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● 06.17.23

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●● Many Fake Patents Are Still Being Squashed and Patent-Centric ‘Media’ in Europe is Mostly Sockpuppets of the EPO

Posted in America, Courtroom, Deception, Europe, Patents at 12:23 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: Team UPC (the illegal and unconstitutional kangaroo court, Unified Patent Court) and EPO thugs are trying to “buy the narrative” — a false narrative of course, but courts and tribunals not yet absorbed by these thugs are throwing out patents in large quantities, even in 2023

Dennis Crouch says that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is “establishing satellite offices” and is planning to have another one [1] while Crouch at al moan about fake US patents being squashed [2]. Obviousness is law and fact, not either or…

=> USPTO

The CCIA’s patent reformers meanwhile speak [3] of “non-practicing entity (NPE)”, i.e. trolls, and Unified Patent continues squashing US patents, most of them covering software [4-6]. There are financial rewards for those who help do this [5] ($2,000). Unified Patent also has some good news [7] about a truly monstrous troll, InterDigital, which we used to write a lot about.

A propaganda apparatus of the EPO dictators (Benoît Battistelli, António Campinos and their cronies), as well as a sponsored promoter of illegal agenda (the Unified Patent Court, no connection to Unified Patent), has meanwhile announced [8] that there’s “FRAND negotiation in Germany”. Like IAM (right now at the top of the front page), they’re promoting monopolies under the false guise of being “fair, “reasonable”, and anything but discriminatory. European software patents are often disguised under this blanket (or “thicket”) of “FRAND. We certainly hope that EPO staff recognises JUVE for what it truly became in recent years — it’s just a ‘German IAM’, i.e. a mouthpiece of the EPO with German connections. █

=> EPO | Benoît Battistelli | António Campinos | European software patents | what it truly became in recent years

Related/contextual items from the news:

●●●● Proposing Locations for Southeast Regional Office

The USPTO began establishing satellite offices a decade ago to expand beyond the traditional Alexandria (Washington DC) headquarters.  We now have offices in Detroit, Dallas, Denver, and San Jose. Last year, Congress voted to further expand the decentralization by at least one more. The Unleashing American Innovators Act of 2022 (UAIA) mandates creation of a Southeast Regional Office (SERO).  The USPTO is now seeking comments on where the office should be located — and the methodology it should use in selecting a location.  [Fed Reg].The statute requires that it be located in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, or Arkansas.  I would automatically rule-out Virginia and North Carolina as too close to the PTO HQ; and also rule-out Arkansas as too close to the Dallas Office.  In my mind, I quickly narrowed things down to four potential cities: Atlanta, Jacksonville, Miami, and Nashville.

●●●● En Banc: Is Obviousness Law or Fact?

Roku’s recently filed en banc petition begins with an intriguing statement: “What should have been a garden-variety substantial-evidence appeal has produced a dangerous obviousness precedent—one as far-reaching as it is misguided.”  [Roku, Inc. v. Universal Electronics, Inc., Docket No. 22-01058 (Fed. Cir.) (en banc petition)]An every day part of patent practice is arguing about whether a cited prior art reference teaches a particular claim limitation.  That analysis is not always an easy task because prior art is often quite cryptic as are the patent claims being evaluated.  One way to look at the process is an interpreting of the prior art to see if it teaches the claim.  In that form, the process is seen a question of fact that must be based upon substantial evidence and reviewed with deference on appeal. 

●●●● New Patent Office Proposals Will Backfire on Small Businesses

When my business was sued for patent infringement, I was caught off guard. In my case, we happened to be the target of a baseless lawsuit from a larger competitor, but for many businesses in a similar situation, the lawsuit comes from a non-practicing entity (NPE).

●●●● Fortress IP entity Entropic Communications packet transmission patent reexam granted

On June 16, 2023, less than three weeks after Unified filed an ex parte reexamination, the Central Reexamination Unit (CRU) granted Unified’s request, finding substantial new questions of patentability on the challenged claim of U.S. Patent 8,228,910, owned by Entropic Communications, LLC, an NPE and a Fortress IP entity.

●●●● $2,000 for Jeffrey M. Gross entity Context Directions detection patent prior art

A new PATROLL contest, with a $2,000 cash prize, was added seeking prior art on at least claim 3 of U.S. Patent 9,807,564, owned by Context Directions LLC, a Jeffrey M. Gross entity. The ‘564 patent generally relates to a method for detecting context of a mobile device, and to a mobile device having a context detection module, especially to detect that the mobile device is located in a moving vehicle.

●●●● InterDigital patent in SISVEL AV1 pool appears not essential

As part of an ongoing series examining the patent holders and pools erroneously designating patents as essential, we highlight U.S. Patent 9,277,243 titled “Methods and apparatus for in-loop de-artifact filtering.” This patent is owned by InterDigital VC Holdings, Inc. InterDigital has designated the ’243 patent as essential to the AV1 standard as a part of SISVEL’s AV1 Patent Pool. See AV1 Patent List, AV1 Family AV1-056, available at https://www.sisvel.com/images/documents/Video-Coding-Platform/PatentList_AV1.pdf.

●●●● InterDigital video codec patent reexam granted

On June 14, 2023, less than a month after Unified filed an ex parte reexamination, the Central Reexamination Unit (CRU) granted Unified’s request, finding substantial new questions of patentability on the challenged claims of U.S. Patent 8,085,845, owned by InterDigital VC Holdings.

●●●● IP Bridge and TCL settlement pre-empts FRAND negotiation in Germany

As reported by Chinese and US magazines, the state-funded Japanese patent pool IP Bridge and Chinese electronics company TCL have concluded a global licensing agreement. This ends all current lawsuits around cellular, wireless communication and HEVC technology. IP Bridge and TCL face off In Europe, the two companies faced each other primarily in Germany.

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