throbber
UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`
`_________________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`
`_________________
`
`MICROSOFT CORPORATION,
`Petitioner,
`
`v.
`
`UNILOC 2017 LLC,
`Patent Owner.
`
`IPR2019-01559
`U.S. Patent No.: 8,724,622
`Issued: May 13, 2014
`Application No.: 13/546,673
`Filed: July 11, 2012
`
`Title: SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT VOIP MESSAGING
`_________________
`
`
`PETITION FOR
`INTER PARTES REVIEW OF U.S. PATENT NO. 8,724,622 (CLAIM 5)
`
`
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`TABLE OF CONTENTS
`
`I.
`II.
`
`Pages
`LIST OF EXHIBITS ................................................................................................. vi
`MANDATORY NOTICES UNDER 37 C.F.R. § 42.8 ............................................ ix
`1.
`Real Party-In-Interest ........................................................................... ix
`2.
`Related Matters ..................................................................................... ix
`3.
`Lead And Back-Up Counsel, And Service Information ................... xiii
`GROUNDS FOR STANDING PER SECTION 42.104(A) ............................ 1
`IDENTIFICATION OF CHALLENGE .......................................................... 1
`A.
`Statement Of The Precise Relief Requested/Statutory Grounds ........... 1
`B.
`These Prior Art And Arguments Were
`Not Considered During Original Prosecution ....................................... 2
`C. Microsoft’s Petition Should Be Granted Despite
`Earlier Third-Party Petitions Challenging The Same Patent ................ 2
`III. UNILOC IS PRECLUDED FROM
`
`CHALLENGING SEVERAL ISSUES RAISED IN THIS PETITION ......... 5
`IV. THE ’622 PATENT ......................................................................................... 7
`A.
`The ’622 Patent’s Specification ............................................................ 7
`LEVEL OF SKILL IN THE ART, AND STATE OF THE ART ................... 9
`A.
`Person Of Ordinary Skill In The Art ..................................................... 9
`VI. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION ............................................................................ 9
`A.
`Proposed Constructions ....................................................................... 11
`1.
`Instant Voice Message .............................................................. 11
`2.
`Instant Voice Message Client System ...................................... 14
`
`V.
`
`Page ii
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`VII. GROUND 1: CLAIM 5 IS OBVIOUS
`
`OVER GRIFFIN IN VIEW OF ZYDEY ...................................................... 16
`A.
`Zydney (Ex. 1004) ............................................................................... 16
`B. Griffin (Ex. 1008) ................................................................................ 20
`C.
`Claim 5 ................................................................................................ 20
`VIII. CONCLUSION .............................................................................................. 51
`CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ....................................................................... 52
`
`
`
`Page iii
`
`

`

`TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
`
`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`Pages
`
`Cases
`Ariosa Diagnostics v. Verinata Health, Inc.
`805 F.3d 1359 (Fed. Cir. 2015) ............................................................................25
`KSR Intern. Co. v. Teleflex, Inc.
`550 U.S. 398 (2007) ...................................................................................... 43, 47
`Nidec Motor Corp. v. Zhongshan Borad Ocean Motor Co.
`868 F.3d 1013 (Fed. Cir. 2017) ............................................................................10
`O2 Micro Int’l Ltd. v. Beyond Innovation Tech. Co.
`521 F.3d 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2008) ............................................................................10
`Papst Licensing GMBH & Co. KG v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc.
`924 F.3d 1243 (Fed. Cir. 2019) .............................................................................. 5
`Phillips v. AWH Corp.
`415 F.3d 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2005) .............................................................................. 9
`SSIH Equip. S.A. v. ITC
`718 F.2d 365 (Fed. Cir. 1983) ................................................................................ 6
`Board Decisions
`Aurobindo Pharma USA, Inc. v. Andrx Corp. et al.
`IPR2017-01648, Paper 34 (PTAB Dec. 28, 2018) ...............................................10
`Statutes
`35 U.S.C. § 102 ................................................................................................. 17, 20
`35 U.S.C. § 103 .......................................................................................................... 1
`35 U.S.C. § 42.104 ..................................................................................................... 1
`Rules
`37 C.F.R. § 42.15 ....................................................................................................... 2
`
`Page iv
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`Patent 8,724,622
`83 FR 51340 .........................................................................................................9, 11
`83 FR51340 ......................................................................................................... 9,11
`
`
`
`IPR2019-01559
`
`
`
`Page v
`Page V
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`No.
`1001
`1002
`1003
`
`1004
`
`1005
`1006
`1007
`1008
`1009
`
`1010
`1011
`1012
`
`1013
`
`1014
`
`1015
`
`1016
`
`LIST OF EXHIBITS
`
`Description
` U.S. Patent No. 8,724,622 (“the ’622 Patent”)
` File History of U.S. Patent No. 8,724,622
` Declaration of Tal Lavian, Ph.D., signed and dated August 29,
`2019
` PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US00/21555 to Herbert Zydney
`et al. (filed August 7, 2000, published February 15, 2001 as WO
`01/11824 A2) (“Zydney”) (with line numbers added)
` Reserved
` Reserved
` Reserved
` U.S. Patent No. 8,150,922 (“Griffin”)
` R. Droms, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, Internet
`Engineering Task Force, Request for Comments 2131
` Harry Newton, Newton’s Telecom Dictionary (16th. ed. 2000)
` John Rittinghouse, IM Instant Messaging Security (1st ed. 2005)
` Dreamtech Software Team, Instant Messaging Systems: Cracking
`the Code (2002)
` Upkar Varshney et al., Voice over IP, Communication of the
`ACM (2002, Vol. 45, No. 1)
` Iain Shigeoka, Instant Messaging in Java: Jabber Protocols
`(2002)
` Trushar Barot & Eytan Oren, Guide to Chat Apps, TOW Center
`for Digital Journalism, Columbia University (2005)
` Samir Chatterjee et al., Instant Messaging and Presence
`Technologies for College Campuses, IEEE Network (Nov. 9,
`2005)
`
`Page vi
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`1017
`
`1018
`
`1019
`1020
`
`1021
`
`1022
`1023
`1024
`1025
`1026
`1027
`
`1028
`
`1029
`
`1030
`
`1031
`
` Daniel Minoli & Emma Minoli, Delivering Voice Over IP
`Networks (2nd ed. 2002)
` Thomas Porter & Michael Gough, How to Cheat at VoIP
`Security (1st ed. 2007)
` Harry Newton, Newton’s Telecom Dictionary (18th. ed. 2002)
` Justin Berg, The IEEE 802.11 Standardization Its History,
`Specification, Implementations and Future, George Mason
`University, Technical Report Series (2011)
` Wolter Lemstra & Vic Hayes, Unlicensed Innovation: The Case
`of Wi-Fi, Competition and Regulation in Network Industries
`(2008, Vol. 9, No. 2)
` U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2003/0039340
` International Published Application No. WO 01/24036
` U.S. Patent No. 9,179,495
` U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2005/0025080
` WO 02/17650A1
` Oxford (Online) Dictionaries, Definition of “Default” (cached
`2000), https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/default
` PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US00/21555 to Herbert
`Zydney et al. (filed August 7, 2000, published February 15, 2001
`as WO 01/11824 A2) (as-published version without added line
`numbers)
` Excerpts from MICROSOFT COMPUTER DICTIONARY
`(Microsoft Press, 3d ed. 1997)
` Excerpts from MARGARET LEVINE YOUNG, INTERNET:
`THE COMPLETE REFERENCE (McGraw-Hill/Osborne, 2d ed.
`2002)
` U.S. Patent No. 6,757,365 B1 to Travis A. Bogard (filed October
`16, 2000, issued June 29, 2004)
`
`Page vii
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`1032
`
` N. Borenstein et al., Request for Comments (RFC) 1521: MIME
`(Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) Part One: Mechanisms
`for Specifying and Describing the Format of Internet Message
`Bodies, September 1993 (“RFC 1521”)
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Page viii
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`MANDATORY NOTICES UNDER 37 C.F.R. § 42.8
`
`1.
`
`Real Party-In-Interest
`
`Microsoft Corporation is the sole real party-in-interest.
`
`2.
`
`Related Matters
`
`The ’622 Patent (Ex. 1001) is asserted in the following litigations:
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`Uniloc 2017 LLC v. Microsoft Corporation, 8-19-cv-00780 (C.D. Cal.),
`
`filed April 29, 2019;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Amazon.com, Inc. et al. 2-18-cv-00290 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed July 13, 2018;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Kik Interactive, Inc., 2-17-cv-00347 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed April 21, 2017;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Hike Ltd., 2-17-cv-00349 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`April 21, 2017;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Google, LLC, 2-17-cv-00231 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`March 26, 2017;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Google Inc., 2-17-cv-00224 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`March 22, 2017;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Google, LLC, 2-17-cv-00214 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`March 20, 2017;
`
`Page ix
`
`

`

`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. HeyWire, Inc. 2-16-cv-01313 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`November 28, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. HTC America, Inc., 2-16-cv-00989 ( E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed September 06, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Kyocera America, Inc. et al., 2-16-cv-00990 (
`
`E.D. Tex.), filed September 06, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. LG Electronics USA, Inc., 2-16-cv-00991 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed September 6, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. V. Motorola Mobility LLC, 2-16-cv-00992 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed September 6, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. V. ZTE (USA) Inc. et al., 2-16-cv-00993 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed September 6, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Huawei Device USA, Inc. et al., 2-16-cv-00994
`
`(E.D. Tex.), filed September 6, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Telegram Messenger, LLP, 2-16-cv-00892
`
`(E.D. Tex.), filed August 11, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Vonage Holdings Corp. et al., 2-16-cv-00893
`
`(E.D. Tex.) filed August 11, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Avaya Inc., 2-16-cv-00777 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`July 15, 2016;
`
`Page x
`
`

`

`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Shore Tel, Inc., 2-16-cv-00779 (E.D. Tex.),
`
`filed July 15, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. AOL Inc., 2-16-cv-00722 (E.D. Tex.), filed July
`
`5, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Bee Talk Private Ltd., 2-16-cv-00725 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed July 5, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Facebook, Inc., 2-16-cv-00728 (E.D. Tex.),
`
`filed July 5, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Green Tomato Limited, 2-16-cv-00731 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed July 5, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC, 2-16-cv-
`
`00732 (E.D. Tex.), filed July 5, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. TangoMe, Inc. d/b/a Tango, 2-16-cv-00733
`
`(E.D. Tex.), filed July 5, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Tencent America, LLC et al., 2-16-cv-00694
`
`(E.D. Tex.), filed June 30, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Snap Inc., 2-16-cv-00696, (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`June 30, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Apple Inc., 2-16-cv-00638 (E.D. Tex.), filed
`
`June 14, 2016;
`
`Page xi
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`•
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. BlackBerry Corporation et al., 2-16-cv-00639
`
`(E.D. Tex.), filed June 14, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Kakao Corporation, 2-16-cv-00640 (E.D.
`
`Tex.), filed June 14, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Line Euro-Americas Corp. et al., 2-16-cv-
`
`00641 (E.D. Tex.), filed June 14, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Samsung Electronics America, Inc., 2-16-cv-
`
`00642 (E.D. Tex.), filed June 14, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Viber Media Sari, 2-16-cv-00643 (E.D. Tex.),
`
`filed June 14, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. VoxerNet LLC, 2-16-cv-00644 (E.D. Tex.),
`
`filed June 14, 2016;
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. WhatsApp, Inc., 2-16-cv-00645 (E.D. Tex.),
`
`filed June 14, 2016; and
`
`Uniloc USA, Inc. et al. v. Tencent America, LLC et al., 2-16-cv-00577
`
`(E.D. Tex.), filed May 30, 2016.
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Page xii
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`Lead And Back-Up Counsel, And Service Information
`
`3.
`
`Lead Counsel
`Andrew M. Mason, Reg. No. 64,034
`andrew.mason@klarquist.com
`
`Back-up Counsel
`(First Back-Up Counsel)
`John M. Lunsford, Reg. No. 67,185
`john.lunsford@klarquist.com
`
`Todd M. Siegel, Reg. No. 73,232
`todd.siegel@klarquist.com
`
`Joseph T. Jakubek, Reg No. 34,190
`joseph.jakubek@klarquist.com
`
`KLARQUIST SPARKMAN, LLP
`121 SW Salmon Street, Suite 1600
`Portland, Oregon, 97204
`503-595-5300 (phone)
`503-595-5301 (fax)
`
`Petitioner consents to service via email at the above email addresses.
`
`Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 42.10(b), concurrently filed with this Petition is a
`
`Power of Attorney executed by Petitioner and appointing the above counsel.
`
`
`
`Page xiii
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`Microsoft Corporation (“Petitioner”) respectfully requests inter partes review
`
`(“IPR”) of claim 5 of U.S. Patent No. 8,724,622 (“the ’622 Patent”) (Ex. 1001),
`
`allegedly assigned to Uniloc 2017 LLC (“Patent Owner”). For the reasons set forth
`
`below, these claims should be found unpatentable and cancelled.
`
`I.
`
`GROUNDS FOR STANDING PER SECTION 42.104(A)
`
`Petitioner certifies that the ’622 Patent is available for IPR and that Petitioner
`
`is not barred or estopped from requesting an IPR challenging the patent claims on
`
`the grounds identified in this petition.
`
`II.
`
`IDENTIFICATION OF CHALLENGE
`
`A.
`
`Statement Of The Precise Relief Requested/Statutory Grounds
`
`Petitioner requests inter partes review of claim 5 (the “Challenged Claim”) of
`
`the ’622 Patent, on the following statutory grounds:
`
`
`
`Reference(s)
`
`Basis
`
`Claims
`
`Ground 1
`
` Zydney and Griffin
`
`35 U.S.C. § 103 5
`
`In Section VII below, the petition presents evidence of unpatentability and
`
`establishes a reasonable likelihood that the Petitioner will prevail in establishing that
`
`the Challenged Claim is unpatentable.
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 1
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`With the filing of this petition an electronic payment of $30,500 is being
`
`charged to deposit account no. 02-4550. 37 C.F.R. § 42.15(a). Any fee adjustments
`
`may be debited/credited to the deposit account.
`
`B.
`
`These Prior Art And Arguments Were
`Not Considered During Original Prosecution
`None of the references presented in Ground 1 were considered during
`
`prosecution of the ’622 Patent. Nor were “substantially the same prior art or
`
`arguments” presented during original prosecution.
`
`Because these key teachings in the prior art were not considered by the Office
`
`when issuing the challenged claim, this petition should not be denied under Section
`
`325(d).
`
`C. Microsoft’s Petition Should Be Granted Despite
`Earlier Third-Party Petitions Challenging The Same Patent
`Despite starting its most recent litigation campaign against Microsoft in July
`
`2018, Uniloc did not assert the ’622 Patent against Microsoft until April 2019. By
`
`that time, however, the Board had issued final written decisions in several other
`
`third-party IPRs challenging other claims of the ’622 Patent.1 While Microsoft
`
`necessarily files its petitions after significant proceedings before the Board on this
`
`patent, that result flows from Uniloc’s strategy of filing many one-party lawsuits
`
`serially over time and does not result from gamesmanship or delay on Microsoft’s
`
`
`1 As discussed below, these FWDs have issue-preclusive effect.
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 2
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`part (of which there is neither). In fact, Microsoft promptly files this petition (and a
`
`concurrently filed petition challenging claims 1, 2, 9, 36, and 37) roughly four
`
`months after filing of the complaint. Moreover, Microsoft challenges a unique set of
`
`claims based on unique set of grounds not previously decided by the Board. Thus,
`
`these petitions should be granted despite other prior IPR proceedings on the same
`
`patent.
`
`The following table compares the prior third-party IPRs to the present
`
`Microsoft petitions, which are shown in the last two rows:
`
`IPR
`
`Petitioner(s) Claims
`Challenged
`3, 6-8, 10, 11, 13-
`23, 27-35, 38, 39
`4, 5, 12, 24-26
`
`IPR2017-01667 Facebook,
`Inc. et al
`IPR2017-01668 Facebook,
`Inc. et al
`
`3, 4, 6-8, 10-13,
`18, 21-23, 27, 32,
`34, 35, 38, and 39
`14-17, 19, 24-26,
`28-31, and 33
`
`IPR2017-01797 Samsung
`Electronics
`America, Inc.
`IPR2017-01798 Samsung
`Electronics
`America, Inc.
`IPR2017-02080 Google LLC 3-23
`IPR2017-02081 Google LLC 1, 2, and 24-39
`IPR2019-01558 Microsoft
`1, 2, 9, 36-37
`IPR2019-01559 Microsoft
`5
`
`
`
`Outcome
`
`All claims
`unpatentable
`12 and 24-26
`unpatentable;
`4 and 5 not
`shown to be
`unpatentable
`All claims
`unpatentable
`
`All claims
`unpatentable
`
`Disposition
`Date
`01/16/2019
`
`01/16/2019
`
`01/31/2019
`
`01/31/2019
`
`Institution denied 03/19/2019
`Institution denied 03/29/2019
`N/A
`N/A
`N/A
`N/A
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 3
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`Microsoft’s challenges are not redundant and should be separately considered
`
`and instituted for several reasons.
`
`First, Microsoft itself has not previously challenged any claim of the ’622
`
`Patent in IPR.
`
`Second, Microsoft was not sued by Patent Owner until after the PTAB issued
`
`final written decisions in four of the earlier cases, and after institution decisions in
`
`the other two earlier cases. Thus, Microsoft had no reason to evaluate the ’622
`
`Patent, much less challenge claims of that patent, until well after significant other
`
`proceedings had occurred at the PTAB. Microsoft did not know of the presently-
`
`asserted prior art (certainly not in connection with the ’622 patent, if at all) at the
`
`time the earlier petitions were filed.
`
`Third, Microsoft promptly files its petitions within roughly four months of
`
`being sued on the ’622 Patent, and roughly one month after receiving Uniloc’s
`
`preliminary infringement contentions.
`
`Fourth, while Microsoft relies on some of the same art applied in the other
`
`third-party petitions, it presents that art in a different light and relies on other art not
`
`cited in those petitions with respect to the Challenged Claim. For example, Ground
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 4
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`1 (targeting claim 5) presents an obviousness combination that includes Griffin, a
`
`reference not presented in previous challenges to claim 52.
`
`So, although claims of the ’622 Patent have been challenged in previous
`
`petitions, none of the previous petitions challenged the Challenged Claim based on
`
`the combination of references presented here.
`
`Additionally, while a number of claims of the ’622 Patent have already been
`
`found unpatentable by the Board, those claims are not the focus of this petition. To
`
`the extent any of those unpatentable claims are discussed here, it is because claims
`
`not yet found unpatentable depend from them. For example, challenged claim 5
`
`depends from unpatentable claims 3 and 4.
`
`III. UNILOC IS PRECLUDED FROM
`CHALLENGING SEVERAL ISSUES RAISED IN THIS PETITION
`Under Federal Circuit precedent, a patent owner is precluded from arguing
`
`any issue that was necessarily resolved as part of a previous IPR proceeding. Papst
`
`Licensing GMBH & Co. KG v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc., 924 F.3d 1243, 1252-53
`
`
`2 Claim 5 was challenged in IPR2017-01668 based on a combination of Zydney,
`
`Shinder, and Hethmon, Illustrated Guide To HTTP (Manning Publications Co.,
`
`1997). Claim 5 was also challenged in IPR2017-02080 based on Zydney and
`
`alternatively based on a combination of Zydney and U.S. Pub. No. 2003/0208543
`
`(“Enete”).
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 5
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`(Fed. Cir. 2019). That preclusive effect is unchanged by the pendency of an appeal
`
`from a lower tribunal’s holding. SSIH Equip. S.A. v. ITC, 718 F.2d 365, 370 (Fed.
`
`Cir. 1983) ("[T]he law is well settled that the pendency of an appeal has no effect on
`
`the finality or binding effect of a trial court's holding. … That rule is applicable to
`
`holdings of patent invalidity as well."). Thus, Uniloc’s pending appeals do not
`
`change that it is precluded from arguing against the Board’s findings in the previous
`
`IPR proceedings, including any subsidiary holdings necessary to the ultimate
`
`outcome of unpatentability, such as the combinability of prior art references.
`
`The following table lists several issues that were necessarily resolved in
`
`previous proceedings and which Uniloc is precluded from challenging here.
`
`Previous Proceeding(s)
`IPR2017-01667/IPR2017-01668,
`IPR2017-01797/IPR2017-01798
`IPR2017-01667/IPR2017-01668
`
`
`IPR2017-01797/IPR2017-01798
`
`Issue
`Zydney is prior art
`
`Shinder is prior art
`Combinability of Zydney and Shinder
`Combinability of Griffin and Zydney
`The combination of Zydney and Shinder
`satisfies all elements of independent claim 3
`The combination of Zydney and Shinder
`satisfies all elements of claim 27
`Griffin is prior art
`The combination of Griffin and Shinder
`satisfies all elements of independent claim 3
`and dependent claim 4
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 6
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`IV. THE ’622 PATENT
`The ’622 Patent (Ex. 1001), titled “System And Method For Instant VoIP
`
`Messaging” issued on May 13, 2014, and alleges priority through a string of
`
`applications to Application No. 10/740,030, filed on December 18, 2003, now U.S.
`
`Patent No. 7,535,890.
`
`A. The ’622 Patent’s Specification
`
`The ’622 Patent purports to address a need to provide “local and global
`
`instant voice messaging over VoIP with PSTN support.” (Ex. 1001, Abstract, 2:47-
`
`53.) The ’622 Patent admits that voice messaging and instant text messaging were
`
`both previously known, and were both previously used in conjunction with VoIP and
`
`PSTN. (Ex. 1001, 2:22-46; see also Ex. 1003, ¶47.) Its alleged invention provides a
`
`way of delivering instant messages containing recorded audio over a packet-
`
`switched network based on client availability.
`
`With reference to Figure 2, the ’622 Patent discloses a system having one or
`
`more instant voice message (IVM) clients 206, 208 and an IVM server 202
`
`connected over a packet-switched network 204. (Id. at 6:60-3:4).
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 7
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`
`
`(Id. at Fig. 2.)
`
`The local IVM server 202 enables instant voice messaging functionality over
`
`the network 204. (Id. at 7:61-65; see also Ex. 1003, ¶52.)
`
`A user operates the IVM client to record a message for one or more selected
`
`recipients. (Id. at 7:65-8:14.) The IVM client transmits the voice message to the IVM
`
`server for delivery to the recipients. (Id. at 8:22-26.) If a recipient is “available,” the
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 8
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`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`server transmits the instant voice message to the recipient. (Id. at 8:32-34.) If the
`
`recipient is “unavailable,” the server temporarily saves the voice message and
`
`transmits it once the recipient becomes available. (Id. at 8:34-39; see also Ex. 1003,
`
`¶53.) Upon receiving the voice message, the recipients can audibly play the message.
`
`(Ex. 1001, 8:29-32; see also Ex. 1003, ¶53.)
`
`V. LEVEL OF SKILL IN THE ART, AND STATE OF THE ART
`
`A.
`
`Person Of Ordinary Skill In The Art
`
`The person of ordinary skill in the art in December 2003 (“POSITA”) would
`
`have possessed at least a bachelor’s degree in computer science, computer
`
`engineering, or electrical engineering and would have had at least two years of
`
`experience in the development and operation of network communication systems (or
`
`equivalent degree or experience). (Ex. 1003, ¶18.)
`
`VI. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION
`
`For inter partes review, claim terms should be given the ordinary meaning that
`
`the terms would have to a POSITA on the earliest effective filing date, in view of the
`
`specification and file history. 83 Fed. Reg. 51340; Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d
`
`1303, 1312-1313 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc).
`
`Unless otherwise expressly discussed, Petitioner applies the plain and
`
`ordinary meaning of all claim terms. Petitioner does not, however, waive any
`
`argument in any litigation that claim terms in the ’622 Patent are indefinite or
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 9
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`otherwise invalid nor does Petitioner waive its right to raise additional issues of
`
`claim construction in any litigation.
`
`Petitioner has identified terms relevant to the issues in this IPR. See, e.g.,
`
`Aurobindo Pharma USA, Inc. v. Andrx Corp. et al., IPR2017-01648, Paper 34 at 11
`
`(PTAB Dec. 28, 2018) (“We address the construction of only certain claim terms
`
`raised by the parties, and we do so only to the extent necessary to determine whether
`
`Petitioner has demonstrated unpatentability by a preponderance of the evidence.”)
`
`(citing Nidec Motor Corp. v. Zhongshan Borad Ocean Motor Co., 868 F.3d 1013,
`
`1017 (Fed. Cir. 2017)). Construction of other claim terms may be relevant to issues
`
`in the parallel district court litigation, e.g., as part of resolving non-infringement
`
`disputes or to “clarify and when necessary to explain” terms for “determination of
`
`infringement” by the factfinder. O2 Micro Int’l Ltd. v. Beyond Innovation Tech. Co.,
`
`521 F.3d 1351, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). Petitioner intends to advise
`
`the Board of pertinent claim construction positions taken in district court filings,
`
`although it does not intend to file every exchange related to the district court claim
`
`construction process.
`
`Petitioner notes that several terms in the Challenged Claim were construed in
`
`other, unrelated petitions under the broadest reasonable interpretation (“BRI”) in
`
`IPR2017-01667, IPR2017-01668, IPR2017-01797, and IPR2017-01798. Without
`
`conceding the correctness of the constructions in the other, unrelated petitions,
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 10
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`Petitioner notes that the prior art presented herein satisfies the claim elements under
`
`those other constructions.
`
`A.
`
`Proposed Constructions
`
`1.
`
`Instant Voice Message
`
`Instant voice message should be construed as: “data that includes a
`
`representation of an audio message.” (Ex. 1003, ¶55.)
`
`In IPR2017-01667, the Board construed “instant voice message” as: “data
`
`content including a representation of an audio message” under the Broadest
`
`Reasonable Interpretation standard. (See IPR2017-01667, Paper 37 at 12-19.)
`
`Petitioner urges that this is the correct construction under the “claim construction
`
`standard that is used to construe the claim in a civil action in federal district court”
`
`(83 FR 51340) as well.3
`
`
`3 Petitioner respectfully submits that the word “content” is not a necessary part of
`
`the Board’s construction. Petitioner believes that the Board included the word
`
`“content” in its construction to emphasize that the instant voice message is the
`
`content that includes the audio representation, regardless of a structure that contains
`
`it. (See IPR2017-01667, Paper 37 at 15-16.) However, Petitioner urges that the use
`
`of the word “content” is superfluous here because the instant voice message is per
`
`se content. I.e., the data that includes the representation of the audio message is
`
`
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 11
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`Claim 34 recite the term “instant voice message.” Claim 3 recites that “the
`
`messaging system receives an instant voice message from one of a plurality of instant
`
`voice message client systems … wherein the instant voice message includes an
`
`object field including a digitized audio file.”
`
`In three different embodiments, the written description describes the “instant
`
`voice message” as data. (Ex. 1003, ¶57.) In one embodiment, the “instant voice
`
`message” is described as an audio file. (Ex. 1001, 8:7–11, 8:26–27, 9:64–65, 10:38–
`
`39, 10:45–46, 12:40–41, 16:22, 17:23–24, 18:6–7, 18:58, 18:64–65, 19:46–47, and
`
`19:52; see also Ex. 1003, ¶57.) In another embodiment, “successive portions of the
`
`instant voice message” are written to one or more buffers that are transmitted to the
`
`IVM server. (Ex. 1001, 11:35-58, 21:10-42 (referring thusly to portions of the user’s
`
`speech that are written to a buffer); see also id. at 11:35−44; Ex. 1003, ¶57.) Notably,
`
`the written description is clear that the one or more buffers are generated “instead of
`
`
`content, and there cannot be “non-content” data that includes the representation of
`
`the audio message. Thus, Petitioner believes that the proper construction of “instant
`
`voice message” is “data that includes a representation of an audio message.”
`
`Nevertheless, the Grounds presented in this Petition render the Challenged Claim
`
`obvious under either construction.
`
`4 Challenged claim 5 depends from independent claim 3.
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 12
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`creating an audio file.” (Ex. 1001, 11:35-37 (emphasis added).) Thus, using “[t]he
`
`one or more buffers … to automatically write successive portions of the instant voice
`
`message” is an alternative embodiment to storing the instant voice message as an
`
`audio file. (Ex. 1003, ¶57.) In both embodiments, the “instant voice message” is data
`
`that includes a representation of an audio message. (Id.)
`
`Furthermore, in a third embodiment, the written description describes a
`
`“message object” with an object field that contains “a block of data being carried by
`
`the message object, which may be, for example, a digitized instant voice message.”
`
`(Ex. 1001, 14:37−40.) Thus, here the instant voice message is a block of data
`
`included in a “message object.” (Ex. 1003, ¶58.)
`
`When all of these embodiments are considered, it is clear that the “instant
`
`voice message” refers to data that includes a representation of an audio message. (Id.
`
`at ¶59.) The way in which data is organized may vary from embodiment to
`
`embodiment (such as an audio file, one or more buffers, or a data block in a “message
`
`object”) but, in each case, the “instant voice message” refers to data that includes
`
`some representation of the audio message. (Id.)
`
`Accordingly, a POSITA would have understood the meaning of “instant voice
`
`message” to be “data that includes a representation of an audio message.” (Id. at
`
`¶60.)
`
`
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 13
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`
`2.
`
`Instant Voice Message Client System
`
`Instant voice message client system should be construed as: “hardware
`
`and/or software of a client used for instant voice messaging.” (Id. at ¶73.)
`
`Claim 3 recites “a plurality of instant voice message client systems.” The
`
`written description does not use the phrase “instant voice message client system.”
`
`However, claim 3 also recites “a messaging system communicating with [the]
`
`plurality of instant voice message client systems via a network interface” “connected
`
`to a packet-switched network.” FIG. 4 (an excerpt of which is included below)
`
`depicts such a messaging system (436) communicating with “IVM clients 206, 208”
`
`via a packet-switched network (204):
`
`(Ex. 1001, FIG. 4. (highlighting added); see also id. at 13:57-60; Ex. 1003, ¶78.)
`
`
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review of USP 8,724,622 (Claim 5)
`
`Page 14
`
`

`

`IPR2019-01559
`Patent 8,724,622
`IVM client 208 is described as a “general-purpose programmable computer.”
`
`(Ex. 1001, 12:11-14.) Figure 3, which is reproduced below, shows the contents of
`

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