`______________________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`______________________
`
`Canon Inc., Canon U.S.A., Inc., and Axis Communications AB,
`
`Petitioners,
`
`v.
`
`Avigilon Fortress Corporation,
`
`Patent Owner.
`______________________
`
`Case No. IPR2019-00314
`U.S. Patent No. 7,932,923
`
`______________________
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`PATENT OWNER’S SUR-REPLY TO PETITION FOR INTER PARTES
`REVIEW
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`
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
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`PATENT OWNER’S EXHIBIT LIST
`Description
`
`Exhibit
`No.
`2001 Declaration of Michael W. De Vries in Support of Unopposed Motion
`to Appear Pro Hac Vice on Behalf of Patent Owner Avigilon Fortress
`Corporation.
`
`2002 Declaration of Adam R. Alper in Support of Unopposed Motion to
`Appear Pro Hac Vice on Behalf of Patent Owner Avigilon Fortress
`Corporation.
`
`2003 Declaration of Akshay S. Deoras s in Support of Unopposed Motion to
`Appear Pro Hac Vice on Behalf of Patent Owner Avigilon Fortress
`Corporation.
`
`2004
`
`2005
`
`37 C.F.R. § 1.132 Declaration of Kenneth A. Zeger (excerpt of U.S.
`Patent No. 7,868,912 Reexamination).
`
`Thomas Olson & Frank Brill, Moving Object Detection & Event
`Recognition Algorithms for Smart Cameras, 1 PROC. 1997 IMAGE
`UNDERSTANDING WORKSHOP 159-175 (1997).
`
`2006
`
`Jonathan D. Courtney, Automatic Video Indexing Via Object Motion
`Analysis, 30(4) PATTERN RECOGNITION 607-625 (1997).
`
`2007 U.S. Patent No. 6,628,835 to Brill et al.
`
`2008 Young Francis Day, et al, Spatio-Temporal Modeling of Video Data
`for On-Line Object-Oriented Query Processing, Proceedings of the
`International Conference on Multimedia Computing and Systems, 98-
`105 (1995).
`
`2009
`
`Forouzan Golshani & Nevenka Dimitrova, A Language for Content-
`Based Video Retrieval, 6 MULTIMEDIA TOOLS AND
`APPLICATIONS, 289-312 (1998).
`
`i
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`
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
`
`Description
`
`IPR2018-00138; IPR2018-00140, Ex. 2009 (Grindon Dep. Transcript
`Aug. 15, 2018).
`
`Exhibit
`No.
`2010
`
`2011 Declaration of Jennifer A. Babbitt.
`
`2012
`
`2013
`
`SearchWorks Catalog Entry for Thomas Olson & Frank Brill, Moving
`Object Detection & Event Recognition Algorithms for Smart Cameras,
`1 PROC. 1997 IMAGE UNDERSTANDING WORKSHOP 159-175 (1997).
`
`Scanned Cover and Front Matter of Jonathan D. Courtney, Automatic
`Video Indexing Via Object Motion Analysis, 30(4) PATTERN
`RECOGNITION 607-625 (1997).
`
`2014 MARC Standards Wikipedia Search.
`
`2015 Declaration of Jennifer A. Babbitt for Sur-Reply.
`
`ii
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`
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
`Petitioners’ Reply fails to demonstrate that Dimitrova and Brill are printed
`
`publications. Avigilon respectfully requests the Board deny institution.
`
`I.
`
`PETITIONERS’ 37 C.F.R. § 42.108(C) ARGUMENT IS INCORRECT
`Petitioners’ contention that it need only show a “genuine issue of fact” to
`
`suffice for institution is incorrect. It is Petitioners’ burden to demonstrate that “there
`
`is a reasonable likelihood that at least one of the claims challenged in the petition is
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`unpatentable.” 37 C.F.R. § 42.108(c). It is also Petitioners’ burden to demonstrate
`
`that its references are printed publications. ServiceNow, Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard
`
`Co., IPR2015-00707, Paper 12 at 19-20 (Aug. 26, 2015). The language in §
`
`42.108(c) on which Petitioners rely is inapplicable here because that language relates
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`only to “testimonial evidence presented in a patent owner preliminary response.”
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`See, e.g., Fluidmaster, Inc. v. Danco, Inc., IPR2017-00770, Paper 17 at 9 (Oct. 4,
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`2017) (original emphasis). Patent Owner presented no such testimonial evidence
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`here. Petitioners’ attempt to distinguish Acceleration Bay also fails. That case
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`discussed the standard for proving public availability, and did not condition its
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`analysis on whether evidence was analyzed before or after institution.
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`II.
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`PRINTED PUBLICATION STATUS IS A SUBSTANTIVE ISSUE
`PROPERLY RAISED IN A PRELIMINARY RESPONSE
`Petitioners are incorrect that Patent Owner’s arguments concern the
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`“admissibility” of the Florio declaration. Reply at 1. Patent Owner puts forth
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`substantive arguments related to the sufficiency of Ms. Florio’s testimony, which is
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`1
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
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`properly addressed in a preliminary response. Indeed, the Board has denied
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`institution when a petitioner failed to provide sufficient evidence supporting a
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`reference’s printed publication status. See e.g., Fluidmaster, IPR2017-00770, Paper
`
`13 at 24; ServiceNow, IPR2015-00707, Paper 12 at 19-20. Further, Petitioners’
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`argument that Patent Owner’s counsel supported a petition in a different IPR with a
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`law firm librarian fails at least because the declarant there testified to her personal
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`knowledge of the cataloging practices at the relevant libraries. See Cisco Sys., Inc.
`
`v. Chrimar Sys., Inc., IPR2019-00401, Ex. 1024 ¶¶ 6-7. Lastly, Avigilon is not
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`precluded from disputing the sufficiency of the Florio declaration because the issue
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`was not litigated or adjudicated in IPR2018-00138, which also concerns a different
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`patent. Paper 9 at 28-29.
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`III. THE FLORIO DECLARATION IS INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
`Petitioners have not met their burden at least because Ms. Florio lacks
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`personal knowledge of the practices at the relevant libraries and the MARC system,
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`or at least has not explained such knowledge or the inconsistencies in her declaration.
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`First, as previously explained in the Preliminary Response, Ms. Florio is
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`explicit as to her lack of personal knowledge, qualifying her testimony with hedge
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`words such as “would have been,” “relatively nominal amount of time,” and “at least
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`before,” which the Board has previously found insufficient to support a petitioner’s
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`contention regarding the public availability of a reference. See generally Ex. 1007;
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`2
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
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`see Intel Corp. v. Alacritech, Inc., IPR2017-01395, Paper 8 at 6 (Nov. 22, 2017)
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`(denying institution based on a lack of public availability where the declarant—who
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`worked in the “Original Cataloguing Unit” at the relevant library—used “hedging
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`words” like “as best I can determine”). And like in Alacritech, the Florio declaration
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`“lacks any acknowledgement . . . that willful false statements are punishable by fine,
`
`imprisonment, or both.” Id. at 7; see 37 C.F.R. § 1.68. The same result in that case
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`should apply here—the Board should give the Florio declaration no weight. Id.
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`Second, Petitioners’ reliance on the Symantec IPR is misplaced. Reply at 4.
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`In Symantec Corp. v. Finjan, Inc., the dispute was over whether a declarant needed
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`to be “physical[ly] presen[t]” at the creation of a MARC record to show public
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`availability. IPR2015-01892, Paper 58 at 30-31. Here, Patent Owner’s challenge
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`does not rest on whether Ms. Florio was “physical[ly] presen[t]” at the creation of
`
`the MARC record. Rather, Patent Owner has demonstrated Ms. Florio’s lack of any
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`personal knowledge regarding the practices at the relevant libraries.
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`Further, in Symantec, the petitioner’s librarian could testify about the MARC
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`standard because she was personally knowledgeable about it. IPR2015-01892, Ex.
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`1006 ¶ 3 (“I have also given over one hundred presentations in the field, including
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`several on . . . MARC standards.”), ¶ 6 (“I am fully familiar with a library cataloging
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`standard known as . . . ‘MARC’”). Here, Ms. Florio’s declaration demonstrates no
`
`such knowledge of MARC standard. In fact, much of Ms. Florio’s explanation of
`3
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
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`the MARC standard appears to be copied nearly verbatim from a Wikipedia page.
`
`Compare Ex. 1007 ¶ 20 (“MARC uses a simple three-digit numeric code (from 001-
`
`999) to identify each field in the record. For example, field 245 lists the title of the
`
`work and field 260 lists publisher information.”) with Ex. 2014 at 2 (“MARC uses a
`
`simple three-digit numeric code (from 001-999) to identify each field in the record.
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`MARC defines . . . field 245 as the title and field 260 as the publisher.”). Further,
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`she does not state she personally retrieved the MARC records she discusses, and she
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`merely asserts, without any explanation of what the OCLC database is, that “MIT
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`does [OCLC’s] cataloguing.” Id. at ¶ 23.
`
`IV. PETITIONERS’ OTHER EVIDENCE IS ALSO INSUFFICIENT
`Even if the facts in the Florio declaration are accepted as true, Petitioners still
`
`fail to show that Dimitrova and Brill were publicly accessible. See Paper 9 at 18-
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`29. Petitioners do not supply any information about the readership or subscriber
`
`base of the journal that allegedly published Dimitrova, which as explained in the
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`Preliminary Response, is required. See Paper 9 at 18-19. They only reference the
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`three libraries about which Ms. Florio testifies as evidence of readership, but, as
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`explained above, Ms. Florio lacks personal knowledge about the policies at these
`
`libraries and the MARC records she discusses.
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`Further, Petitioners allege Brill was “disseminated through the distribution of
`
`the periodical[] in which [it was] contained,” but provide no evidence of Brill being
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`4
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
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`contained in a “periodical.” Reply at 4. To the contrary, Brill purports to be a
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`conference paper. Ex. 1004. For such references, public dissemination is not
`
`demonstrated merely from receipt by a library. ABS Global, Inc. v. Inguran, LLC,
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`IPR2016-00927, Paper 33 at 17 (Oct. 2, 2017) (“Thus, while the date stamp on
`
`Petitioner's copy of Leary suggests that the publication was stamped with a June 24,
`
`2002 date and information identifying the library, it does nothing more.”). Further,
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`a library’s date stamp alone does not show that the library made the reference
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`publicly available after receiving it. Id. at 15 (“[A] petitioner must do more than
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`rely on that date stamp to demonstrate that the reference in question was publicly
`
`accessible.”). And Petitioners provide no evidence at all about any searching
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`functionality or ways a POSITA would find the reference at the relevant universities
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`other than Ms. Florio’s baseless allegation that the references “would have been
`
`shelved shortly after” receipt by the libraries.
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`5
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`Dated: April 30, 2019
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`Respectfully submitted,
`
`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
`
`By:
`
`/s/ Eugene Goryunov/
`Eugene Goryunov (Reg. No. 61,579)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`300 North LaSalle
`Chicago, IL 60654
`Telephone: 312-862-2000
`Facsimile: 312-862-2200
`
`Lead Counsel for Patent Owner
`Avigilon Fortress Corporation
`
`Reza Dokhanchy (Reg. No. 62,795)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`555 California Street
`San Francisco, CA 94104
`Telephone: 415-439-1400
`Facsimile: 415-439-1500
`reza.dokhanchy@kirkland.com
`
`Akshay S. Deoras (pro hac vice)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`555 California Street
`San Francisco, CA 94104
`Telephone: 415-439-1400
`Facsimile: 415-439-1500
`akshay.deoras@kirkland.com
`
`Adam R. Alper (pro hac vice)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`555 California Street
`San Francisco, CA 94104
`Telephone: 415-439-1400
`Facsimile: 415-439-1500
`adam.alper@kirkland.com
`
`Michael W. De Vries (pro hac vice)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`333 South Hope Street
`Los Angeles, CA 90071
`Telephone: 213-680-8400
`Facsimile: 213-680-8500
`michael.devries@kirkland.com
`
`Back-Up Counsel for Patent Owner
`Avigilon Fortress Corporation
`
`6
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`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
`
`CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
`The undersigned hereby certifies that a copy of the foregoing PATENT
`
`OWNER’S SUR-REPLY was served on April 30, 2019 via electronic service on
`
`lead and back up counsel:
`
`Axis Communications AB
`Lead Counsel
`
`Axis Communications AB
`Backup Counsel
`
`C. Gregory Gramenopoulos (Reg. No.
`36,532)
`Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow,
`Garrett & Dunner LLP
`901 New York Avenue, NW
`Washington, DC 20001-4413
`Telephone: 202-408-4263
`Fax: 202-408-4400
`Email: gramenoc@finnegan.com
`
`Kelly S. Horn (Reg. No. 70,657)
`Guang-Yu Zhu (Reg. No. 66,250)
`Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow,
`Garrett & Dunner LLP
`901 New York Avenue, NW
`Washington, DC 20001-4413
`Telephone: 202-408-43131
`Fax: 202-408-4400
`Email: kelly.horn@finnegan.com
`Email: guang-yu.zhu@finnegan.com
`
`Canon Inc. and Canon U.S.A., Inc.
`Lead Counsel
`
`Canon Inc. and Canon U.S.A., Inc.
`Back-Up Counsel
`
`Joseph A. Calvaruso (Reg. No. 28,287)
`Orrick, Herrington, & Sutcliffe LLP
`2050 Main Street, Suite 1110
`Irvine, CA 92614-8255
`Telephone: 212-506-5140
`Facsimile: 949-567-6710
`Email: ipprosecution@orrick.com
`
`Richard F. Martinell (Reg. No. 52,003)
`Orrick, Herrington, & Sutcliffe LLP
`2050 Main Street, Suite 1110
`Irvine, CA 92614-8255
`Telephone: 212-506-5140
`Facsimile: 949-567-6710
`Email: ipprosecution@orrick.com
`
`7
`
`
`
`Dated: April 30, 2019
`
`Reza Dokhanchy (Reg. No. 62,795)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`555 California Street
`San Francisco, CA 94104
`Telephone: 415-439-1400
`Facsimile: 415-439-1500
`reza.dokhanchy@kirkland.com
`
`Adam R. Alper (pro hac vice)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`555 California Street
`San Francisco, CA 94104
`Telephone: 415-439-1400
`Facsimile: 415-439-1500
`adam.alper@kirkland.com
`
`Patent Owner’s Sur-Reply to Petition
`IPR2019-00314
`
` /s/ Eugene Goryunov
`Eugene Goryunov (Reg. No. 61,579)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`300 North LaSalle
`Chicago, IL 60654
`Telephone: 312-862-2000
`Facsimile: 312-862-2200
`eugene.goryunov@kirkland.com
`
`Akshay S. Deoras (pro hac vice)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`555 California Street
`San Francisco, CA 94104
`Telephone: 415-439-1400
`Facsimile: 415-439-1500
`akshay.deoras@kirkland.com
`
`Michael W. De Vries (pro hac vice)
`KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
`333 South Hope Street
`Los Angeles, CA 90071
`Telephone: 213-680-8400
`Facsimile: 213-680-8500
`michael.devries@kirkland.com
`
`8
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