throbber
Trials@uspto.gov
`571-272-7822
`
`Paper 31
`Entered: April 6, 2015
`
`
`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`____________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`____________
`
`SONY MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS (USA) INC.,
`Petitioner,
`
`v.
`
`B.E. TECHNOLOGY, L.L.C.,
`Patent Owner.
`____________
`
`Case IPR2014-00029
`Patent 6,771,290 B1
`____________
`
`
`Before SALLY C. MEDLEY, KALYAN K. DESHPANDE, and
`LYNNE E. PETTIGREW, Administrative Patent Judges.
`
`PETTIGREW, Administrative Patent Judge.
`
`
`FINAL WRITTEN DECISION
`35 U.S.C. § 318(a) and 37 C.F.R. § 42.73
`
`
`
`I. INTRODUCTION
`We have jurisdiction to hear this inter partes review under 35 U.S.C.
`§ 6(c). This Final Written Decision is issued pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 318(a)
`and 37 C.F.R. § 42.73. For the reasons discussed herein, Petitioner has
`shown by a preponderance of the evidence that claims 2 and 3 of U.S. Patent
`No. 6,771,290 B1 (Ex. 1001, “the ’290 patent”) are unpatentable.
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`IPR2014-00029
`Patent 6,771,290 B1
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`A. Procedural History
`Petitioner, Sony Mobile Communications (USA) Inc., filed a Petition
`for inter partes review of claims 2 and 3 of the ’290 patent. Paper 2 (“Pet.”).
`Patent Owner, B.E. Technology, L.L.C., did not file a Preliminary Response.
`On April 9, 2014, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 314, we instituted an inter partes
`review for claims 2 and 3 of the ’290 patent on the ground of anticipation by
`Kikinis1 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). Paper 7.
`Subsequent to institution, Patent Owner filed a Patent Owner
`Response (Paper 21, “PO Resp.”), and Petitioner filed a Reply to the Patent
`Owner Response (Paper 24, “Reply”). On December 11, 2014, we held a
`consolidated hearing for five inter partes reviews involving the ’290 patent.2
`A transcript of the oral hearing is included in the record. Paper 30 (“Tr.”).
`
`B. Related Proceedings
`The parties indicate that the ’290 patent is at issue in B.E. Technology,
`L.L.C. v. Sony Mobile Communications (USA), Inc., No. 2:12-cv-02827
`(W.D. Tenn.), and numerous other district court cases filed by Patent Owner
`against other defendants. Pet. 1–2; Paper 4, 1–2 (Patent Owner’s Mandatory
`Notices). As noted, the ’290 patent is the subject of four other inter partes
`reviews: IPR2014-00031, IPR2014-00033, IPR2014-00040, and IPR2014-
`00044.
`
`
`1 PCT International Publication Number WO 97/09682, published Mar. 13,
`1997 (Ex. 1008) (“Kikinis”).
`2 Sony Mobile Commc’ns (USA) Inc. v. B.E. Tech., L.L.C., Case IPR2014-
`00029; Google Inc. v. B.E. Tech., L.L.C., Case IPR2014-00031; Google Inc.
`v. B.E. Tech., L.L.C., Case IPR2014-00033; Microsoft Corp. v. B.E. Tech.,
`L.L.C., Case IPR2014-00040; Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc. v. B.E. Tech.,
`L.L.C., Case IPR2014-00044.
`
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`C. The ’290 Patent
`The ’290 patent describes a system that provides remote storage of
`user-specific files and resources that can be accessed over a network, such as
`the Internet. Ex. 1001, 5:43–50, 12:45–50. The disclosed system includes
`client computers, each running a client software application that provides
`access via a network to an advertising and data management (ADM) server.
`Id. at 11:42–49. The server includes a user database that stores a user profile
`and a user library for each user. Id. at 12:45–13:12. The user profile is
`accessed by the client software application using a unique identifier for the
`user via a login. Id. at 12:52–56. The user profile may contain user-specific
`customized settings for the operating system used by the client computer.
`Id. at 12:56–58. Additionally, the user profile may contain “bookmarks,
`shortcuts, and other such links to files and information resources accessible
`via” the network. Id. at 12:67–13:3. The user library “enables the user to
`store files (documents, executable programs, email messages, audio clips,
`video clip, or other files) that can then be accessed from any client
`computer.” Id. at 13:4–7. By storing user profiles and user libraries on the
`server, users “can have world-wide access to their preferences, addresses,
`bookmarks, email, and files without having to physically transport them
`from one place to another.” Id. at 13:9–12.
`The ’290 patent further describes a user interface on a client
`computer, provided by a graphical user interface (GUI) module. Id.
`at 13:41–43. The user interface comprises an application window with
`selectable items such as icons. Id. at 13:43–53. As shown in Figure 5b, the
`application window may include “icons that represent various files and links
`to information resources.” Id. at 15:48–53.
`
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`Figure 5b of the ’290 patent is reproduced below:
`
`
`Figure 5b illustrates an application window with icons
`representing files and links to information resources.
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`The application window in Figure 5b includes a library icon, which,
`when selected, provides a display as shown in Figure 5c, reproduced below.
`
`Figure 5c illustrates an application window
`displaying files in a user library.
`
`
`
`The display in Figure 5c provides a list of all files contained in a user
`library. Id. at 15:55–56. From this window, “the user can access any of the
`files contained in his or her user library.” Id. at 15:56–57.
`
`D. Claims
`Petitioner challenges claims 2 and 3, which read:
`
`2.
`A computer-readable memory for use by a client
`computer in conjunction with a server that is accessible by the
`client computer via a network, the server storing a user profile
`and user library for each of a number of different users, with the
`user library containing one or more files and the user profile
`containing at least one user link that provides a[] link to one of
`the files in the user library, the computer-readable memory
`comprising:
`
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`a non-volatile data storage device;
`
`a program stored on said non-volatile data storage device
`
`in a computer-readable format;
`
`said program being operable upon execution to display a
`graphical user interface comprising an application window
`having a number of user-selectable items displayed therein,
`wherein each of said items has associated with it a link to an
`information resource accessible via the network and wherein
`said program is operable upon execution and in response to
`selection by a user of one of said items to access the associated
`information resource over the network;
`
`said program being operable upon execution to receive
`from [the] server one of the user profiles and to display a user-
`selectable item for user links contained within the user profile,
`said program further being operable in response to selection by
`a user of one of the user links to access the file associated with
`the selected user link from the user library associated with the
`received user profile.
`
`A computer-readable memory as defined in claim
`3.
`
`2, wherein said program is operable upon execution and in
`response to selection by a user of one of said items to access the
`associated information resource over the network using a
`browser.
`Id. at 39:1–40:16.
`
`II. ANALYSIS
`
`A. Claim Construction
`In an inter partes review, we construe claim terms in an unexpired
`patent according to their broadest reasonable construction in light of the
`specification of the patent in which they appear. 37 C.F.R. § 42.100(b).
`Patent Owner contends the Board’s adoption of the “broadest reasonable
`construction” standard exceeded the Office’s rulemaking authority and
`requests that we construe the claims in this case in a manner consistent with
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`claim construction that would be applied in the district court. PO Resp. 24–
`25. Recently, however, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
`Circuit held that “Congress implicitly adopted the broadest reasonable
`interpretation standard in enacting the [America Invents Act].” In re Cuozzo
`Speed Techs., LLC, 778 F.3d 1271, 1281 (Fed. Cir. 2015). The court further
`held that even if the broadest reasonable interpretation standard were not
`incorporated into the inter partes statutory provisions, the Office properly
`adopted the standard by regulation under the rulemaking authority provided
`by 35 U.S.C. § 316. Id. at 1282. Accordingly, we construe the claims in this
`proceeding using the broadest reasonable construction standard.
`Consistent with the broadest reasonable construction standard, claim
`terms are presumed to have their ordinary and customary meaning, as
`understood by a person of ordinary skill in the art, in the context of the entire
`patent disclosure. In re Translogic Tech., Inc., 504 F.3d 1249, 1257 (Fed.
`Cir. 2007). An inventor may provide a meaning for a term that is different
`from its ordinary meaning by defining the term in the specification with
`reasonable clarity, deliberateness, and precision. In re Paulsen, 30 F.3d
`1475, 1480 (Fed. Cir. 1994).
`
`1. Claim Terms Defined in the ’290 Patent
`The ’290 patent recites explicit definitions for many terms. In the
`table below, we construe claim terms relevant to our decision in accordance
`with the definitions provided in the ’290 patent, which are set forth in the
`written description with reasonable clarity, deliberateness, and precision.
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`Claim Term
`
`data set
`
`file
`
`information resource
`
`link
`
`non-volatile data storage
`device
`
`profile
`
`Construction
`“A group of data items; for example, links,
`keywords, or entries in an address book.”
`Ex. 1001, 4:18–19.
`“Any digital item, including information,
`documents,
`applications,
`audio/video
`components, and the like, that is stored in
`memory and
`is accessible via a file
`allocation
`table or other pointing or
`indexing structure.” Ex. 1001, 4:25–28.
`“A source of information stored on a
`server or other computer that is accessible
`to other computers over a network.”
`Ex. 1001, 4:33–35.
`“A data item that identifies the location or
`address of a program or
`information
`resource.” Ex. 1001, 4:39–40.3
`“A memory device that retains computer-
`readable data or programming code in the
`absence of externally-supplied power,
`including such things as a hard disk or a
`floppy disk, a compact disk read-only
`memory (CDROM), digital versatile disk
`[(]DVD), magneto-optical disk, and so
`forth.” Ex. 1001, 4:46–51.
`“User-specific information relating to an
`individual using a computer.” Ex. 1001,
`4:52–53.
`
`2. User library
`Claim 2 recites a “server storing a . . . user library for each of a
`number of different users, with the user library containing one or more
`
`3 The ’290 patent further provides: “A URL [i.e., a uniform resource
`locator] is a link, as is a path and filename of an information resource.”
`Ex. 1001, 4:40–41. We consider these to be examples of a “link,” not part of
`the definition, and, therefore, not part of our construction of the claim term.
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`files.” Ex. 1001, 39:3–5 (emphasis added). Claim 2 further provides that
`files in the user library are accessed via user links in a user profile.
`Id. at 39:6–7, 40:8–11. Although the ’290 patent does not provide an
`explicit definition of “user library,” it provides the following description:
`“[T]he User Database 46 of ADM server 22 can include a user library that
`enables the user to store files (documents, executable programs, email
`messages, audio clips, video clips, or other files) that can then be accessed
`from any client computer 40.” Id. at 13:3–7 (emphasis added). The written
`description of the ’290 patent further explains that a user library is “used to
`store [a user’s] individual files and resources that the user wishes to be able
`to access from anywhere on the network.” Id. at 5:56–58.
`An ordinary meaning of “library” in the context of electronic
`document storage is a “collection of software or data files,”4 and, thus, a
`“user library” is a “collection of a user’s software or data files.” In view of
`this ordinary meaning and the claims and written description of the
`’290 patent, the broadest reasonable construction of “user library” consistent
`with its use in the ’290 patent is “a collection of an individual’s stored files.”
`
`B. Asserted Ground of Anticipation by Kikinis
`Petitioner contends that claims 2 and 3 are unpatentable under
`35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Kikinis, relying on declaration
`testimony of Dr. Eric Burger. Pet. 17–22 (citing Ex. 1006). Patent Owner
`responds, relying on declaration testimony of Dr. Cory Plock. PO Resp. 8–
`24 (citing Ex. 2001). Having considered the parties’ contentions and
`
`
`4 See MICROSOFT COMPUTER DICTIONARY 309 (5th ed. 2002).
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`supporting evidence, we determine that Petitioner has demonstrated by a
`preponderance of the evidence that claims 2 and 3 are anticipated by Kikinis.
`
`1. Summary of Kikinis
`Kikinis describes a document management system that provides for
`remote storage and retrieval of electronic documents. Ex. 1008, Abstract,
`1:7–9. Figure 2, reproduced below, illustrates Kikinis’s electronic document
`system.
`
`
`
`As shown in Figure 2, Kikinis discloses user station 53 with a web browser
`that allows a user to access, via the Internet, servers provided by a remote
`Internet service provider (ISP), labeled “User’s Provider” in the figure.
`Id. at 6:11–14, 6:24–26. In the embodiment shown in Figure 2, the remote
`ISP includes web server 67 and a set of electronic document servers 69, all
`of which have access to the Internet. Id. at 6:24–27.
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`Each electronic document server 69 runs software that supports a
`specific application. Id. at 6:27–29. As shown in Figure 2, examples
`include e-mail program 79, fax program 81, voice-mail program 85, and
`other programs 87, which provide access to other electronic documents.
`Id. at 6:29–31. Web server 67 stores a set of databases 71, each of which is
`associated with a different user. Id. at 6:32–35. Each database set 71
`includes home page 73 that is individualized to a specific user and provides
`links to various lower-order databases maintained by electronic document
`server 69 for each user, such as e-mail database 89, fax database 91, voice-
`mail database 93, and other electronic documents in database 95. Id. at
`6:35–7:4. A user may be required to provide a password and user name to
`gain access to home page 73 of an electronic document database. Id. at
`8:21–24.
`A user who wishes to access electronic documents stored on an
`electronic document server invokes the web browser at a user station. Id. at
`7:17–29. Figure 3 of Kikinis, reproduced below, illustrates a series of web
`browser windows for accessing electronic documents.
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`As shown in Figure 3, a user enters a URL for his home page in
`field 113. Id. at 7:29–31. Home page 73 is retrieved from the remote server
`and displayed as a graphical user interface to data and other web
`destinations, with on-screen links to the user’s electronic documents stored
`on the electronic document server. Id. at 7:31–8:1. For example, as shown
`in Figure 3, home page 73 provides links to the user’s voice-mail
`(button 117), e-mail (button 118), faxes (button 120), and other electronic
`documents (button 122). Id. at 8:2–13. A user also may use home page 73
`to link to other databases, “such as a personal multi-lingual dictionary
`featuring pronunciation, a spelling checker, or a thesaurus; or indeed, almost
`any other sort of digital data or control routines.” Id. at 8:14–18.
`
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`2. Claims 2 and 3
`Independent claim 2 of the ’290 patent is directed to a computer-
`readable memory for use by a client computer in conjunction with a server
`that is accessible by the client via a network and stores a user profile and a
`user library containing one or more files. Ex. 1001, 39:1–5. The computer-
`readable memory on the client includes a “program stored on [a] non-
`volatile data storage device.” Id. at 39:10–11. The program is, among other
`things, “operable upon execution to receive from [the] server one of the user
`profiles and to display a user-selectable item for user links contained within
`the user profile,” and “operable in response to selection by a user of one of
`the user links to access the file associated with the selected user link from
`the user library associated with the received user profile.” Id. at 40:3–11.
`Claim 3 depends from claim 2 and specifies that the program uses a browser.
`Id. at 40:13–17.
`Petitioner provides detailed analysis showing where Kikinis describes
`each limitation of claims 2 and 3. Pet. 17–22. In particular, Petitioner
`asserts that Kikinis discloses the recited “program” (a web browser on a user
`station), “user library” (user-specific databases, such as an e-mail database, a
`fax database, a voice-mail database, and an electronic document database, all
`of which contain user-specific files), and “user profile” (home page) with
`links to the user’s files. Id. at 18–22 (citing Ex. 1006 ¶¶ 17–19). Patent
`Owner argues that Kikinis fails to describe (a) a program stored on a non-
`volatile data storage device that performs the functions recited in claim 2,
`(b) a file associated with a selected user link, and (c) a user profile.
`PO Resp. 8–23. Patent Owner contends that Kikinis does not anticipate
`claim 3 for the same reasons provided for claim 2. Id. at 23–24.
`
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`Having considered the parties’ contentions and supporting evidence,
`we determine that Petitioner has demonstrated by a preponderance of the
`evidence that Kikinis anticipates claims 2 and 3 of the ’290 patent. For the
`reasons discussed below, we are not persuaded by Patent Owner’s
`contentions.
`
`a. Program stored on a non-volatile data storage device
`Patent Owner contends that Kikinis does not disclose a program
`stored on a client that performs the functions of a “program” as recited in
`claim 2. PO Resp. 8–15. Specifically, Patent Owner argues that Kikinis
`discloses a system that provides indirect access to electronic documents
`because it requires programs remotely stored on a server to access remotely
`stored electronic documents. Id. at 9. For example, each electronic
`document server shown in Figure 2 of Kikinis runs software that supports a
`specific application, such as an e-mail program or a voice-mail program.
`Id. at 9–10 (citing Ex. 1008, 6:27–31). Patent Owner further submits that
`Kikinis’s web browser, although stored on a non-volatile storage device on a
`client, does not perform the claimed functions of a “program” because it
`cannot access electronic documents by itself without additional software
`programs stored on a remote server. Id. at 13–15 (citing Ex. 2001 ¶ 21). In
`other words, Patent Owner essentially contends that the client program
`recited in claim 2 must provide direct access to a file stored in a user library
`on the server, without the assistance of any program on the server.
`See id. at 9; see also Ex. 2003, 24:3–24 (Dr. Plock testifying that Kikinis’s
`browser cannot correspond to the claimed “program” because it must use a
`server-side program to access databases, and thus “cannot directly access”
`the databases).
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`We are not persuaded by Patent Owner’s argument, which improperly
`reads “direct” access into the claim. Claim 2 simply requires the program to
`“access the file,” without precluding the involvement of software on the
`server to facilitate that access. The broadest reasonable interpretation of
`“access,” as used in the claim without any modifiers, encompasses the type
`of file access performed by the browser in the Kikinis system. Moreover,
`Patent Owner’s own expert admits that in any client-server system, such as
`the system described and claimed in the ’290 patent, software on a server
`necessarily is required for the server to respond to a request from a client
`program, such as a browser. See Ex. 2004, 53:14–19, 54:13–18. Thus, we
`find that Kikinis’s web browser is a program stored on a client that is
`operable to perform the functions of the “program” recited in claim 2,
`including accessing a file on the server.
`
`b. File associated with a selected user link
`Patent Owner contends that Kikinis does not disclose “selection by a
`user of one of the user links to access the file associated with the selected
`user link from the user library,” as recited in claim 2. PO Resp. 15–21.
`According to Patent Owner, Kikinis describes links to software programs
`and databases, but not links to specific files. Id. at 17. As part of its
`argument, Patent Owner submits that the ’290 patent describes a “one-click”
`system that provides a “direct link” from an item in the user profile to a
`specific file in the user library. Id. at 16–17 (citing Ex. 1001, 15:12–13
`(“The user has the ability to subscribe the channel by making a direct link to
`a file . . . .”)).
`As an initial matter, the plain language of claim 2 does not require
`“one-click” access or a “direct link” to files. Although the ’290 patent
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`describes direct links to files, it also describes other means for accessing
`files. See, e.g., Ex. 1001, 15:12–15 (“The user has the ability to subscribe
`the channel by making a direct link to a file, or by combining various files
`under some category, or by providing a drop down list to a subscribed
`channel.” (emphases added)); id. at 15:53–57 (“[A] library icon . . . , when
`selected, provides a display as shown in FIG. 5c which contains a list of all
`of the files contained in the user library. From here, the user can access any
`of the files contained in his or her user library . . . .” (emphasis added)).
`Patent Owner does not present persuasive evidence or argument for
`importing a “one-click” limitation into claim 2.
`Turning to Kikinis, we find that, contrary to Patent Owner’s
`arguments, Kikinis discloses the selection of a user link to access the file
`associated with the selected user link from the user library. Kikinis
`specifically states that its home page, which corresponds to the claimed user
`profile, has “on-screen links to electronic documents reserved for the home
`page ‘owner’, such as e-mail and faxes.” Ex. 1008, 7:35–8:1. Patent
`Owner’s expert, Dr. Plock, agrees that this passage from Kikinis discloses
`links to electronic documents. Ex. 2004, 66:6–20. Thus, Kikinis clearly
`discloses links on a user’s home page to individual, electronic documents,
`which are “files” as that term is defined in the ’290 patent. See supra II.A.1.
`In addition, it is undisputed that Kikinis discloses a home page with
`links to databases. See, e.g., Pet. 18; PO Resp. 19. As described in Kikinis,
`in connection with Figure 2, web server 67 stores a set of databases 71, each
`of which “belongs to (or is assigned to or is associated with) a different
`client.” Ex. 1008, 6:32–35. Each database set 71 includes home page 73
`that is individualized to a specific user and provides links to various lower-
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`order databases maintained by electronic document server 69 for each user,
`such as e-mail database 89, fax database 91, voice-mail database 93, and
`database 95 containing other electronic documents. Id. at 6:35–7:4;
`see id. at Fig. 2 (showing client-specific databases 89, 91, 93, and 95).
`Patent Owner agrees that Kikinis describes links to databases, but
`argues that databases are not files. PO Resp. 15–17, 19; Ex. 2001 ¶¶ 24–25.
`The ’290 patent, however, defines “file” as “[a]ny digital item, including
`information, documents, applications, audio/video components, and the like,
`that is stored in memory and is accessible via a file allocation table or other
`pointing or indexing structure.” Ex. 1001, 4:25–28; see supra II.A.1. At his
`deposition, Patent Owner’s expert, Dr. Plock, admitted that the databases for
`e-mail, fax, voice-mail, and other electronic documents in Kikinis meet the
`requirements of a file, as that term is used in the ’290 patent. See Ex. 2004,
`59:21–63:20. Specifically, Dr. Plock agreed that the databases are stored in
`digital form, id. at 63:15–20, are stored in memory, id. at 59:21–23, 62:21–
`24, and can be accessed using a pointing or indexing structure, id. at 59:24–
`60:1, 60:9–11, 62:25–63:7. Dr. Plock further agreed that a user accesses the
`databases in Kikinis via links on the home page, which corresponds to the
`claimed user profile. Id. at 71:19–72:8. The databases disclosed in Kikinis,
`therefore, are files associated with selected user links, as recited in claim 2.
`Patent Owner and its expert contend that Kikinis’s lower-order
`databases (e-mail database 89, fax database 91, voice-mail database 93, and
`database 95 for other electronic documents) do not comprise a “user
`library,” as required by claim 2, because the databases contain e-mails,
`voice-mails, and faxes for multiple users. See Tr. 32:11–25; Ex. 2003, 36:3–
`14; Ex. 2004, 56:20–57:1. This argument, however, is inconsistent with the
`
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`disclosures in Kikinis, including the client-specific databases shown in
`Figure 2. See Ex. 1008, 8:30–31 (describing electronic document databases
`as belonging to a user). Kikinis, therefore, discloses a user library (i.e., a
`collection of databases stored for a user) containing one or more files (i.e.,
`databases 89, 91, 93, and 95), which may be selected by a user link in a user
`profile (i.e., home page).
`Thus, Kikinis discloses selection of a link to access a file associated
`with the selected link from a user library in at least two ways—via a link to
`an electronic document stored in a user’s database of electronic documents,
`which corresponds to the recited “user library,” and via a link to one of the
`user’s databases, e.g., the user’s e-mail database, which is a “file” as that
`term is defined in the ’290 patent and which, together with other databases,
`comprise a “user library.”
`
`c. User profile
`Patent Owner contends that the home page disclosed in Kikinis is not
`a “user profile” as recited in claim 2 because Kikinis contains no mention of
`any “user-specific information relating to an individual using a computer”
`found within the home page. PO Resp. 22. Kikinis, however, describes a
`home page as “a graphical interface unique to an individual user” that
`“functions in part as a table of contents.” Ex. 1008, 2:3–5. Further, Kikinis
`specifically indicates the home page has “indicia identifying the home page
`owner” and is “individualized to a specific client.” Id. at 3:3–4, 6:34–35.
`Patent Owner’s argument fails to account for these express disclosures of
`“user-specific information” in Kikinis.
`
`18
`
`

`
`IPR2014-00029
`Patent 6,771,290 B1
`
`III. CONCLUSION
`Based on the evidence and arguments, Petitioner has demonstrated by
`a preponderance of the evidence that claims 2 and 3 of the ’290 patent are
`anticipated by Kikinis under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b).
`
`IV. ORDER
`
`Accordingly, it is:
`
`ORDERED that claims 2 and 3 of U.S. Patent No. 6,771,290 B1 are
`
`unpatentable.
`
`This is a final written decision. Parties to the proceeding seeking
`judicial review of the decision must comply with the notice and service
`requirements of 37 C.F.R. § 90.2.
`
`FOR PETITIONER:
`John Flock
`Paul Qualey
`KENYON & KENYON LLP
`jflock@kenyon.com
`pqualey@kenyon.com
`
`FOR PATENT OWNER:
`
`Jason S. Angell
`Robert E. Freitas
`FREITAS TSENG & KAUFMAN LLP
`jangell@ftklaw.com
`rfreitas@ftklaw.com
`
`
`19

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