In an order issued this week in IPR2019-00143, a panel of PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. judges decided that the public has no interest in ensuring that only valid patent claims issue from the Patent Office.
That’s not an exaggeration—if anything, it understates the case. In fact, the PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. order states that “the public is generally likely to benefit from claim amendments during an inter partes reviewAn adversarial procedure created by the AIA for challenging patents. Intended to be similar to a court proceeding, the parties argue before an Administrative Patent Judge, not a patent examiner. The challenger must show a reasonable likelihood of successfully invalidating one claim before the PTAB will agree to grant a petition for review..” (emphasis added). In other words, this PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. panel thinks that members of the public should be happy that the PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. is amending a claim—even if no one is challenging its validity.
ZTE and LG v. CyWee
Starting in 2014, a company called CyWee began to sue a variety of hardware manufacturers. CyWee is a subsidiary of SoftBank China and ITRI, a Taiwanese government-funded research entity that has previously spun off patents to NPEs. CyWee once made products, but may have stopped doing so, transforming into an NPENon-Practicing Entity. A broad term associated with trolls but now disfavored because it includes universities and legitimate technology developers that seek to license technology in advance rather than after a producing company has independently developed it. More in the process.
As is common when faced with patents of questionable validity asserted by an NPENon-Practicing Entity. A broad term associated with trolls but now disfavored because it includes universities and legitimate technology developers that seek to license technology in advance rather than after a producing company has independently developed it. More, where a cross-license won’t provide benefits, ZTE went to the PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. to challenge the validity of the CyWee patent. And other companies faced with litigation from CyWee filed to join the IPRs against CyWee’s patents—including, most relevantly, LG.
ZTE and CyWee Make Up
At first, ZTE actively pursued an invalidation of CyWee’s patents. But at a certain point, that began to change. CyWee proposed an amendment to its patent—and ZTE decided not to oppose that amendment.
Now, ZTE might have a very good reason for doing this—the amendment might be enough to remove the possibility that its products infringe and it might not want to spend additional money fighting this patent. In fact, ZTE openly admitted this—ZTE doesn’t expect the amended claims to impact it, and decided not to oppose in order to “limit the expense of these legal proceedings.”
There’s nothing wrong with that—ZTE should absolutely be able to step away from an IPRIntellectual Property Rights. Usually associated with formal legal rights such as patent, trademark, and copyright. Intellectual property is a broader term that encompasses knowledge, information, and data considered proprietary whether or not it is formally protected. if it no longer makes sense for it to participate actively. But it creates a real problem because of a case called Aqua Products.
Aqua Products
Before Aqua Products, the patent owner bore the burden of showing patentability for claims they wanted to add during an IPRIntellectual Property Rights. Usually associated with formal legal rights such as patent, trademark, and copyright. Intellectual property is a broader term that encompasses knowledge, information, and data considered proprietary whether or not it is formally protected.. But in Aqua Products, the Federal CircuitSee CAFC determined that the USPTO’s current rules were not permissibly enacted and that, by default, petitioners bear the burden of proving an amended claim is invalid in IPRIntellectual Property Rights. Usually associated with formal legal rights such as patent, trademark, and copyright. Intellectual property is a broader term that encompasses knowledge, information, and data considered proprietary whether or not it is formally protected.. The various opinions also set out a way in which the USPTOUnited States Patent and Trademark Office. See also PTO. could issue rules that place the burden back on the patent owner.
The USPTOUnited States Patent and Trademark Office. See also PTO. did no such thing. Instead, it issued rules to place the burden on the petitioner. The problem with that—as I identified in CCIA’s comments on the proposed rule—is that sometimes, as with ZTE, petitioners don’t have an incentive to prove the claims invalid. In that situation, the party that bears the burden of proof just gives up—and the amended claims are granted without any form of substantive opposition or examination.
That’s not ideal in any circumstance—and it’s part of why the USPTOUnited States Patent and Trademark Office. See also PTO. should have placed the burden on the patent owner. But the ZTE case goes one step further, because there’s a party who’s actively willing to provide that substantive opposition—and the PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. won’t let them.
ZTE and CyWee v. LG
Given that ZTE was not going to actively participate in opposing the amended claims, LG—already a party to the ZTE IPR—asked if it could step in and serve as the opposition.
ZTE and CyWee both argued against this. It’s obvious why CyWee would prefer to have an unopposed amendment process—it allows it to obtain claims which were never substantively examined or opposed. But it’s less clear why ZTE would actively oppose LG having a chance to oppose the amendment. LG believes that ZTE and CyWee have an agreement whereby ZTE doesn’t oppose the amended claims and CyWee provides some other benefit—allowing CyWee to obtain claims that LG wouldn’t be able to challenge in IPRIntellectual Property Rights. Usually associated with formal legal rights such as patent, trademark, and copyright. Intellectual property is a broader term that encompasses knowledge, information, and data considered proprietary whether or not it is formally protected., which could still be asserted against LG.
It’s clear why CyWee wants this. And it’s at least plausible why ZTE might be interested. But the hope was that the PTAB—serving in its role of “protect[ing] the public’s ‘paramount interest in seeing that patent monopolies … are kept within their legitimate scope’”—would allow LG to go forward with its opposition.
That didn’t happen.
The PTAB v. the Public
In a complete abdication of its statutory role, as described by the Supreme Court, the PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. panel in this case decided that ZTE—in the face of all logic—remained an “active participant” and that LG would not be permitted to argue against the proposed amendment. And to add insult to injury, the PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. did so while claiming that the public would benefit from the issuance of this unexamined amended claim.
The PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. is intended to protect the public from patent monopolies that go beyond their legitimate scope. That’s not the result this PTABPatent Trial and Appeal Board. Reviews adverse decisions of examiners on written appeals of applicants and appeals of reexaminations, and conducts inter partes reviews and post-grant reviews. The Board also continues to decide patent interferences, as it was known as the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) before the AIA. panel has ordered. Director Iancu should step in, trigger a Precedential Opinion Panel, and hold that if a party to an IPRIntellectual Property Rights. Usually associated with formal legal rights such as patent, trademark, and copyright. Intellectual property is a broader term that encompasses knowledge, information, and data considered proprietary whether or not it is formally protected. is actively willing to oppose an amendment otherwise unopposed, it is permitted to do so even if the primary petitioner remains in the case.
Or better yet, when the USPTOUnited States Patent and Trademark Office. See also PTO. issues its final rulemaking on amendment burden, Director Iancu should throw out the idea that petitioners should bear the burden and place the burden of proving patentability where policy and common sense says it should lie—on the party asking for a new patent claimThe section of a patent that describes the legal scope of the invention. Patent claims are supposed to establish the boundaries of the patentee’s entitlement to exclude. Under peripheral claiming as practiced in the U.S., claims establish the outer bounds of the patentee's privilege to exclude others. For further reading, see Burk and Lemley, Signposts or Fence Posts., the patent owner.