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`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
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`PLAID TECHNOLOGIES INC.
`Petitioner
`
`v.
`
`YODLEE, INC. and YODLEE.COM, INC.
`Patent Owner
`
`Case CBM2016-00037
`Patent 6,199,077
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`PATENT OWNERS’ PRELIMINARY RESPONSE
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`(cid:51)(cid:79)(cid:68)(cid:76)(cid:71)(cid:3)(cid:20)(cid:19)(cid:23)(cid:19)
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`Case CBM2016-00037
`Attorney Docket No: 12233-0048CP1
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`TABLE OF CONTENTS
`INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................ 1(cid:3)
`I.(cid:3)
`II.(cid:3) STATEMENT OF RELIEF REQUESTED ................................................. 3(cid:3)
`III.(cid:3) CLAIM CONSTRUCTION ......................................................................... 3(cid:3)
`A.(cid:3)
`“Gatherer” / “Gatherer Agent” / “Gathering Software
`Agent” / “Path Agent” ...................................................................... 4(cid:3)
`IV.(cid:3) THE BOARD SHOULD DENY THE PETITION BECAUSE
`THE ’077 PATENT IS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR COVERED
`BUSINESS METHOD REVIEW ................................................................ 5(cid:3)
`A.(cid:3)
`The ’077 Patent does not claim a method or apparatus for
`performing data processing or other operations used in
`the practice, administration, or management of a financial
`product or service ............................................................................. 6(cid:3)
`The ’077 Patent Claims a “Technological Invention” ................... 12(cid:3)
`B.(cid:3)
`V.(cid:3) PETITIONER’S PRIOR ART GROUNDS ALSO FAIL ......................... 18(cid:3)
`A.(cid:3)
`The Zhao Reference Does Not Disclose “Information
`Specific to a Person” ...................................................................... 19(cid:3)
`The Zhao Reference Does Not Disclose a Gathering Agent ......... 22(cid:3)
`The VerticalOne Reference is not 102(a) Prior Art and
`Thus Cannot Provide a Reason to Modify the Zhao
`Reference. ....................................................................................... 23(cid:3)
`The Claims are not Obvious in view of Lowery, Brandt,
`and Zhao ......................................................................................... 27(cid:3)
`Petitioner Failed to Address Two Limitations of Claim 7 ............. 28(cid:3)
`E.(cid:3)
`VI.(cid:3) THE BOARD SHOULD NOT INSTITUTE PETITIONER’S
`REDUNDANT PRIOR ART CHALLENGES .......................................... 28(cid:3)
`A.(cid:3)
`The Board’s Precedent Required Petitioner to Distinguish
`Between Otherwise Redundant Prior Art References .................... 30(cid:3)
`The Petition Recites Multiple Redundant Grounds ....................... 31(cid:3)
`B.(cid:3)
`Petitioner Has Not Made Any Argument of Non-Redundancy ..... 31(cid:3)
`C.(cid:3)
`VII.(cid:3)CONCLUSION .......................................................................................... 32(cid:3)
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`B.(cid:3)
`C.(cid:3)
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`D.(cid:3)
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`TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
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` Page(s)
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`Cases
`Amgen Inc. v. Hoechst Marion Roussel, Inc.,
`314 F.3d 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2003) ..................................................................... 26
`
`Berk-Tek LLC v. Belden Technologies Inc.,
`IPR2013-00057 (Paper 21, May 14, 2013) .................................................... 29
`
`Bloomberg L.P. v. Quest Licensing Corporation,
`CBM2014-00205, Paper 16 (Apr. 7, 2015) ................................................... 18
`
`Enfish Inc. v. Microsoft Corp.,
`2015-1244 (Fed. Cir. May 12, 2016) ......................................................... 5, 17
`
`KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc.,
`550 U.S. 398 (2007) ....................................................................................... 19
`
`Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Progressive Casualty Co.,
`CBM2012-00003 (Paper 7, Oct. 25, 2012) ................................. 29, 30, 31, 32
`
`Mutual Ins. Co. v. Progressive Casualty Co.,
`CBM2012-00003 (Paper 7, Oct. 25, 2012) ................................................... 30
`
`Oracle Corp. v. Patent of Clouding IP, LLC,
`IPR2013- 00075 (Paper 15, June 13, 2013) ............................................. 30, 32
`
`PNC Bank NA v. Parus Holdings, Inc.,
`CBM2015-00111, Paper 10 (Nov. 9, 2015) .................................................... 8
`
`Qualtrics, LLC v. OpinionLab, Inc.,
`CBM2015-00164, Paper 8 (Feb. 3, 2016) ......................................... 6, 8, 9, 11
`
`ServiceNow, Inc. v. BMC Software, Inc.,
`CBM2015-00107, Paper 12 (Sept. 11, 2015) .................................................. 8
`
`Sony Corp v. Yissum Research Development Co. of the Hebrew
`Univ. of Jerusalem,
`IPR2013-00219 (Paper 33, Nov. 21, 2013) ................................................... 29
`
`Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. Co., Ltd.; TSMC N. Am. Corp. v.
`Ziptronix,
`IPR2014-00114 (Paper 14, May 1, 2014) ...................................................... 31
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`Statutes
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`35 U.S.C. § 103 ............................................................................................... 3, 19
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`35 U.S.C. § 324 ................................................................................................... 32
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`Other Authorities
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.1(b) ............................................................................................. 28
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.301 ................................................................................................ 5
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.301(a) ............................................................................................ 6
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.301(b) ................................................................................... 12, 18
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`AIA § 18(a)(1) ...................................................................................................... 5
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`AIA § 18(d)(1) ............................................................................................ 5, 6, 12
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`Office Patent Trial Practice Guide, 77 Fed. Reg. 48734 (Aug. 14,
`2012) ................................................................................................................ 6
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`EXHIBIT LIST
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`
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`Exhibit No. Description
`2001
`Printout from
`http://www.cnn.com/TECH/9706/comdex/comdex.custom/press.r
`elease.html
`Document Entitled “Summarizing the web with AutoLogin”
`dated May 12, 1999.
`Portion of the April 19, 2016 Deposition of Donald Boys
`Report and Recommendation, Yodlee, Inc. v. Plaid Technologies
`Inc., 1:14-cv-01445, D.I. 185.
`
`2002
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`2003
`2004
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`Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 42.207(a), the Patent Owners, Yodlee, Inc. and
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`Yodlee.com, Inc. (“Yodlee” or “Patent Owners”), hereby submit the following
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`Preliminary Response in opposition to the Petition for Covered Business
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`Method Review (“CBM”) of U.S. Patent No. 6,199,077 (“the (cid:1932)077 Patent”)
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`numbered CBM2016-00037, filed by Plaid Technologies, Inc. (“Plaid” or
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`“Petitioner”).
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`I.
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`INTRODUCTION
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`The ’077 Patent describes and claims a technical solution to a number of
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`problems that are specifically identified in the Patent itself. In particular, the
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`Patent describes methods and systems for accessing a number of different
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`websites storing information specific to a person, and then specific technologies
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`for gathering data from those websites and summarizing it for presentation to a
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`user.1 This invention solves multiple technical problems, including the
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`difficulty of retrieving and summarizing data from a variety of different
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`websites that store data in specific and potentially unique ways, the problems in
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`parsing and utilizing specific website data, the issues in maintaining different
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`usernames and passwords. In fact, the ’077 Patent even provides one exemplary
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`1 Notably, on May 24, 2016, the Court in the co-pending district court
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`infringement case issued a Report and Recommendation denying Plaid’s motion
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`under Section 101. Ex. 2004 at 24.
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`1
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`software script describing a particular technical manner by which data may be
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`gathered and summarized.
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`Despite all of this evidence about the broad, technical nature of the
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`claimed invention which is potentially applicable to a number of different fields,
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`the Petition boldly asserts that the ’077 Patent is eligible for covered business
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`method review and that it is limited to financial applications. Petitioner,
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`however, fails to actually analyze the challenged claims – instead choosing to
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`focus on only certain examples provided in the specification. Petitioner does
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`not identify any claim language purportedly limiting the claims to these
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`particular embodiments, nor does Petitioner propose any claim construction that
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`limits the scope of the claims to something financially-related. Nor could it,
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`given that the claims are broadly applicable to multiple fields and the
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`specification itself explicitly discloses use of the invention in multiple fields and
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`even provides explicit non-financial examples. The proper analysis of the
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`claims as a whole makes clear that the ’077 patent does not claim “a method or
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`corresponding apparatus for performing data processing or other operations
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`used in the practice, administration, or management of a financial product or
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`service” and thus is not eligible for CBM review under AIA § 18.
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`Furthermore, because of the disclosure of the technical problems being
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`addressed by the ’077 Patent as well as the technical solutions provided and
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`then claimed by the ’077 Patent, the Patent clearly recites a “technological
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`invention” and is therefore further ineligible for CBM review under AIA § 18.
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`Again, Petitioner’s analysis is deficient in this regard and improperly breaks the
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`claims down without considering whether the claims as a whole recite a
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`technological invention. In fact, as set forth below, the Petitioner’s own
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`proposed constructions reinforce the specific technical nature of the invention.
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`A proper analysis of the claims as a whole shows that the ’077 Patent does
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`recite a technological invention and is not eligible for CBM review.
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`Beyond this, as set forth below, Petitioner’s grounds for invalidity under
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`Section 103 are fundamentally flawed. In particular, Petitioner relies on
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`references that fail to disclose limitations from the claims and/or relies on a
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`reference (the VerticalOne press release) that is neither prior art nor enabled. It
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`would thus be inappropriate to institute a review on any of the purported
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`obviousness grounds.
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`The Board should therefore deny the Petition because the ’077 Patent is
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`not eligible for CBM review and because the grounds fail to show that it is more
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`likely than not that at least one of the claims challenged in the Petition is
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`unpatentable.
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`II.
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`STATEMENT OF RELIEF REQUESTED
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`Patent Owners respectfully request that this Board deny this Petition for
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`CBM of the ’077 Patent with regard to all claims (1-12).
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`III. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION
`Patent Owners have addressed below the claim terms relevant to the
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`arguments made in this preliminary response. To the extent that this case is
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`instituted, Patent Owners reserve the right to address any additional claim
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`construction issues that arise with respect to its further arguments to be made in
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`the Patent Owners’ Response.
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`A.
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`“Gatherer” / “Gatherer Agent” / “Gathering Software Agent” /
`“Path Agent”
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`As Petitioner acknowledges, the terms “gatherer,” “gatherer agent,”
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`“gathering software agent,” and “path agent” have very recently been construed
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`in the corresponding District Court action as “software component that uses a
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`site-specific script and/or site-specific data to extract data values from an
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`Internet site based on the site’s logic and structure.” See Ex. 1010 at 14;
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`Petition at 9. While Petitioner asserts that a construction from an earlier
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`litigation should apply, Petitioner identifies no flaw in the recent District Court
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`construction and asserts invalidity under either construction. For at least the
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`same reasons espoused by the District Court, Patent Owners believe that
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`“software component that uses a site-specific script and/or site-specific data to
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`extract data values from an Internet site based on the site’s logic and structure”
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`is the appropriate construction. The specification explains that the gatherer uses
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`site-specific scripts or templates to identify and extract the desired information
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`from a website. Ex. 1010 (District Court Claim Construction Order) at 15; Ex.
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`1001, at 9:54-64, 11:35-55. The Board should adopt this construction for the
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`purposes of the Petition.
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`IV. THE BOARD SHOULD DENY THE PETITION BECAUSE THE
`’077 PATENT IS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR COVERED BUSINESS
`METHOD REVIEW
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`Covered business method review is only available for patents that (1)
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`claim “a method or corresponding apparatus for performing data processing or
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`other operations used in the practice, administration, or management of a
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`financial product or service”; and (2) are not “technological inventions.” AIA
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`§ 18(a)(1) & (d)(1); 37 C.F.R. § 42.301. The ’077 Patent does not claim a
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`method or apparatus for performing data processing or other operations used in
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`the practice, administration, or management of a financial product or service.
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`Moreover, the claimed invention is clearly a technological invention. Thus, the
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`’077 Patent fails to satisfy either of the requirements for a CBM and is not
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`eligible for CBM review. The Board should therefore deny the Petition.2
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`2 Patent Owners believe that the claims of the ’077 Patent are valid under
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`Section 101, but chooses to focus its Preliminary Response on the Patent’s
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`ineligibility for CBM review. The merits of the claims under Section 101 (in
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`addition to other flaws in the Petition) will be addressed in further detail in
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`Patent Owner’s Response if such a response is needed in view of the institution
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`decision. However, as described below, the claims of the ’077 Patent are
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`directed to a specific technical invention that improves computer operation – not
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`an abstract concept. For this reason alone, institution under Section 101 is not
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`proper. See Enfish Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 2015-1244 at *11 (Fed. Cir. May 12,
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`A. The ’077 Patent does not claim a method or apparatus for
`performing data processing or other operations used in the
`practice, administration, or management of a financial product
`or service
`The AIA defines a CBM-eligible patent as one “that claims a method or
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`corresponding apparatus for performing data processing or other operations
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`used in the practice, administration, or management of a financial product or
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`service, except that the term does not include patents for technological
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`inventions.” AIA § 18(d)(1); 37 C.F.R. § 42.301(a). The focus in determining
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`whether a patent is eligible for CBM review is therefore on “what the patent
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`claims.” Office Patent Trial Practice Guide, 77 Fed. Reg. 48734, 48736 (Aug.
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`14, 2012) (response to comment 8); Qualtrics, LLC v. OpinionLab, Inc.,
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`CBM2015-00164, Paper 8 (Feb. 3, 2016) at 4-5.
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`Petitioner’s analysis entirely fails to show that the ’077 Patent claims a
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`method or apparatus for performing data processing or other operations used in
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`the practice, administration or management of a financial product or service.
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`First, Petitioner only appears to actually allege that claim 7 is CBM-eligible.3
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`
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`2016) (rejecting that notion that claims directed to software are necessarily
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`abstract).
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`3 Petitioner does in a couple of instances include the parenthetical “(as with all
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`challenged claims)” when discussing CBM eligibility. See, e.g., Petition at 13,
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`14, 15. However, Petitioner never analyzes any of the other claims nor does it
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`Then, Petitioner’s only arguments are (1) that the “data” upon which the claim
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`operates is financial; (2) that the “plurality of sites” from which the data is
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`gathered are financial; and (3) that the “software gathering agent . . . to gather
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`data from the site” gathers financial data and/or gathers data from financially-
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`related sites. See generally Petition at 13-16. But instead of showing that any
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`recited claim language from claim 7 is focused on the “practice, administration
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`or management of a financial product or service,” Petitioner focuses entirely on
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`examples in the specification that show the technology of the ’077 Patent may
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`be used in particular applications that bear some relation to finance.
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`Nothing in the language of claim 7 – the required inquiry in determining
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`CBM eligibility – is limited in any way to the practice, administration or
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`management of a financial product or service. Petitioner fails to identify a
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`single claim term that is sufficiently tied to a financial activity to justify
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`inclusion in the CBM program. To the contrary, previous PTAB decisions
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`assert that claim 7 is somehow representative of any other claim in the ’077
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`Patent, much less actually provide any analysis to show how or why claim 7 is
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`representative of “all challenged claims.” Thus, the Petition should be read as
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`only relying on claim 7 to meet the test for CBM eligibility. In any event, as
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`Patent Owner’s analysis will show, none of the claims of the ’077 Patent satisfy
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`the test for CBM eligibility.
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`7
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`actively counsel against institution in this case. See Qualtrics, CBM2015-
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`00164, Paper 8 (Feb. 3, 2016) at 5 (denying institution as not eligible for CBM
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`review: “Here, the claims are devoid of any terms that reasonably could be
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`argued as having any particular relation to a financial product or service.”);
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`ServiceNow, Inc. v. BMC Software, Inc., CBM2015-00107, Paper 12 (Sept. 11,
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`2015) at 10 (“none of these steps involve a financial activity. We also note that
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`no claim limitation is tied specifically to a financial product or service.”); PNC
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`Bank NA v. Parus Holdings, Inc., CBM2015-00111, Paper 10 (Nov. 9, 2015) at
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`15 (“Petitioner points to no recitations in the claims addressing financing,
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`commerce, or the movement of money. We find no such recitation.”).
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`Nor does Petitioner propose any claim constructions that are financial in
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`nature - another factor the Board has recognized supports denying institution as
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`not eligible for CBM review. Qualtrics, CBM2015-00164, Paper 8 at 5. For
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`example, neither of the construction options that Petitioner proposes for
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`“Gatherer Agent,” make any mention of financial matters. To contrary, the
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`construction noted above (and proposed as acceptable by even Petitioner)
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`recites “site-specific scripts” for “extract[ing” data values…based on the sites
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`logic and structure.” Pet. at 9. Similarly, Petitioner’s proposed construction of
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`“authenticating…” recites “utilizing user login credentials.” Pet, at 10. These
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`are clearly not financial activities. In fact, none of Petitioner’s numerous
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`proposed constructions limit (or even direct) the claims to something financial
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`in nature.
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`To the contrary, Petitioner appears to have implicitly agreed that the
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`claims are not financially-related by asserting invalidity based on the notably
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`non-financial CNN news service. See Petition at 40-41. While the art cited by
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`Petitioner is different from the claimed technology (as described below),
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`Petitioner’s decision to rely on a general news website, which is not financially-
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`related, as invalidating the claims shows that Petitioner itself does not believe
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`that the claims are limited to financially-related information.4 Further, in a
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`related IPR petition regarding this same patent, Petitioner similarly asserted that
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`information from ESPN (sports-related, rather than financially-related) could be
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`used to practice the invention. This also shows that Petitioner itself does not
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`read the claims as limited to financially-related applications – if so, it would not
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`have chosen to rely on non-financial prior art. See IPR2015-00275, Paper 1
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`(Dec. 3, 2015) at 43, 52.
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`To be clear, whether or not the claims may be used with certain
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`financially-related applications – the only thing Petitioner alleges about the ’077
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`Patent – is not sufficient to show CBM eligibility. Claims that are “hardly the
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`exclusive domain of the financial sector” do not satisfy the test for CBM
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`eligibility. Qualtrics, CBM2015-00164, Paper 8 (Feb. 3, 2016) at 6. The
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`claims here are, similar to those in Qualtrics, not the exclusive domain of the
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`4 It is even unclear if the CNN personalized news service was even a pay news
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`service See Ex. 2001 (describing CNN personalized news as a free service).
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`financial sector but apply broadly to all types of “information specific to the
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`person” (claim 1) and all types of “data specific to that person” (claim 7), and
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`thus the claims here cannot not satisfy the first prong of the CBM eligibility
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`test. See also ServiceNow, CBM2015-00107, Paper 12 at 13 (denying
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`institution as not CBM-eligible because the patent claimed “methods of general
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`utility”); PNC Bank, CBM2015-00111, Paper 10 at 17 (to be CBM-eligible,
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`“claims must be directed to something more than techniques applicable to a
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`wide variety of industries”).
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`The specification of the ’077 Patent makes clear that the claimed
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`invention is not confined to the particular embodiments upon which Petitioner
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`relies. In particular, the specification describes gathering and summarizing data
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`and information generally: “The present invention is in the field of Internet
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`navigation . . . and pertains more particularly to methods and apparatus,
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`including software, for gathering summary information . . . and presenting the
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`information . . . .” Ex. 1001 at 1:16-22; see also id. at 1:31-35; 1:43; 2:65-67.
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`Further, the specification of the ’077 Patent shows that information
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`specific to a person is not limited in scope to the practice, administration or
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`management of a financial product or service. Quite the contrary, the
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`specification teaches that “information extracted in step 64 may include any
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`information contained in any of the stored pages such as text, pictures,
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`interactive content, or the like.” Ex. 1001 at 9:43-45. The specification even
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`gives examples like obtaining “user-requested notification information about
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`upcoming events,” which are distinctly not financial. Id. at 10:21-23.
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`Moreover, the claimed system can operate on free accounts that are specific to
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`the person or can gather information about events specific to the person but that
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`bear no relation to anything financial. See Qualtrics, CBM2015-00164, Paper 8
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`(Feb. 3, 2016) at 6-7 (denying institution as not CBM-eligible because even
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`though specification
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`included certain financially-related examples, “the
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`specification suggests that the survey tool is amenable to any one of a broad
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`spectrum of websites”).
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`Petitioner has not and cannot identify any language in the specification
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`that limits the scope of the invention to something related to a financial product
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`or service. Thus, the Board should deny institution. See Qualtrics, CBM2015-
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`00164, Paper 8 (Feb. 3, 2016) at 6 (denying institution as not CBM-eligible:
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`“Nor does Qualtrics point to any language in the specification of the ’724 patent
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`that limits the scope of the challenged claims to a financial product or service.”)
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`The only limitation, in either the claims or the specification, on the scope of the
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`claimed “information” (claim 1) or “data” (claim 7) is that it be “specific to
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`[the/that] person” as recited in claims 1 and 7, respectively.
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`As the Board has recognized before, “[t]he fact that the specification may
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`describe the [claimed invention] as capable of being used for [financially-
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`related] purposes does not mean that the challenged claims are limited to such
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`uses” and thus does not mean that the challenged claims are CBM-eligible.
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`Qualtrics, CBM2015-00164, Paper 8 (Feb. 3, 2016) at 6. Concluding otherwise
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`would drastically expand the scope of CBM review in a way that is inconsistent
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`with the statutory language. See also PNC Bank, CBM2015-00111, Paper 10 at
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`15 (“reading Section 18 to apply to any patent that could be used in conjunction
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`with financial products and services could lead to an unreasonable result”). The
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`Board should therefore deny the Petition for this threshold reason alone.
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`The ’077 Patent Claims a “Technological Invention”
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`B.
`Beyond not claiming a financial product, the ’077 patent claims a true
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`“technological invention” and thus is not eligible for CBM review. AIA
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`§ 18(d)(1) (“the term ‘covered business method patent’ . . . does not include
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`patents for technological inventions”). The regulations explain that in
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`determining whether a patent qualifies as a technological invention, “the
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`following will be considered on a case-by-case basis: whether the claimed
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`subject matter as a whole recites a technological feature that is novel and
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`unobvious over the prior art; and solves a technical problem using a technical
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`solution.” 37 C.F.R. § 42.301(b). Petitioner here has failed to show that the
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`“claimed subject matter as a whole” does not satisfy the technological invention
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`exception, and thus has failed to prove the claims are CBM-eligible. In fact, the
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`specification of the ’077 Patent describes the multiple technical challenges to
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`which the claims are addressed, and how the claimed invention addresses those
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`problems (i.e., how the claims are the “technical solution” to the identified
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`“technical problem”).
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`For example, many of the technical problems identified in the ’077 Patent
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`revolve around issues generated by having individual content stored on a variety
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`of different websites and computers throughout the internet. Ex. 1001 at 1:25-
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`45. As the ’077 Patent describes “it is desirable that the software agent in
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`conjunction with the search function be enabled to navigate to any URL or
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`group of URL's, provided as input by a user or otherwise deemed appropriate
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`by the service provider, for the purpose of providing summary information
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`regarding updated content for each URL, which may be presented as an
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`HTML information-page to the user.” Id. at 2:40-46. To address this problem
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`and others, the ’077 Patent recites gathering software agents that have “a
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`client/service interface layer 69 adapted to enable directive input from both a
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`client (user) and a knowledge worker or workers associated with the service.”
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`Ex. 1001 at 10:59-61.
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`The system provides “a unique scripting method…to enable gatherer 67
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`to obtain the goal information requested by a user…[using] aa site-specific
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`script or template for gatherer 67 to follow. Such a template contains
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`descriptions and locations of the appropriate fields user.” Id. at 11:36-47. The
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`gathering agents are further described as being able to include “a process layer
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`71 adapted for internal information gathering and parameter configuration”
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`(11:66-67) as well as an “appliance configuration module,” (12:13-27) a
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`“navigation layer” (12:28-35), a “portal server interface” (12:1-2), and a
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`“parsing engine” (12:37-46). The specification then includes a specific
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`sourcecode example. Id. at 12:61-13:41.
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`Aspects of this technical solution are recited in both sets of claims,
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`particularly in claim 1 (“the gathering agent dedicated to each site accessed
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`extracts data from that site”) and claim 3 (“wherein the data gathered by the
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`gathering agents is summarized and/or aggregated”), as well as in claim 7
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`(“executing a software gathering agent at each site accessed to gather data from
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`the site”) and claim 9 (“further comprising a step for summarizing at the Portal
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`the data gathered by the gathering agents, the resulting summary to be provided
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`to the person”). The parsing engine is further recited in dependent claims 6 and
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`12.
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`In another example, the ’077 Patent addresses the problem that “there are
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`invariably many passwords and/or log-in codes to be used” and in particular that
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`these codes may be required to be different, for example if “the password or
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`code may already be taken by another user” on a particular site. Ex. 1001 at
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`1:46-51. The ’077 Patent explains that one way to address this problem is by
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`maintaining a list of websites with “[u]ser names and password data associated
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`with each item in list 34.” Id. at 5:26-29; Fig. 1. As the Patent explains, the
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`user “is spared the need of entering passwords and user names for any
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`destinations enabled by list 34.” Id. at 5:59-61.
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`This solution is claimed in claim 1 including at least using “a list of
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`addresses of Internet sites associated with a specific person” which is accessed
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`by gatherer agents which are configured to “authenticating too [sic] each site
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`accessed as the person” during a gathering cycle. Id. at claim 1. Claim 5
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`further requires that the portal “stores user names and passwords . . . and uses
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`the stored user games [sic] and passwords to authenticate to each site as the
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`person.” Id. at claim 5. Claim 7 also recites “a plurality of Internet sites storing
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`data specific to that person” where the method involves “authenticating to the
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`sites as the person.” Id. at claim 7. Similarly, claim 11 recites that the portal
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`“stores user names and passwords . . . and uses the stored user names and
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`passwords to authenticate to each site.”
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`Another technical problem identified by the ’077 Patent is that the user
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`“must bookmark many WEB pages in a computer cache so that they may
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`quickly find and access the various services.” Ex. 1001 at 1:59-62. The
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`solution of the ’077 Patent is to use the claimed “list of addresses of Internet
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`sites” (claim 1) or “plurality of Internet sites” (claim 7) so that the portal can
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`“access[]” that site, “authenticat[e]” to it, and “extract[]” (claim 1) or “gather”
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`(claim 7) the requested data without the user needing to individually find each
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`website.
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`The technical nature of the invention is reinforced by the proposed claim
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`constructions which Petitioner itself submitted. For example, as discussed
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`above, the appropriate construction for the “gatherer” and “gathering agent”
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`terms that embody this technical solution is a “software component that uses a
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`site-specific script and/or site-specific data to extract data values from an
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`Internet site based on the site’s logic and structure.” This is a specific
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`technology, that requires specific information about a website (its logic and
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`structure) in order to craft the site-specific script and/or data that is used to
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`extract the information. This is not generic software merely implemented on a
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`computer, but rather, a specific script that must be created to solve the technical
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`problem of how to access information from a specific website given that the
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`structure of different websites may be entirely different and may require
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`different approaches in order to extract useful information.5 This claim
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`construction of the “gatherer