`571-272-7822
`
`Paper13
`Date: July 28, 2020
`
`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`
`APPLEINC.,
`Petitioner,
`
`Vv,
`
`SEVEN NET WORKS, LLC,
`Patent Owner.
`
`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
`
`Before THU A. DANG, KARL D. EASTHOM,and JONI Y. CHANG,
`Administrative Patent Judges.
`
`CHANG,Administrative Patent Judge.
`
`DECISION
`Granting Institution of Inter Partes Review
`35 U.S.C. $314
`
`
`
`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
`
`I.
`
`INTRODUCTION
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`Apple Inc.(“Petitioner”)filed a Petition requesting an interpartes
`
`review (“IPR”) of claims 1—50 (“the challenged claims”) of U.S. Patent No.
`
`9,516,127 B2 (Ex. 1001, “the ’127 patent”). Paper 3 (“Pet.”), 1. Seven
`
`Networks, LLC (“Patent Owner”? filed a Preliminary Response (Paper9,
`
`“Prelim. Resp.”).
`
`Under 35 U.S.C. § 314(a), an interpartes review may notbeinstituted
`
`unless the information presentedin the petition “showsthat there is a
`
`reasonablelikelihood that the petitioner would prevail with respect to at
`
`least 1 of the claims challenged in the petition.” For the reasonsstated
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`below, we determinethat Petitioner has established a reasonablelikelihood
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`that it would prevail with respect to at least one claim. We herebyinstitute
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`an interpartes reviewasto all of the challenged claims of the ’127 patent
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`and all ofthe grounds of unpatentability presented in the Petition.
`
`A. Related Matter
`
`Theparties indicate that the ’127 patent is involved in Seven
`
`Networks, LLC v. Apple Inc., Case No. 2:19-cv-115 (E.D. Tex.), Pet. 74-75;
`
`Paper 6,1. The’127 patent also was involvedin the following IPR
`
`proceedings:
`
`Google LLC v. SEVENNetworks, LLC, IPR2018-01051,
`Paper 33 (PTAB Feb. 14, 2019) (terminatedafter institution);
`Google LLC v. SEVENNetworks, LLC, IPR2018-01052, Paper
`33 (PTAB Feb. 14, 2019) (terminatedafter institution);
`
`Samsung Elecs. Co., Ltd. v. SEVENNetworks, LLC,
`IPR2018-01106, Paper 29 (PTAB Jan. 11, 2019) (terminated
`after institution);
`
`2
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`
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`Samsung Elecs. Co., Ltd. v. SEVENNetworks, LLC, IPR2018-
`01108, Paper 30 (PTAB Jan. 11, 2019) (terminated after
`institution);
`ZTE USA, Inc. v. SEVENNetworks, LLC, IPR2019-00460,
`Paper 18 (PTAB June6, 2019) (terminated before institution);
`Samsung Elecs. Co., Ltd. v. SEVENNetworks, LLC, IPR2019-
`00457, Paper 11 (PTAB Jan. 29, 2019) (terminated before
`institution);
`Samsung Elecs. Co., Ltd. v. SEVENNetworks, LLC, IPR2019-
`00458, Paper 9 (PTAB Jan.29, 2019) (terminated before
`institution). Paper 6, 1—2.
`Petitioner also filed anotherparallel Petition (“the ’254 IPR Petition”),
`
`challenging the same claims of the same patent. IPR2020-00254, Paper3.
`
`Petitioner filed a Notice rankingits Petitions in the orderthat Petitioner
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`wishes the Board to consider the merits—namely, ranking the instant
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`Petition first and the ’254 Petition second. Paper 2 (“Notice”). We
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`concurrently enter a Decision denyinginstitution in IPR2020-00254.
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`B. The ’127patent
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`The ’127 patentclaimspriority to U.S. Provisional Application No.
`
`61/805,070 (the “’070 application”), which wasfiled on March 25, 2013.
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`Ex. 1001, codes (54), (60). The ’127 patent discloses a system and method
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`“for tracking resources used bytriggers such as alarmsand timersthat are
`used by mobile applications to schedule tasks and intelligently manipulating
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`the timing of the triggers to optimize usage of resources.” Jd. at code (57).
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`Figure 1A-1 of the ’127 patent is reproduced below.
`
`
`Set A1 for
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`(T + 8) saconds
`
`
`Set Actuai
`Time
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`
` C+ 15)
`seconds
`Intelligent
`
`
`
`
`
`Use Resource
`
`Fes rariZ
`Alarm_Manager [aren itesa
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`15) seconds
`Execute At, A2, AZ at
`GetintelligentTimeFor:
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`At, A2, A3
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` Resources
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`
`
`
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`Resource
`Utilization
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`FIG. 1A-1
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`Figure 1A-1 of the ’127 patentillustrates an example resource
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`utilization tracking andintelligent alarm managementoftriggers across
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`multiple applications on a mobile device. Jd. at 5:15—20. In particular,
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`Figure 1A-1 showsintelligent alarm manipulator and resource tracker
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`module 114 havingintelligent alarm manger 115 and resourceutilization
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`tracker 116. Jd. Applications 101, 105, and 107 are exemplary applications
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`of a mobile device, which canset alarmsfor different times to perform
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`different tasks. Id. at 5:24—26. Alarms Al, A2, and A3 are intercepted
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`and/or tracked by intelligent alarm manger 115, and they use resources 102,
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`including battery 109, network 111, and CPU 113. Jd. at 5:29-33. Resource
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`utilization tracker 116 tracks or monitors the usage of various resources by
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`alarms Al, A2, and A3, or taskstriggered by the alarms. /d. at 5:33-36.
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`For example, assuming that alarm Al wakes up the mobile device from the
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`4
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`
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`sleep mode, whenalarm A1is triggered, the mobile device’s battery/power
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`resource and CPU resource can beutilized. Jd. at 5:36—39.
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`C. Illustrative Claim
`
`Ofthe challenged claims, claims 1, 10, 17, 24, 33 and 42 are
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`independent. Claims 2-9 depend from claim 1; claims 11—16 depend from
`claim 10; claims 18-23 depend from claim 17; claims 25-32 depend from
`
`claim 24; claims 34—41 depend from claim 33; and claims 43-50 depend
`
`from claim 42. Claim 1 is illustrative:
`
`1. A method for managing resources on a mobile device,
`comprising:
`entering a power save mode based on a backlight status and
`sensed motion of a mobile device;
`
`delaying a timing of one or more triggers
`applications on the mobile device,
`wherein the timing is delayed such that the triggers execute
`within a window oftime,
`
`for multiple
`
`wherein at least a subset of the triggers are associated with
`wakelocks; and
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`exiting the power save mode whenthe backlight of the mobile
`device turns on or motion of the mobile device is sensed.
`
`Ex. 1001, 23:60—24:5.
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`
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`D. Prior Art Relied Upon
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`Petitioner relies upon the referenceslisted below (Pet. 2):
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`
`
`
`
`
`
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`Aleksic, US 2008/0057894 Al
`
`Hackborn, US 8,280,456 B2
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`Kim, US 2012/0315960 Al
`
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`Mar. 6, 2008
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`Oct. 2, 2012
`
`Dec. 13, 2012
`
`1007
`
`1008
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`1016
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
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`E. Asserted Grounds ofUnpatentability
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`Petitioner asserts the following groundsof unpatentability (Pet.1):
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`cis|Bass|Retrnces
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`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`24-26, 28, 29, 32-34,36,
`.
`
`37, 40-44, 46, 47, 50 § 103|Chueh, Jiang, Kim
`
`
`
`27, 35, 45 § 103|Chueh, Jiang, Kim, Hackborn
`
`30, 31, 38, 39, 48, 49 § 103|Chueh, Jiang, Kim, Backholm
`
`
`
`
`03
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`
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`II. ANALYSIS
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`A. Discretionary Denial Under 35 U.S.C. § 314(a)
`
`Institution of an interpartes review is discretionary. Section 314(a)
`
`of title 35 of the United States Code providesthat “[t]he Director may not
`
`authorize an inter partes review to beinstituted unless the Director
`
`determinesthat the information presented in the petition .. . and any
`
`response... . showsthat there is a reasonablelikelihood that the petitioner
`
`would prevail with respectto at least 1 of the claims challenged in the
`petition.” The Supreme Court ofthe United States (“the Supreme Court”)
`
`has explained that, because § 314 includes no mandate to institute review,
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`“the agency’s decision to denyapetition is a matter committed to the Patent
`
`Office’s discretion.” Cuozzo Speed Techs., LLC v. Lee, 1368.Ct. 2131,
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`2140 (2016); see also Harmonic Inc. v. Avid Tech., Inc., 815 F.3d 1356,
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`1367 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (explaining that under § 314(a), “the PTO is
`
`permitted, but never compelled, to institute an IPR proceeding”). The
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`Director has delegated his authority under § 314(a) to the Board. 37 C.F.R.
`
`§ 42.4(a) (“The Board institutes the trial on behalf of the Director.”).
`
`In this proceeding, Patent Ownerarguesthat we should exercise
`
`discretion to deny the instant Petition, as in NHK Spring,“because ajury in
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`the concurrentdistrict court litigation between the sameparties will resolve
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`the ’127 patent’s validity over substantially the sameprior art and arguments
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`in a trial scheduled to begin 9.5 monthsbefore the final written decisions
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`would be dueif instituted.” Prelim. Resp. 1-36 (citing NHK Spring Co.v.
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`
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`Intri-Plex Techs., Inc.,1PR2018-00752, Paper 8 (PTAB Sept. 12, 2018)
`
`(precedential)).!
`
`In AppleInc. v. Fintiv, Inc., IPR2020-00019, Paper 11 (PTAB Mar.
`20, 2020) (precedential) (““Fintiv’), the Board ordered supplementalbriefing
`on a nonexclusivelist of factors for consideration in analyzing whetherthe
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`circumstancesofa parallel district court action are a basis for discretionary
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`denial oftrial institution under NHK. Fintiv, Paper 11 at5—16. Those
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`factors include:
`
`1. whether the court granted a stay or evidence exists that one
`may be grantedif a proceedingis instituted;
`2. proximity of the court’s trial date to the Board’s projected
`statutory deadline for a final written decision;
`
`3. investment in the parallel proceeding by the court and the
`parties;
`
`4. overlap betweenissuesraised in the petition andin the parallel
`proceeding;
`5. whether the petitioner and the defendant in the parallel
`proceeding are the sameparty; and
`
`6. other circumstances that impact
`discretion, including the merits.
`Id. at 5-6. We authorized the parties to address these factors in a Reply
`
`the Board’s exercise of
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`(Paper11, “Pet. Reply”) and Sur-reply (Paper 12, “Sur-reply”). We now
`
`' Patent Owneralso arguesthat the Petition filed in IPR2020-00254 should
`be denied for improperparallel petitioning and submitted the same
`arguments in IPR2020-00254. Prelim. Resp. 37-52; IPR2020-00254, Paper
`9, 37-52. We address those arguments in our Decision denyinginstitution
`entered concurrently in IPR2020-00254.
`8
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`consider these factors to determine whether we should exercise discretion to
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`deny institution under § 314(a). In evaluating the factors, we take a holistic
`
`view of whetherefficiency andintegrity of the system are best served by
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`denyingor instituting review. Fintiv, Paper 11 at 6.
`
`Factor 1: whether the court granted a stay or evidence exists
`that one may be granted ifa proceedingisinstituted
`
`Patent Ownerarguesthat“[i}]n the District Court Action, Petitioner
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`has not movedfora stay or indicated that it would.” Prelim. Resp. 18;
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`Sur-reply 2-4. Patent Owneralso argues that a motion for stay is unlikely in
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`this case, even if instituted, becausethe district court “has repeatedly
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`declined to stay cases, even overinstituted IPRs, when the motionto stay is
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`broughtlate in the case,”citing to three decisions denying stays. Prelim.
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`Resp. 19-21; Sur-reply 2-3.
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`Petitioner argues that institution would resolve efficiently the issue of
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`the ’127 patent’s invalidity and the simplification would increasegreatly the
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`likelihood ofa district court stay. Pet. Reply 4 (citing NFC Techs. LLC v.
`
`HTC Am., Inc., Case No. 13-cv-1058, 2015 WL 1069111 (E.D. Tex. Mar.
`
`11, 2015) (“the most important factor bearing on whetherto grant a stay...
`
`is the prospect that the interpartes review proceeding will result in
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`simplification of the issues”); Uniloc USA, Inc. v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc.,
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`Case No. 2:16-cv-642-JRG,2—3 (E.D. Tex. Jun. 18, 2017) (granting stay in
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`view ofthe “significant likelihood that the... IPR proceedingswill
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`streamline the scope of this case”’)). Further, Petitioner contendsthat
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`institution of interpartes review against the ’127 patent and other Seven
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`patents has the potential to simplify other proceedings, “by addressing prior
`art otherwise raised but left unaddressedin settled IPR challengesfiled by
`Seven’s earlier targets,” and “by relieving future courts of the need to
`address the same during Seven’s seriallitigation campaign.” Jd. at 4—5.
`
`Onthe present record,neither party has produced evidencethata stay
`
`has been requestedor that the Eastern District of Texas has considered a stay
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`in this case. Petitioner’s assertion that institution “greatly increases the
`
`likelihood of a District Court stay” (Pet. Reply 4) is not sufficient evidence
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`that a stay will likely be granted. A court determines whetherto grant a stay
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`based on the facts and circumstancesof each specific case. Although Patent
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`Ownercites to three decisions denying stays (Prelim. Resp. 19-21), we
`
`decline to infer, based on actions taken in different cases with differentfacts,
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`howthe district court would rule should a stay be requested bythe parties in
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`the case here.
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`Thus, wefind that this factor does not weigh for or against our
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`exercising our discretion to denyinstitution under § 314(a).
`
`Factor 2: proximity ofthe court’s trial date to the Board’s
`projected statutory deadlinefor afinal written decision
`
`Theparties agree that the trial in the Eastern District of Texas
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`(“District Court’) currently is scheduled to begin on November2, 2020.
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`Patent Ownerarguesthat “[t]he trial is scheduled to begin on November2,
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`2020, 9% months before the August 18, 2021 FWD deadline, and thatis after
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`the parties already pushed backthetrial date due to COVID-19.” Prelim.
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`Resp. 24; Sur-reply 4-5. However, Petitioner argues that “[t]he District
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`10
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`Court in this case is one of the busiest patent courts in the country”andthat
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`“there are eighteen other cases scheduled to begin jury selection on
`November2, including a numberoflarge patent cases.” Pet. Reply 5 (citing
`Ex. 1050, 1—9 (calendar eventsset for Nov. 2, 2020, E.D. Tex, June 3,
`2020)) (emphasis added). Petitioner also argues that “given the inevitability
`
`of further COVID-19 outbreaks, further scheduling issues cannot be ruled
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`out.” Jd. (citing Ex. 1047, 1).
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`If the District Court’s trial date is earlier than the projected statutory
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`deadline, the Board generally has weighedthis factor in favor of exercising
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`authority to deny institution under § 314(a). Fintiv, Paper 11 at9. However,
`there are variables contributing to the uncertainty that the jurytrial will
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`occur on November2, 2020. First, as Petitioner points out, the Eastern
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`District of Texas currently has eighteen separate trials scheduled to begin on
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`November2, 2020. Pet. Reply 5; Ex. 1050, 1-9. Second, the Coronavirus
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`disease 2019 (“COVID-19”) pandemic already disrupted the trial date once,
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`andthe situation is evolving daily. See Ex. 1040 (District Court scheduling
`
`order movingthetrial date from September 14, 2020 to November2, 2020,
`
`as agreed by the parties); Ex. 2002 (same).
`A previous agreement to extend scheduling order dates and
`uncertainty as to whetherthetrial will actually go forward on the presently
`
`scheduledtrial date may diminish the extent to which this factor weighs in
`
`favorof exercising discretion to denyinstitution. See SandRevolutionI,
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`LLC v. Continental Intermodal Group — Trucking LLC, IP R2019-01393,
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`Paper 24 at 9-10 (June 16, 2020) (informative) (“because ofthe numberof
`times the parties have jointly movedfor andthedistrict court agreed to
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`11
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`extend the scheduling order dates .. . and the uncertainty that continues to
`surround the scheduledtrial date, we find that this factor weighs marginally
`
`in favorof not exercising discretion to deny institution under 35 U.S.C.
`§ 314(a)”). Even so, given the substantial gap of 9 '2 months betweenthe
`trial date and the expectedfinal written decision deadline in this proceeding,
`it is unclear, based on the presentrecord,that the trial date would be delayed
`to a date after a final written decision in this proceedingasa result of
`
`COVID-19.
`
`Thus, given the District Court’s currently scheduledtrial date falls
`over nine monthspriorto the projected statutory deadline for a final written
`decision, but accounting for the previous agreement to extend scheduling
`order dates and uncertainty as to whetherthetrial actually will start on
`currently scheduleddate, we find that this factor weighs in favor of
`exercising our discretion to deny institution under § 314(a).
`
`investment in theparallelproceeding by the court
`Factor 3:
`and theparties
`
`Patent Ownerarguesthat the parties and district court have invested
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`incredible amountsoftime and effort because “[t]he 101-page Markman
`
`order issued on March 31, the parties have madefinalelections of claims
`and art, discovery will close, andfinal pretrial disclosures will be made
`before the DI deadline.” Prelim. Resp. 5—6; Sur-reply 5-7.
`
`Petitioner arguesthat, in its complaint, Patent Ownerasserted sixteen
`patents containing overfive-hundredfifty claims, and that Petitioner
`“needed the time taken to prepare its twenty-onepetitions,as it was faced
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`12
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`IPR2020-00255
`Patent 9,516,127 B2
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`with the immense burdenof understanding the five-hundredfifty claims
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`contained in these patents andthe potential prior art.” Pet. Reply 5-6.
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`Petitioner also arguesthat its substantial investment in these twenty-one
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`petitions should counterbalance and outweigh the resourcesinvested in the
`
`Jd.
`co-pendinglitigation.
`The District Court’s scheduling order showsthe following deadlines
`passed: fact discovery andfiling of motions to compeldiscovery, service of
`disclosures for expert witnesses by the party with the burden ofproof,
`
`service of disclosures for rebuttal expert witnesses, expert discovery,filing
`
`of dispositive motions, andfiling of motionsto strike expert testimony,
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`including Daubert motions. Ex. 1040. Upcoming deadlines include the
`
`following:
`responseto dispositive motions and Daubert motions
`(August 6, 2020), serving ofpretrial disclosures (August 13, 2020), serving
`
`of objections to disclosures, and rebuttal disclosures (August 24, 2020),
`serving of objects to rebuttal disclosures (September3, 2020), filing of
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`motionsin limine (September3, 2020), filing of the jointpretrial order
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`(September17, 2020), the pretrial conference (September 24, 2020), and
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`jury trial (November30, 2020). Jd.
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`Wefind that the parties have invested significant resources in the
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`parallel District Court litigation, with some of the work relevantto patent
`
`validity, including claim construction and expert discovery. Nevertheless,
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`the potential relevance of such workis diminished bythefact that only
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`3 claims, out of the 50 claims challenged here, are involvedin the district
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`court litigation. And, significantly, Petitioner’s unpatentability challenges
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`here will not overlap with the invalidity grounds asserted in the underlying
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`13
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`IPR2020-00255
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`litigation because Petitioner hasstipulated that, if the Board institutes inter
`partes review here, it will not pursue the sameinstituted groundsin the
`underlyinglitigation regarding the ’127 patent. See Ex. 1045,3; see also the
`discussion addressing Fintiv Factor 4 below. Based on the current record,it
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`is also unclear to what extent the District Court has invested resources in the
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`parallel district court litigation that bear directly on the issue of patent
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`validity.
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`Petitioner’s timing in filing the Petition is also relevant to this factor.
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`If the petitioner, ‘“‘faced with the prospect ofa loomingtrial date, waits until
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`the district court trial has progressedsignificantly before filing a petition,”
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`that decision “may impose unfair costs to a patent owner.” Fintiv, Paper 11
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`at 11. Onthe other hand,“[i]f the evidence showsthat the petitionerfiled
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`the petition expeditiously, such as promptly after becoming awareofthe
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`claims being asserted, this fact has weighed against exercising the authority
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`to denyinstitution.” Jd.
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`Here,the timing ofthe filing of this Petition mitigates somewhat the
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`investmentin this litigation by the parties. Petitioner acted expeditiously in
`
`filing this Petition on December 30, 2019, before Patent Ownerservedits
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`narrowed numberofasserted patents and asserted claims on January 21,
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`2020. See Pet. Reply 5—6 (citing Ex. 1048, 1). We find that this timing is
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`reasonable, particularly considering that Patent Owner’s complaintin the
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`parallel district court litigation asserted sixteen patents that contain over
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`five-hundredfifty claims, and Petitionerfiled fourteen ofits interpartes
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`review petitions, including this Petition, before Patent Owner’s initial
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`identification of asserted claims, and six of the remaining sevenpetitions
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`14
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`within one monthofit. See Ex. 1052; Pet. Reply 5—6 (citing Ex. 1048, 1).
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`Therefore, even though the parties invested time and effort in the district
`
`court action, Petitioner acted diligently and without much delay in exercising
`
`its statutory right to file a Petition, mitigating against the investment (which
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`a District Court stay otherwise could have diminished). See Fintiv, Paper 11
`
`at 11.
`
`Weighing thefacts in this particular case, including the time invested
`by the parties and the District Court in the parallel district court proceeding,
`the extent to which the investmentin the district court proceedingrelates to
`
`issues of patent validity, and the timing ofthe filing of the Petition, we find
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`that this factor weighsslightly in favor of exercising our discretion to deny
`
`institution under § 314(a).
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`Factor 4: overlap between issues raised in thepetitionandin
`the parallelproceeding
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`This factor evaluates “concernsof inefficiency and the possibility of
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`conflicting decisions” when substantially identical prior art is submitted in
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`both the district court and the interpartes review proceedings. Fintiv,
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`Paper 11 at 12. Patent Ownerarguesthat “the references, grounds, and
`
`arguments raised in the two venuesare strikingly similar.” Prelim.
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`Resp. 7-9, 29; Sur-reply 7.
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`In its Reply, Petitioner advances two arguments. First, Petitioner
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`argues that only 3 claims overlap betweenthedistrict court proceeding and
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`the instant IPR proceeding. Pet. Reply 8 n.3. The District Court will not
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`address the validity of all 50 claims challenged in this IPR proceeding
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`becauseonly 3 claimsare currently atissue in the District Court. Jd.
`In its Sur-reply, Patent Owner countersthat the additional claims do
`not justify institution because Patent Owner“stipulates that if the Board
`declines to institute under Fintiv, Patent Ownerwill not assert any ofthe
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`IPR-only claims of the ’127 patent against [Petitioner] if the asserted
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`’127 claimsarefinally adjudicated to be invalid or not infringed in the
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`District Court Action.” Sur-reply 9-10.
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`However,Petitioner asserts that it “will continue to create innovative
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`new products, and desires Board review of these claims, so as to prevent
`their future assertion by [Patent Owner] in potential seriallitigation.” Pet.
`
`Reply 8n.3. Itis unclear whether Patent Owner’s stipulation would apply to
`Petitioner’s customersthat use those new products. Therefore, Patent
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`Owner’s argumentis unavailing becausethe District Court will not address
`47 claims challenged in this IPR proceeding and Petitioner has an interestin
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`resolving the validity issue of these 47 claims.
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`Second,Petitioner arguesthatit “has eliminated anyrisk of duplicated
`
`effort by stipulating to counsel for [Patent Owner] that, if the Board
`institutes the pending Petition, [Petitioner] will not pursue district court
`invalidity challenges based on the pending Petition’s asserted grounds.”
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`Pet. Reply 8 (citing Ex. 1045, 1). Petitioner’s stipulation states that
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`“[Petitioner] herebystipulates thatif the Patent Trialand Appeal Board
`(PTAB)institutes one or more IPRpetitions on the grounds presented (a
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`16
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`IPR2020-00255
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`table of which is reproduced below),then [Petitioner] will not pursue those
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`same instituted groundsin the above-captionedlitigation, 2:19-cv-115.”
`Ex. 1045,1-3.
`Patent Ownerrespondsthat Petitioner’s stipulation “actually
`increase[s] the overlap betweenthe District Court Action and the IPRs”
`
`because “[a]ny difference, no matter howtrivial, falls outside this
`‘stipulation.’” Sur-reply 8. Patent Ownerarguesthat Petitioner only
`stipulates that“if the [PTAB]institutes. .
`. on the exact same ground
`presented... then [Petitioner] will not pursue those sameinstitutedgrounds
`in the... litigation.” /d. at 8 (citing Ex. 1045, 1). Thus, according to Patent
`Owner, Petitioner’s stipulation “‘is .. . a thinly-veiled attempt to increase the
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`overlap in art and argument betweenthe District Court and here.” Jd. at 9.
`Wedisagree with Patent Ownerthat Petitioner’s stipulation is “a
`thinly-veiled attempt to increase the overlapin art and argument.” Jd. The
`stipulation is signed by Petitioner’s counsel and preventsPetitioner from
`pursuing eachofthe groundsatissue in this interpartes review proceeding
`with the prior art combinationsas listed on the Table provided with the
`stipulation. See Ex. 1045, 1-3. To the extent Patent Ownersuggests that
`Petitioner’s stipulation wouldallow it to raise the same IPR groundin the
`District Court by merely adding a reference from one combination to another
`combination of references but using the same arguments, we disagree
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`because such a result would contravene thestipulation’s language preventing
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`Petitioner from using the samelisted references and “the sameinstituted
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`ground”in the District Court.
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`To the extent Patent Ownerarguesthat the stipulation would allow a
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`primary reference in an IPR groundto be replaced entirely with another
`reference, such an outcome would result in different issues and grounds
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`being pursued in each forum. In suchcase, Petitioner’s stipulation mitigates,
`at least to some degree, the concerns of duplicative efforts between the
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`district court and the Board,as well as concernsofpotentially conflicting
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`decisions.
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`Nevertheless, the District Court issued an order requiring the parties
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`to “streamline the issues” in the underlyinglitigation. See Ex. 2007 (“Order
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`Focusing Patent Claimsand Prior Art’), 1. In particular, the District Court
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`orders that Petitioner, the Defendantin the underlyinglitigation, ‘“‘shall serve
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`a Final Election of Asserted Prior Art,” wherein “each combination counts
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`as a separate prior art reference.” /d. at2. Inresponse,Petitioner, as
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`Defendant, submitted its Notice Regarding Prior Art Reduction, in whichit
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`reducedthe prior art to the sameprior art combination set forth in the Table
`provided with thestipulation. Ex. 2003 (“Apple Inc.’s Notice Regarding
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`Prior Art Reduction”), 3.
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`In particular, the District Court ordered Petitioner to employ “no more
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`than nine (9)asserted prior art references per patent from among the
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`eighteen (18) prior art references previously identified for that particular
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`patent and no morethanatotal of forty-five (45) references.” Ex. 2007,2.
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`Adding unnecessary referencesincreasesthe total numberof references
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`employed. Thus, addition of a reference will not streamline the issues as
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`ordered by the court. Also, even if adding spurious references somehow
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`fails to violate the stipulation according to Patent Owner’s arguments,
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`Petitioner likely will not and cannotdo so in coordinatingits invalidity
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`challenges across ten patents, because Petitioner asserted a similar
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`stipulation across the ten patents and already reached the District Court
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`orderedlimit of forty-five patents across those ten patentsin its invalidity
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`challenges. See Ex. 1045; Ex. 2003; Ex. 2007.
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`Furthermore,in its order requiring the parties to streamline the issues
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`in the underlyinglitigation, the District Court also orders that Patent Owner,
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`the Plaintiff in the underlyinglitigation, “shall serve a Preliminary Election
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`of Asserted Claims.” See Ex. 2007, 2. The District Court action initially
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`involved sixteen patents-in-suit and multiple issues, including all fourteen
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`claims of the ’029 patent. Ex. 1052 (complaint); Ex. 1043 (invalidity
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`contentions). After its complaint, pursuant to the District Court order, Patent
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`Ownernarrowedits infringement assertions to seventy-five claims and
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`sixteen patents-in-suit, including four claims of the ’029 patent. Ex. 1048.
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`Thereafter, pursuantto the District Court’s order, Patent Ownernarrowedits
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`infringementassertionsfurtherto thirty-six claims and ten patents-in-suit,
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`including three claimsof the ’029 patent. Ex. 2008, 1; Ex. 2003.
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`Accordingly, pursuantto the District Court’s order, Petitioner narrowedits
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`prior art challenges to forty-five prior art references to challenge the ten
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`patents-in-suit. Ex. 1041 (prior art reduction); Ex. 2003 (same).
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`This narrowing ofissues, including the numberofpatents-in-suit,
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`claims, and prior art invalidity challenges, evidences the complexity of
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`multiple patents and issuesin the District Court action. A trial here avoids
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`potentially complicated and overlapping jury issues of ten patents, while
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`allowing the panel to focus on multiple issues in depth that involve only the
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`’127 patent. Therefore, this interpartestrial will provide the parties with an
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`in-depth analysis of the ’127 patent, providing a full record that will enhance
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`the integrity of the patent system.
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`Based on the factsin this particular case, we find that this factor
`weighs against exercising our discretion to deny institution under § 314(a).
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`Factor 5: whetherthepetitioner and the defendantin the
`parallelproceeding are the sameparty
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`It is undisputed that Petitioner here is the defendantin the underlying
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`litigation. Pet. Reply 5-6; Ex. 1052. “Ifa petitioner is unrelated to a
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`defendantin an earlier court proceeding, the Board has weighed this fact
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`against exercising discretion to deny institution under NHK.” Fintiv,
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`Paper 11 at 13-14 (emphasis added).? Thus,this factor weighsslightly in
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`favorof exercising our discretion to deny institution under § 314(a).
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`Factor 6: other circumstances that impact the Board’s exercise
`ofdiscretion, including the merits.
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`Thefinal Fintiv factor is a catch-all that takes into accountany other
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`relevant circumstances. The decision whetherto exercise discretion to deny
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`* At least one Board memberobservedthat Fintiv “says nothing about
`situations in which thepetitioner is the sameas,oris related to, the district
`court defendant.” Cisco Sys., Inc. v. Ramot at Tel Aviv Univ. Ltd. , IPR2020-
`00122, Paper 15 at 10 (PTAB May15, 2020) (APJ Crumbley,dissenting).
`According to the dissent in Cisco,if “the factor weighs in favor of denial if
`the parties are the same,”this could “tip the scales against a petitioner
`merely for being a defendantin the district court.” /d. atl1. This “would
`seem to be contrary to the goal of providing district court litigants an
`alternative venue to resolve questions of patentability.” Jd.
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`institution under § 314(a) is based on “a balanced assessment ofall relevant
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`circumstancesin the case, including the merits.” Consolidated Trial Practice
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`Guide 58.
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`Weaccountfor the fact that the Office already hasinstituted
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`proceedings challenging other patents in dispute in the co-pendingparallel
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`litigation—IP R2020-00188 (instituted June 11, 2020), IPR2020-00156
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`(instituted June 18, 2020), and [IPR2020-001 57(instituted June 18, 2020).
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`Weacknowledgethat it would beinefficient to discretionarily deny
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`institution of this Petition, which we find meetsthe statutory threshold for
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`institution, after having instituted petitions challenging other patents in
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`dispute in the parallel proceeding.
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`Patent Ownerarguesthat further favoring denial wasPetitioner’s
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`9-month delay in filing the Petition. Sur-reply 10.
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`Wedo not agree with Patent Owner. As noted above,Petitionerfiled
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`its Petition on December30, 2019, about three and a half months before the
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`statutory deadline under § 315(b). Pet. 74; Paper 4, 1. Furthermore, as
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`Petitioner explains, Patent Ownerasserted in its complaint sixteen patents
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`which contain over 550 claims, and Petitioner “neededthe time taken to
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`prepare its twenty-onepetitions, as it was faced with the immense burden of
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`understanding the five-hundredfifty claims contained in these patents and
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`the potential prior art.” Pet. Reply 5-6. As discussed above, wefind that
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`this timing is reasonable,particularly considering that Patent Ownerasserted
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`sixteen patents that contain over five-hundredfifty claims, and Petitioner
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`filed twenty-one IPR Petitions challenging those patents. Ex. 1052; Pet.
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`Reply 5-6.
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`In addition, “the factors considered in the exercise of discretion are
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`part of a balanced assessment ofall relevant circumstancesin the case,
`including the merits.” Fintiv, Paper 11 at 14. “For example, if the merits of
`a groundraised in the petition seem particularly strong on the preliminary
`record, .. . the institution ofa trial may serve the interest of overall system
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`efficiency and integrity becauseit allows the proceeding to continue in the
`eventthat the parallel pr