throbber
Trials@uspto. gov
`Tel: 571-272-7822
`
`Paper13
`Date: May 31, 2023
`
`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`
`MICROSOFT CORPORATION,
`Petitioner,
`
`V.
`
`THROUGHPUTER,INC.,
`Patent Owner.
`
`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`Before MICHAEL R. ZECHER, MATTHEW S. MEYERS, and
`JULIET MITCHELL DIRBA,Administrative Patent Judges.
`
`DIRBA,Administrative Patent Judge.
`
`DECISION
`Denying Institution of /nter Partes Review
`35 US.C. $314
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`On November7, 2022, Microsoft Corporation (“Petitioner”)filed a
`
`Petition requesting interpartes review of claims 1—8 of U.S. Patent
`
`No. 11,036,556 B1 (Ex. 1001, “the °556 patent”). Paper 2 (“‘Pet.”).
`
`ThroughP uter, Inc. (“Patent Owner”) timely filed a Preliminary Response.
`
`Paper 8 (Prelim. Resp.”). With our authorization (Paper 10), Petitioner
`
`filed a Preliminary Reply (Paper 11, “Prelim. Reply”), and Patent Owner
`
`filed a Preliminary Sur-Reply (Paper12, “Prelim. Sur-Reply”).
`
`An interpartes review may not be instituted unless “the information
`
`presentedin the petition .. . and any response. .
`
`. showsthat there 1s a
`
`reasonable likelihood that the petitioner would prevail with respect to at least
`
`1 of the claims challenged in the petition.” 35 U.S.C. §314(a).
`
`For the reasons given below, on this record, Petitioner has not
`
`established a reasonable likelihood that it would prevail in showing the
`
`unpatentability of at least one challenged claim. Accordingly, we do not
`
`institute an interpartes review ofthe *556 patent.
`
`I. BACKGROUND
`
`A. RelatedMatters
`
`Theparties indicate that the ’556 patent has been asserted in
`
`ThroughPuter, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., No. 2:22-cv-00492-BJR(W.D.
`
`Wash.), which wasconsolidated with ThroughPuter, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp.,
`
`No. 2:22-cv-00344-BJR (W.D. Wash. ). Pet. 76; Paper 4 (Patent Owner’s
`
`Mandatory Notices), 2. The parties also state that Petitioner has challenged
`
`other patents from thatlitigation in IPR2022-00527, IPR2022-00528,
`
`IPR2022-00574, IPR2022-00757, and IPR2022-00758. Id.
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`B. The Petition’s Asserted Grounds
`
`Petitioner asserts the following groundsof unpatentability (Pet. 2):
`
`Kupferschmidt?, Tuan?
`
`103
`
`Kupferschmidt, Tuan, Brent*
`
`Kupferschmidt, Tuan, Brent, Sandstrom-501
`
`Kupferschmidt, Tuan, Sandstrom-501°
`
`In support of its contentions, Petitioner relies on the testimonyofJeffreyS.
`
`Chase, Ph.D. (Ex. 1003) and June Ann Munford (Ex. 1007).
`
`C. Summary ofthe ’556 Patent
`
`The *556 patentis titled “Concurrent Program Execution
`
`Optimization.” Ex. 1001, code (54). The application that led to the °556
`
`' The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (“AIA”), Pub. L. No. 112-29, 125
`Stat. 284, 285-88 (2011), revised 35 U.S.C. § 103 effective March 16, 2013.
`The challenged patent wasfiled after March 16, 2013 and claimspriority to
`applicationsfiled after that date. As a consequence, werefer to the current
`version ofthe statute. Accord Pet. 2.
`
`2 US 2010/0333099 A1, published Dec. 30, 2010 (Ex. 1004).
`3 Vu Manh Tuan,“A Study on a Multitasking Environment for Dynamically
`Reconfigurable Processors,” Doctoral Dissertation, School of Science for
`Open and Environmental Systems Graduate School of Science and
`Technology, Keio University (2009) (Ex. 1005).
`+ US 2010/0131955 Al, published May 27, 2010 (Ex. 1006).
`5 US 2012/0079501 Al, published Mar. 29, 2012 (Ex. 1010).
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`patent wasfiled on March8, 2021, claiming priority to applicationsfiled as
`
`early as August 23, 2013.
`
`/d. at (22), (60), (63).
`
`The Specification is directed to “managing execution of multiple
`
`concurrent, multi-task software programson parallel processing hardware.”
`
`Ex. 1001, 1:45—48. Figure 2 of the 556 patent is reproduced below.
`
` App.
`
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`
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`
`Worker stage #3
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`
`FIG. 2
`
`Figure 2 is a functional block diagram of multi-stage manycore processing
`
`system 1, which is shared dynamically among tasks of multiple application
`
`programs(apps) andinstances(insts) thereof.
`
`/d. at 5:18—21, 10:29-32. For
`
`each of the apps, each task is located at one of the processing stages 300. Jd.
`
`at 10:32—33. Nevertheless, for any given app-inst, copies of same task
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`software can be located at more than one ofthe processing stages 300 of a
`
`given system 1, thus supporting any combination ofpipelined and/or
`
`parallelized processing.
`
`/d. at 10:34—41. Hardwarelogic is implemented for
`
`scheduling tasks of application program instancesandprioritizing inter-task
`
`communications (ITC) among tasks of a given app instance.
`
`/d. at 10:10—
`
`13.
`
`D. Challenged Claims
`
`Petitioner challengesall eight claims of the ’556 patent. Ofthese,
`
`only claim 1 1s independent. It recites:
`
`A methodperformedin a data processing system,
`1.
`the method comprising:
`
`receiving, by hardware logic and/or softwarelogic,
`requests to perform different tasks on behalf of instances of a
`plurality of programs managedby a data processing system;
`identifying, by the hardwarelogic and/or softwarelogic
`for each of the instances, communication interdependencies
`between different processing stages of a set of processing stages
`of the respective instance;
`based on conditions in the data processing system,
`dynamically varying, by the hardware logic and/or software
`logic, structures of field-programmable gate arrays used to
`processdifferent tasks of the instancesof the plurality of
`programs, the structures being dynamically varied by
`
`identifying available field-programmable gate
`arrays of the data processing system that are available to
`processdifferent processing stages of requesting
`instances ofrespective programs,
`
`basedat least on the conditions in the data
`processing system, identifying selectedfield-
`programmable gate arrays from the available field-
`programmable gate arrays to execute the different
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`processing stages of the requesting instances of the
`respective programs,
`
`configuring the selected field-programmable gate
`arrays to process a respective processing stage of a
`respective requesting instance, and
`
`configuring certain selected field-programmable
`gate arrays to support communicating, by the task
`executing on the respective field-programmable gate
`array, final results to a requesting client over a network in
`the data processing system.
`
`Ex. 1001, 21:26—22:11.
`
`Il. ANALYSIS
`
`A. Law on Obviousness
`
`The legal question of obviousnessis resolved on the basis of
`
`underlying factual determinations including (1) the scope and contentof the
`
`priorart; (2) any differences between the claimed subject matter and the
`
`priorart; (3) the level of ordinary skill in the art; and (4) whenin evidence,
`
`objective evidence of nonobviousness. Grahamy. John Deere Co. ofKan.
`
`City, 383 U.S. 1, 17-18 (1966). One seekingto establish obviousness based
`
`on more than one reference also mustarticulate sufficient reasoning with
`
`rational underpinnings to combine teachings. See KSR Int’] Co. v. Teleflex
`
`Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007).
`
`B. Level ofOrdinary Skill in the Art
`
`Petitionerasserts that the level of ordinary skill in the art corresponds
`
`to “a Master’s degree in computer science, computer engineering, or a
`
`related field, and 2—3 years of practical computer programmingor
`
`engineering experience, including experience designing or researching
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`parallel processing systems.” Pet. 6 (citing Ex. 1003 9] 18-20). Patent
`
`Ownerdoesnot address the level of ordinary skill in the art. See Prelim.
`
`Resp.
`
`On the present record, weare satisfied that Petitioner’s proposed
`
`definition generally comports with the level of skill necessary to understand
`
`and implement the teachings of the 556 patent (see Ex. 1003 § 19), and for
`
`purposesofthis Decision, we adopt Petitioner’s proposedlevelofskill.
`
`C. Obviousness Grounds Based on Kupferschmidt and Tuan
`
`Petitioner relies on a combination of Kupferschmidt and Tuan for
`
`each of the groundspresentedin the Petition. Pet. 2,7—71. According to
`
`Petitioner, “Tuanis a doctoral dissertation” published in October 2009, over
`
`three years before the earliest possible priority date for the °556 patent.
`
`/d.
`
`at 2, 10; Prelim. Reply 3-7. Patent Ownerarguesthat Petitioner does not
`
`establish that Tuan qualifies as a printed publication. Prelim. Resp. 14-20;
`
`Prelim. Sur-Reply 4—7. For the reasons explained below, we agree with
`
`Patent Owner.
`
`1. Legal Standard
`
`For a reference to qualify as a printed publication, it “must have been
`
`sufficiently accessible to the public interested tn the art.” /n re Lister, 583
`
`F.3d 1307, 1311 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (quoting /n re Cronyn, 890 F.2d 1158,
`
`1160 (Fed. Cir. 1989)). The touchstoneis “public accessibility,” and this “is
`
`determined on a case-by-case basis based on the ‘facts and circumstances
`
`surrounding the reference’s disclosure to membersof the public.’” /d.
`
`(quoting /n re Klopfenstein, 380 F.3d 1345, 1350 (Fed. Cir. 2004); In re
`
`Hall, 781 F.2d 897, 898-99 (Fed. Cir. 1986)). “A given referenceis
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`“publicly accessible’ uponasatisfactory showing that such document has
`
`been disseminated or otherwise made available to the extent that persons
`
`interested and ordinarily skilled in the subject matteror art[, | exercising
`
`reasonable diligence, can locate it.” SR/Int'l, Inc. v. Internet Sec. Sys., Inc.,
`
`511 F.3d 1186, 1194 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (quoting Bruckelmyer v. Ground
`
`Heaters, Inc., 445 F.3d 1374, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2006)).
`
`“Whenareference 1s uploaded to a website or deposited in a library,
`
`the fact that the referenceis indexed or cataloged in some waycanindicate
`
`that it is publicly accessible.” Samsung Elecs. Co. v. Infobridge Pte. Ltd.,
`
`929 F.3d 1363, 1369 (Fed. Cir. 2019). “In certain situations, particularly for
`
`manuscripts or dissertations stored in libraries, courts may inquire whether a
`
`reference wassufficiently indexed, catalogued, and shelved.” Hulu v. Sound
`
`View Innovations, LLC, IPR2018-01039, Paper 29 at 9 (PTAB Dec. 20,
`
`2019) (precedential). There ts no strict requirement for indexing,
`
`searchability, cataloging, or shelving. See, e.g., Samsung, 929 F.3d at 1369;
`
`Jazz Pharms., Inc. v. Amneal Pharms., LLC, 895 F.3d 1347, 1359 (Fed. Cir.
`
`2018). Butit is “critical” that there be “some evidencethat a person of
`
`ordinary skill could have reasonably found”the reference. Samsung, 929
`
`F.3dat 1369. A reference “is not publicly accessible if the only people who
`
`know howtofind it are the ones whocreated it.” /d. at 1372.
`
`“TAJt the institution stage, the petition mustidentify, with
`
`particularity, evidence sufficient to establish a reasonable likelihood that the
`
`reference was publicly accessible before the critical date of the challenged
`
`patent and therefore that there is a reasonable likelihood thatit qualifies as a
`
`printed publication.” Hulu, IPR2018-01039, Paper 29 at 13. “[T]here is no
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`presumption in favorof institution or in favor of finding a reference to be a
`
`printed publication.” /d. at 16.
`
`2. The Parties’ Dispute
`
`Petitioner contends that Tuan, a doctoral dissertation, was published
`
`in the Keio University library in October 2009. Pet. 2,10. To support this
`
`contention, Petitioner relies upon the testimony of Ms. Munford,“an
`
`experienced expert in library and information sciences.” /d. at 10 (citing
`
`Ex. 1007 ff 1-11, pp. 22-30). Ms. Munfordtestifies that she secured the
`
`MARC*record for Tuan as held by the Keio University library, and she
`
`includes the MARCrecord and a certified translation of it as an appendix to
`
`her declaration. Ex. 10074 10 (citing id. at 22-30). Ms. Munfordalso
`
`testifies that the “008 field” of this MARCrecord“indicates the Keio
`
`Unversity library first acquired this dissertation as of October 1, 2009,” and
`
`from this, Ms. Munfordtestifies that Tuan “was made available to the public
`
`shortly after its mitial acquisition in Fall 2009.” /d. 4 11. Petitioner submits
`
`that this date is consistent with the year on Tuan’s title page. Pet. 10 (citing
`
`Ex. 1005, 1).
`
`Patent Ownercontendsthat Petitioner fails to establish that Tuan
`
`qualifies as a printed publication for two independent reasons. Prelim.
`
`Resp. 14—20. First, Patent Ownerarguesthat Petitionerfails to sufficiently
`
`show that the MARCrecordrelates to the version of Tuanfiled in this
`
`proceeding(1.e., Exhibit 1005) and, thus, that “Ms. Munfordat best
`
`establishes that a different documentthat is not Ex. 1005 wasavailable in
`
`2008.” /d. at 15—17 (emphasis omitted and added). Second, Patent Owner
`
`° “MARC”is an acronym for Machine Readable Catalog. Ex. 100775.
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`arguesthat, even if Petitioner showstechnical availability, it fails to show
`
`public accessibility.
`
`/d. at 17-20; see id. at 19 (arguing that this “1s a classic
`
`example of technical accessibility, which is insufficient to meet Hulu’s
`
`public accessibility requirement’) (citing Hulu, IPR2018-01039, Paper 29 at
`
`10). According to Patent Owner,Petitionerfails to provide any explanation
`
`of how an ordinary artisan could have found Tuan with the exercise of
`
`reasonable diligence (id. at 18), and Petitionerfails to provide evidence to
`
`support such a finding (id. at 18-19).
`
`3. Analysis
`
`On this record, we agree with Patent Ownerthat Petitionerfails to
`
`provide evidence sufficient to show that Tuan (a doctoral thesis) was
`
`publicly accessible before the critical date, and as a result, we determine that
`
`Petitionerfails to sufficiently establish that Tuan qualifies as a printed
`
`publication. See Hulu, IPR2018-01039, Paper 29 at 13. For purposes of our
`
`analysis, we have assumed (without deciding) that all of Petitioner’s
`
`evidencerelates to the same version of Tuan (1.e., Exhibit 1005), and we
`
`assume that Tuan wasreceived by the Keio University library on October1,
`
`2009, as indicated by the MARCrecord located by Ms. Munford (see
`
`Ex. 1007, pp. 23-24).
`
`Webegin by observingthat the Petition never squarely addresses
`
`whether Tuan waspublicly accessible, andit also does not expressly contend
`
`that an ordinary artisan could have located Tuan with reasonable diligence.
`
`See Pet. 2,10. Petitioner’s entire argument for qualifying Tuan asaprinted
`
`publication is reproduced below:
`
`Tuan is a doctoraldissertation titled “A Study ona
`Multitasking Environment for Dynamically Reconfigurable
`
`10
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`Processors,” which published in 2009—1.e., somefour years
`before the earliest possible priority date of the °556 Patent.
`According to Ms. June Munford, an experienced expert in
`library and information sciences, Tuan “was madeavailable to
`the public shortly after its mitial acquisition [by the Keio
`Unversity library] in Fall 2009.” Ms. Munford’s determination
`is supported bylibrary records that demonstrate Keio
`Unversity library’s acquisition of Tuan in October 2009, andis
`consistent with the year (2009) printed on Tuan’s title page.
`
`7d. at 10 (citing Ex. 1003 4] 48-51; Ex. 1005, 1; Ex. 1007 4] 1-11, pp. 22-
`
`30). Although these contentions are relevant to Tuan’s date, they are not
`
`sufficient to establish its accessibility to an ordinary artisan. See
`
`Acceleration Bay, LLC v. Activision BlizzardInc. , 908 F.3d 765, 773 (Fed.
`
`Cir. 1998) (““[P Jublic accessibility’ requires more than technical
`
`accessibility.”).
`
`Wehave considered the evidencePetitionercites, but it also falls
`
`short. See Pet. 10. Petitioner points to Dr. Chase’s testimony and Tuan
`
`itself, but neither is probative of Tuan’s public accessibility—Dr. Chase
`
`simply summarizesthe contents of Tuan (see Ex. 1003 4] 48-51), and Tuan
`
`itself has no conventional markersofpublication (see Ex. 1005, 1).
`
`Petitioneralso relies upon Ms. Munford’s declaration, but her testimony
`
`doesnot indicate that an ordinary artisan could have located Tuan with
`
`reasonable diligence. See Ex. 1007 4 1-11, pp. 22-30. Ms. Munford
`
`testifies regarding her credentials (Ex. 1007 4] 1-5), provides background
`
`information on MARCrecords(id. 4 5—8), and states that she located the
`
`MARCrecordfor Tuan from the library’s public catalog (id.9-10). She
`
`also addresses Tuan’s date, stating:
`
`The 008 field of the MARCrecord in Appendix
`TUANO1 indicates the date of record creation. The 008 field of
`Appendix TUANO1 indicates the Keio University library first
`
`11
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
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`acquired this dissertation as of October 1, 2009. Considering
`this information, it is my determination that Exhibit 1005 4
`Study on a Multitasking Environmentfor Dynamically
`Reconfigurable Processors was madeavailable to the public
`shortly after its mitial acquisition in Fall 2009.
`
`Id. { 11; see id. at pp. 22-30 (Appendix TUANO1). Ms. Munford does not
`
`otherwise address Tuan, and Ms. Munford’s conclusory assertion that Tuan
`
`“was madeavailable to the public” (id. § 11) is insufficient. As our
`
`reviewing court has explained,it is “critical” that there be “some evidence
`
`that a person of ordinary skill could have reasonably found”the reference.
`
`Samsung, 929 F.3d at 1369; see also id. at 1372 (stating that a reference “‘is
`
`not publicly accessible if the only people who know howtofindit are the
`
`ones whocreated it”). In other words, even assuming that Ms. Munford
`
`establishes Tuan was technically available to the public in October 2009, her
`
`testimonyfails to support a finding that an ordinary artisan could have
`
`located Tuan with reasonablediligence.
`
`In its Preliminary Reply, Petitionerrelies on “the MARC. .
`
`. itself,”
`
`arguing that it “provides meaningful evidence of indexing and public
`
`accessibility.” Prelim. Reply 5—6. Petitioner’s argumentis as follows:
`
`For instance, the MARCrecorditself indicates that Tuan was
`“la|vailable” and shelvedat the “Main Building.” It further
`includes a range of searchable metadataincludingthetitle,
`author, and academic dissertation details. Tuan’s title is plainly
`descriptive ofits subject matter, and would have ensuredthat
`the thesis could be readily accessed exercising reasonable
`diligence (e.g.,a keyword search). The declaration even shows
`[the] webpage from which the MARCrecord wassearched.
`
`Id. at 6 (citing Ex. 1007, pp. 25-28; Lister, 583 F.3d at 1316; M&K
`
`Holdings, 985 F.3d at 1382). In addition, Petitioner contendsthat “[t]he
`
`specific function of MARCrecordsis to provide searchable entries for
`
`12
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
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`catalogued worksin a library.” /d. at 6n.2. Petitioner’s argumentis not
`
`persuasive for several reasons.
`
`First, Petitioner’s argument improperly conflates the MARCrecord
`
`itself with the website from which the MARCrecord was obtained. The
`
`Appendix at issue includes the MARCrecorditself (Ex. 1007, p. 23) andits
`
`translation (id. at p. 24), as well as a December 2021 screenshot ofthe
`
`library catalog used by Ms. Munford to obtain that record (id. at p. 25) anda
`
`translation of this screenshot(id. at pp. 26-29). See also id. pp. 25
`
`(“screenshot-search.lib. keto. ac.jp-2021.12.10-072947” (emphasis added)),
`
`30 (translator’s certification attesting to translation of two documents);
`
`Prelim. Resp. 6 (“The declaration even shows[the] webpage from which the
`
`MARCrecord wassearched.”(citing Ex. 1007, pp. 25—26)). In its
`
`Preliminary Reply, Petitioner cites the website screenshot when purporting
`
`to discuss “the MARCrecorditself” (Prelim. Reply 6 (citing Ex. 1007, pp.
`
`25—28)), but the two are not the same (compareEx. 1007 p. 23, with id. at
`
`p. 25).
`
`This is important becausethe screenshotofthe library catalog is dated
`
`December 2021 (Ex. 1007, p. 25), over eight years after the August 2013
`
`critical date (see Pet. 2). Neither Petitioner nor Ms. Munforddiscuss the
`
`library catalog itself or the screenshot provided, and the record includes no
`
`evidence that the screenshot depicts an archived version ofthe library’s
`
`catalog. In fact, there is no evidencethat this catalog (or a substantially
`
`similar one) existed on or beforethecritical date. Accordingly, we
`
`determine that the December 2021 screenshot (Ex. 1007, pp. 25—29) is not
`
`probative of whether Tuan waspublicly accessible before the critical date.
`
`As a result, the evidence does not support Petitioner’s contention that Tuan
`
`13
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`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
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`was“available” and shelvedat the “Main Building” before thecritical date,
`
`as this information 1s not apparent from the MARCrecorditself. Prelim.
`
`Reply 6 (cleaned up) (citing Ex. 1007, pp. 25—26); see Ex. 1007,p. 24.
`
`Second, Petitioner’s speculation that an ordinary artisan might have
`
`found Tuan using a keywordsearchofthetitle field (see Prelim. Reply 6) is
`
`also unavailing. As Patent Ownerobserves, “Petitioner stops short of even
`
`providing attorney argument that Ex. 1005 could have been located through
`
`a keyword search in 2013.” Prelim. Sur-Reply 7. Weagree. In our view,
`
`Petitioner’s vague reference to a keywordsearchis insufficient—it fails to
`
`explain How or why an ordinary artisan, exercising reasonable diligence,
`
`would have located Tuan. For example, Petitioner does not even propose a
`
`hypothetical keyword search that an ordinary artisan would have used. Cf
`
`Lister, 583 F.3d at 1315—16 (finding public accessibility based on particular
`
`keyword search that would have yielded reference). This is problematic
`
`because Tuan’s title appears to have only two termsthat could be relevantto
`
`sucha search: “multitasking” and “dynamically reconfigurable processors.”
`
`Ex. 1007, p. 24. Petitioner does not explain why an ordinary artisan would
`
`have searched for both of these terms, and we question whethera search for
`
`only one of them would yield an excessive numberofresults.
`
`Moreover, Petitioner fails to provide evidence that would support such
`
`an argument. The record includes no evidence that a keyword searchofthe
`
`title field could have been performed at the time. Although thelibrary
`
`catalog allowed a “search” in December 2021 (see Ex. 1007, pp. 25—26
`
`(“New search’’)), there is no evidence regarding any search functionality
`
`before the critical date, over eight years prior. We are tempted to assume
`
`that at least one of the MARCfields would have been searchableat the
`
`14
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`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
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`relevant tmme—the MARCrecordis, by definition, “Machine Readable”
`
`(Ex. 1007 4 5)—butthere is no evidence that any software (such as an online
`
`catalog) allowed a keywordsearch onthe ‘title field of the MARCrecords
`
`before the critical date.’ It is not our role to assumefacts not in evidence.
`
`Rather, it is Petitioner’s burdento “identify, withparticularity, evidence
`
`sufficient to establish a reasonable likelihood that the reference waspublicly
`
`accessible before the critical date.” Hulu, IPR2018-01039, Paper 29 at 13
`
`(emphasis added).
`
`Finally, Petitioner argues that previous Board decisions “have
`
`repeatedly sustained publication evidence based on MARCrecords and
`
`similar librarian analysesto those offered by Ms. Munford.” Prelim.
`
`Reply 7. Wedisagree. Petitioner cites four non-precedential Board
`
`decisions in support of its argument, but each 1s readily distinguishable.
`
`In
`
`the decision discussed by Petitioner, the Board did not find a MARCrecord
`
`alone sufficient to show public accessibility, as Petitioner suggests (id. ), but
`
`rather determinedthat three articles published in conference proceedings
`
`were publicly accessible given “the indicia of publication and public
`
`accessibility on the face of each ofthe references, availability of the
`
`references on the IEEE website, and the cataloguing of the Proceedingsfor
`
`each of the papers in variouslibraries.” /ntel Corp. v. FG SCRLLC,
`
`IPR2020-01449, Paper 13 at 43-44 (PTAB Mar.3, 2021); see id. at 39-41,
`
`43. Fortwo other decisions, the disputed issue was whetherthe petitioner
`
`had sufficiently shownthat an article was actually included in a conference’s
`
`7 Cf Lister, 583 F.3d at 1315 (indicating that, in the mid-1990s, the
`Copyright Office’s automated, electronic catalog “could only be searched by
`either the author’s last nameorthe first wordof thetitle ofthe work”).
`
`15
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`proceedings, and it appears the patent ownerdid not dispute that the
`
`conference proceedings themselves were publicly accessible. Nearmap US,
`
`Inc. v. Eagle View Techs., Inc. ,1PR2022-01009, Paper 7 at 18-19 (PTAB
`
`Dec. 14, 2022); Apple Inc. v. AliveCor, Inc. , 1PR2022-00872, Paper 7 at 34—
`
`35 (PTAB Nov. 10, 2022). The final decision addresseda different issue
`
`(1.e., whether the MARCrecord submitted by petitioner wasfor a different
`
`version of the document), and the documentitself was a book with indicia of
`
`publication including a publisher and ISBN information. Microchip Tech.
`
`Inc. v. Bell Semiconductor, LLC, IP R2021-00148, Paper 19 at 28-30 (PTAB
`
`May14, 2021). Asa result, none of these four decisions support Petitioner’s
`
`contention that a MARCrecord (showing,at best, a library’s receipt of the
`
`document beforethe critical date) is sufficient by itself, without additional
`
`explanation or evidence, to show that a doctoral thesis was publicly
`
`accessible at that time.
`
`4. Conclusion
`
`For the reasons explained above, we determinethat Petitionerfails to
`
`identify, with particularity, evidence sufficient to establish a reasonable
`
`likelihood that Tuan waspublicly accessible beforethe critical date. See
`
`Hulu, 1PR2018-01039, Paper 29 at 13. Asa result, we determine that
`
`Petitioner fails to showareasonable likelihood that Tuan qualifies as a
`
`printed publication. See id.
`
`Eachofthe groundspresented in the Petition relies on a combination
`
`of Kupferschmidt and Tuan (Pet. 2), so we determine that Petitioner has not
`
`shown a reasonable likelihood that it will prevail with respectto its
`
`assertions that claims 1—8 would have been unpatentable over the proposed
`
`16
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`combinations of Kupferschmidt and Tuan. As a consequence, wedo not
`
`institute an interpartes review.
`
`IH. ORDER
`
`It is ORDEREDthatthe Petition is denied and no interpartes review
`
`1s instituted.
`
`17
`
`

`

`IPR2022-01566
`Patent 11,036,556 B1
`
`FOR PETITIONER:
`
`W.Karl Renner
`David L. Holt
`Jennifer Huang
`Nicholas Stephens
`FISH & RICHARDSON P.C.
`axf-ptab@fr.com
`holt2@fr.com
`yh@fr.com
`nstephens@fr.com
`
`FOR PATENT OWNER:
`
`Scott A. McKeown
`ROPES & GRAY LLP
`scott. mckeown@ropesgray.com
`
`Michael A. Dorfman
`GARDELLA GRACE P.A.
`mdorfman@gardellagrace.com
`
`18
`
`

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