News / Insights
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The Fed. Cir. just created a lot of confusion in my mind when it struck down today another AI patent for failing to recite patent eligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101 in Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst. v. Amazon (nonprecedential). Obviously, this is another blow to the patent eligibility of AI after Recentive, and I’ll…
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The Fed. Cir. just issued a very interesting biotech patentable subject matter case under 35 U.S.C. § 101: REGENXBIO v. Sarepta Therapeutics. The reason why I find it interesting is because the court addressed whether the Alice/Mayo test applies to a natural phenomenon. The case involves host cells that include a recombinant nucleic acid molecule…
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The Federal Circuit today gave us some nice clarity on step one of Alice’s patentable subject matter analysis under 35 U.S.C. § 101 in GoTV Streaming v. Netflix. I plan on emphasizing this case in my articles, webinars, and speeches.
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As promised yesterday, here’s a pretty exhaustive list of abstract ideas found by the Fed. Cir. post Alice (and a few interesting legal points on step one). I don’t list duplicates. For example, I don’t list all of the variations of abstract ideas that fall under Electric Power Group. Perhaps I’ll save that for another…
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The Fed. Cir. today struck down claims directed to providing product location information within a store for failing to recite patentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101 in Innovaport v. Target (nonprecedential). This was a nice, meaty decision (unlike the one I posted about earlier today). Perhaps this is because the claims not only…
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The Fed. Cir. yesterday issued a conclusory, patentable-subject-matter opinion under 35 U.S.C. § 101: Q Technologies v. Walmart (nonprecedential). The court basically just agreed with the district court in finding the claims patent ineligible with little, if any, explanation/analysis. The lesson to be learned here is that if a contested claim can be characterized as…
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The Fed. Cir. today struck down a web-conferencing patent for failure to recite patent eligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101: US Patent No. 7,679,637 v. Google. This is not a typo; the name of the plaintiff-appellant is this patent number. Overall, there is nothing surprising in the case, but the court had a…
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Here’s an interesting patentable subject matter case under 35 U.S.C. § 101. On Friday, the Federal Circuit seemingly used Electric Power Group as its primary consideration, while downplaying claim limitations tied to technological improvements described in the specification.
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Finally, after several months, the Fed. Cir. today issued another patentable subject matter case under 35 U.S.C. § 101: Technology in Ariscale v. Razer (nonprecedential). The district court below found patent ineligible claims directed to “‘[a] computer-implemented method for decoding a transmission signal’ that comprises steps including ‘receiving,’ ‘deinterleaving,’ ‘combining,’ and ‘decoding’ the information in…
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The AIPLA’s INNOVATE Magazine just published the article I wrote for my panel discussion at the AIPLA annual meeting. It deals with patent eligibility of AI as well as avoiding problems with 112(f). Here’s a link: Subject Matter Eligibility of Artificial Intelligence and the Problems with a Functionally Drafted Patent
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