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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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`
`GOOGLE INC.
`Petitioner
`
`v.
`
`AT HOME BONDHOLDERS' LIQUIDATING TRUST
`Patent Owner
`
`_____________________
`
`Case IPR No. Unassigned
`U.S. Patent 6,286,045
`_____________________
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`DECLARATION OF PETER KENT
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`
`
`IPR of US Pat. No. 6,286,045
`
`
`Google Inc.
`GOOG 1003
`IPR of U.S. Patent No. 6,286,045
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`i
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
`Declaration of Peter Kent (GOOG 1003)
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`TABLE OF CONTENTS
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`B.
`C.
`
`I.
`Overview ......................................................................................................... 1
`II. My Background and Qualifications ................................................................ 2
`III. List of Documents Considered in Formulating My Opinion ......................... 4
`IV. Person of Ordinary Skill in the Art ................................................................. 5
`V.
`State of the Art ................................................................................................ 6
`VI. Overview of the '045 Patent.......................................................................... 11
`VII. Overview of Prior Art References ................................................................ 13
`VIII. Claim Construction ....................................................................................... 15
`A.
`"Banner" .............................................................................................. 15
`B.
`"Best Suited" ....................................................................................... 16
`C.
`"Content General Banner Request" ..................................................... 17
`D.
`"Content Specific Banner Request" .................................................... 19
`IX. Legal Principles ............................................................................................ 20
`X. Grounds of Unpatentability .......................................................................... 24
`A. Ground 1: Angles and Merriman (20, 24-26, 28, 30, 31, 75,
`and 78) ................................................................................................. 25
`Ground 2: Angles, Merriman, and Davis (21) .................................... 40
`Ground 3: Angles, Merriman, and Garland (22, 23, 29, 33,
`43, 44, 47, 48, and 77) ......................................................................... 43
`D. Ground 4: Angles, Merriman, and HTTP1.0 (27, 59, 61-63,
`72, and 73) ........................................................................................... 51
`Ground 5: Wexler, and HTTP1.0 (20, 21, 24-28, 31, 33, 72,
`75, 77, and 78) ..................................................................................... 58
`Ground 6: Wexler, HTTP1.0, and Meeker (30, 59, 61-63,
`and 73) ................................................................................................. 76
`G. Ground 7: Wexler, HTTP1.0, and Garland (22, 23, 29, 43,
`44, and 47) ........................................................................................... 82
`H. Ground 8: Wexler, HTTP1.0, Garland, and Meeker (48) ................... 88
`XI. Conclusion .................................................................................................... 89
`
`E.
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`F.
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`I, Peter Kent, hereby declare as follows.
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`I.
`
`Overview
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`
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`1.
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`I am over the age of eighteen (18) and otherwise competent to make
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`this declaration.
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`2.
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`I have been retained as an expert witness on behalf of Google Inc. for
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`the above-captioned inter partes review (IPR). I am being compensated for my
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`time in connection with this IPR at my standard consulting rate, which is $350 per
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`hour. I understand that the petition for inter partes review involves U.S. Patent No.
`
`6,286,045 ("the '045 patent", GOOG 1001), which resulted from U.S. Application
`
`No. 08/858,650 ("the '650 application"), filed on May 19, 1997, naming Michael
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`John Griffiths and James David McElhiney as the inventors. I understand that the
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`effective filing date of the '045 patent is May 19, 1997. I further understand that,
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`according to USPTO records, the '045 patent is currently assigned to At Home
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`Bondholders' Liquidating Trust ("Patentee").
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`3.
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`In preparing this Declaration, I have reviewed the '045 patent and
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`considered each of the documents cited herein, in light of general knowledge in the
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`art. In formulating my opinions, I have relied upon my experience in the relevant
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`art. I have also considered the viewpoint of a person of ordinary skill in the art
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`(i.e., a person of ordinary skill in the field of web-based information management
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`and delivery, defined further below in Section IV) prior to May 19, 1997. I am
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
`Declaration of Peter Kent (GOOG 1003)
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`familiar with the technology at issue as of the May 19, 1997 effective filing date of
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`the '045 patent. I am also familiar with the level of ordinary skill in the art with
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`respect to the technology at issue as of the May 19, 1997 effective filing date.
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`II. My Background and Qualifications
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`4.
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`Throughout the remainder of this declaration, I will refer to the field
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`of network architecture and information delivery as the relevant field or the
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`relevant art. In formulating my opinions, I have relied upon my training,
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`knowledge, and experience in the relevant art. A copy of my current curriculum
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`vitae is provided as GOOG 1004, and it provides a comprehensive description of
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`my academic and employment history.
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`5.
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`I had direct experience with banner advertising dating back to the
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`mid-1990s and am very familiar with banner advertising mechanisms during that
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`time frame. I am experienced with a variety of advertising systems from the mid-
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`1990s to the present, all of which included various tools for counting ad
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`impressions. Over the last 20 years, I worked with numerous systems that count
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`hits of various kinds such as Google Analytics, Analog, AWStats, Webalizer,
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`Urchin, and Webtrends.
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
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`6.
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`I am knowledgeable with respect to clearing and blocking browser
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`caches and cache-blocking mechanisms that ensure that the correct ad is displayed
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`with various HTML meta tags, such as the pragma and cache-control tags. I began
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`working with HTML in 1993 and have been involved in Web development in
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`various roles since then.
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`7.
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`In addition to authoring online-advertising portions of Poor Richard's
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`Web Site in 1997, I authored Pay Per Click Search Engine Marketing for Dummies
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`in 2005.
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`8. My other publications related to online advertising include How to
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`Make Money Online with eBay, Yahoo!, and Google; Poor Richard's Internet
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`Marketing and Promotions: How to Promote Yourself, Your Business, Your Ideas
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`Online; and The CDnow Story: Rags to Riches on the Internet.
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`9.
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`I have extensive online experience, dating back to 1984 (e.g.,
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`participating in bulletin boards and online services, designing CompuServe
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`navigation tools, and creating web pages). I have been working on the Internet day-
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`to-day since 1993. I also have been working in software development since 1981
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`and in cyberspace-software development since 1991.
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`10.
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`I received a B.A. degree, in Geography/Geology, from University of
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`Sheffield, United Kingdom, in 1978.
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
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`11. My additional contributions to the field are set forth in my current
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`curriculum vitae (GOOG 1004).
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`III. List of Documents Considered in Formulating My Opinion
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`12.
`documents:
`
`
`Exhibit #
`1001
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`1002
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`1007
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`1008
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`1009
`
`1010
`
`1012
`
`1013
`
`1014
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`In formulating my opinion, I have considered
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`the following
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`Description
`
`Griffiths et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,286,045 (filed May 19, 1997;
`issued September 4, 2001).
`
`File History for U.S. Patent No. 6,286,045.
`
`Wexler, U.S. Patent No. 5,960,409 (filed October 11, 1996, issued
`September 28, 1999).
`
`Fielding et al., "HTTP Working Group Internet Draft Hypertext
`Transfer Protocol – HTTP/1.0,"( dated February 19, 1996; published
`February 20, 1996).
`
`Garland et al., "Implementing Distributed Server Groups for the
`World Wide Web" Carnegie Mellon University (January 25, 1995).
`
`Meeker, Mary, "Technology: Internet/New Media The Internet
`Advertising Report" Morgan Stanley, U.S. Investment Research
`(January 1997).
`
`Angles et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,933,811 (filed August 20, 1996,
`issued August 3, 1999).
`
`Merriman et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,948,061 (filed October 29, 1996,
`issued September 7, 1999).
`
`Davis et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,796,952 (filed March 21, 1997, issued
`August 18, 1998).
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`Exhibit #
`1016
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`1017
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`1018
`
`1019
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`1021
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
`Declaration of Peter Kent (GOOG 1003)
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`Description
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`J. Mogul and P. Leach, "Simple Hit-Metering for HTTP," (dated
`January 21, 1997; published January 22, 1997).
`
`C. Brown and S. Benford, "Tracking WWW Users: Experience from
`the Design of HyperVisVR," Webnet 96, Oct. 15-19, 1996.
`
`H. Skardal, "A Trip Report and some reflections," W3C Meeting on
`Web Efficiency and Robustness (Apr. 22, 1996).
`"WRQ Express PageMeter delivers breakthrough accuracy in Web
`metering," Business Wire, Apr. 28, 1997.
`Lopez-Ortiz, et al., "A Multicollaborative Push-Caching HTTP
`Protocol for the WWW," December 28, 1995.
`
`
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`IV. Person of Ordinary Skill in the Art
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`13.
`
`I understand that a person of ordinary skill in the art is one who is
`
`presumed to be aware of all pertinent art, thinks along conventional wisdom in the
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`art, and is a person of ordinary creativity. A person of ordinary skill in the art
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`("POSA") would have had knowledge of Internet advertising including banner
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`display counting, cache usage, and various HTTP-related technologies as of 1997.
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`14. Applying the above understanding, it is my opinion that, as a general
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`matter, a POSA at the time of the filing of the '045 patent would have had at least
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`(a) a Bachelor of Science degree in computer science and/or a similar field or (b) at
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`least 3 years of experience in web-based information management and delivery
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`systems.
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`V.
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`State of the Art
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
`Declaration of Peter Kent (GOOG 1003)
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`15. Counting accuracy for delivered content was a widely known issue at
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`the time the '045 patent was filed, and the proposed solution in the '045 patent was
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`also already widely known. In fact, attempting to improve counting accuracy via
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`cache avoidance was such a burden on the Web's bandwidth by early 1997 that
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`other proposals were already being made to move advertisers away from the use of
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`cache-avoidance. As stated in a HTTP Working Group memo:
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`For a variety of reasons, content providers want to be
`able to collect information on the frequency with which
`their content is accessed. This desire leads to some of the
`"cache-busting" done by existing servers (exactly how
`much is unknown). This kind of cache-busting is done
`not for the purpose of maintaining transparency or
`security properties, but simply to collect demographic
`information. It has also been pointed out that some
`cache-busting
`is also done to provide different
`advertising images to appear on the same page (i.e.,
`each retrieval of the page sees a different ad.)
`
`…
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`HTTP/1.1 already allows origin servers to prevent
`caching of responses, and we have evidence that at least
`some of the time, this is being done for the sole purpose
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`of collecting counts of the number of accesses of specific
`pages.
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`(GOOG 1016, pp. 2-31.)
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`16. Another reference describes various cache avoidance techniques
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`including HTTP no-cache pragma, appending a random segment to the URL, and
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`using a cgi script to generate dynamic pages:
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`Many content providers have resorted to "beating the
`cache" when attempting to obtain full access statistics
`and
`tracking
`information. HTTP/1.0 specifies a
`'Pragma: no-cache' header, which is an instruction to the
`cache server not to cache that object. However, due to the
`misuse of the header by content providers, many proxy
`cache administrators have resorted to ignoring the header
`and caching the resource anyway. Cache busting
`methods include appending a random segment to the
`URL which confuses the cache into thinking that all
`the resources are different, and generating all pages
`dynamically through a cgi-script, the results of which
`do not get cached.
`
`(GOOG 1017, pp. 7-8.)
`
`
`1 Emphasis added throughout, unless otherwise noted.
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`17. The idea of using "cache-busting" to get accurate hit counts for an
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`advertisement server was widely known and used. For example, Skardal states that
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`"[t]here are phenomenons in the Web working against caching. One is the 'hit
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`count problem' where content providers modify the URL's to be CGI/non-
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`cacheable URL's in order to improve
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`'hit count', which is needed for
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`advertisement counting." (GOOG 1018, p. 2.) In another example, Business Wire
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`reported that "[u]ntil now, web metering products could not accurately count page
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`requests because of caching by both proxy servers and browsers. With Express
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`PageMeter, however, the web server is notified each time the page is requested,
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`even when it is served from cache." (GOOG 1019, p. 1.)
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`18. HTTP redirect was also widely employed in the field of information
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`delivery (including delivery of online advertisements). Among many examples,
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`Wexler describes a third party accounting and statistical service "configured to
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`issue a '302' redirect response when a specific URL is requested." (GOOG 1007,
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`5:16-17.) Similarly, Merriman describes an advertisement server for "send[ing] the
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`redirect message causing the user's browser to receive the URL for the advertiser's
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`web site based upon data stored in the server." (GOOG 1013, 7:22-26.)
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`19. HTTP redirect provided many benefits that web developers at the time
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`(including developers for web-based online advertisement) would recognize. One
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`well-known use of HTTP redirect messages was to refer a client computer to a
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`server located in the close geographical proximity of the client for reducing
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
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`latency. (See GOOG 1021, p. 6; see also GOOG 1009, p. 9 ("The dispatcher would
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`then take network load and proximity into account when deciding which server to
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`transfer a client to.") Another well-known use of HTTP redirect messages was to
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`refer the client computer to a selected server in a group of distributed servers. It
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`was well known in the art that using a group of web servers can reduce latency
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`because a distributed web server group can balance the load and dispatch the
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`request to the least loaded web server. (See GOOG 1009, pp. 1 and 3.) It was also
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`well known in the art at the time that a group of web servers could use a HTTP
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`redirect message to tell the web browser to contact the least loaded server. (See
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`GOOG 1009, p. 4.)
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`20.
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`In web-based systems, a cache is a collection of locally stored web
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`resources, such as web pages, embedded images, and other types of digital data
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`retrieved over the Internet using HTTP. HTTP1.0 defines a cache as:
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`A program's local store of response messages and the
`subsystem that controls its message storage, retrieval, and
`deletion. A cache stores cachable responses in order to
`reduce
`the response
`time and network bandwidth
`consumption on future, equivalent requests. Any client or
`server may include a cache, though a cache cannot be
`used by a server while it is acting as a tunnel.
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`(GOOG 1008, p. 6.)
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`HTTP1.0 also defines the standard function when caching is involved:
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`Any party to the communication which is not acting as a
`tunnel may employ an internal cache for handling
`requests. The effect of a cache
`is
`that
`the
`request/response chain is shortened if one of the
`participants along the chain has a cached response
`applicable to that request. The following illustrates the
`resulting chain if B has a cached copy of an earlier
`response from O (via C) for a request which has not been
`cached by UA or A.
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`request chain ---------->
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`UA -----v----- A -----v----- B - - - - - - C - - - - - - O
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`<--------- response chain
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`(GOOG 1008, pp. 6-7.)
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`21. Caching behavior may be modified. "Not all responses are cachable,
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`and some requests may contain modifiers which place special requirements on
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`cache behavior. Some HTTP/1.0 applications use heuristics to describe what is or
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`is not a 'cachable' response, but these rules are not standardized." (GOOG 1008, p.
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`7.)
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`22.
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`In other words, with default functioning of caching (i.e., no cache
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`modifier specified), before the web browser on a client device sends a HTTP
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`request, the web browser first checks to see if there is a cached copy of the
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`requested response on the client device. If not, the web browser sends the HTTP
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`request. If a proxy is used to forward the HTTP request to the web server, the
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`proxy processes the HTTP request similarly. The proxy first checks to see if there
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`is a cached copy of the requested response. If not, the proxy forwards the HTTP
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`request to the web server.
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`VI. Overview of the '045 Patent
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`23. The '045 patent describes methods for "allowing information [e.g.
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`advertisement banners] to be accessed by terminals connected to the computer
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`network." (GOOG 1001, Abstract.) Despite the length of the '045 patent claims,
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`these claims do no more than add a few conventional steps to a standard method of
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`delivering a "banner" referenced in a web page. The added steps include sending a
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`non-blockable first request and a redirect signal triggering a second request to
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`retrieve the banner. As discussed further below, these added steps themselves were
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`well known in the art well before the earliest possible priority date for the present
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`application.
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`24.
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`In the Background of the Invention section of the '045 patent, Patentee
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`argues that the "nature and extent of the problem of miscounting displays of
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`banners is not well-known or even understood in the industry or by people of
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`ordinary skill in the art." (GOOG 1001, 3:10-13.) Accordingly, "despite the well-
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`developed state of the art in the displaying of information, banners, and
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`advertisements in conjunction with web pages, documents, or other information,
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`there is still a need for a system for storing and delivering information and banners
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`on a computer network where accurate counts of the number of times each piece of
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`information and banner is displayed can be made and the information and banners
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`are displayed quickly and efficiently to users or terminals." (GOOG 1001, 3:13-
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`21.)
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`25. To achieve this so-called "accurate count[] of the number of times
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`each piece of information and banner is displayed," the '045 patent essentially
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`retrieves a banner utilizing two requests. The first request is non-blockable, and the
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`server basically counts the number of non-blockable requests received as the
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`number of displays. The second request is triggered by a redirect signal returned by
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`the server, and the client computer sends the second request to retrieve the banner
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`and display the banner in a web page. The second request is blockable (that is,
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`there is nothing special about the second request; it is a HTTP request with
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`standard default cache behavior).
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`26. Given the practice of cache avoidance and well-known operation of
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`using a HTTP redirect to trigger a second HTTP request, combining a non-
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`blockable HTTP request and a HTTP redirect message would have been obvious to
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`a POSA at the time of filing of the '045 patent.
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`27.
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`Indeed, a skilled person would have understood that the prior art
`
`references render obvious the claims. Not only are the independent claims a mere
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`recitation of known technology, but the dependent claims do not serve to claim
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`further novel features. Rather, they provide increasing levels of detail for otherwise
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`conventional banner delivery and counting systems and processes.
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`VII. Overview of Prior Art References
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`28. U.S. Patent No. 5,960,409 to Wexler (GOOG 1007), filed October 11,
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`1996. It is my understanding that Wexler is a prior art reference to the '045 patent.
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`29.
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`"HTTP Working Group Internet Draft Hypertext Transfer Protocol –
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`HTTP/1.0," by Fielding et al. (HTTP1.0 or GOOG 1008), published on February
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`20, 1996. It is my understanding that HTTP1.0 is a prior art reference to the '045
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`patent.
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`30.
`
` "Implementing Distributed Server Groups for the World Wide Web, "
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`by Garland et al. (GOOG 1009), published on January 25, 1995. It is my
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`understanding that Garland is a prior art reference to the '045 patent.
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`31.
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`"Technology: Internet/New Media The Internet Advertising Report"
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`by Meeker (GOOG 1010), published in January 1997. It is my understanding that
`
`Meeker is a prior art reference to the '045 patent.
`
`32. U.S. Patent No. 5,933,811 to Angles et al. (GOOG 1012), filed on
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`August 20, 1996. It is my understanding that Angles is a prior art reference to the
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`'045 patent.
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`33. U.S. Patent No. 5,948,061 to Merriman et al. (GOOG 1013), filed on
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`October 29, 1996. It is my understanding that Merriman is a prior art reference to
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`the '045 patent.
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`34. U.S. Patent No. 5,796,952 to Davis et al. (GOOG 1014), filed on
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`March 21, 1997. It is my understanding that Davis is a prior art reference to the
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`'045 patent.
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`35. By 1997 and prior to the invention, all the technology at issue in the
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`'045 patent was broadly applied and well known by developers of web-based
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`information delivery. No individual elements of the '045 claims were novel at the
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`time of the alleged invention, and there was nothing novel about the manner in
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`which those elements were combined in the claim. Further, there were no
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`technological barriers to combining these elements to form the claimed invention.
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`VIII. Claim Construction
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`Inter Partes Review of USPN 6,286,045
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`36.
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`I understand that the challenged claims must be given their broadest
`
`reasonable interpretations ("BRI") in light of the specification of the '045 patent,
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`which means that the words of the claims should be given their broadest possible
`
`meaning consistent with the specification of the '045 patent.2
`
`A.
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`"Banner"
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`37. Claims 20, 22-30, 33, 43, 47, 48, 59, 62, 72, 73, 75, and 78 recite a
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`"banner." The '045 patent specification states:
`
`invention, the term
`the present
`For purposes of
`"banner" is meant to be construed very broadly and
`includes any information displayed in conjunction with a
`web page wherein the information is not part of the same
`file as the web page. That is, a banner includes anything
`that is displayed or used in conjunction with a web page,
`but which can exist separately from the web page or
`
`
`2 I also understand that the broadest reasonable interpretation used here may
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`be different from the interpretation that a POSA may give to the claims in another
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`context—e.g., in litigation—and that the broadest reasonable interpretation may be
`
`informed by the construction advanced by a patentee in litigation.
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`which can be used in conjunction with many web pages.
`Banners can include graphics, textual information, video,
`audio, animation, and links to other computer sites, web
`sites, web pages, or banners.
`
` (GOOG 1001, 2:28-37.)
`
`38. Under BRI, a POSA would therefore have understood the term
`
`"banner" to mean "information displayed in conjunction with a web page wherein
`
`the information is not part of the same file as the web page." This would include
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`graphics, textual information, video, audio, animation, and links to other computer
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`sites, web sites, web pages, or banners.
`
`B.
`
`"Best Suited"
`
`39. Claims 22, 23, and 43 recite determining a server that is "best suited"
`
`to serve a banner. The '045 patent specification states:
`
`Typically, the information server best suited to handle the
`serving or transmittal of a banner to the terminal 36 will
`be the information server that can download or serve the
`banner to the terminal 36 in the shortest period of time.
`Other selection criteria can be used, however, in
`download or serve a banner to a terminal, including the
`network topological distance between the terminal 36 and
`the
`information servers,
`the geographical distance
`between the terminal 36 and the information servers, the
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`bandwidth of the information servers, or the round trip
`times for a message between the terminal 36 and the
`information servers.
`
` (GOOG 1001, 20:62-21:7.)
`
`40. The term "best suited" is relative and subjective, and it is difficult to
`
`determine the boundary of this term. However, under BRI, based on these
`
`examples above, a POSA would have understood a "best suited" server to at least
`
`include a server that can serve a banner based on one of the criteria including
`
`shortest period of time, network topological distance, geographical distance,
`
`bandwidth of the server, and round trip times.
`
`C.
`
`"Content General Banner Request"
`
`41. Claim 24 recites a "content general banner request." The '045 patent
`
`specification states:
`
`In other words, the initial banner request signal generated
`by terminal 36 during the step 112 can be a content
`general signal and may contain only the minimum
`amount of information needed to tell a designated
`computer site, information server, or other device which
`receives the initial banner request signal and on which a
`banner may or may not be stored or located, only that the
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`terminal 36 desires that an unspecified banner be served
`to the terminal.
`
` (GOOG 1001, 15:8-16.)
`
`42. The '045 patent specification further states "[i]f the optional selection
`
`step 113 is used with the method 110, the terminal 36 will only request during step
`
`112 that a banner be served to the terminal 36, but the terminal 36 will not specify
`
`which banner is to be served to the terminal 36." (GOOG 1001, 15:25-29.)
`
`43. The '045 patent specification additionally states:
`
`A general content URL address for a banner does not
`provide the necessary information to determine which
`banner is to be displayed. Rather a general content URL
`address for a banner only indicates that a banner is to be
`displayed and the receiver of the signal generated by the
`terminal 36 during the step 112 can decide which banner
`is to be displayed during the selection step 113. A general
`content URL address for a banner could be of the form
`http://www.bannersite1.com/image;spacedesc=contentsit
`ename.
`
`(GOOG 1001, 16:50-58.)
`
`44. Further, "The space descriptor field in the general content URL
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`address can reference different groups of banners such as, for example, a collection
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`the web page providing the general content URL address." (GOOG 1001, 17:3-8.)
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`45. Under BRI, a POSA would therefore have understood the term
`
`"content general banner request" to mean "a request indicating that a banner is to
`
`be displayed and that the receiver can decide which banner is to be displayed."
`
`D.
`
`"Content Specific Banner Request"
`
`46. Claim 25 recites a "content specific banner request." The '045 patent
`
`specification states:
`
`If the optional selection step 113 is not used with the
`method 110, the terminal 36 will request during the step
`112 that a specific banner to [sic] be served to the
`terminal 36.
`
` (GOOG 1001, 15:23-25.)
`
`47. The '045 patent specification states:
`
`In order to speed up the process of downloading,
`transmitting, or serving a specific banner from an
`information server to the terminal 56, the content specific
`URL address of the requested or selected banner sent to
`the terminal during step 114 can contain the exact
`Internet Protocol (IP) address of the requested or selected
`banner. For example, instead of providing the specific
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`as
`the banner 62
`for
`address
`content URL
`http://www.bannersite1.com/banner1.gif,
`the
`specific
`content URL address for the banner 62 could be provided
`as, for example, http://236.45.78.190/banner1.gif, thereby
`removing any need to use the Domain Name System
`(DNS)
`to
`convert
`the
`alphanumeric
`address
`"www.bannersite1.com" of the information server to its
`exact IP address.
`
`(GOOG 1001, 18:62-19:8.)
`
`48. Under BRI, a POSA would therefore have understood the term
`
`"content specific banner request" to mean "a request containing a content specific
`
`URL address with the location of a banner."
`
`IX.
`
`Legal Principles
`
`49.
`
` I understand that my analysis requires an understanding of the scope
`
`of the '045 patent claims. I understand that claims subject to inter partes review are
`
`given the "broadest reasonable construction in light of the specification of the
`
`patent in which it appears." 42 C.F.R. § 42.100(b).
`
`50.
`
`I understand that a claim is invalid if it is anticipated or obvious. I
`
`understand that anticipation of a claim requires that every element of a claim is
`
`expressly or inherently disclosed in a single prior art reference. I do not render
`
`opinions regarding anticipation in connection with this proceeding.
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`51.
`
`I understand that an obviousness analysis involves comparing a claim
`
`to the prior art to determine whether the claimed invention would have been
`
`obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention
`
`("POSA") in view of the prior art and in light of the general knowledge in the art. I
`
`also understand that when a POSA would have reached the claimed invention
`
`through routine experimentation, the invention may be deemed obvious.
`
`52.
`
`I also understand that obviousness can be established by combining or
`
`modifying the teachings of the prior art. Specific teachings, suggestions, or
`
`motivations to combine any first or primary prior art reference with a second prior
`
`art reference can be explicit or implicit, but must have existed before the '045
`
`patent was filed. I understand that prior art references themselves may be one
`
`source of a specific teaching or suggestion to combine features of the prior art, but
`
`that such suggestions or motivations to combine art may come from other sources
`
`as well. Specifically, the sources may include logic, judgment, and common sense
`
`available to a POSA rather than explicit statements in the prior art. I understand
`
`that it is not proper to combine references when there is a teaching away of such a
`
`combination. However, a reference's mere disclosure of more than one alternative
`
`does not constitute teaching away from any of these alternatives.
`
`53.
`
`I further understand that whether there is a reasonable expectation of
`
`success from combining references in a particular way is also relevant to the
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`analysis. I un