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`In re Inter Partes Review of:
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
`Issued: Sep. 17, 2019
`Application No.: 15/933,531
`Filing Date: Mar. 23, 2018
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`For: Artificial Intelligence Assisted Tagging of Users in Digital Media Online
`FILED VIA P-TACTS
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`PETITION FOR INTER PARTES REVIEW OF
`U.S. PATENT NO. 10,417,275
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`TABLE OF CONTENTS
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`INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................... 1
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`I.
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`II. MANDATORY NOTICES ............................................................................. 2
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`A.
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`B.
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`C.
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`D.
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`E.
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`Real Parties-in-Interest .......................................................................... 2
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`Related Matters ...................................................................................... 2
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`Notice of Counsel and Service Information .......................................... 3
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`Fee for Inter Partes Review .................................................................. 5
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`Certification of Grounds for Standing ................................................... 5
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`III.
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`IDENTIFICATION OF CHALLENGES (37 C.F.R. § 42.104(b)) ................. 5
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`IV. BACKGROUND ............................................................................................. 6
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`A.
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`B.
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`C.
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`D.
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`Technology Overview ........................................................................... 6
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`The ’275 Patent ..................................................................................... 7
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`The Challenged Claims ....................................................................... 11
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`Prosecution History ............................................................................. 11
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`V.
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`LEVEL OF ORDINARY SKILL IN THE ART ...........................................13
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`VI. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION ..........................................................................14
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`A.
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`B.
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`“user identifier” (all claims) ................................................................ 14
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`“contact list” (all claims) ..................................................................... 15
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`VII. OVERVIEW OF THE PRIOR ART .............................................................16
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`A.
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`B.
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`Sharpe (EX1005) ................................................................................. 16
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`Eintracht (EX1006) ............................................................................. 18
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`C.
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`D.
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`FotoFile (EX1011) .............................................................................. 21
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`Carey (EX1007) .................................................................................. 24
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`VIII. GROUND 1: SHARPE IN VIEW OF EINTRACHT AND FOTOFILE
`RENDERS OBVIOUS CLAIMS 1-12 ....................................................................25
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`A. Motivation to Combine Sharpe with Eintracht ................................... 25
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`B. Motivation to Combine Sharpe and Eintracht with FotoFile .............. 27
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`C.
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`D.
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`Reasonable Expectation of Success .................................................... 28
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`Independent Claim 1 ........................................................................... 30
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`1[pre]: method implemented within a computer system
`for associating users with digital media ....................................30
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`1[a]: distinguishing users via unique user identifiers ..............32
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`1[b]: in response to selection of digital media,
`determining unique digital media identifier
`corresponding to digital media selected ....................................40
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`1[c]: receiving input indicating selection of named user
`from contact list of other users including the named user ........41
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`1[d]: in response to selection of named user from list,
`determining unique user identifier of the named user ..............46
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`1[e]: receiving input indicating set of coordinates
`corresponding to location of named user within image;
`and .............................................................................................47
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`1[f]: applying artificial intelligence algorithms to locate
`images, wherein coordinates associated with unique user
`identifier of named user and unique image identifier ...............51
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`E.
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`Dependent Claims 2-12 ....................................................................... 58
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`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`Claim 2: artificial intelligence algorithms include image
`recognition algorithm ................................................................58
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`Claim 3, 4: in response to locating image, providing
`information indicating that named user has been
`associated with one or more images via email .........................59
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`Claims 5, 6: set of coordinates defines polygonal or
`circular area ...............................................................................61
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`Claim 7: providing graphical user interface configured
`to display representation of set of coordinates indicating
`location of named user within image ........................................62
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`Claim 8: in response to locating image, providing
`interface configured for named user to select or deselect
`users for which to store association with unique image
`identifier ....................................................................................63
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`Claim 9: in response to selection of named user and
`determining photo album associated with named user,
`adding image to photo album associated with named user.......66
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`Claim 10: naming information includes name, e-mail
`address, other naming information, or home page address ......67
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`Claim 11: naming information includes screen name ............67
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`Claim 12: located image matching characteristics of the
`subset of image data does not have prior stored
`association with the named user ...............................................68
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`IX. GROUND 2: SHARPE IN VIEW EINTRACHT AND FOTOFILE, AND IN
`FURTHER VIEW OF CAREY, RENDERS OBVIOUS CLAIMS 1-12 ...............69
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`A. Motivation to Combine ....................................................................... 69
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`B.
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`C.
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`Reasonable Expectation of Success .................................................... 70
`
`Independent Claim 1 ........................................................................... 71
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
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`D. Dependent Claims ............................................................................... 72
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`Claim 10 ...................................................................................72
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`Claim 11 ...................................................................................73
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`Claims 2-9, 12 ..........................................................................74
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`X.
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`SECONDARY CONSIDERATIONS ...........................................................74
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`XI. THE BOARD SHOULD REACH THE MERITS OF THIS PETITION .....74
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`A.
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`B.
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`Institution is appropriate under §325(d) .............................................. 74
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`Institution is appropriate under §314(a) .............................................. 75
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`XII. CONCLUSION ..............................................................................................75
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`iv
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
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`STATUTES
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`Page(s)
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`35 U.S.C.
`§ 101 ................................................................................................................ 3, 75
`§ 102(a) ............................................................................................................... 21
`§ 102 (b) .............................................................................................................. 21
`§ 102(e) ................................................................................................... 16, 18, 24
`§ 103 .................................................................................................................. 5, 6
`§ 314(a) ............................................................................................................... 75
`§ 325(d) ............................................................................................................... 74
`REGULATIONS
`
`37 C.F.R.
`§ 42.10(b) .............................................................................................................. 4
`§ 42.15(a) .............................................................................................................. 5
`§ 42.100(b) ........................................................................................................... 14
`§ 42.104(a) ............................................................................................................ 5
`§ 42.104(b) ............................................................................................................ 5
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`v
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`
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`Exhibit
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`EXHIBIT LIST
`
`Description
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`1001
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`1002
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`1003
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`1004
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`1005
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`1006
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`1007
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`1008
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`1009
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`1010
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`1011
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`1012
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`1013
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`1014
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`1015
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`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275 (“’275 Patent”)
`
`Prosecution History of U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275 (“’275 FH”)
`
`Declaration of Dr. Benjamin B. Bederson (“Bederson”)
`
`Curriculum Vitae of Dr. Benjamin B. Bederson
`
`U.S. Patent No. 7,461,099 to Sharpe, et al. (“Sharpe”)
`
`U.S. Patent No. 6,687,878 to Eintracht, et al. (“Eintracht”)
`
`U.S. Patent No. 6,714,793 to Carey, et al. (“Carey”)
`
`Prosecution History of U.S. Patent No. 10,628,480 (“’480 FH”)
`
`Excerpt from THE OXFORD AMERICAN DICTIONARY AND LANGUAGE
`GUIDE (1999), at 203 (contact).
`Excerpt from THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY (4th ed. 2001),
`at 191 (contact).
`Allan Kuchinsky et al., FotoFile: A Consumer Multimedia
`Organization and Retrieval System, CHI ’99: PROCEEDINGS OF THE
`SIGCHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS,
`496-503 (May 1999) (“FotoFile”).
`U.S. Patent No. 7,739,139 to Robertson, et al. (“Robertson”)
`
`U.S. Patent App. Pub. No. 2002/0055955 to Lloyd-Jones, et al.
`(“Lloyd-Jones”)
`Reserved
`
`Yuichi Yagawa et al., The Digital Album: A Personal File-tainment
`System, PROCEEDINGS OF THE THIRD IEEE INTERNATIONAL
`CONFERENCE ON MULTIMEDIA COMPUTING AND SYSTEMS
`
`
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`vi
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`
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`Exhibit
`
`Description
`
`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`1016
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`1017
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`1019
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`1020
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`1021
`
`(MULTIMEDIA ’96), June 17-23, 1996, at 433-39.
`Ben Shneiderman & Hyunmo Kang, Direct Annotation: A Drag-and-
`Drop Strategy for Labeling Photos, 2000 IEEE INTERNATIONAL
`CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION VISUALIZATION (IV ’00), July 19-21,
`2000.
`Benjamin B. Bederson et al., Pad++: A Zoomable Graphical
`Sketchpad For Exploring Alternate Interface Physics, 7 J. OF VISUAL
`LANGUAGES & COMPUTING 3 (1996).
`1018 Mark Roseman & Saul Greenberg, Building Real-Time Groupware
`with GroupKit, a Groupware Toolkit, 3 ACM TRANSACTIONS ON
`COMPUTER-HUMAN INTERACTION 1 (Mar. 1996), at 66-106.
`Excerpts from ROB KIRKLAND ET AL., DOMINO SYSTEM
`ADMINISTRATION (1999).
`Excerpts from DOROTHY BURKE & JANE CALABRIA, TEN MINUTE
`GUIDE TO LOTUS NOTES 4.6 (1997).
`Elizabeth F. Churchill, et al., Anchored Conversations: Chatting in the
`Context of a Document, CHI ’00: PROCEEDINGS OF THE SIGCHI
`CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS, April
`2000, at 454-61.
`1022 Mark S. Ackerman & David W. McDonald, Answer Garden 2:
`Merging Organizational Memory with Collaborative Help, CSCW
`’96: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 1996 ACM CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER
`SUPPORTED COOPERATIVE WORK, Nov. 1996, at 97-105.
`U.S. Patent No. 6,175,831 to Weinreich, et al.
`
`1023
`
`1024
`
`1025
`
`1026
`
`Excerpts from C.J. DATE, AN INTRODUCTION TO DATABASE SYSTEMS
`(6th ed. 1995).
`Excerpts from RANDY JAY YARGER ET AL., MYSQL & MSQL (1st ed.
`1999).
`Ulla Merz & Roger King, DIRECT: A Query Facility for Multiple
`Databases, 12 ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS 4
`(Oct. 1994), at 339-59.
`
`
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`vii
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`
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`Exhibit
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`Description
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`1027
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`1028
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`1029
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`1030
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`1031
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`1032
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`1033
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`1034
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`1035
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`
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`Excerpts from CHARLES DYE, ORACLE DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS (1999).
`
`U.S. Patent No. 6,442,573 to Schiller, et al. (“Schiller”)
`
`Reserved
`
`Reserved
`
`Reserved
`
`Reserved
`
`Reserved
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`Prosecution History of U.S. Patent No. 8,954,432 (“’432 FH”)
`
`Declaration of Sylvia D. Hall-Ellis, Ph.D. (“Hall-Ellis”)
`
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`viii
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`I.
`
`INTRODUCTION
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`
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`Meta Platforms, Inc. (“Petitioner”) respectfully requests inter partes review
`
`of claims 1-12 of U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275 (EX1001, “’275 Patent”).
`
`The ’275 Patent relates to photo tagging over a communications network—
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`enabling “users to supply and/or receive information about the existence of objects
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`within images.” EX1001, 1:21-26. The specification claims that prior art systems
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`failed to “provide a way to obtain additional information about a person or object
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`such as contact information or to locate additional photos of the person or object.”
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`Id., 3:41-45.
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`But such networked photo tagging systems were available at the time.
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`Consequently, the Applicant spent over a decade prosecuting the patent family,
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`attempting to distinguish the claimed system from the prior art. The Applicant
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`ultimately overcame the Examiner’s rejections only by amending the claims to
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`include a limitation that allowed a user to photo tag another user from a contact list.
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`When allowing the Examiner remarked:
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`[A]lthough the prior art … clearly allows users to annotate images with
`people who appear in them, the specific use of a contact list of an
`identifying user as the list with which that identifying user can use to
`annotate the images is not found in the prior art, in conjunction with the
`rest of the limitations of the independent claim.
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`EX1002, 199. But the use of contact lists was by no means inventive in the early
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`2000s.
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`Identifying a user in a photo from a contact list was a known feature that a
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`POSA understood encourages collaboration and enhances the user experience. For
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`example, U.S. Patent No. 7,461,099 (EX1005, “Sharpe”) expressly teaches an
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`archiving system that allowed “members of [a] private group [to] work together …
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`to identify, collect, translate, or create digital media items” and allowed the user to
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`tag its contacts in a photo using a contact list in the form of “[a] drop down box 55
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`[] provided for selecting any of a number of people within the group.” EX1005, 5:7-
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`10; 6:67-7:1.
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`Accordingly, Petitioner respectfully requests the Board institute review and
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`find all challenged claims of the ’275 Patent unpatentable.
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`II. MANDATORY NOTICES
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`A. Real Parties-in-Interest
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`The real parties-in-interest are Meta Platforms, Inc. (formerly Facebook, Inc.)
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`and Instagram, LLC.
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`B. Related Matters
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`U.S. Patent Office records indicate that the ’275 Patent is assigned to Angel
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`Technologies Group LLC (“PO”), which asserted the ’275 Patent in the following
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`2
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
`
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`litigation filed on October 26, 2021: Angel Technologies Group LLC v. Facebook,
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`Inc. and Instagram LLC, No. 2:21-cv-08459-CBM-JPR (C.D. Cal.). On June 30,
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`2022, the district court found the asserted patents, including the ’275 Patent, invalid
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`under 35 U.S.C. § 101 and dismissed the case. On July 29, 2022, PO filed a Notice
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`of Appeal. The case has been docketed as the following: Angel Technologies Group,
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`LLC v. Meta Platforms, Inc., No. 2022-2100 (Fed. Cir.). The opening appeal brief
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`is currently due on November 2, 2022.
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`Petitioner has filed, at substantially the same time that this Petition was filed,
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`petitions for inter partes review against related family members U.S. Patent No.
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`8,954,432 (the “’432 Patent”), U.S. Patent No. 9,959,291 (the “’291 Patent”), and
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`U.S. Patent No. 10,628,480 (the “’480 Patent”).
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`C. Notice of Counsel and Service Information
`
`Lead Counsel
`Lisa K. Nguyen (Reg. No. 58,018)
`lisa.nguyen@allenovery.com
`Postal & Hand-Delivery Address:
`Allen & Overy LLP
`550 High Street, Second Floor
`Palo Alto, CA 94301
`Telephone: (650) 388-1724
`
`Back-Up Counsel
`David M. Tennant (Reg. No. 48,362)
`david.tennant@allenovery.com
`Postal & Hand-Delivery Address:
`Allen & Overy LLP
`1101 New York Avenue NW
`Washington, DC 20005
`Telephone: (202) 683-3891
`
`Alan M. Billharz (Reg. No. 79,532)
`alan.billharz@allenovery.com
`Postal & Hand-Delivery Address:
`Allen & Overy LLP
`1101 New York Avenue NW
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`Washington, DC 20005
`Telephone: (202) 683-3862
`
`Chitrajit Chandrashekar (Reg. No. L0896)
`chitrajit.chandrashekar@allenovery.com
`Postal & Hand-Delivery Address:
`Allen & Overy LLP
`550 High Street, Second Floor
`Palo Alto, CA 94301
`Telephone: (650) 388-1736
`
`Eric E. Lancaster (pro hac vice to be filed)
`eric.lancaster@allenovery.com
`Postal & Hand-Delivery Address:
`Allen & Overy LLP
`550 High Street
`Palo Alto, CA 94301
`Telephone: (650) 388-1700
`
`Sara L. Townsend
`(pro hac vice to be filed)
`sara.townsend@allenovery.com
`Postal & Hand-Delivery Address:
`Allen & Overy LLP
`550 High Street, Second Floor
`Palo Alto, CA 94301
`Telephone: (650) 388-1733
`
`
` A
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` Power of Attorney is being filed concurrently with this Petition in
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`accordance with 37 C.F.R. § 42.10(b). Petitioner consents to electronic service by
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`e-mail.
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`D.
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`Fee for Inter Partes Review
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`
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`The Director is authorized to charge the fee specified by 37 C.F.R. § 42.15(a)
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`to Deposit Account No. 604184.
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`E. Certification of Grounds for Standing
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`Petitioner certifies pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 42.104(a) that the ’275 Patent is
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`available for inter partes review and that Petitioner is not barred or estopped from
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`requesting an inter partes review challenging the patent claims on the grounds
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`identified in this Petition.
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`III.
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`IDENTIFICATION OF CHALLENGES (37 C.F.R. § 42.104(b))
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`Ground 1: Claims 1-12 are obvious under pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. § 103 over
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`Sharpe1 in view of Eintracht2 and FotoFile.3
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`1 U.S. Patent No. 7,761,099 to Sharpe, et al. (EX1005, “Sharpe”).
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`2 U.S. Patent No. 6,687,878 to Eintracht, et al. (EX1006, “Eintracht”).
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`3 Kuchinsky, et al., FotoFile: A Consumer Multimedia Organization and Retrieval
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`System, CHI ’99: PROCEEDINGS OF THE SIGCHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS
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`IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS, 496-503 (May 1999) (EX1011, “FotoFile”).
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`Ground 2: Claims 1-12 are obvious under pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. § 103 over
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`Sharpe in view of Eintracht and FotoFile, and in further view of Carey.4
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`IV. BACKGROUND
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`A. Technology Overview
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`With the advent of practical digital photography in the 1990s, digital photo
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`management became an area of rapid growth and interest in the field of information
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`technology. Bederson, ¶¶88, 91-98. By 2000, a wide range of technologies and
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`commercial systems to organize, annotate, and share photos and other kinds of media
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`were well-known and in common use. Id., ¶¶87, 91-98. These technologies and
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`systems were used personally and professionally, on personal computers, via the
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`web, and with different kinds of databases. Id., ¶¶91-98. In particular, multiple
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`systems for annotation (or tagging) of photos were disclosed to the public by 2000.
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`Id. Sharpe was one of those systems. Id., ¶98.
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`In parallel, the popularization of networking technologies in the 1990s drove
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`the development of rich collaborative applications often called “groupware.” Id.,
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`¶¶88, 99-105. Groupware applications were typically centralized and made
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`available to users via a server and a client application (which could be a web
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`4 U.S. Patent No. 6,714,793 to Carey, et al. (EX1007, “Carey”).
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`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`browser). Id., ¶¶99-105. Lotus Notes and Microsoft Outlook are two major
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`examples, as well as early wikis. Id., ¶¶101-102. Groupware applications included
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`multiple features that enabled teams of users to work collaboratively on documents
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`(including images) and engage in discussions on team topics. Id., ¶¶99-105.
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`Annotation of images was one such groupware feature, one that is discussed by
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`Eintracht. Id., ¶105.
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`As groupware and the Internet were growing in popularity in the 1990s, so
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`were social networks. Id., ¶¶89, 106-109. Early examples of social networks were
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`AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) and ICQ that each used buddy lists to enable real-
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`time chat among a group of people. Id. Carey is an AOL patent that discusses these
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`buddy lists. Id., ¶86. By 2000, the concept of general online chatting had broadened
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`to chatting about documents. Id., ¶107. Another use of social networks was to use
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`one’s contacts or groups to provide collaborative help. Id., ¶108.
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`Thus, at the relevant time in 2000, it was obvious to develop software that
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`could use the features of all three technologies—photo management software,
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`groupware, and social networking. Id., ¶90.
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`B.
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`The ’275 Patent
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`The ’275 Patent describes a well-known system and method “for storing and
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`sharing images such as photographs via a communications network,” such as the
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`Internet. EX1001, Abstract. The system and method “allows the identification of
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`objects such as persons within the photos” and allows users “to automatically search
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`for photos and/or certain people in photos.” Id.
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`Like other annotation systems, the ’275 Patent stores and retrieves
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`photographs using associations between the users and photographs—specifically,
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`associations between their IDs. Id., 9:41-45, 9:57-60, Fig. 2. The system identifies
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`each user using a user ID (or “unique user identifier”) and each photograph using an
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`image ID (or “unique image identifier”). Id. For example, the system identifies
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`“John Doe” using the unique user identifier “007,” and identifies the image
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`“my_image.jpg” using the image identifier “ABCD.” Id., 7:58-8:12. The system
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`enables searches of the stored photographs using associations between the
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`identifiers. Id., 9:8-13, 9:23-26, Fig. 2. For example, the system could retrieve John
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`Doe’s images by searching for all image identifiers associated with John Doe’s user
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`identifier, “007.” See id., 8:14-27.
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`To create the associations, the system uses a web page called an “identifying
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`page.” Id., 10:20-27. A user “may view the page with a browser and then identify
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`people within the photo 34 displayed on the page.” Id., 11:65-12:2. This creates an
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`association between the user and the image. Id., 8:14-19. For example, if John Doe
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`is tagged in my_image.jpg, the system creates a record for the association with John
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`Doe’s user identifier (i.e. “007”) and my_image.jpg’s image identifier (i.e.
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`“ABCD”):
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`EX1001, Fig. 2 (annotated)
`Notably, the claimed system allows a user to tag another user from a contact
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`list, as shown below in Figure 4. Id., 12:4-6 (“In one embodiment, the user may
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`simply select or click on the names of all people in the contact list 36 that are in the
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`displayed photograph 34.”), Fig. 4. “The contacts may include, for example, friends
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`and family members who regularly appear in photographs taken by the user and/or
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`persons who may wish to receive or view photographs taken by the users.” Id., 9:47-
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`51. As explained in the prosecution history discussion below, the challenged claims
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`were allowed on the basis of this contact list. Tellingly, the ’275 Patent does not
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`emphasize the contact list as an inventive aspect of the system. To the contrary, the
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`’275 Patent expressly states that the contact list is unnecessary. Id., 7:26-27 (“The
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`list of contacts is not necessary and may be stored in a separate database.”); 9:51-55
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`(“The use of contacts, while not necessary, …”).
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`EX1001, Fig. 4 (annotated)
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`The claimed embodiment “can also utilize artificial intelligence algorithms to
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`locate other images where the identified object has not yet been defined by a user of
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`the system.” Id., 4:9-12; see also 13:34-39 (“[A]rtificial intelligence algorithms
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`(e.g., image recognition system) may be applied against images and utilized to
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`further define characteristics of images, obtain identifying information, and/or
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`search a database for other possible matches to a named object.”). The specification
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`does not identify the artificial intelligence algorithms as an inventive aspect of the
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`system. Further, as discussed below in the prosecution history section, the Examiner
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`found (and the Applicant admitted) that these algorithms were taught in the prior art.
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`EX1002, 162, 223-24.
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`C. The Challenged Claims
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`The ’275 Patent has 12 claims, 1 independent claim and 11 dependent claims.
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`Independent claim 1 is a method claim reciting a 6-step process:
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`(1) distinguishing between users of the computer system via one or more
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`unique user identifiers;
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`(2) determining a unique image identifier corresponding to the image selected;
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`(3) receiving a selection of the named user from the identifying user’s contact
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`list;
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`(4) determining a unique user identifier of the named user;
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`(5) indicating a set of coordinates corresponding to a location of the named
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`user within the image;
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`(6) applying artificial intelligence algorithms to locate other images of the
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`named user by matching characteristics of the image data bounded by the set of
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`coordinates.
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`D.
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`Prosecution History
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`The Applicant only obtained allowance of the ’275 Patent by amending the
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`claims to allow a user to photo tag another user selected from a contact list.
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`During prosecution, the claims of the ’275 Patent were largely rejected as
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`obvious over U.S. Patent Pub. 2002/0093678 to Skidgel in combination with other
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`references. Id., 113-35. In one rejection, the Examiner specifically found “the
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`secondary reference of Kuchinsky [FotoFile, EX1011] teaches the concept of using
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`identified/known images to annotate … images of unidentified people in other
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`images,” and that “[i]t would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at
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`the time the invention was made to combine the teachings of the cited references
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`because teaching [FotoFile’s] would have allowed Skidgel’s and Matsuoka’s to
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`provide a method of avoiding frustration of retrieval and storage of retrieval and
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`storage of images, as noted by [FotoFile].” Id., 121. In another rejection, the
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`Examiner stated, “the face detection and recognition system of Kuchinsky [FotoFile]
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`teaches the claimed artificial intelligence algorithm,” and “the results of the face
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`detection and recognition system are clearly stored as the resultant output as shown
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`in Figures 3-4.” Id., 183-84.
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`Ultimately, on July 3, 2019, in response to the Applicant’s request for
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`reconsideration, the Examiner allowed claims 87-88 and 90-99. Id., 234-35.
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`Specifically, the Examiner found:
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`[A]lthough the prior art (See Skidgel and Schneiderman [sic]) clearly
`allows users to annotate images with people who appear in them, the
`specific use of a contact list of an identifying user as the list with which
`that identifying user can use to annotate the images is not found in the
`prior art, in conjunction with the rest of the limitations of the
`independent claim.
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`Id., 235. The ’275 Patent subsequently issued on September 17, 2019.
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`Petition for Inter Partes Review
`U.S. Patent No. 10,417,275
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`Notably, months after the Examiner issued his Notice of Allowance, on
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`August 9, 2019, the Applicant filed the application for U.S. Patent No. 10,628,480
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`(the “’480 Patent”)—child of the ’275 Patent. Claim 85 was the only claim to
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`include any language of contact lists or associations between users. On
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`November 22, 2019, the Examiner rejected all original claims. Critically, for
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`claim 85, the Examiner rejected the claim finding that Carey discloses contact lists:
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`[T]he only support for the claimed associations between users is a
`contact list of a specific user (and the subsequent contacts of that user).
`Thus, the examiner is interpreting the claimed associations between
`users as simply contacts lists. The secondary reference of Carey
`clearly depicts displaying contact lists (which includes naming
`information) of a user (i.e. determining associations between a first user
`and a second user). The combination would result in the selectable
`naming information in Shneiderman to be from a contact list.
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`EX1008, 206. The Applicant did not traverse the rejection.
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`V. LEVEL OF ORDINARY SKILL IN THE ART
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`A person of ordinary skill in the art (“POSA”) in 2000 would have had at least
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`a bachelor’s degree in computer science, electrical engineering, computer
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`engineering, or a similar technical field, with at least two years of experience in the
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`field of networked and Web-based media applications. Additional experience could
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`substitute for less education, and additional education could likewise substitute for
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`less experience. Bederson, ¶39.
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`This Petition does not turn on this precise definition, and the challenged claim
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`would be unpatentable from the perspective of any reasonable person of ordinary
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`skill in the art at the relevant time. Id., ¶40.
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`VI. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION
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`The Board construes the claims “using the same claim construction standard
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`that would be used” in district courts. 37 C.F.R. §42.100(b).5 This Petition
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`establishes the prior art meets each of the claim limitations under any reasonable
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`construction.
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`A.
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`“user identifier” (all claims)
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`The Board should give the term “user identifier” its ordinary meaning to a
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`POSA in the context of the ’275 Patent, namely “a series of characters identifying a
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`user.” Bederson, ¶61-64. The ’275 Patent consistently refers to an “identifier” (also
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`used interchangeably with “I.D.”) as a series of characters that identifies something.
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`Id. For example, “a user, John Doe, may access and sign-up with host computer 200
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`5 Petitioner reserves the right to argue alternative constructions in other proceedings,
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`including that the claims are indefinite where such a defense is available.
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`and be assigned a user I.D. of ‘007’ in the Users database.” EX1001, 7:58-60. “The
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`user, John Doe, may then upload a photo, ‘my_image.jpg’, which may be assigned
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`an image I.D. of ‘ABCD’ in Images database 250.” Id., 8:1-3.
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`The use of a series of characters as an identifier is also consistent with the
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`understanding of a POSA at the relevant time. Bederson, ¶63. Just as used in the
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`’275 Patent, identifiers were often used as keys to create links between different
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`database tables. Id. Using a series of characters was simple and provided many
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`options to ensure that the identifier would be unique. Id.
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`B.
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`“contact list” (all claims)
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`The Board should give the term “contact list” its ordinary meaning to a POSA
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`in the context of the ’275 Patent, namely a “list of people known to the user.”
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`Bederson, ¶65-68. The ’275 Patent explains that “[u]sers may request to enter a
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`number of other persons as contacts.” EX1001, 9:45-48. “The contacts may include,
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`for example, friends and family members who regularly appear in photographs taken
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`by the user and/or persons who may wish to receive or view photographs taken by
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`th