`
`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`____________________________________________________________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`____________________
`
`APPLE INC. and TWITTER, INC.
`Petitioner
`
`v.
`
`SUMMIT 6 LLC
`Patent Owner
`____________________
`
`Case: IPR2015-00688
`Patent No. 7,765,482
`
`Title: Web-Based Media Submission Tool
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`PATENT OWNER’S
`PRELIMINARY RESPONSE UNDER 37 C.F.R. § 42.107
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`IPR2015-00688
`U.S. Pat. No. 7,765,482
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`I.
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`II.
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`TABLE OF CONTENTS
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`Introduction ...................................................................................................... 1
`
`Procedural History ........................................................................................... 3
`
`A.
`
`B.
`
`Patenting of the Inventions .................................................................... 3
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`Litigation of the Patents ........................................................................ 8
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`III. Level of Ordinary Skill in the Art ................................................................... 9
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`IV. Claim Construction ........................................................................................ 10
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`A.
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`“Pre-processing” .................................................................................. 10
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`V.
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`Response to Ground of Challenge ................................................................. 14
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`A. Overview of Creamer .......................................................................... 14
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`B.
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`Petitioner Has Not Shown That Claims 13, 14, 16–23, 35, 37, 38, 40–
`42, 44–46, and 49 Are Obvious Over Creamer. .................................. 17
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`1.
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`2.
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`3.
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`Creamer does not teach or suggest “receiving an identification
`of [said] digital content.” (claims 13, 14, 16–23, 40) ............... 17
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`Creamer does not teach or suggest “pre-processing said
`[identified digital content / selected digital content / digital
`content] at said client device in accordance with one or more
`pre-processing parameters.” (claims 13, 14, 16–23, 35, 37, 38,
`40–42, 44–46, 49) ..................................................................... 23
`
`Creamer does not teach or suggest “pre-processing parameters
`[controlling / enabling] said client device [in a placement of / to
`place] said [identified group of one or more items of digital
`content / digital content] into a specified form in preparation for
`[publication / distribution].” (claims 13, 14, 16–23, 35, 37, 38,
`40–42, 44–46, 49) ..................................................................... 25
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`4.
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`Petitioner has not shown that Creamer teaches or suggests
`“displaying a preview image of said selected digital content,
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`said preview image having a reduced size relative to said
`selected digital content” or “transmitting a message that
`includes said pre-processed digital content to said server device
`for subsequent publishing to said one or more devices that are
`remote from said server device and said client device” in claim
`(claim 35). ................................................................................. 29
`
`C.
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`The Objective Secondary Factors Confirm that the Challenged Claims
`are Not Obvious. .................................................................................. 29
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`1.
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`2.
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`Long-Felt but Unresolved Need ............................................... 31
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`Commercial Success and Licensing ......................................... 34
`
`a.
`
`b.
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`Substantial Evidence of Commercial Success and
`Licensing Supports a Finding of Non-Obviousness. ...... 35
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`The Commercial Success is Attributable to the
`Technology and Inventions Disclosed in Summit 6’s
`Patented Technology. ..................................................... 38
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`3.
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`Industry Praise ........................................................................... 40
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`VI. Petitioners Claims are Redundant and Lack Any Meaningful Distinction
`Between Prior Art References. ...................................................................... 43
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`VII. Conclusion ..................................................................................................... 47
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`EXHIBIT LIST
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`Exhibit 2001
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`Exhibit 2002
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`Exhibit 2003
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`Exhibit 2004
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`Exhibit 2005
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`Exhibit 2006
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`Exhibit 2007
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`Exhibit 2008
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`Exhibit 2009
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`Exhibit 2010
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`Exhibit 2011
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`[PROTECTIVE ORDER MATERIAL] RIM–Summit 6
`License and Settlement Agreement (executed October 17,
`2012).
`[PROTECTIVE ORDER MATERIAL] Facebook–Summit 6
`License and Settlement Agreement (February 8, 2013).
`Jury Charge and Verdict Form, Summit 6 LLC v. Research in
`Motion Corp. et al., Civil Action No. 3:11-cv-00367-O
`(N.D.Tex., April 5, 2013).
`Excerpts of Trial Testimony of Dr. Mark Jones, Summit 6
`LLC v. Research in Motion Corp. et al., Civil Action No.
`3:11-cv-00367-O, N.D.Tex. (April 4, 2013).
`Summit6-1876—Correspondence, T. Anderson to H. Latham
`of Moore Data Management Services (September 15, 1998).
`Summit6-4346—Correspondence, T. Anderson to J. Graff of
`RealSelect, Inc., Proposal to integrate Rimfire system with
`Realtor.com (April 26, 1999).
`Summit6-1606—Press Release, “New Prepare and Post
`Technology from PictureWorks Technology, Inc.
`Revolutionizes Use of Photos in Internet Marketing of Real
`Estate,” (November 7, 1998).
`Summit6-1962—Press Release, “Moore Data Management
`Services and PictureWorks Technology, Inc., Announce
`Partnership to Revolutionize Use of Real Estate Photos on the
`Internet,” (Business Wire, November 6, 1998).
`Excerpts of Trial Testimony of Lisa Wood, Summit 6 LLC v.
`Research in Motion Corp. et al., Civil Action No. 3:11-cv-
`00367-O, N.D.Tex. (March 29, 2013).
`Rimfire Functional Specification Version 1.0 Core Feature
`Set, revision 4 (April 12, 1999).
`Summit6-4341—Press Release, “PictureWorks Technology’s
`PictureBay Solves #1 Frustration of eBay Members, Adding
`Pictures to Auctions,” (April 12, 1999).
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`Exhibit 2012
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`Exhibit 2013
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`Exhibit 2014
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`Exhibit 2015
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`Exhibit 2016
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`Exhibit 2017
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`Exhibit 2018
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`Exhibit 2019
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`Exhibit 2020
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`Exhibit 2021
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`Exhibit 2022
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`Summit6-2415—pbay Marketing Plan (PictureWorks
`Technology, Inc., March 24, 1999).
`Summit6-5246—Press Release “PictureWorks Technology's
`Auction Photo Service, Picturebay, Serves Over Two Million
`Images to eBay, Amazon.com and Auction Universe,”
`(August 3, 1999).
`White Paper, “Rimfire: The End-to-End Imaging Solution for
`Content Capture and Delivery,” (Internet Pictures
`Corporation, 2000).
`Market Study, “Image Servers - Early Adopter Case Studies,”
`(Tony Henning and Future Image, Inc., 2001).
`Summit6-5178—Excerpts of Woerner et al., “eBay for
`Dummies,” (IDG Books Worldwide, Inc., 1999).
`Press Release, “iPIX Acquisition Locks up Internet Picture
`Market,” (March 9, 2000).
`Press Release, “iPIX to Acquire PictureWorks Technology,
`Inc. to form End-to-End Internet Imaging Solutions
`Company,” (PictureWorks Technology, Inc., March 8, 2000
`[Exhibit 99.1 to 8-k filing]).
`iPIX Presentation, “Enhancing Classified Advertising with
`Visual Data,” (Don Strickland and Sarah Pate, October 2,
`2003).
`[PROTECTIVE ORDER MATERIAL] Confidential
`Information Memorandum, “AdMission” (Swiftsure Capital
`LLC, December 13, 2004).
`[PROTECTIVE ORDER MATERIAL] Amendment No. 3 to
`the Visual Content Services Agreement Between eBay and
`iPIX (June 27, 2003).
`Excerpts of Trial Testimony of Scott Lewis, Summit 6 LLC v.
`Research in Motion Corp. et al., Civil Action No. 3:11-cv-
`00367-O, N.D.Tex. (April 1, 2013).
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`Exhibit 2023
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`Exhibit 2024
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`Exhibit 2025
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`Exhibit 2026
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`Exhibit 2027
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`Exhibit 2028
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`Exhibit 2029
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`Exhibit 2030
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`Exhibit 2031
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`Exhibit 2032
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`Exhibit 2033
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`Exhibit 2034
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`
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`Summit6-4732—Press Release, “PictureWorks Technology
`Streamlines Posting of Photos to Internet,” (Business Wire,
`November 6, 1998).
`Summit6-4770—“Product Picks” at realtor.org web site
`(February 1, 1999).
`PX-0937—Excerpts of Collier et al., “eBay for Dummies”
`(Hungry Minds, Inc., 2nd Edition 2001).
`Press Release, “Admission Corp. Granted Web-Based Media
`Submission Patent,” (Admission Corporation, June 2, 2005).
`Press Release, “AdMission Directories Wins Gold at Yellow
`Pages Association Annual Industry Excellence Awards;
`Enhanced, Interactive Ads for IYP Recognized as Marketing
`Innovation,” (Business Wire, March 14, 2005).
`U.S. Patent No. 7,765,482,
`titled “Web-Based Media
`Submission Tool,” to Wood et al. (“the ’482 patent” or “’482
`pat.”).
`U.S. Patent No. 8,612,515, titled “System, Method and
`Apparatus for Media Submission,” to Wood et al. (“the ’515
`patent” or “’515 pat.”).
`Claim Construction Order, Summit 6 LLC v. HTC Corp. et al.,
`Civil Action No. 7:14-cv-00014-O (N.D.Tex., May 21, 2015).
`Excerpts of the prosecution file history of U.S. Patent No.
`6,895,557.
`U.S. Patent No. 6,035,323, titled “Methods and Apparatuses
`for Distributing a Collection of Digital Media Over a Network
`with Automatic Generation of Presentable Media,”
`to
`Narayen et al. (“Narayen”).
`[PROTECTIVE ORDER MATERIAL] Visual Content
`Services Agreement Between eBay and iPIX (April 19, 2000).
`Summit6-1686—Overview of Enterprise Solutions, Executive
`Summary (PictureWorks, August 18, 1998).
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`TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
`
`CASES
`Alcon Research, Ltd. v. Apotex Inc.,
`687 F.3d 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2012)............................................................................ 37
`Apple Inc. v. Virnetx Inc.,
`IPR2014-00484, Paper 11 (PTAB Sept. 15, 2014) ....................................... 44, 47
`
`Canon Inc. v. Intellectual Ventures I LLC,
`IPR2014-00535, Paper 9 (PTAB Sept. 24, 2014) ................................................ 45
`
`EMC Corp. v. Personal Web Technologies, LLC,
`
`IPR2013-00087, Paper 25 (PTAB Jun. 5, 2013) .......................................... 44, 46
`Gambro Lundia AB v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
`110 F.3d 1573 (Fed. Cir. 1997)............................................................................ 38
`Geo. M. Martin Co. v. Alliance Mach. Sys. Int'l LLC,
`618 F.3d 1294 (Fed. Cir. 2010)............................................................................ 40
`Idle Free Systems, Inc. v. Bergstrom, Inc.,
`IPR2012-00027, Paper 26 (PTAB Jun. 11, 2013) ............................................... 44
`
`In re Application of Gershon,
` 372 F.2d 535 (C.C.P.A. 1967) ............................................................................. 31
`Integrated Global Concepts, Inc. v. Advanced Messaging Technologies, Inc.,
`IPR2014-01027, Paper 16, (PTAB December 22, 2014) .................................... 11
`Intri-Plex Technologies, Inc. v. Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics Rencol Ltd.,
`
`IPR2014-00309, Paper 83, (PTAB March 23, 2014) ................................... 30, 37
`Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Progressive Casualty Insurance Co.,
` CBM2012-00003, Paper 7 (PTAB Oct. 25, 2012) ....................................... 43, 45
`Mintz v. Dietz & Watson, Inc.,
`679 F.3d 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2012)............................................................................ 30
`Newell Companies, Inc. v. Kenney Mfg. Co.,
`864 F.2d 757 (Fed. Cir. 1988).............................................................................. 31
`Ormco Corp. v. Align Tech., Inc.,
`463 F.3d 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2006)............................................................................ 34
`Omron Oilfield & Marine, Inc. v. MD/TOTCO, a Division of Varco, L.P.,
`IPR2013-00265, Paper 10 (PTAB Oct. 31, 2013) ............................ 34, 37, 38, 39
`
`Pressure Products Med. Supplies, Inc. v. Greatbatch Ltd.,
`599 F.3d 1308 (Fed. Cir. 2010)............................................................................ 30
`Rambus Inc. v. Rea,
`731 F.3d 1248 (Fed. Cir. 2013)............................................................................ 31
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`ScentAir Technologies, Inc. v. Prolitec, Inc.,
`IPR2013-00180, Paper 18 (PTAB Aug. 26, 2013) .............................................. 44
`
`SIBIA Neurosciences, Inc. v. Cadus Pharm. Corp.,
`225 F.3d 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2000)............................................................................ 34
`Stratoflex, Inc. v. Aeroquip Corp.,
`713 F.2d 1530 (Fed. Cir. 1983)............................................................................ 30
`Tandus Flooring, Inc. v. Interface, Inc.,
`IPR2013-00527, Paper 48 (PTAB Feb. 12, 2015) ........................................ 31, 34
`
`Transocean Offshore Deepwater Drilling, Inc. v. Maersk Drilling USA, Inc.,
`699 F.3d 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2012)..................................................................... 30, 43
`Versata Development Group, Inc. v. SAP America, Inc.,
` No. 2014-1194 (Fed. Cir.) .................................................................................... 10
`Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. v. Cadbury Adams USA LLC,
`683 F.3d 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2012)............................................................................ 38
`Zimmer Holdings Inc. v. Bonutti Skeletal Innovations LLC,
`
`IPR2014-01080, Paper 17 (PTAB Oct. 31, 2014) ............................................... 44
`STATUTES
`35 U.S.C. § 102(e) ................................................................................................... 14
`35 U.S.C § 314(a) ..................................................................................................... 2
`REGULATIONS
`37 C.F.R. § 42.1(b) ........................................................................................... 44, 47
`37 C.F.R. § 42.108(c) ................................................................................................. 2
`LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
`Hearing on H.R. 1249 Before the H. Comm. On the Judiciary, (April 14, 2011)
`(statement of Judiciary Comm. Chair Lamar Smith) ............................................. 3
`H.R. Rep. No. 112-98, p. 48 (2011), reprinted in 2011 U.S.C.C.A.N. 67, p. 78 ...... 3
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`I.
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`INTRODUCTION
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`Patent Owner Summit 6 LLC files this Preliminary Patent Owner response
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`to one of ten separate, yet coordinated, petitions1 for inter partes review that co-
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`defendants in the underlying litigation have filed against Summit 6’s three, related
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`patents. The patents were granted over a plethora of prior art references including
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`Creamer and Mayle. Summit 6 obtained a $15M verdict affirming the validity of
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`one of the patents over Mattes, and Summit 6 and its predecessors enjoyed
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`overwhelming commercial success and industry recognition. Petitioner nonetheless
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`contends that Summit 6’s inventions are obvious on numerous, redundant grounds.
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`1 On February 4, 2015, Twitter filed two petitions (IPR2015-00680, Paper 1;
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`IPR2015-00681, Paper 1) seeking inter partes review of U.S. Pat. No. 6,895,557;
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`Apple and Twitter filed two petitions (IPR2015-00683, Paper 3; IPR2015-00684,
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`Paper 3) seeking inter partes review of U.S. Pat. No. 8,612,515; and Apple and
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`Twitter filed four petitions (IPR2015-00685, Paper 1; IPR2015-00686, Paper 1;
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`IPR2015-00687, Paper 3; IPR2015-00688, Paper 1) seeking inter partes review of
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`U.S. Pat. No. 7,765,482. Google and HTC filed two petitions, the first seeking
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`inter partes review of U.S. Pat. No. 7,765,482 (IPR2015-00806, Paper 1) and the
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`second seeking inter partes review of U.S. Pat. No. 8,612,515 (IPR2015-00807,
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`Paper 1).
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`Petitioner’s “scorched-earth” attack on Summit 6’s inventions should be rejected
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`by the Board as substantively deficient and procedurally improper.
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`As discussed in detail below, none of the prior art, either alone or in
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`combination, renders the challenged claims unpatentable because the prior art does
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`not teach or suggest one or more the claimed limitations. As a result, Petitioner
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`fails to assemble the claimed inventions, even with an expert declaration and the
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`considerable benefit of hindsight. Tellingly, Petitioner bases many of its
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`obviousness arguments solely on conclusory litigation-inspired expert witness
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`statements wholly devoid of any supporting evidence. Besides showing that the
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`prior art, alone or in combination, fails to teach or suggest all claim limitations of
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`each challenged claim, Summit 6 has identified considerable, objective evidence of
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`non-obviousness—including proof tying this evidence to the claimed inventions—
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`that conclusively demonstrates that Summit 6’s claimed inventions are not obvious
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`in light of Petitioner’s hindsight-based, prior art combinations. In short, the Board
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`should deny this Petition because Petitioner fails to carry its burden of proving that
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`one or more of the challenged claims are unpatentable. (See 35 U.S.C. § 314(a);
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`37 C.F.R. § 42.108(c).)
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`Procedurally, Petitioner’s multi-pronged attack on Summit 6’s inventions
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`overturns the “carefully written” balance drawn in the America Invents Act
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`between “encourag[ing] its use while at the same time preventing the serial
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`harassment of patent holders.” (Meeting of H. Comm. on the Judiciary, Transcript
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`of Markup of H.R. 1249, p. 72 (April 14, 2011) (statement of Judiciary Comm.
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`Chair. Lamar Smith).) Instead, Petitioner is using this proceeding as a “tool[] for
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`harassment” by filing multiple, redundant petitions, subjecting Summit 6 to a war
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`of attrition. (H.R. Rep. No. 112–98, p. 48 (reprinted in 2011 U.S.C.C.A.N., p. 78).)
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`Petitioner’s harassing tactics should not be endorsed or condoned by the Board. As
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`a result, the Board should deny the Petition.
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`II.
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`PROCEDURAL HISTORY
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`A.
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`Patenting of the Inventions
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`The three Summit 6 patents at issue in these coordinated proceedings—U.S.
`
`Pat. Nos. 6,895,557 (“the ’557 Patent”), 7,765,482 (“the ’482 Patent”), 8,612,515
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`(“the ’515 Patent”)—all stem from a common specification filed on July 21, 1999.
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`(Ex. 1001.) The original application issued nearly six years later as the ’557 Patent
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`on May 17, 2005 (Ex. 1024.) On October 4, 2004, the inventors filed a
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`continuation of the ’557 patent application. As with the earlier application, that
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`application went through nearly six years of prosecution before ultimately issuing
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`as the ’482 Patent on July 27, 2010. (Ex. 1001.) Finally, on April 29, 2011,
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`Summit 6 filed for a third patent, which issued on December 17, 2013 as the ’515
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`Patent. (Ex. 1009.)
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`Until the Summit 6 inventions, uploading a digital image to a web site was a
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`very cumbersome process. “For example, transferring a digital image may require
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`first downloading a FTP program, then installing it, then running it and connecting
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`to an FTP server by typing the server name in the connection dialog, then
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`navigating to the proper subdirectory, selecting the files to be uploaded, making
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`sure that the program is in binary transfer mode, then sending the files.” (’557 pat.
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`at 1:23–30; ’482 pat. at 1:26–32; ’515 pat. at 1:31–37.) Summit 6’s inventions
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`provided an elegant solution to this problem by allowing users with minimal
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`technical sophistication to select and submit “media objects” (which include, for
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`example, images, videos, graphics, sound clips) to a third-party website. (’557 pat.
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`at 2:46–47; ’482 pat. at 2:56–57; ’515 pat. at 2:62–63.) The so-called Prepare and
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`Post tools are browser-side components that prepare and submit media objects
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`from inside a standard browser to a web site or server. (’557 pat. at 2:44–47; ’482
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`pat. at 2:44–48; ’515 pat. at 2:50–54.) Each of the Summit 6’s patents claims
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`different embodiments of the “Prepare and Post Media Submission Tool”
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`described in the common specification of the ’557, ’482, and ’515 patents.
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`A diagram of an exemplary web page providing the media object acquisition
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`functionality of the Prepare and Post tools is shown in Fig. 1 of the ’557 patent:
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`A user of the Prepare and Post tools selects a media object (e.g., a digital
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`image) to upload either through a “drag and drop” functionality (’557 pat. at 3:18–
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`22; ’482 pat. at 3:20–24; ’515 pat. at 3:26–30.) or a file browse functionality. (’557
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`pat. at 3:29–33; ’482 pat. at 3:31–34; ’515 pat. at 3:37–40.) During the selection
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`process, a user can add identification information such as a MLS listing number to
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`the image in the context of a real estate application. (’557 pat. at 3:60–66; ’482
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`pat. at 3:60–62; ’515 pat. at 3:66–4:1.) After image selection, the user can simply
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`upload the selected images to another location such as web site using the media
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`sender functionality of the Prepare and Post tools. (’557 pat. at 3:14–16; ’482 pat.
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`at 3:17–19; ’515 pat. at 3:23–25.)
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`The user of Summit 6’s inventions need not understand (or even be aware
`
`of) the underlying technology of the image selection and upload process because
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`the Prepare and Post tools transparently ensure that any media object selected by
`
`the user will be submitted in a form acceptable to the receiving location such as a
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`web site. To do so, the Prepare and Post tools running on the user’s browser
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`receive configuration parameters. (’557 pat. at 5:42–50; ’482 pat. at 5:26–33; ’515
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`pat. at 5:32–39.) Before transmitting images to the second location, the Prepare
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`and Post tools preprocess the images according to requirements of the second
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`location, as specified by the parameters. (’557 pat. at 4:67–5:2; ’482 pat. at 5:1–4;
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`’515 pat. at 5:7–10.) This client side intelligence of the Summit 6 inventions
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`allows a user to “submit media objects to web pages ‘as is’ without making
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`modifications to the media objects prior to sending.” (’557 pat. at 2:62–64; ’482
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`pat. at 2:65–67; ’515 pat. at 3:4–6.) Accordingly, these tools provide a user access
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`to an intuitive platform for facilitating image selection and uploading.
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`Media objects can be preprocessed in numerous ways before transmission to
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`the second location, including resizing the image, compressing the file, changing
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`the image file format, changing the image quality, cropping or changing the aspect
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`ratio of the image, adding text or annotations, encoding or combining media
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`objects, or enhancing image values such as contrast or saturation of the media
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`object. (’557 pat. at 4:65–5:12; ’482 pat. at 4:52–67; ’515 pat. at 4:58–5:6.)
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`In addition to facilitating the user’s experience, the Prepare and Post tools
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`also benefit the receiving web site. This functionality gives the web site partner
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`access to media objects that “meet[] their imaging specifications every time
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`without human intervention.” (’557 pat. at 3:1–3; ’482 pat. at 3:4–6; ’515 pat. at
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`3:10–12.) The client-side, transparent preprocessing functionality allows a user to
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`submit images “as is” because the tool automatically prepares the images to meet
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`requirements for the second location. (’557 pat. at 4:58–5:2; ’482 pat. at 4:46–5:4;
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`’515 pat. at 4:52–5:10.)
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`In short, the Summit 6 Prepare and Post tools transparently handle for the
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`user the technical tasks of image selection and uploading. (’557 pat. at 2:53–58;
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`’482 pat. at 2:56–60; ’515 pat. at 2:62–66.) And as discussed later, Summit 6’s
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`inventions quickly proliferated into wide spread use across many platforms,
`
`including eBay because Summit 6’s technology benefitted both users who
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`submitted images to web sites, as well as receiving web sites.
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`B.
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`Litigation of the Patents
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`On February 23, 2011, Summit 6 filed a Complaint against Samsung, RIM,
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`Facebook, and others for infringing the ’557 and ’482 Patents. On October 17,
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`2012, RIM took a license to the ’557 and ʼ482 Patents. (Ex. 2001.) On February
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`8, 2013, just two months before trial, Facebook also took a license to the ’557 and
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`ʼ482 Patents. (Ex. 2002.) Samsung was the only defendant that proceeded to trial
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`for infringing the ’482 patent.
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`During the week-long trial, Samsung vigorously contested both infringement
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`and validity of the ’482 patent. The jury returned a unanimous verdict in favor of
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`Summit 6 finding that Samsung infringed claims 40, 44–46, and 49 of the ’482
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`patent. (Ex. 2003, pp. 46, 47.) The jury also found that Samsung did not prove
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`that these claims were invalid over the prior art including Mattes now relied on by
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`Petitioner. (Id.) The jury also awarded Summit 6 a $15M judgment as a
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`reasonable royalty for Samsung’s infringement. (Id.) That judgment is currently
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`on appeal. See Summit 6, LLC v. Samsung Electronics Co., et al., No. 2013-1648,
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`1651 (Fed. Cir.).
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`On February 18, 2014, Summit 6 filed a Complaint for Patent Infringement
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`in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas against co-
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`defendants HTC Corporation, HTC America, Inc., LG Electronics, Inc., LG
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`Electronics USA, Inc., LG Electronics Mobilecomm USA, Inc., Motorola Mobility
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`LLC, Apple Inc., and Twitter Inc., asserting claims of infringing all three of
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`Summit 6’s patents. See Summit 6 LLC v. HTC Corp., et al., No. 7:14-cv-00014-O
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`(E.D. Tex. Feb. 18, 2014) (Dkt. 1). Each of the co-defendants has answered and
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`asserted affirmative defenses and counterclaims of invalidity. ((Id. (Dkts. 49, 51,
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`53, 64, 66, 80, and 81).) That case is proceeding apace.2
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`III. LEVEL OF ORDINARY SKILL IN THE ART
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`Petitioner has proposed that a person of ordinary skill in the art (“POSA”)
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`with respect to the teachings in the Summit 6 patents would be a person having at
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`least (a) a Bachelor of Science degree in a field such as computer science (or
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`similar field, e.g., electrical engineering), or (b) at least 3 to 5 years of industry
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`experience in the general field of software engineering and web design. (Pet. at 4.)
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`Patent Owner disagrees with Petitioner’s proposed level of ordinary skill in
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`the art. Patent Owner acknowledges the similarity between the technical fields of
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`computer science and electrical engineering, but requiring 3 to 5 years of industry
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`experience in “web design” by July 1999, at a time still considered to be the
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`infancy of the Internet, is erroneous. Patent Owner proposes that the teachings in
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`2 One of the defendants originally named in the lawsuit, LG Electronics, Inc., has
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`settled with Summit 6 and has taken a license to the ’557, ’482, and ’515 Patents.
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`the ’482 patent would have been directed to a person with at least a Bachelor of
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`Science degree in computer science or electrical engineering, combined with 2 to 3
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`years of experience in software engineering.
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`IV. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION
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`In this Section, Patent Owner addresses the subject limitations according to
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`the “broadest reasonable
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`interpretation” standard (“BRI”). Patent Owner
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`recognizes, however, that the question of whether the PTAB should employ the
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`BRI standard to claim construction in post-grant proceedings is currently pending
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`before the Federal Circuit, e.g. Versata v. SAP, Fed. Cir. Case No. 2014-1194. If
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`the Court should rule that application of BRI is improper, Patent Owner urges that
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`the Board construe disputed claim terms according to the standard articulated by
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`the Court.
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`A.
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`“Pre-processing”
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`Patent Owner proposes that the broadest reasonable construction for this
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`term is “modifying the media object [data/digital content data/one or more image
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`files, video files, or audio files], at the client or local device prior to transmission to
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`a remote device.”
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`Petitioner proposes that “pre-processing” should be construed to mean
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`“modifying before further processing.” (Pet. at 5–6.) But Petitioner has not
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`provided adequate explanation, indeed any explanation, of intrinsic or extrinsic
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`evidence to support its proposed construction; instead Petitioner merely cites to its
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`expert witness declaration.
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` For that reason, Petitioner’s proposed claim
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`construction is inadequately supported and should be disregarded. Integrated
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`Global Concepts, Inc. v. Advanced Messaging Technologies, Inc., IPR2014-01027,
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`Paper 16, p. 8 (PTAB December 22, 2014) (expert’s conclusory testimony was not
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`persuasive evidence).
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`In any case, Petitioner’s construction is erroneous, as it ignores the
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`specification’s teaching that pre-processing is performed at the client device.
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`Petitioner’s construction further
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`ignores
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`the specification’s
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`teaching
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`that
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`modification to a media object/digital content is done prior to transmission of the
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`media object elsewhere.
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`Although Petitioner’s proposed construction correctly recognizes that
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`modification gives meaning to the term “processing,” Petitioner erroneously
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`construes the prefix “pre” in the phrase “pre-processing.” A POSA would
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`understand the prefix “pre-” serves as a temporal signal, indicating processing
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`prior in time to the transmission event. As Petitioner acknowledged in its
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`IPR2015-00680 and -681 Petitions, the ’557 patent “consistently describes
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`‘preprocessing’ as a step that occurs ‘prior to upload’ or ‘prior to transporting to a
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`second location.’” (IPR2015-00680, Pet. at 7, citing (’557 pat., Abstract, 2:11–13,
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`4:65–5:2, 5:43–46).) Patent Owner agrees. The specification supports including
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`the phrase “prior to transmission” in the construction of this term.
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`Petitioner also argues in IPR2015-00680 and -681 that the reexamination file
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`history of the ’482 patent supports that pre-processing is not limited to preparation
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`for transmission, but could also include preparation for publication. (IPR2015-
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`00681, Pet. at 8.) Yet, the reexamination file history merely shows that the pre-
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`processing must be performed prior to transmission. Patent Owner stated during re-
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`examination that “the act of pre-processing modifies the digital content to meet
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`certain specifications for publication to one or more devices. . . .” Because
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`publication to one or more different devices necessarily includes transmission to
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`the different device, a POSA would understand that the pre-processing was
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`performed prior to such transmission.
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`Petitioner suggests that dependent claim 9 of the ’557 patent supports its
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`“modifying before further processing” interpretation, because claim 9 includes an
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`added limitation that the media object identifier “allows display of the media
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`object in context on the web page.” In fact, the presence of this additional
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`limitation in claim 9 supports Patent Owner’s construction, providing that the “pre-
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`processing” must occur before transmission. Claim 9 depends from independent
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`claim 1, which requires that the pre-processing is done “for the requirements of the
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`third-party web site”; in other words, pre-processing is done for the requirements
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`of a third-party web site, and is done prior to transmission. The added limitation of
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`claim 9 simply claims a media object identifier that is able to display the media
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`object in context along with its other functionality, meaning that the media object
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`identifier could have a preview function in addition to its pre-processing capability.
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`Finally, Petitioner’s proposed construction is also erroneous because it
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`would exclude the preferred embodiment. The preferred embodiment does not
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`disclose a processing step performed in addition to “pre-processing.” Instead, the
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`media object is automatically prepared on the client device “to meet the
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`requirements of the second location.” (’557 pat. at 16–20.) The ’557 patent makes
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`clear that no additional processing is required after the media object is pre-
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`processed by the client device:
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`to PictureWorks web site partner, access to contributed media
`‘made to order,’ it meets their imaging specifications every time
`without human intervention;
`. . .
`to PictureWorks web site partner