high), but the claims are not directed to any such strategy. The method claims
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`merely require that the claimed order entry tool, with the required structural and
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`functional features, be used. In other words, the claims are about the claimed tool, not
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`merely about the act of placing an order.
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`1.
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`Technical Problems with the Prior Art
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`Prior to the invention of the ’132 patent, there was well-accepted conventional
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`wisdom regarding the design of a trading interface for order entry. Ex. 2010, Second
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`Corrected Expert Report of Christopher Thomas, ¶ 19. For example, it was
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`conventional to provide the ability to enter orders using order entry tickets. Id. While
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`there were, and continue to be, a variety of designs for such order tickets, such
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`screens typically provided a user the ability to fill out a ticket (with information like
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`type of order, price, quantity, etc.) and then click on a send button (and/or a
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`confirmation button) provided on the ticket to send an order to an exchange. Id. This
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`approach was widely known as being very accurate for order entry, but also as being
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`slow. Id.
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`Another typical interface for permitting order entry is shown in Figure 2 of the
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`’132 patent (shown below with annotations). Figure 2 depicts a conventional GUI
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`tool used in the trading field that displayed the current “best prices” for a market on
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`the top line of the GUI.
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`Figure 2 of the ’132 Patent
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`Figure 2 represents a screenshot at a particular moment in time. Ex. 2010, ¶ 22.
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`In these types of tools, the best bid price that is currently available in the market is
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`always displayed at the top of column 203, and other bids that are also currently
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`available in the market are displayed, progressively descending the BidPrc column 203.
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`Id. Similarly, the best ask price that is currently available in the market is always
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`displayed at the top of column 204, and other asks that are currently available in the
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`market are displayed, progressively descending the AskPrc column 204. Id.
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`In these types of tools, each and every time the inside market (the best bid and
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`ask prices) changes, the price values displayed within the cells of the top row in
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`columns 203 and 204 change. Id., ¶ 23. The other displayed bid and ask prices
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`similarly change based on updates received from the market. Id. Therefore, the
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`displayed prices are constantly changing in response to changes in the market. Id.
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`However, the location (or cells) designated for the inside market remains in the same
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`top row of the display. Id. In other words, these types of tools maintained the display
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`of the inside market at the same location (i.e., fixed the inside market in a specified
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`location). Id. Figure 2 provides an example of one particular design of such a prior art
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`style screen. Various other designs of such style screens (where the inside market is
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`displayed in a fixed location) existed and continue to be developed and commonly
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`used today. Id., ¶¶ 24-28.
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`Some of these types of tools permitted “single action” order entry that
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`consisted of a trader presetting a default quantity and then clicking on a cell in the
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`screen (i.e., pressing a button on the tool) to cause a trade order message to be sent to
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`the exchange at the preset quantity and at the price value associated with that cell.
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`Id., ¶ 20.
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`Those of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention viewed these types
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`of trading tools as satisfying well-understood design criteria and as providing
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`numerous advantages. Id., ¶¶ 24-28. For example, fixing the display of the inside
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`market at a designated location on the tool allowed a user to easily locate and focus on
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`the most important information—the inside market. Id., ¶ 25. At any given time, a
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`trader could look at the tool and immediately know the current state of the market. Id.
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`These tools also allowed the trader to rapidly and accurately enter market type orders
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`(orders made at the inside market prices) by clicking on the location for the best bid
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`or best ask prices. Id.
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`Mr. Brumfield, one of the inventors of the ’132 patent, was using a Figure 2
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`style order entry tool as part of a product purchased from TT prior to the invention.
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`Ex. 2011, Trial Testimony of Mr. Brumfield, pp. 676-678. He encountered a problem
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`with this type of tool. Id., pp. 682-706; Ex. 2010, ¶ 31. Mr. Brumfield was focused on
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`entering orders at particular price levels, as opposed to market type orders. Ex. 2011,
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`pp. 682-706. If Mr. Brumfield wanted to use fast single action order entry on these
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`types of tools and was trying to enter an order at a particular price level, he had to
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`sacrifice accuracy for speed. Id. In particular, there was a risk that he would miss his
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`intended price as a result of prices changing from under his cursor right at the time he
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`clicked on a cell. Id. The following example slide (which was used in court in litigation
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`involving the ’132 patent) illustrates the problem:
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`Ex. 2007, p. 30. In this example, the “ask price” displayed in the top field of the GUI
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`changes from 111175 to 111180 in the time between the user deciding to place the
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`order at the displayed price (time 1) and the user executing the click (time 2). The
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`resulting trade is inaccurate because it executes at a different price (111180) from the
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`displayed price selected by the user (111175). Ex. 2010, ¶ 30. The ’132 patent
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`describes this problem at 2:60-67.
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`A video demonstrating this loss of accuracy in favor of speed in prior art
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`trading screen tools of the sort shown in Figure 2 that was recognized by Mr.
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`Brumfield is attached as Exhibit 2012.1 This video demonstrating the problem was
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`Case No. CBM2014-00135
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`previously shown to the court in a litigation involving the ’132 patent.
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`2.
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`The Inventors Created New Technology that Provides
`Improved Accuracy While Maintaining Speed
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`In an attempt to address the problem described above, Mr. Brumfield
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`conceived the design of a new GUI tool. Ex. 2011, pp. 690-693. One of Mr.
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`Brumfield’s early diagrams of the new GUI tool from September 1998 is shown
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`below:
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`1 The extensive body of prior art considered in the original examination and then in
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`reexamination (and in litigation) includes some screens that function differently than
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`the Figure 2 style screens. As explained below, the Patent Office determined the
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`claimed combination of features to be novel and nonobvious over this art. Prior to
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`the inventors, no one put together the combination of claimed features into one
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`tool—a tool that has proven to be a huge success. Petitioners’ invalidity arguments are
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`based on a subset of art that was already considered and is actually less than
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`cumulative than the art considered.
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`Ex. 2013. Mr. Brumfield’s design showed early versions of new features that would be
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`integrated into his new tool, such as a static price axis display with price levels that
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`would not move every time the market changed in the manner of Figure 2, multiple
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`active screen elements such as areas to dynamically display indicators representing
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`quantity information relative to the price axis, and cells associated with different price
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`levels along the price axis that could be selected by a single action to cause an order
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`message to be sent for an order at the corresponding price level. Ex. 2011, pp. 692-
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`700. The design also included areas to display indicators representing working orders
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`that have been sent to the exchange but have not yet been filled. Id.
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`Case No. CBM2014-00135
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`Over an extensive period of time, Mr. Brumfield spent significant resources
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`(both time and money) working with technical consultants from TT to develop a
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`working prototype of the new GUI tool.2 Id. Once a functioning tool was developed
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`that could be tested for its intended purpose, Mr. Brumfield confirmed that the new
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`tool addressed the problem of speed and accuracy discussed above. Id. The ’132
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`patent describes this problem and how the invention addresses it at 2:60-67 and 7:47-
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`53. A video (used in court in litigation) illustrating how the claimed invention
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`addresses this problem is attached as Exhibit 2014.
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`In addition, he learned that the tool provided the added and unexpected benefit
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`of solving another technical problem with the prior art. In particular, the interaction
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`of the static axis and aligned dynamic elements of the new tool better represented the
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`market and changes in the market than prior art style screens. Ex. 2011, pp. 703-706;
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`Ex. 2010, ¶ 33. For example, aligning the dynamic elements with the static axis (which
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`is the result of the claimed juxtaposing of the dynamic indicators and the static axis
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`that does not move price levels with each change in the market) provided the ability
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`for a user to enter orders more quickly and accurately at desired prices relative to the
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`2 At the time, TT had two businesses: (1) a product business, in which it sold its
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`trading application called X_Trader to banks and trading firms around the world; and
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`(2) a consulting business which provide computer programming/development
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`services to clients. Ex. 2011, pp. 720-721.
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`12
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`market. Id. This resulted in the new tool identifying market changes more precisely
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`Case No. CBM2014-00135
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`and being easier to use and less error prone (due to its improved/more intuitive
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`visualization) than the prior art style tools. Id.. This improved visualization is
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`described in the ’132 patent at 7:15-46 and shown by comparing Figures 3 and 4,
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`which show an example embodiment at time 1 (before a change in the market) and
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`time 2 (after the change in the market). A video (used in court in litigation) illustrating
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`the visualization difference between the prior Figure 2 style screens and the claimed
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`invention is attached as Exhibit 2049.
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`Experienced people in the field did not even recognize the shortcomings in the
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`prior art recognized by Mr. Brumfield until after they saw the invention embodied in
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`TT’s MD Trader product. See, e.g., Ex. 2038, ¶ 6 (“MD Trader provided this speed
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`benefit by providing for very accurate and fast order entry as compared to the
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`preexisting screens because there was no risk of the fast order entry as compared to
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`the preexisting systems . . . . MD Trader also had an improved display of the market
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`data such that a trader could easily see the ebb and flow of the market . . . . It was only
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`after seeing the benefits of this new unusual screen [MD Trader] that people like
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`myself realized the shortcomings of the preexisting systems.”); Ex. 2044, ¶¶ 10-12
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`(“Once I started using the product [MD Trader], I saw that it was better than the
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`preexisting order entry screens. In particular, it was faster in that by providing a more
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`intuitive display, it reduced the time it takes for a trader to recognize opportunities.
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`Also, it allowed for order entry with less errors than preexisting systems . . . . The
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`combination of the more intuitive display and the fast and reliable order entry cause
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`MD Trader to be a faster tool than preexisting systems . . . . MD Trader provided a
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`significant change to the order entry screens that were prevalent at the time of its
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`release. Prior to the release of MD Trader, traders did not even perceive a problem
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`with the old tools they were using. Only after seeing the benefits of MD Trader did
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`people like myself realize the shortcomings of the preexisting systems.”); Ex. 2041, ¶ 6
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`(“For someone who is an active trader, MD Trader was a revolutionary product. Only
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`after I saw MD Trader did I realize the severe shortcomings of the preexisting
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`systems. Whoever came up with the ideas behind MD Trader was truly ‘thinking
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`outside of the box.’”).
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`In 1999, TT’s business was struggling. Ex. 2010, p. 713. Based on his belief that
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`the invention could turn the company around if TT developed it into a product,
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`Mr. Brumfield assigned the invention to TT and became an investor in the company.
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`Id., pp. 713-714. A significant part of the decision to assign the invention to TT was
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`based on the ability to patent the innovation so TT’s efforts at development and
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`commercialization could not be easily copied by others. Id. After the patent
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`application that led to the ’132 patent was filed, TT completed development of the
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`technology and released it as the “MD Trader” tool—which was part of TT’s
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`X_Trader product. Id., p. 800. The X_Trader product, with the MD Trader tool, is
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`still TT’s flagship product today. See id., p. 715; see also Ex. 2015, X_Trader Website.
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`The MD Trader tool combined the claimed features discussed in detail below,
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`including the features of a static price display aligned with dynamic displays, an order
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`entry region aligned with the static price display with areas for receiving single action
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`commands to set parameters and send an order.
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`MD Trader
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`Fig. 4 of the ’132 Patent
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`This combination allowed for fast order entry with improved accuracy and a
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`more precise visualization of the market changes. Ex. 2010, ¶ 33. The product also
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`included features from various dependent claims that recite additional innovative
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`features, such as regions for displaying working order indicators and that permit the
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`easy visualization and cancellation of such orders and a re-centering feature. The
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`various inventions claimed in the ’132 patent not only address the problems noted
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`above, but also provided an order entry tool that combined various features that were
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`kept separate in the prior art (such as an order entry tool and displays of working
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`orders (sometimes called fill windows) in an innovative GUI that is materially simpler
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`and more efficient to use. See, e.g., Ex. 1001, 7:17-22.
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`Mr. Brumfield proved to be right—the invention was revolutionary, and turned
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`TT around. After a period of initial skepticism, the MD Trader product became a
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`huge commercial success, Ex. 2007, p. 34, and received widespread industry praise,
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`Ex. 2010, ¶ 32. The technology received many accolades from experienced people in
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`the industry. Id. Indeed, over thirty experienced, third-party individuals in the field
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`signed declarations testifying to the benefits of the invention.3 Id.; see also Exs. 2016-
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`3 Petitioners have been provided voluminous amount of materials from litigation
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`related to the ’132 patent that has been ongoing for ten years, including the
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`declarations cited herein. Ex. 2047. The litigation materials, including such
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`declarations, depositions, trial testimony, an extraordinary number of court pleadings
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`and decisions, and hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of documents contain an
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`overwhelming amount of evidence that contradicts assertions being made by
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`Petitioners. What is cited herein are just a few examples—examples that Petitioners
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`either have or have access to. The sheer volume of this evidence and the fact that
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`Petitioners have not bothered to identify contrary information in this evidence
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`2046. For example, the new technology was hailed as “a very significant departure
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`from [systems that were available]” and “a stroke of genius . . . . I had not seen
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`anything like it before.” Ex. 2010, ¶ 32.
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`3.
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`The Claims Recite the Technical Elements of the Inventive
`Tool
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`The claims of the ’132 patent, never addressed in any detail in the petition,
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`recite detailed structural and functional features of an inventive GUI tool that make
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`the claims novel and nonobvious. In particular, the claims recite static and dynamic
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`portions of the screen aligned in specific ways, multiple display regions to receive
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`input from a user, and areas for receiving single action order entry commands (which
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`is shorthand for displaying order entry regions with areas that receive commands to
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`send orders in the form of single action commands that both set a plurality of
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`parameters and cause an order message to be sent).
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`In substance, all claims, whether in method, computer readable medium or
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`system format, of the ’132 patent recite these features of the GUI tool. The novel and
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`nonobvious elements of all claims in the ’132 patent are directed to the structure and
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`dictates against institution. This evidence also includes 20 consent judgments, with
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`most of TT’s traditional competitors finding the ’132/’304 patents valid, Exhibits
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`2063-2082, and numerous settlements in which companies either dropped the
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`invention from their product or took a license under the patents.
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`make-up of the order entry tool (embodied in a GUI). None of the claims are merely
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`directed to a general method of placing an order or send