Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank (Patentable subject matter of
software-related inventions)
Nautilus v. Biosig Instruments (Patent indefiniteness)
Moderator: Thomas Pasternak, Partner, Steptoe & Johnson
LLP
Panelists: Constantine Trela, Jr., Counsel to Alice Corp.;
Partner, Sidley Austin LLP: Alice: We
know that reciting computer components isn’t enough. Improving the operation of
the computer, data handling, etc. seems to be PSM. Big area in between; not a
lot of guidance on that.
Mark Perry, Counsel to CLS Bank International, Partner,
Gibson Dunn LLP: Is there enough guidance?
There is important guidance, but how much is enough? SCt has been incremental. Deliberately
tried not to craft a fit-every-case, answer-every-question standard.
Professor Rebecca Eisenberg, University of Michigan Law
School: we need to go back to Diamond
to find a clear statement of what is
PSM (other than cDNA); hopefully this will eventually show up with
software. Not very illuminating.
Professor Ronald Mann, Columbia Law School: disappointing
pattern: take big cases, then become scared that they’ll ruin the economy if
they say something big and say as little as possible. Fed. Cir. then tries to
deal with it and eventually the opinions from Fed. Cir. make no sense because
each judge is trying to pick the language from the previous SCt opinion that they think is really the test.
Perry: problem is in part overthinking. Bugs in the forest =
not patentable. Bugs built in the lab =
patentable. Economic principles =
not. But, you can find sentences in
every opinion that will support anything and throws it open to the litigators.
Trela: Fundamental problem: if abstract idea is the trigger,
Court is incredibly unclear about what an abstract idea is. Economic principles
everyone knows may be obvious, but does that make them abstract? Algorithms,
formulas, natural laws: rationales given for unpatentability are about
withdrawing things from the storehouse of human knowledge, inherent in
nature/mathematical relationships. Makes sense doctrinally, but when you get to
economic concepts, they may be obvious, but if I come up with a wild idea like “make
energy from cigarette butts” I may have an implementation problem but I haven’t
withdrawn anything from the storehouse of human knowledge.
Perry: Part of the problem is, as Prof. Eisenberg said, that
they’re working through the problem by telling us what’s not PSM but not what
is. Fear of foreclosing technologies they don’t understand (cf. Aereo
discussion at oral argument). Doing it
with a computer = not inventive because they have computers.
John Vandenberg, Counsel to Nautilus, Inc., Partner,
Klarquist Sparkman LLP: SCt sees patents as a two edged sword. Q is whether the
benefit from allowing claims of this sort outweighs the risk.
Eisenberg: inventive concept is an unfortunate term. Leaves impression that it’s more like 103,
not what the Court intended. PTO’s
guidelines have offered a bunch of alternative factors to see whether there’s
enough there beyond excluded matter. If
we had a clearer understanding of what an abstract idea/natural law/natural
product maybe we wouldn’t have to collapse 101 into a seat of the pants 103
analysis.
Mann: abstractness may provide a less institutionally well
suited way to dispose of cases than the other bars. Judges say “this doesn’t sound inventive” but
what do they know about business software?
It’s inherently situational.
Could use more contextual knowledge.
Eisenberg: agree (on this).
More interested in that on the nature side than the abstractness side.
102 has a discipline for figuring out the state of human knowledge to guide
decisions, provide source of information. By contrast there’s no guide to
figuring out what nature knows—isolated DNA is naturally occurring, but cDNA
isn’t, per amicus briefs. Imagining a
magic microscope, but how do we know what that reveals? We only have real microscopes.
Perry: only a problem at the tail end of the distribution
(general groaning results).
Vandenberg: software patents no longer make sense for a
small business—even if you get through the PTO you might be challenged.
Eisenberg: the only cases we’ve seen have been computer
implemented business methods rather than broader software, but her expectation
is that broadly claimed software patents are in trouble.
Mann: some patents are very specific, and we haven’t had
cases about electronic inventions. Smartphone patent—completely intangible/electronic,
but actually applied—you might see the Court have the nerve to say something’s
patentable. The patent in this case
seemed the same as the patent in Bilski
to them. They think the case means ‘we really meant it in Bilski.’
Perry: Google, BSA, etc. filed on the Bank’s side; didn’t
view the case as threat to their industry, though some of them aren’t
patent-reliant companies. (Note from
someone, sorry, that Microsoft is a defendant in half the software patent
cases.)
Q: turn to Nautilus.
Vandenberg: Fed. Cir. test: if claim was amenable to
construction, and not insolubly ambiguous, that was enough. That language was curious and sent a message
to trial courts that they shouldn’t waste time on indefiniteness. Chance of
being reversed on claim construction is high enough anyway. Only in means plus function was Fed. Cir.
rigorous. SCt: no one defended insoluble
ambiguity. We think Nautilus means not a post hoc approach. Not can you figure out, but
can a follow on innovator look at the patent the day after issue and have
reasonable certainty what’s covered.
Trela: Claim construction in theory tells you what claim
meant to person of ordinary skill at the time. It’s only post hoc in the sense
that all litigation is post hoc. What’s wrong with looking at claim
construction?
Vandenberg: our patent was out of reexamination; pretty
established that if you have reexamination you get to use the history of that
too. You can’t have a crystal ball to
figure out what will happen. Fed. Cir. said “it’s clear because the reexaminer
accepted this argument.” Claim
construction can be very hard; fact that it can be done shouldn’t tip scales
against a finding of indefiniteness. There’s always a right construction, even
when there isn’t really: because the claim must be construed.
Eisenberg: in order to exercise active appellate review,
Fed. Cir. and SCt want to attribute meaning to the claim language; it becomes
hard to say “this is ambiguous” even when a dct assigns one interpretation and
a split appellate panel gives 2 more.
That’s ambiguity; if 3 different views are possible after studying the
patent closely, then, even if each one is confident, indefiniteness exists.
Likes focus on claim language as central and important and something applicants
can do better on.
Mann: example of legal sociology. What’s the difference between SCt standard
and Fed. Cir. standard? Probably
nothing. Just keep “insolubly ambiguous” out of it. They’ve accomplished a change in the status
quo: dcts were told that if they invalidated on indefiniteness grounds they’d
be reversed; now they won’t (necessarily) be.
Perry: this, unlike Alice,
is really designed to influence primary conduct of patentees. Encourages them
to write better and more claims.
Eisenberg mentioned claim by claim approach; we’ll see some claims
getting wiped out while others survive. This ought to produce better patents
down the road.
Mann: best part of briefs were discussion of the incentive
to write indefinite claims in the hope that 20 years from now it would cover
something. That had a real effect on the
Court.
Vandenberg: praises Gibson & Dunn for partnering on the
briefs, but as a patent lawyer he contributed, among other things, a book of
advice to patent lawyers/treatises & articles about the importance of
including ambiguous claims. More ambiguous = more powerful, harder to innovate
around; the zone of uncertainty was deliberate, and the Fed. Cir.’s standard
encouraged that kind of practice.
No comments:
Post a Comment