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`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`____________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`____________
`
`SNAP INC.,
`Petitioner,
`
`v.
`
`VAPORSTREAM, INC.,
`Patent Owner.
`____________
`
`Case IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`Case IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`Case IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`Case IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
`____________
`
`Record of Oral Hearing
`Held: April, 17, 2019
`____________
`
`
`
`Before STEPHEN C. SIU, JUSTIN T. ARBES, STACEY G. WHITE, and
`JENNIFER MEYER CHAGNON, Administrative Patent Judges.
`
`
`
`
`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`
`
`APPEARANCES:
`
`ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER:
`
`
`HEIDI KEEFE, ESQUIRE
`YUAN LIANG, ESQUIRE
`Cooley LLP
`3175 Hanover Street
`Palo Alto, CA 94304-1130
`
`
`
`ON BEHALF OF THE PATENT OWNER:
`
`
`MICHAEL F. HEIM, ESQUIRE
`DOUGLAS WILSON, ESQUIRE
`Heim Payne & Chorush, LLP
`1111 Bagby Street
`#2100
`Houston, TX 77002
`
`
`
`
`The above-entitled matter came on for hearing on Wednesday, April,
`
`17, 2019, commencing at 1:00 p.m., at the U.S. Patent and Trademark
`Office, 600 Dulany Street, Alexandria, Virginia.
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`2
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
`
`
`P R O C E E D I N G S
`- - - - -
`JUDGE ARBES: Good afternoon everyone, please be seated. This is
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`the oral hearing in four cases today: Cases IPR2018-00416, 439, 455, and
`458. Can counsel please state your names for the record?
`
`MS. KEEFE: Good afternoon, Your Honors. Heidi Keefe on behalf
`of petitioner Snap. With me at table is Yuan Liang and he will also be
`presenting a portion of the argument. Thank you.
`
`MR. WILSON: Good afternoon, Your Honors. On behalf of patent
`owner, Douglas Wilson of Heim, Payne and Chorush and with me is my
`partner Michael Heim who will also be arguing. And also with us is Avi
`Elkoni who is the chief operating officer and chief technical officer of
`Vaporstream.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: Per the Trial Hearing Order in these cases, each
`party will have 90 minutes of time to present arguments for all four cases.
`The order of presentation is first, petitioner will present its case regarding
`the challenged claims and may reserve time for rebuttal, but no more than 45
`minutes. Patent owner then will respond to petitioner's presentation and can
`address its motions to amend and may reserve some of its time for sur-
`rebuttal.
`Petitioner then my use any remaining time to respond to patent
`owner's presentation regarding the challenged claims and motions to amend,
`and finally patent owner may use any remaining time for a brief sur-rebuttal.
`Again, as before with the previous hearings, a few reminders. To
`ensure that the transcript is clear and because we have two judges
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`participating remotely, please only speak into the podium. Please speak at
`the podium and refer to demonstratives by slide number when you can.
`If either party believes that the other party is presenting an improper
`argument, we would ask you again to raise that during your own
`presentation rather than interrupting the other side.
`Any questions before we begin today? Okay. Counsel for petitioner,
`you may proceed, and would you like to reserve time for rebuttal?
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`MS. KEEFE: Yes, Your Honor, I would like to reserve 45 minutes.
`Hopefully I won’t need all of that. And I would also like at the very
`beginning to appreciate and thank the Board's indulgence in allowing this
`hearing to happen here. I have already thanked again patent owner, and my
`mom thanks you when I will see her tonight for dinner so thank you again
`very much for that indulgence.
`Now I know that Judge Siu wasn’t here last time but we actually
`argued about almost all of these receive side and send side limitations last
`time. I will however go through them briefly but please, if there’s any
`questions that you have, feel free to interrupt me at any point because
`obviously what I’m here for most is to make sure that I answer your
`questions, not simply to go through whatever presentation materials we
`have.
`I will start however, with the send side patents. And I’m sure Your
`Honors know, there are essentially three groups, groupings that can be made
`of the patents in these cases. The first here today for the 156 deals with what
`happens on the sending side of sending a video message from one sender to
`another.
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`
`Then we have what happens on the receiving end and then finally as
`kind of a bring it all together we have what I call the server side patents
`which show the end to end transmission. So the beginnings at the sender
`side and the recipient at the receiver side.
`Within the send side patents, we have Claim 1 which is very familiar
`to the other send side patents that we have already discussed which talks
`about associating message content with which includes a media component
`and in the case of all of our references, it’s a video. That will be displayed at
`the sending user device.
`You have to associate an identifier with the recipient of the message
`and make sure that there are two separate displays on the sender side device
`for entering information first about the recipient on one display and content
`on the other display or vice versa.
`That message content is then transmitted including a media
`component from the sending device to a server computer and then the
`identifier of the recipient is also transmitted as well.
`The send side references, the main reference in all of the send side
`claims is the Namias reference. And the Namias reference as we know is a
`kiosk style computer which has at its core a touch screen described in the
`patent as a touch screen enabled by a PC or other processing computer, that
`enables a user who wants to send a video to someone else to through a series
`of wizard type screens send information from a sender to a recipient.
`In Namias Figure 4A, we see the first display screen and in that
`display screen, nothing but the message content is shown. The message
`content is the video that you are going to send.
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`Only after the video has been decided, this is the video I definitely
`want to send, the user presses send this video and only thereafter is taken to
`a secondary screen, Figure 5, in which the sender is asked to type in the
`recipients address. And we see that in Figure 5 itself.
`So we have two completely separated displays. One showing content,
`in this case the message, the video, and the other showing the recipient.
`The secondary reference being combined is that of Saffer. Saffer is a
`system that receives a video and in the Saffer system what happens is that
`when the video is sent up to the server, the server says I’m going to take that
`video and I’m going to store it.
`And I’m going to give that video an ID and I’m going to send that ID
`back down to the sender’s computer so that it can be associated with the
`email, shipped back up to the server, and then what is sent to the recipient is
`a link to the video that’s been stored at the service, not the video itself.
`And then finally the reference Smith. Smith is a reference that talks
`specifically about the use of personalized URLs in order to give more
`information to the identifier of a document. So instead of just having the
`link where it just reads the exact location of a document, you can actually
`append a recipients name or other security information to the end of that
`URL so it can be used for tracking information or further security features.
`And finally, the Ford reference which I don’t think we need to talk
`about today.
`The complaints that petitioner -- sorry, the complaints that patent
`owner makes regarding the combination of Namias, Saffer, and in particular
`Smith, is that the complaint is that somehow our reliance on Namias's user
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`interface to disclose the separate displays is improper hindsight reasoning.
`But that's not true.
`Namias had two separate displays. The claim required two separate
`displays. Namias has separate displays for inputting content and inputting a
`recipient’s information. There is nothing hindsight about looking for
`elements in the prior art, finding the elements in the prior art exist in exactly
`the same way that the claim calls for. That is we have a messaging system
`for sending video.
`How do we do that? We do that with two screens. It’s exactly what
`Namias did. And the petitioners reply at paper 24, 11 through 16
`specifically addresses exactly why it’s not improper hindsight to look at that.
`Also one of ordinary skill in the art would be motivated to combine
`Namias with Saffer and use its URL based delivery technique because again,
`both Namias and Saffer were delivery of video content from a messaging
`sender to a messaging recipient.
`Saffer because it deals with URLs allows for streaming of video
`content and Dr. Chatterjee specifically discussed why it would be beneficial
`to be able to use the streaming technique of Saffer with Namias. Especially
`to conserve bandwidth and conserve potential storage space.
`The argument made by patent owner was well, but there might be
`times when someone might want to view the video a handful of times and
`therefore it might not conserve bandwidth in one instance.
`But that’s not enough to overcome an obviousness combination where
`the motivation to combine does indeed find benefit especially for example in
`those situations where someone doesn’t look at the video at all and therefore
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`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`all bandwidth is stored. Or someone wants to start watching the video while
`the rest is being buffered. That also is extremely helpful with streaming
`versus direct transmission.
`Finally, the combination of Namias and Saffer does teach separate
`transmission. When the Namias and Saffer combination is made, the
`attachment, the video, the message content, the video, is replaced with a
`URL which is then sent down to the user. That URL is a link to the
`information. Not the linked information itself.
`And therefore, the combination of Namias and Saffer absolutely
`shows sending separately the transmission of the content versus the recipient
`information which looks an awful lot like and I'll jump forward to Figures
`10 and 11 and this is on Slide 24, looks an awful lot like Figures 10 and 11
`of the patent itself.
`In the 156 patent, what we know on the left hand side is this is the
`recipient information but that is a clickable link. When one clicks on what is
`in the box highlighted in red on Slide 24, that accesses an HTML page.
`The underlying information from that page is then used by the server
`to deliver the information. And wat we see on the right hand side in the
`green box up above is the exact location of that HTML page that is now
`being displayed with the content which is this is my first message to you.
`Dr. Almeroth, patent owners expert concurred that in fact, this was a
`separate transmission within the context of the patent itself. Therefore,
`when Saffer sends down a link, a URL to the information, that is a separate
`transmission exactly as we see in Figures 10 and 11.
`The fact that one could gain access to the information by clicking on
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`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`the link or by doing some type of a right click that would show you the
`underlying information behind the URL does not mean that the content has
`been sent simply by seeing the screen that has the URL in it. Otherwise, the
`patent itself would not have taught what they say is a separate transmission
`as agreed by Dr. Almeroth.
`And finally, separate transmission is also taught by RFC 2821 and we
`know that because RFC 2821, this is an alternative ground and now we are
`looking at Slide 31.
`RFC 2821 specifically calls out that when you send an email you have
`to do each line separately. Each is a separate command followed by a
`separate answer command. Answer command and it must follow that format
`and the RFC is clear about that.
`What we see for example in D1 which is a complete example if we
`look at the header above that on -- in RFC 28121, it is a complete example.
`We see that RCPT TO Jones@foo.com, is sent by itself. If that is a valid
`address an okay is returned and the next RCPT TO can be sent. In this case,
`green@foo.com.
`There, no valid email address existed so a no such user was sent back.
`No content has been shipped at this point. These are separate transmissions
`of the recipient information.
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`JUDGE WHITE: Counselor, let’s just go back through this one more
`time then. If you look in the RFC section 3.3 mail transactions, it says the
`data command initiates a transfer of mail data and if you look up above in
`section 2.3.9 it talks about what message content in mail data is and it says
`that it includes message headers in the possibly structured message body.
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`
`So with that in mind, are we not in a situation where that data
`command would be sending both?
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`MS. KEEFE: So, Your Honor, the first answer is no. Not within the
`example given at D1. For example, if we look at page 73 of Exhibit 1022 of
`which shows the scenarios of typical SMTP transactions, each one presents a
`complete scenario of that SMPT section.
`Within D1, the very first transaction shown, we see that it’s merely
`data like blah, blah, blah, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So this is a scenario
`which would not include headers.
`If you look forward into the remainder of the examples, for example,
`at the D3 and D4, both of those examples specifically include header
`information like date, from, subject and to, and are specifically included as
`the data that is being submitted.
`Therefore, the SMPT knew how to say put the header data in here and
`knew how not to. D1 is an example when it wasn’t required.
`But as we talked about last time, Your Honor, even if you were to find
`that for example header information its better if it's included or not, there is
`still always the BCC operation. And in the BCC operation, recipient
`information does not have to be included.
`And so that’s -- and that’s also set out specifically by Dr. Chatterjee
`and by the SMTP itself which is confirmed by RFC 2822 which specifically
`indicates that the only header fields that are required are the date field and
`the from field, the originator field.
`So even if header information had to be included, the operation of
`BCC mandates that the to information does not have to be included and in
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`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
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`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`fact would follow within D1 that the to information was not included.
`So if BCC were being operated, then the recipient information would
`not be being sent with the data operation. Does that answer Your Honor’s
`questions?
`
`
`JUDGE WHITE: Yes.
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`MS. KEEFE: Thank you. I think the last question was whether or not
`the combination of Saffer and Smith taught the claimed correlation. Within
`Smith, the ID of the video is the identification of the content information.
`Adding on Smith places the correlation within the URL itself by then
`appending the name of either the sender or the recipient directly into that
`URL. And therefore the combination of Saffer and Smith would have
`resulted in a system in which the URL of Saffer with the content ID directly
`follows with recipient identifiers such as the recipients email address.
`RFC 2821 also teaches the claimed correlation and this is at slide 73
`and here the data that is used to correlate the recipient information with what
`it is, recipient information, is the phrase RCPT to and I’m in Slide 37 which
`is highlighted in yellow.
`That data thereby correlates this is recipient information which is what
`follows and that is Jones@foo.com. That's now correlated. And then the
`period at the end makes sure that we now tie a bow around, tie a lasso I think
`is the word I used last time, around the data that is going to be correlated
`together with what then goes to those recipients and we see that highlighted
`in green.
`On the receive side patents, we have as you can expect what happens
`on the opposite end where we again have two separate displays for who is
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`receiving the information, where it comes from, and what the information
`itself is.
`The primary reference being used is the Wren application. This is at
`Slide 41 and in the Wren application, we specifically see sender information,
`time and length in Figure 9A. And in Figure 9B we see the movie that had
`been sent.
`Wren itself was a video messaging application that specifically
`contemplated a one touch usage. That was the primary usage feature of
`Wren. There is an alternative embodiment in which a user may be prompted
`to add additional information but the primary embodiment of Wren is the
`one touch meaning you put your video up, make sure you have the right
`sender that you want to send it to or recipient’s name, click and it goes. No
`further input from a user whatsoever.
`That’s confirmed in paragraph 32, Figure 9 is an illustration of a
`recipient receiving the one touch arbitrary length movie message with video
`and audio. Figure 9 shows the notification of the new message and that
`notification is not the content. It’s just that you have a new movie from
`Jane.
`And Figure 9B shows the movie once the user selects play. Sender
`information separated from content. The argument made is that somehow
`this is not a separate display because it includes the phrase new movie. But
`new movie is not information entered by the sender of the movie.
`In fact, all of Wren talks about one touch being that nothing else is
`being added by the sender and Dr. Chatterjee specifically describes this in
`his declaration and his reply declaration. The logical, the frankly the most
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`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`logical if not the only logical conclusion is that new movie is simply what
`the sender, sorry, the receiver’s phone puts in to say this is a movie as
`opposed to for example a voice message or an email.
`So that’s just information indicating as a notice this is what is -- this is
`what it is but it has no content whatsoever. The computer didn’t go in,
`review the movie, figure out what it was and type something in about it or
`prompt the user for any information.
`The combination made is with Berger because the claim requires a list
`of senders as oppose to simply one and in Berger, what we see is messages
`that have been received, multimedia messages including in Figure 1 of
`Berger, videos.
`Videos are absolutely contemplated by Berger and we see that it, what
`Berger lists are what the user has received and from who. So we have
`George Smith for example on the very first line.
`And what the next figure in Berger, Figure 5 shows is that what is
`behind George Smith is actually a URL that includes information about
`George Smith and the document itself so that when you click it you actually
`go to that document.
`And I think it is very important to also look at what it says in number
`three. Number three simply says voice message. No different from new
`movie. So it’s a basic boring description of what the thing is as a
`notification as opposed to any information input by anyone. The
`combination of --
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`JUDGE WHITE: Counselor?
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`MS. KEEFE: Please.
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`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`JUDGE WHITE: In your view, what is sort of the construction of
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`message content? What are the -- what would actually fall in and out of the
`that term? How broad should we view the term message content?
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`MS. KEEFE: So, I think, Your Honor, the most logical way to view it
`is that content is separate from header which is exactly what the
`specification of the patent itself contemplates. That content is the, you
`know, that which the user wants the person on the other end to see versus
`header information which is simply information about who is sending it.
`What time it was, where that information is, who it comes from, who
`it goes to. And so content is the information being sent as opposed to
`information about those things.
`And the easiest way within the Namias, Wren, Berger, and the 711,
`156 and 157 patents is that it's what the user puts in. It is what the user
`chooses. The video that they want someone to see. The video that they
`want to record or in the case of Vaporstream, the information that they want
`to make sure that someone on the other end sees. Whatever multimedia is
`being sent.
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`JUDGE ARBES: What about text --
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`JUDGE WHITE: Is it really the -- I was going to say is it really the
`question of who actually entered in the information? Because if I’m typing
`in the email address that would arguably fall into the bucket of header
`information so it’s not -- is it really in your mind the question of who types it
`in?
`MS. KEEFE: No, in fact Your Honor, raises -- that's why I was trying
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`to separate the notion of header information from content information. So
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`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`you’re right. It’s not who types it in because it can be an auto complete field
`but it’s what the user wants the recipient to see. And it’s the content versus
`the header.
`So really the differentiator is header is -- I almost think about it as
`metadata versus data. I don’t want to get too far down that road because I’m
`sure that will blow up in my face at some point.
`But the, it's the concept of header information is information about the
`content. When it is, who it's from, when it was sent versus the content itself.
`That which the sender wants the recipient to see.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: But didn’t the --
`
`JUDGE WHITE: Isn’t that a bit imprecise, I mean, what we want the
`user to see? I mean, we want the user to see that there is an email. That’s --
`
`MS. KEEFE: Well, but that is not the content. That’s not the thing
`that the sender is trying to send.
`The sender is trying to send a video and in the patents at issue here,
`156, 157, and 711, the sender is trying to send some form of multimedia.
`And they always distinguish between the message and the message content
`except for one location where Judge Arbes asked me during the last one
`there is one time where it says message instead of message content.
`But is always separating itself from header. And so content is always
`that which is not header. And so that’s probably the best answer I can give
`is that message header information is not message content.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: Counsel, can I ask the reverse?
`
`MS. KEEFE: Sure.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: Do we need to interpret header information? It
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`appears that the district court interpreted it as properties of a message that is
`not the message content.
`
`MS. KEEFE: Well --
`
`JUDGE ARBES: Defining – so, how do we pinpoint exactly here
`what is header information and what is message content, what can be
`considered in either of those two categories?
`
`MS. KEEFE: I think the best advice or the best guidance, Your
`Honor, comes from the specification itself in column 9. This, I’m looking
`right now at the 711 patent but the same exact language is in all the rest. At
`column 9, line 5 for example says typically a message content such as
`message content 140 which is what is trying to be sent to the recipient, does
`not include information that in itself identifies the message sender, recipient,
`location of the electronic message or time date associated with the electronic
`message.
`And all of those as we know from SMTP are typical header
`information. I don’t think you have to define it as header versus content but
`what we have is a definitional statement or sorry, not definitional, it’s a
`guidance from the patent owner of what it intended message content to be
`which was not in and of itself identifying the sender recipient, location of the
`message and or date time associated with that message.
`And so I would say that includes for example the from, the to, subject
`line, something like a URL that simply shows where the content is or the
`date or time associated with it.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: But how do we know here that the sender did not
`want to communicate the text New Movie?
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`MS. KEEFE: So what we know is that the embodiment, the primary
`
`embodiment within Wren was for a one touch message being sent. And the
`one touch arbitrary length movie message is always described as the sender
`recording a movie and then just with one click, either a hard button or a soft,
`sending it to a recipient.
`They are not prompted in the one touch method for any further
`information. They're not prompted to type in any text. And therefore --
`
`JUDGE ARBES: But they could have entered that text earlier and
`when I do the one click, it sends the text with the video, right?
`
`MS. KEEFE: I think that while that’s possible, while that’s absolutely
`possible, Your Honor, it would be very strange -- for one thing it would be
`very strange to put subject information above the from, time and length.
`Typical arrangement would have something like subject that had been
`typed in put down below and it would have been after a header field.
`Header field, subject colon which we actually see in 9C which is the email
`message which includes the attachment.
`So they knew how to use a subject that had been provided by the user
`whether it was auto filled from something that had been typed in before or
`something that was typed in on a prompt at that time. And nowhere does
`that show up or a subject field in what we see on the left hand side.
`Instead what I honestly think and what Dr. Chatterjee says is the most
`likely is that this is no different for example than what we see on line 3 of
`Berger which is this is just a description of what it is which is provided by
`the phone itself.
`So I’m looking at a movie as opposed to a voice message. As opposed
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`to a text message or an email. And that’s just to say this is what it is going
`to be so when you hit play that’s that you are going to get. It’s not going to
`be a voice message. It’s going to be a movie.
`And it also describes every single movie that would ever be
`transmitted using the Wren one touch system and so it just doesn’t make
`sense that what they're saying is that’s what the user typed in because as you
`see in 9C. They say Christmas morning. That’s something that actually is
`descriptive of what is happening.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: Well, but you're saying then that there is a
`difference. There is a difference between Figures 9A and 9C. These are the
`only figures that we have to go on.
`And in some sense, your belief and Dr. Chatterjee’s belief is that
`Figure 9A is inconsistent with the only other description we have.
`Shouldn’t, isn’t the more natural reading to read these together?
`
`MS. KEEFE: So I don’t think they’re inconsistent at all. All it is, is
`that in 9C you actually have subject information that had been entered by
`someone. For example, if we actually look at the title, the words that we are
`looking at, it doesn’t say new movie like in, you know, capital N, little
`movie, New movie like you would be writing a sentence or a description.
`It says cap N new, cap M movies. That’s that this thing is. It’s a New
`Movie. That’s not -- it doesn’t look like something that has been input by a
`user. There is no evidence to show that it was and it specifically talks about
`this being sent with one touch.
`So I think in order if they were consistent, you would have a subject
`line underneath time so that it looked more like 9C if that was in fact
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`IPR2018-00416 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00439 (Patent 9,413,711 B2)
`IPR2018-00455 (Patent 9,313,157 B2)
`IPR2018-00458 (Patent 9,313,156 B2)
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`something that had been entered by the user.
`So to answer your question, I think it would only make more sense to
`make them consistent if it was something that had been typed in by the user
`that it looked like 9C not that it had a completely different format.
`Instead it only makes sense that the reason it looks different is that
`that isn’t something that had been entered by anyone. That’s just what the
`phone does to say what you are going to be seeing is a movie instead of
`something else. And so it wasn’t entered by a user and therefore isn’t
`content. Wasn’t intended to be content, wasn’t anything that the sure
`intended to send to the recipient.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: A couple additional questions.
`
`MS. KEEFE: Please.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: The Christmas morning line in Figure 9C.
`
`MS. KEEFE: Yes.
`
`JUDGE ARBES: Is that header information your view?
`
`MS. KEEFE: Yes. Because it is a subject. It directly follows the
`colon subject which is the header information and include in the header
`itself. And it des