Parus Holdings, Inc.Download PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardOct 19, 2021IPR2020-00846 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 19, 2021) Copy Citation Trials@uspto.gov Paper 31 571-272-7822 Date: October 19, 2021 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ GOOGLE LLC, SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD., SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS AMERICA, INC., LG ELECTRONICS INC., and LG ELECTRONICS U.S.A., INC., Petitioner, v. PARUS HOLDINGS, INC., Patent Owner. ____________ IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 ____________ Before DAVID C. MCKONE, STACEY G. WHITE, and SHELDON M. MCGEE, Administrative Patent Judges. MCKONE, Administrative Patent Judge. JUDGMENT Final Written Decision Determining All Challenged Claims Unpatentable 35 U.S.C. § 318(a) IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 2 I. INTRODUCTION A. Background and Summary Google LLC, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., Samsung Electronics America, Inc., LG Electronics Inc., and LG Electronics U.S.A., Inc. (collectively, “Petitioner”) filed a Petition requesting an inter partes review of claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14 of U.S. Patent No. 7,076,431 B2 (Ex. 1001, “the ’431 patent”). Paper 2 (“Pet.”). Parus Holdings, Inc. (“Patent Owner”) filed a Preliminary Response to the Petition. Paper 6 (“Prelim. Resp.”). Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 314, we instituted this proceeding. Paper 9 (“Dec.”). Patent Owner filed a Patent Owner’s Response (Paper 14, “PO Resp.”), Petitioner filed a Reply to the Patent Owner’s Response (Paper 22, “Reply”), and Patent Owner filed a Sur-reply to the Reply (Paper 24, “Sur- reply”). An oral argument was held in this proceeding and IPR2020-00847 on July 27, 2021. Paper 30 (“Tr.”). We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6. This Decision is a final written decision under 35 U.S.C. § 318(a) as to the patentability of claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14. Based on the record before us, Petitioner has proved, by a preponderance of the evidence, that claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14 are unpatentable. B. Related Matters The parties identify the following district court proceedings as related to the ’431 patent: Parus Holdings Inc. v. Apple, Inc., No. 6:19-cv-00432 (W.D. Tex.); Parus Holdings Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., No. 6:19-cv-00454 (W.D. Tex.); Parus Holdings Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., No. 6:19-cv-00438 (W.D. Tex.); Parus Holdings Inc. v. Google LLC, IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 3 No. 6:19-cv-00433 (W.D. Tex.); and Parus Holdings Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc., No. 6:19-cv-00437 (W.D. Tex.). Pet. xi; Paper 5, 1. The case against LG Electronics, 6:19-cv-00437, has been transferred to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. Ex. 1032. The remaining cases have been consolidated. Ex. 2017. We refer the consolidated cases collectively as “the Texas case.” The parties also identify the following inter partes review proceedings: Apple Inc. v. Parus Holdings, Inc., IPR2020-00686 (challenging the ’431 patent) and Apple Inc. v. Parus Holdings, Inc., IPR2020-00687 (challenging U.S. Patent No. 9,451,084 (“the ’084 patent”)) (“the Apple IPRs”); and Google LLC v. Parus Holdings, Inc., IPR2020- 00847 (challenging the ’084 patent). Pet. xii–xiii; Paper 5, 1–2. C. The ’431 Patent The ’431 patent describes a system that allows users to browse web sites and retrieve information using conversational voice commands. Ex. 1001, 1:20–23. Figure 1, reproduced below, illustrates an example: IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 4 Figure 1 is a block diagram of a voice browsing system. Id. at 4:16–17. Figure 3, reproduced below, shows additional details of media server 106, a component shown in Figure 1: IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 5 Figure 3 is a block diagram of Figure 1’s media server 106. Id. at 4:20–21. Media server 106 includes speech recognition engine 300, speech synthesis engine 302, Interactive Voice Response (IVR) application 304, call processing system 306, and telephony and voice hardware 308 to communicate with Public Switched Telephone Network (PTSN) 116. Id. at IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 6 5:62–6:1. When a user speaks into voice enabled device 112 (e.g., a wireline or wireless telephone), speech recognition engine 300 converts voice commands into data messages. Id. at 6:4–8. Media server 106 uses results (e.g., keywords) generated by speech recognition engine 300 to retrieve web site record 200 stored in database 100 that can provide the information requested by the user. Id. at 6:44–50. Media server 106 selects the web site record of highest rank and transmits it to web browsing server 102 along with an identifier indicating what information is being requested. Id. at 6:52–56. Speech synthesis engine converts the data retrieved by web browsing server 102 into audio messages that are transmitted to voice enabled device 112. Id. at 6:57–60. According to the ’431 patent, with its system, [u]sers are not required to learn a special language or command set in order to communicate with the voice browsing system of the present invention. Common and ordinary commands and phrases are all that is required for a user to operate the voice browsing system. The voice browsing system recognizes naturally spoken voice commands and is speaker-independent; it does not have to be trained to recognize the voice patterns of each individual user. Such speech recognition systems use phonemes to recognize spoken words and not predefined voice patterns. Id. at 4:34–43. Claim 1, reproduced below (bracketed numbering added to track the numbering used in the Petition), is illustrative of the invention: 1. A system for retrieving information from pre-selected web sites by uttering speech commands into a voice enabled device and for providing to users retrieved information in an audio form via said voice enabled device, said system comprising: IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 7 [1a] a computer, said computer operatively connected to the internet; [1b] a voice enabled device operatively connected to said computer, said voice enabled device configured to receive speech commands from users; [1c] at least one speaker-independent speech recognition device, said speaker-independent speech recognition device operatively connected to said computer and to said voice enabled device; [1d] at least one speech synthesis device, said speech synthesis device operatively connected to said computer and to said voice enabled device; [1e] at least one instruction set for identifying said information to be retrieved, said instruction set being associated with said computer, said instruction set comprising: a plurality of pre-selected web site addresses, each said web site address identifying a web site containing said information to be retrieved; [1f] at least one recognition grammar associated with said computer, each said recognition grammar corresponding to each said instruction set and corresponding to a speech command; said speech command comprising an information request selectable by the user; [1g] said speaker-independent speech recognition device configured to receive from users via said voice enabled device said speech command and to select the corresponding recognition grammar upon receiving said speech command; [1h] said computer configured to retrieve said instruction set corresponding to said recognition grammar selected by said speaker-independent speech recognition device; IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 8 [1i] said computer further configured to access at least one of said plurality of web sites identified by said instruction set to obtain said information to be retrieved, [1j] said computer configured to first access said first web site of said plurality of web sites and, if said information to be retrieved is not found at said first web site, said computer configured to sequentially access said plurality of web sites until said information to be retrieved is found or until said plurality of web sites has been accessed; [1k] said speech synthesis device configured to produce an audio message containing any retrieved information from said pre-selected web sites, and said speech synthesis device further configured to transmit said audio message to said users via said voice enabled device. D. Evidence Petitioner relies on the references listed below. Reference Date Exhibit No. Kovatch WO 01/50453 A2 July 12, 2001 1005 Neal US 6,324,534 B1 Nov. 27, 2001 1007 Chakrabarti US 6,418,433 B1 July 9, 2002 1008 DeSimone US 5,787,470 July 28, 1998 1009 Kurganov-262 US 2001/0047262 A1 Nov. 29, 2001 1004 Petitioner also relies on the Declaration of Stuart J. Lipoff (Ex. 1002), the Declaration of Martin Walker (Ex. 1053), and the Reply Declaration of Mr. Lipoff (Ex. 1057). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 9 Patent Owner relies on the Declaration of Alexander Kurganov (Ex. 2020), the Declaration of Benedict Occhiogrosso (Ex. 2059), and the Declaration of Paul Mulka (Ex. 2060). E. The Instituted Grounds of Unpatentability Claim(s) Challenged 35 U.S.C. § References/Basis 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, 14 103(a)1 Kovatch, Neal 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal, DeSimone 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti, DeSimone 9 103(a) Kurganov-262, Chakrabarti 14 103(a) Kurganov-262, DeSimone2 II. ANALYSIS A. Claim Construction For petitions filed after November 13, 2018, we construe claims “using the same claim construction standard that would be used to construe the claim in a civil action under 35 U.S.C. 282(b), including construing the claim in accordance with the ordinary and customary meaning of such claim as understood by one of ordinary skill in the art and the prosecution history pertaining to the patent.” 37 C.F.R. § 42.100(b) (2019); see also Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc). 1 The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (“AIA”), Pub. L. No. 112-29, 125 Stat. 284, 287–88 (2011), amended 35 U.S.C. § 103. Because the ’431 patent was filed before March 16, 2013, the effective date of the relevant amendment, the pre-AIA version of § 103 applies. 2 In its listing of grounds, Petitioner includes Chakrabarti in its combination with Kurganov-262 and DeSimone. Pet. 2. This appears to be a typographical error, as Petitioner’s analysis of claim 14 includes only Kurganov-262 and DeSimone. Id. at 63–68. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 10 In the Petition, Petitioner contended that we should give the claim terms their plain and ordinary meaning, and did not identify any claim term for construction. Pet. 6. In its Response, “Patent Owner relies upon no specialized meanings or disclaimers.” PO Resp. 18. Based on the record before us, we do not find it necessary to provide express claim constructions for any terms. See Nidec Motor Corp. v. Zhongshan Broad Ocean Motor Co., 868 F.3d 1013, 1017 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (noting that “we need only construe terms ‘that are in controversy, and only to the extent necessary to resolve the controversy’”) (quoting Vivid Techs., Inc. v. Am. Sci. & Eng’g, Inc., 200 F.3d 795, 803 (Fed. Cir. 1999)). In the Institution Decision (Dec. 27–28), we noted that the District Court in the Texas case provided the following constructions (Ex. 2016, 2): Claim(s) Term Texas Court’s Construction 1 “voice enabled device” Plain and ordinary meaning, where the plain and ordinary meaning is not limited to wireline or wireless telephone, IP phone, wireless PDA, or other wireless device, and where the voice enabled device contains an audio input (e.g., a microphone) 1, 5, 6 “speaker-independent speech recognition device” “speech recognition device that recognizes spoken words without adapting to individual speakers or using predefined voice patterns” 1 “recognition grammar” “the words, phrases, and/or sounds a user can say that will be recognized by the speech recognition engine” IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 11 Claim(s) Term Texas Court’s Construction 1, 7, 9, 10, 13, 14 “web site” Plain and ordinary meaning 1 “select the corresponding recognition grammar upon receiving [said/the] speech command” Plain and ordinary meaning 1 “instruction set for identifying [said/the] information to be retrieved” Not subject to § 112, ¶ 6. Plain and ordinary meaning 1 “access at least one of [said/the] plurality of web sites identified by [said/the] instruction set to obtain [said/the] information to be retrieved” Plain and ordinary meaning 1 “said computer configured to first access said first web site of said plurality of web sites and, if said information to be retrieved is not found at said first web site, said computer configured to sequentially access said plurality of web sites until said information to be retrieved is found or until said plurality of web sites has been accessed” Not subject to § 112, ¶ 6. Plain and ordinary meaning Similar to what we observed in the Institution Decision (Dec. 28), we see nothing inconsistent between these constructions and our analysis of the claims, below. Nevertheless, neither party contends that these constructions have any bearing on our application of the claims to the prior art. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 12 B. Patent Owner’s Earlier Conception and Reduction to Practice Arguments are Improperly Incorporated by Reference and Will Not Be Considered Patent Owner contends that the inventors of the ’431 patent conceived of their invention before January 4, 2000, the filing date of U.S. Prov. No. 60/174,371 (Ex. 1006), the provisional application to which Kovatch claims the benefit. PO Resp. 31; see also Ex. 1005, code (30). “Conception is the formation, in the mind of the inventor, of a definite and permanent idea of the complete and operative invention, as it is thereafter to be applied in practice.” Cooper v. Goldfarb, 154 F.3d 1321, 1327 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (citing Hybritech Inc. v. Monoclonal Antibodies, Inc., 802 F.2d 1367, 1376 (Fed. Cir. 1986)). “A reduction to practice can be either a constructive reduction to practice, which occurs when a patent application is filed, or an actual reduction to practice.” Id. (citing Hybritech, 802 F.2d at 1376). “In order to establish an actual reduction to practice, the inventor must prove that: (1) he constructed an embodiment or performed a process that met all the limitations of the [claim]; and (2) he determined that the invention would work for its intended purpose.” Id. “Where a party is first to conceive but second to reduce to practice, that party must demonstrate reasonable diligence toward reduction to practice from a date just prior to the other party’s conception to its reduction to practice.” Mahurkar v. C.R. Bard, Inc., 79 F.3d 1572, 1578 (Fed. Cir. 1996). “In an inter partes review, the burden of persuasion is on the petitioner to prove ‘unpatentability by a preponderance of the evidence,’ 35 U.S.C. § 316(e), and that burden never shifts to the patentee.” Dynamic Drinkware, LLC v. National Graphics, Inc., 800 F.3d 1375, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2015). Petitioner also bears an initial burden of production to go forward IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 13 with prior art that would render the challenged claims obvious. Id. at 1379. Petitioner has met that burden by providing detailed allegations that Kovatch and Neal (and for claim 9, Chakrabarti) teach each limitation of the challenged claims and that an ordinarily skilled artisan would have been motivated to combine teachings of the prior art and would have reasonably expected success doing so. Pet. 6–44. The burden of production then shifted to Patent Owner to argue or produce evidence that Kovatch is not prior art. See Dynamic Drinkware, 800 F.3d at 1380; see also In re Magnum Oil Tools Int’l, Ltd., 829 F.3d 1364, 1375–76 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“In Dynamic Drinkware, we noted that, in the context of establishing conception and reduction to practice for the purposes of establishing a priority date, the burden of production can shift from the patent challenger to the patentee. 800 F.3d at 1379. This is because a patent challenger has the burden of producing evidence to support a conclusion of unpatentability under § 102 or § 103, but a patentee bears the burden of establishing that its claimed invention is entitled to an earlier priority date than an asserted prior art reference.”); Mahurkar, 79 F.3d at 1577 (“Had Dr. Mahurkar not come forward with evidence of an earlier date of invention, the Cook catalog would have been anticipatory prior art under section 102(a) because Dr. Mahurkar’s invention date would have been the filing date of his patent.”). Patent Owner alleges, without meaningful explanation in the Response, that the inventors conceived of their invention no later than July 12, 1999, and reduced it to practice in a prototype no later than December 31, 1999. PO Resp. 31–32. Patent Owner avers generally to “time-stamped source code, emails, documents, and the testimony of Paul Mulka and Benedict Occhiogrosso” as evidence that corroborates testimony IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 14 of Alexander Kurganov, but does not cite to any such evidence or testimony with specificity. Id. Patent Owner further alleges that, to the extent reduction to practice is found in a prototype supported by computer source code dated January 7, 2000, the inventors worked diligently between January 4 and January 7. Id. at 32. In support of this argument, Patent Owner cites generally to large portions of its supporting declarations. Id. (citing Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 103–119; Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 44–91; Ex. 2060 ¶¶ 1–6). According to Patent Owner, it “relies on the source code revision logs and emails, as well as the testimony of Paul Mulka,” which “shows that from December 1999 to early January 2000, the inventors were employed full-time on the Webley Assistant project, and every file, or file modification they committed to the source code revision system, was for the Webley Assistant project.” Id. at 33. Patent Owner further argues that “[t]his activity logged in the source code revision system was directed toward and reasonably necessary for a reduction to practice.” Id. In the Response, Patent Owner does not cite to any evidence with specificity to support these arguments. Patent Owner further argues that “all of the diligence activity here by the inventors was related to the claimed subject matter and other enhancements to the voice browser in which the claimed subject matter operated.” Id. at 34 (citing generally to Ex. 2058; Ex. 2060). Patent Owner concludes that “the source code revision logs shows that the activity during the diligence period was directed toward and reasonably necessary for a reduction to practice,” but does not explain the basis for this conclusion or cite to any evidence to support it. Id. According to our rules, “[a]rguments must not be incorporated by reference from one document into another document.” 37 C.F.R. § 42.6(a)(3). For example, the Board has explained that “parties that IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 15 incorporate expert testimony by reference in their petitions, motions, or replies without providing explanation of such testimony risk having the testimony not considered by the Board.” Patent Trial and Appeal Board Consolidated Trial Practice Guide 35–36 (November 2019) (“TPG”)3 (citing Cisco Systems, Inc. v. C-Cation Techs., LLC, IPR2014-00454 (PTAB Aug. 29, 2014) (Paper 12) (informative)). Petitioner argues that the case made in Patent Owner’s Response is “conclusory in fashion,” “does not [] identify particular exhibits where the ‘source code’ and unidentified ‘documents’ can be found, and never explains the relevance of any evidence or how it maps to any challenged claim.” Reply 1. Instead, Petitioner argues, Patent Owner “improperly seeks to make its antedating case in pages of block-cited argument provided in non- word-count-limited declarations which cannot be incorporated by reference into the” PO Response. Id. In support of its argument, Petitioner cites to the Federal Circuit’s non-precedential case, General Access Solutions, Ltd. v. Sprint Spectrum L.P., 811 Fed. Appx. 654 (Fed. Cir. 2020). In General Access, the Federal Circuit affirmed a Board decision declining to consider arguments on prior conception when those arguments were not substantively presented in the patent owner’s briefing and, instead, merely directed the Board to arguments and evidence presented in an inventor declaration and attached claim charts. Gen. Access, 811 Fed. Appx. at 656–57. The Federal Circuit noted the “policy goals” of our rule prohibiting such incorporation by reference, including minimizing overlooked arguments, eliminating abuse, and avoiding situations where the Board is “forced to ‘play archeologist with the record’ and search for 3 Available at https://www.uspto.gov/TrialPracticeGuideConsolidated. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 16 arguments that might have made outside of the parties’ briefing.” Id. at 657 (quoting Rules of Practice for Trials Before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board and Judicial Review of Patent Trial and Appeal Board Decisions, 77 Fed. Reg. 48,612, 48,617 (Aug. 14, 2012)). The Federal Circuit explained that the patent owner “had to present a case to establish prior conception of every claim limitation,” and that patent owner’s “briefing failed to meet this burden.” Id. at 658. We determine that Patent Owner has not presented its arguments regarding prior conception and reduction to practice in its Response or Sur- reply; rather, Patent Owner presents its arguments in several declarations and improperly incorporates those arguments by reference into its Response and Sur-reply, in violation of Rule 42.6(a)(3). See, e.g., PO Resp. 32 (citing Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 44–91; Ex. 2060 ¶¶ 1–6; Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 103–119). As to conception, the Patent Owner Response includes two paragraphs making a conclusory allegation, without specificity, that the named inventors conceived of “the claimed subject matter” while working on a system named “the Webley Assistant.” PO Resp. 31–32. Patent Owner cites to a single paragraph of Mr. Kurganov’s Declaration, without explaining its relevance. Id. (citing Ex. 2020 ¶ 13). Patent Owner argues that Mr. Kurganov’s testimony regarding a conception date of July 12, 1999, is “corroborated by the time-stamped source code, emails, documents, and the testimony of Paul Mulka and Benedict Occhiogrosso.” Id. at 31–32. Patent Owner does not cite to any of this evidence with specificity. Patent Owner’s Response does not attempt to map any evidence to any limitation of any claim of the ’431 patent. Nor does the Response point to where such argument and evidence might be found, in declarations or otherwise. Rather, Patent Owner invites IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 17 us to read the Kurganov, Mulka, and Occhiogrosso declarations and construct for ourselves a case for conception of ten claims. In the Sur-reply, to rebut Petitioner’s arguments that Patent Owner had not met its burden of production in the PO Response, Patent Owner argues that “[i]n its[] antedating materials, Parus included claim charts that used excerpts of the source code to demonstrate exactly which parts of the source code met the claim limitations in claim charts and included the entire source code files for Petitioners’ inspection.” Sur-reply 2–3. The Patent Owner Response does not reference any claim charts. Indeed, the Sur-reply does not indicate where, in the record, the claim charts can be found. Although none of Patent Owner’s briefing indicates what “antedating materials” include such claim charts, both the Kurganov Declaration and the Occhiogrosso Declaration appear to provide element-by-element comparison of aspects of the alleged Webley Assistant to claims of the ’431 patent, and Mr. Kurganov’s declaration references Exhibits 2027 and 2028, one of which, Exhibit 2027, appears to be a claim chart mapping claims of the ’431 patent to the Webley System. See Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 21–83; Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 47–69; Ex. 2027; Ex. 2028. Although Patent Owner has not been specific, these materials appear to be Patent Owner’s arguments explaining the correspondence of the evidence to the limitations of the claims. Thus, Patent Owner seeks to incorporate at least 84 paragraphs (46 pages) of argument from declarations and 50 pages of claim charts into the Response and/or the Sur-reply to support its allegations of prior conception. This is improper under Rule 42.6(a)(3), and Patent Owner’s arguments regarding prior conception will be disregarded. As to reduction to practice, Patent Owner argues that “[t]he evidence produced in Mr. Kurganov’s declaration, along with the accompanying IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 18 exhibits, demonstrate that the enhancements to the Webley Assistant reduced the ’431 and ’084 inventions to practice in a prototype no later than December 31, 1999, five days before Kovatch’s earliest filing date of January 4, 2000.” PO Resp. 32. Patent Owner does not further explain this contention or cite to any evidence to support it. As an alternative, Patent Owner contends that the invention was reduced to practice in a prototype on January 7, 2000, when a “grammar file was entered into the source code revision system.” Id. Patent Owner provides no further explanation. Instead, Patent Owner cites generally to the Occhiogrosso, Mulka, and Kurganov declarations. Id. (citing Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 44–91; Ex. 2060 ¶¶ 1–6; Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 103–119). Even here, it is not clear whether Patent Owner cites to these declarations to support its reduction to practice argument or to show diligence between Kovatch’s January 4, 2000, date and January 7, 2000. Id. Petitioner responds that Patent Owner has not made its case for reduction to practice in its Response, opting instead to incorporate its arguments by reference to multiple declarations, claim charts, and other evidence. Reply 3–5. Petitioner also provides argument as to specific deficiencies in the evidence, should we consider the declarations, claim charts, source code, and emails in the record not addressed with specificity in the Response. Id. at 5–12. As to Petitioner’s arguments in the Reply that Patent Owner did not support its reduction to practice case in the Response, Patent Owner argues that it “included extensive source code versioning records to demonstrate that the versions of the source code that Parus cites, were in fact entered into the source code versioning system by 12/31/1999.” Sur-reply 3. Patent Owner does not provide a citation to support this argument. Later, Patent IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 19 Owner argues that “Mr. Mulka pulled the source code commits out of the source code versioning system while creating a detailed report of activity in the source code revision system,” and that “[e]ach of the entries in this report demonstrated that the files were indeed committed to the system by the relevant date.” Id. (citing Ex. 2058). Patent Owner provides no further explanation of Mr. Mulka’s testimony or the activity log of Exhibit 2058, which may or may not be the “Exhibit A” referenced in, but not attached to, Mr. Mulka’s declaration. Ex. 2060 ¶ 6 (referencing “CVS records between December 1, 1999 and January 10, 2000 (attached as Exhibit A)”). Similarly, Patent Owner argues, without citation, that it “provided email communication that showed that the system was complete.” Sur-reply 3. As noted above, Patent Owner must introduce evidence that the constructed embodiment met all the limitations of the claims at issue. See Cooper, 154 F.3d at 1327. In the Sur-reply, Patent Owner argues that its evidence demonstrates such an embodiment, but does not explain where this is shown. Sur-reply 5–10. Rather, the Sur-reply contains empty assertions, without citation, that “the source code alone is an actual reduction to practice of the claimed invention”; “Parus provides source code that defines the functionality of the system, and need not be synthesized into a physical embodiment, in addition to the claimed computer making up an actual reduction of practice of the system of the claims of the ’431 and ’084 patents”; and “[t]he evidence demonstrates an embodiment having a computer meeting all claimed limitations, contrary to Petitioners’ assertions.” Id. at 5–7. Patent Owner argues that “Mr. Kurganov’s testimony and the evidence presented demonstrate that the claimed computer was embodied by a UNIX cluster of servers that was used to provide Parus’s Webley Assistant product.” Id. at 7 (citing Ex. 2020 ¶ 14; Ex. 2025). In the IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 20 cited testimony, Mr. Kurganov testifies that source code of the first version of the Webley Assistant was implemented on a UNIX cluster of servers, but says nothing of the later Webley Assistant that appears to be the basis of Patent Owner’s allegations of reduction to practice.4 Ex. 2020 ¶ 14. In any case, Mr. Kurganov does not testify here regarding any claims of the ’431 patent. Patent Owner then argues that “Mr. Kurganov makes this clear in his declaration as well in his deposition testimony and email communications that the system was operational.” Sur-reply 7. Here, Patent Owner cites, without specificity, to 80 paragraphs of declaration testimony and 36 email and source code exhibits. Id. (citing Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 20–102; Exs. 2021–2057; Ex. 1050, 21:17–22:8, 32:17–23)). This is another example of improper incorporation by reference, and Patent Owner’s assertions of reduction to practice will be disregarded. As noted above, as part of its showing for an actual reduction to practice, Patent Owner must introduce evidence that the invention worked for its intended purpose. See Cooper, 154 F.3d at 1327. Patent Owner did not contend in its Response that the invention allegedly reduced to practice 4 To show conception and reduction to practice, Patent Owner appears to rely on a later version of the Webley Assistant, namely, “the WA-II enhancements, which embody the Challenged claims.” Sur-reply 4. Patent Owner does not explain the relevance of the earlier first version of the Webley Assistant, “WA I,” discussed in Mr. Kurganov’s declaration (Ex. 2020 ¶ 14). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 21 worked for its intended purpose. Petitioner pointed this out in the Reply. Reply 13–15.5 Responding to Petitioner, Patent Owner argues that Mr. Mulka authenticated unspecified source code files and that “Mr. Kurganov recognized the files and detailed how they demonstrated that the code functioned for its intended purpose.” Sur-reply 3. Here, Patent Owner cites generally to the entirety of Mr. Kurganov’s declaration (Ex. 2020), as well as the claim charts of Exhibits 2027 and 2028. Id. Patent Owner continues, arguing that “Mr. Occhiogrosso examined Mr. Kurganov’s declaration and his exhibits and testified as a [person of ordinary skill in the art] that the source code worked as Mr. Kurganov testified.” Id. at 4 (citing Ex. 2059, ¶¶ 44–91). Patent Owner does not provide further explanation or argument; rather, the detailed explanation of the evidence is contained in Mr. Occhiogrosso’s declaration rather than the Response or Sur-reply. This is an improper incorporation of over 150 paragraphs of argument from two declarations, as well as over 50 pages of claim charts. 5 Patent Owner argues in several instances that Petitioner has not proved that the Webley System or source code did not work. See, e.g., Sur-reply 4 (“At his deposition, Petitioners did not challenge Mr. Kurganov’s testimony related to the functionality of the produced source code. (Ex. 1050). Parus asked Petitioners’ expert, Dr. Martin Walker, if the code did not work for its intended purpose, and Dr. Walker indicated that he did not form an opinion as to whether the code functioned for its intended purpose.”), 8 (“The source code identified by Mr. Kurganov shows conclusively that the embodiment of the invention memorialized by the source code operated for its intended purpose. Petitioners do not even challenge that showing.”), 8 (“Petitioners identify absolutely no error in the source code or alleged failure in the operation of the source code.”). This misstates the respective burdens. Petitioner need not introduce evidence or attempt to disprove Patent Owner’s evidence until Patent Owner has introduced that evidence properly. Magnum Oil Tools, 829 F.3d at 1375–76. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 22 Patent Owner also argues that “Mr. Kurganov makes [] clear in his declaration as well in his deposition testimony and email communications that the system was operational.” Id. at 7 (citing Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 20–102; Exs. 2021–2057; Ex. 1050, 21:17–22:8, 32:17–23). The explanation of the applicability of this evidence to the claims is in Mr. Kurganov’s declaration rather than the Response or the Sur-reply. Id. at 8 (“Mr. Kurganov provided evidence that walked through each source code file highlighting where the claimed functionality of the ’431 . . . patent[] could be found in the code.”). This is another improper incorporation by reference of at least 80 paragraphs of argument from a declaration. Patent Owner further argues that “Parus demonstrated the system worked for its intended purpose,” and gave as examples that “Parus provided an inventor declaration, exhibits, and associated source code that delineated how the claimed system functioned for its intended purpose and practiced the various elements of the Challenged Claims,” and concluded that “Mr. Kurganov’s testimony regarding the source code, emails between Mr. Kurganov and Mr. Zhukov, and a press release, all included in Mr. Kurganov’s declaration, demonstrate a working embodiment.” Sur- reply 12. Here, Patent Owner cites generally to Mr. Kurganov’s declaration, the claim charts of Exhibits 2027 and 2028, and 34 source code and email files. Id. (citing Exs. 2020, 2027, 2028, 2021–2026, 2029–2057). Patent Owner then argues that Mr. Kurganov testifies in his declaration as to work with Mr. Zhukov on “web agents,” but does not explain that work or its relevance to the claims in detail. Id. at 12–13 (citing Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 12, 112– 119; Exs. 1053, 2044, 2050, 2056; Ex. 2061, 41:24–42:15 (Walker deposition)). Once again, any specific argument explaining the relevance of Patent Owner’s evidence is in Patent Owner’s declarations, which Patent IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 23 Owner attempts to incorporate by reference improperly. Patent Owners’ assertions that its invention worked for its intended purpose will be disregarded. As to diligence from a time before Kovatch’s priority date until the alleged reduction to practice, Patent Owner argues that “[f]ollowing conception, the inventors were reasonably and continuously diligent as the Webley Assistant enhancements was the only project they were working on at Webley and they were employed full-time.” PO Resp. 32. Presumably, here, Petitioner refers to its contended July 12, 1999, conception date and December 31, 1999, reduction to practice date. Id. Patent Owner does not cite any evidence to support its diligence argument. Id. Here, Patent Owner cites broadly to the Occhiogrosso, Mulka, and Kurganov declarations. Id. (citing Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 44–91; Ex. 2060 ¶¶ 1–6; Ex. 2020 ¶¶ 103–119). As noted above, it is not clear whether these citations are intended to support Patent Owner’s reduction to practice or diligence contentions. Limiting the “diligence period” to January 4, 2000, to January 7, 2000, Patent Owner “relies on the source code revision logs and emails, as well as the testimony of Paul Mulka,” and argues that “[t]he source code revision logs and Paul Mulka’s testimony shows that from December 1999 to early January 2000, the inventors were employed full-time on the Webley Assistant project, and every file, or file modification they committed to the source code revision system, was for the Webley Assistant project.” PO Resp. 33. Patent Owner argues that “all of the diligence activity here by the inventors was related to the claimed subject matter and other enhancements to the voice browser in which the claimed subject matter operated.” Id. at 33–34 (citing Ex. 2058; Ex. 2060). Patent Owner does not cite to Mr. Mulka’s declaration, revision logs, or emails with specificity and does IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 24 not provide further explanation of the testimony or other evidence. The Patent Owner Response does not meet Patent Owner’s burden to introduce evidence of diligence. The case in Patent Owner’s Sur-reply is not any better. Patent Owner argues that “Mr. Mulka created a detailed report of activity in the source code revision system demonstrating that Mr. Kurganov and Mr. Zhukov worked full time and consistently on the WA-II enhancements, which embody the Challenged Claims for at least a month and a half before the effective date of Kovatch.” Sur-reply 4. Here, Patent Owner provides no citation to or explanation of Mr. Mulka’s report. This is simply an invitation for us to play archeologist with the record, an invitation that we decline. We note that, at the oral argument, Patent Owner argued that it followed the briefing strategy of the patent owner in LG Electronics, Inc. v. ATI Technologies ULC, IPR2015-00325, including simply referencing in the briefing detailed element-by-element analysis performed in declarations. Tr. 45:23–46:14, 50:26–52:13. Patent Owner argues that this approach was affirmed by the Federal Circuit. Id. at 46:6–8, 52:2–7. We do not agree that LG Electronics supports Patent Owner’s position. It does not appear that the petitioner in that case objected to the manner in which the patent owner presented its evidence and argument, and the panel did not express any views on whether it was appropriate under Rule 42.6(a)(3). IPR2015-00325, Paper 62 at 14–53 (PTAB Apr. 14, 2016). In reviewing the LG Electronics decision, the Federal Circuit did not comment on whether the presentation of the evidence was appropriate under our rules. See ATI Techs. ULC v. Iancu, 920 F.3d 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2019). Thus, we see nothing in the LG Electronics case suggesting that Patent IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 25 Owner’s presentation of its arguments and evidence via declaration rather than in its Response is appropriate under Rule 42.6(a)(3). Patent Owner, by presenting its arguments and evidence in the form of declarations, rather than by including the arguments in its Response and Sur- reply, has not complied with Rule 42.6(a)(3). Thus, we disregard Patent Owner’s arguments that the inventors conceived of and reduced to practice the invention claimed in the ’431 patent prior to the earliest priority date of Kovatch. See 37 C.F.R. § 42.6(a)(3); TPG at 35–36; Gen. Access, 811 Fed. Appx. at 656–57. We conclude that Kovatch is prior art to the ’431 patent.6 C. Obviousness of Claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 over Kovatch and Neal Petitioner contends that claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch and Neal. Pet. 6–39. For the reasons given below, Petitioner has made a sufficient showing. A claim is unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103 if the differences between the claimed subject matter and the prior art are “such that the claimed invention as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which the claimed invention pertains.” We resolve the question of obviousness on the 6 Petitioner contends that Kovatch is prior art under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) by virtue of its claim of the benefit of U.S. Prov. No. 60/174,371 (Ex. 1006). Pet. 8–12. Patent Owner does not contest that Kovatch is prior art as of the filing date of the provisional application. We have analyzed Petitioner’s contentions and, on the complete record, agree that at least claim 1 of Kovatch is supported by the Kovatch Provisional. Accordingly, we agree that Kovatch is entitled to the benefit of the Kovatch Provisional and, therefore, is prior art to the ’431 patent. See Dynamic Drinkware, 800 F.3d at 1381; Amgen Inc. v. Sanofi, 872 F.3d 1367, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2017). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 26 basis of underlying factual determinations, including (1) the scope and content of the prior art; (2) any differences between the claimed subject matter and the prior art; (3) the level of skill in the art; and (4) objective evidence of nonobviousness, i.e., secondary considerations.7 See Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 17–18 (1966). 1. Level of Skill in the Art The level of skill in the art is a factual determination that provides a primary guarantee of objectivity in an obviousness analysis. See Al-Site Corp. v. VSI Int’l Inc., 174 F.3d 1308, 1324 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citing Graham, 383 U.S. at 17–18 (1966); Ryko Mfg. Co. v. Nu-Star, Inc., 950 F.2d 714, 718 (Fed. Cir. 1991)). Generally, it is easier to establish obviousness under a higher level of ordinary skill in the art. See Innovention Toys, LLC v. MGA Entm’t, Inc., 637 F.3d 1314, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (“A less sophisticated level of skill generally favors a determination of nonobviousness . . . while a higher level of skill favors the reverse.”). Petitioner, relying on the testimony of Mr. Lipoff, contends that a person of ordinary skill in the art “would have had a Bachelor’s Degree in electrical engineering, computer science or a related field, and at least two years of experience with voice interfaces and information processing,” and that “[m]ore education could substitute for less experience, and vice versa.” Pet. 5 (citing Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 41–48). Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s proposal or offer an alternative. On the complete record, we are persuaded that Petitioner’s proposal is consistent with the technology 7 The complete record does not include allegations or evidence of objective indicia of nonobviousness. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 27 described in the Specification and the cited prior art and adopt Petitioner’s proposed level of skill. 2. Scope and Content of the Prior Art a) Overview of Kovatch Kovatch describes an interactive voice response system for accessing information from a computer network via remote telephony devices. Ex. 1005, 1:10–12. The interactive voice response system analyzes utterances spoken by users and matches the utterances with an index of destinations. Id. at 4:25–26. The system produces a list of valid destinations and guides the user along a path with pre-recorded voice prompts. Id. at 4:26–27. The user accessing the system navigates using speech and/or telephone keypad entry. Id. at 4:28–29. Kovatch describes the system in reference to a commercial system, “HeyAnita” or “Anita.” Id. at 5:25–27. The “Anita” server architecture is illustrated in Figure 1, reproduced below. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 28 Figure 1 is a schematic representation of the “Anita” server architecture. Id. at 6:16. Anita server 120 is a fault-tolerant, multi-threaded NT service. Id. at 14:14–16. It includes Anita speech recognition engine 2 that translates spoken utterances to a set of text phrases (id. at 14:28–30); Anita natural language engine 3 that converts natural language sentences to a set of structured commands (id. at 15:1–3); Anita query engine 4 that maps commands to web queries (id. at 15:9–11, 17:31–32); and Anita web parser 8 that browses Internet/Web 11 to retrieve information based on the web queries (id. at 18:1–2). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 29 Figure 2 is reproduced below: Figure 2 is a schematic representation of the logical structure of the Anita server 120. Id. at 6:18. Anita server 120 consists of three logical servers: Anita phone server 20 implements a computer telephony interface using, inter alia, Anita telephone interface 1, Anita speech recognition engine 2, and Anita prompt generator 6 to connect digital lines to accept calls (id. at 18:30–32); Anita application server 30 implements applications using, inter alia, Anita natural language engine 3, Anita query engine 4, and Anita web parser 8 (id. at 19:1–3); and Anita database server 40 implements Anita repository database 7 (id. at 19:10). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 30 Kovatch discloses that information is organized in a “tree” structure 140 as shown in Figure 4, reproduced below: Figure 4 is a block diagram of a tree structure that exemplifies how clarification questions would be asked while narrowing down a search. Id. at 6:23–24, 22:27–29. b) Overview of Neal Neal describes a system and method for cascading search methodologies on preselected segments, or sets, of data. Ex. 1007, 3:25–27. Each data set is paired with one or more search strategies so that the overall effect is to supply the user with the most advantageous match to a keyword search. Id. at 3:27–29. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 31 Figure 2 is reproduced below: Figure 2 is a logic block diagram representation of a sequential search methodology. Id. at 5:12–14. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 32 In the sequential search of Figure 2, a user inputs a search string (block 202), e.g., “the name of an item, a part number for an item, or any descriptive attribute of the item.” Id. at 6:23–30. At block 206, a search methodology (e.g., “exact string search”) is applied to a first data set. Id. at 6:34–40. If the first data set represents a first (“preferred”) supplier, and the first supplier has an exact item that matches the search string, a match is recognized and the results of the match are reported to the user (block 236) and the algorithm terminates (block 226). Id. at 6:40–44. If the first search methodology does not yield a match, the algorithm 200 proceeds to a second search strategy with a second data set and second search methodology (block 210). Id. at 6:48–51. The second data set might be the same as the first (e.g., same supplier) or it might be different (a second supplier). Id. at 6:51–58. Similarly, there second search methodology may be the same as the first search methodology. Id. at 6:59–61. If the second search strategy fails to yield a match, the algorithm 200 continues with a third search strategy (block 214), and so on. Id. at 7:8–11. If the search fails to identify the desired item from any data set, the algorithm proceeds to block 222, where a negative search result is reported to the user. Id. at 7:29–33. 3. Claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14, Differences Between the Claimed Subject Matter and Kovatch and Neal; Reasons to Modify or Combine a) Preamble of claim 1 and limitations 1a–1i and 1k Regarding the preamble of claim 1, Petitioner contends that Kovatch’s HeyAnita system (“a system for retrieving information from pre-selected web sites”) matches information requests with an index of destinations IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 33 (“web sites”) in response to a user speaking into a telephone (a “voice enabled device”) and translates information retrieved from the web sites into speech to play back to the user via the telephone (“providing to users retrieved information in an audio form via said voice enabled device”). Pet. 16–18 (citing Ex. 1005, 4:25–27, 13:23–14:8, 14:18–24, 15:26–34, 16:21, 17:28–32, 18:1–3, 18:13–15, 18:28–32, 20:9–12, 28:17–18; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 107–116). Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s allegations for claim 1’s preamble. We find, on the basis of Petitioner’s evidence, including the disclosure of Kovatch and the credible testimony of Mr. Lipoff, that Kovatch teaches the preamble of claim 1. Petitioner maps Kovatch’s Anita Server to the “computer” of claim limitation 1a and telephone 15 to the “voice enabled device operatively connected to said computer” and “configured to receive speech commands from users” of claim limitation 1b. Id. at 18–19 (citing Ex. 1005, 14:11–24, 18:18–19:6, 19:31; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 117–121). Petitioner further contends that Kovatch’s Speech Recognition Engine is a “speaker-independent speech recognition device,” as recited in claim limitation 1c. Id. at 19–20 (citing Ex. 1005, 13:30–31, 14:11–15:7, 17:21–27, 18:23–19:4; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 122–128). Petitioner maps Kovatch’s Prompt Generator to the “speech synthesis device” of claim limitation 1d. Id. at 20–21 (citing Ex. 1005, 5:17–18, 14:7–8, 14:11–16, 14:18–23, 16:19–26, 18:13–15, 18:23–32; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 129–131). Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s allegations for these claim limitations. We find, on the basis of Petitioner’s evidence, including the disclosure of Kovatch and the credible testimony of Mr. Lipoff, that Kovatch teaches claim limitations 1a–1d. Regarding claim limitation 1e, Petitioner contends that Kovatch’s Anita components, including the destination tree (shown in Figure 4) used to IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 34 match information requests to destination web sites and HeyAnita’s executable functions for identifying matching web sites and retrieving information from them constitute “at least one instruction set for identifying said information to be retrieved,” as recited in claim limitation 1e. Pet. 21–22 (citing Ex. 1005, 4:25–27, 13:33–34, 15:11–34, 26:8–29:51; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 132–137). According to Petitioner, [a]n obvious implementation of the system Kovatch describes would have been to store each destination web site’s URL in association with the web site’s entry in the destination tree, so the Query Engine can generate the URL for a particular web query as Kovatch describes, by retrieving the stored URL associated with the destination determined for the user’s request. Id. at 23 (citing Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 114, 139–140). Petitioner cites Kovatch’s examples of a user searching for books or CDs at web sites for Amazon, CD Now, and Barnes and Noble as teaching “said instruction set comprising: a plurality of pre-selected web site addresses, each said web site address identifying a web site containing said information to be retrieved,” as recited in claim limitation 1e. Id. at 22–24 (citing Ex. 1005, 4:25–27, 13:33–34, 15:9–34, 17:28–18:5, 20:11–12, 20:29–21:3, 21:19–25, 26:8–16, 28:17–18, 28:41–44; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 138, 141). Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s allegations as to claim limitation 1e in the Patent Owner Response or Sur-reply.8 8 Patent Owner presented arguments as to this claim limitation in the Preliminary Response (at 39–45), which we found unpersuasive in the Decision to Institute (at 36–40). Patent Owner does not advance those arguments in the Patent Owner Response. Accordingly, those arguments are waived. Paper 10 (Scheduling Order), 8 (“Patent Owner is cautioned that any arguments not raised in the response may be deemed waived.”). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 35 Kovatch describes Anita Query Engine 4 generating web queries to fulfill a user’s request. Ex. 1005, 17:31–32. Kovatch describes several examples of matching such requests to addresses for web sites that contain the information requested and generating web site URLs to initiate selected applications. Id. at 15:19, 20:10–12, 20:29–21:3, 21:19–25. Kovatch’s Figure 4 (reproduced above) illustrates how the HeyAnita system organizes this information into a tree structure that helps narrow down a search to particular web sites. Id. at 22:25–29. We find that Kovatch’s web URLs are pre-selected (chosen before the user executes a search), are web site addresses (URLs for web sites), and identify web sites containing information to be retrieved (information corresponding to keywords). Accordingly, we find, on the basis of Petitioner’s evidence, including the disclosure of Kovatch and the credible testimony of Mr. Lipoff, that Kovatch teaches claim limitation 1e. Regarding claim limitation 1f, Petitioner contends that Kovatch’s Speech Recognition Engine translates speech into text phrases using a “recognition grammar.” Pet. 24 (citing Ex. 1005, 13:30–31, 14:28–15:7, 17:23–27, 28:30–39; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 142–143). Petitioner argues that, because the recognition grammar is used to generate web URLs to which the system navigates for information, the recognition grammar “correspond[s] to each said instruction set and correspond[s] to a speech command” and “compris[es] an information request selectable by the user,” as recited in claim limitation 1f. Id. at 25–29 (citing Ex. 1005, 4:26–27, 13:28–14:1, 14:28–15:34, 22:1–5, 28:17–44; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 135–137, 144–151). Regarding claim limitation 1g, Petitioner points to Kovatch’s description of Speech Recognition Engine 2 translating speech to text phrases and Natural Language Engine 3 converting the text to structured commands representing IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 36 the recognition grammar. Id. at 29–30 (citing Ex. 1005, 13:30–31, 14:28– 15:19, 17:23–27, 28:17–39; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 152–154). According to Petitioner, the structured commands represent an identification of destination nodes and a mapping of commands to an application for generating destination URLs to retrieve information from web sites, thus meeting claim limitation 1h. Id. at 31 (citing Ex. 1005, 15:1–34; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 155–156). As to claim limitation 1i, Petitioner argues that Kovatch’s Web Parser navigates to the identified web site and retrieves requested information. Id. at 32 (citing Ex. 1005, 13:33–14:1, 15:1–34, 17:28–18:5; Ex. 1002 ¶ 157). Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s allegations for these claim limitations. We find, on the basis of Petitioner’s evidence, including the disclosure of Kovatch and the credible testimony of Mr. Lipoff, that Kovatch teaches claim limitations 1f–1i. As to claim limitation 1k, Petitioner points to Kovatch’s Prompt Generator, which creates an audio stream of text phrases converted to audio prompts based on information returned by the Web Parser. Pet. 34 (citing Ex. 1005, 14:7–8, 14:18–23, 16:19–26, 18:13–15, 20:5–22:21; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 161–162). Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s allegations for this claim limitation. We find, on the basis of Petitioner’s evidence, including the disclosure of Kovatch and the credible testimony of Mr. Lipoff, that Kovatch teaches claim limitation 1k. b) Claim limitation 1j The parties’ disputes as to claim 1 are focused on claim limitation 1j, which recites said computer configured to first access said first web site of said plurality of web sites and, if said information to be IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 37 retrieved is not found at said first web site, said computer configured to sequentially access said plurality of web sites until said information to be retrieved is found or until said plurality of web sites has been accessed. Petitioner acknowledges that Kovatch by itself does not teach claim limitation 1j, but contends that a skilled artisan would have modified Kovatch’s HeyAnita system according to Neal’s teachings. Pet. 12–15. Specifically, Petitioner contends that a skilled artisan would have considered Neal’s teaching of searching suppliers’ data sets in a hierarchy, as illustrated in Neal’s Figure 2 (reproduced above). Id. at 12–13 (citing Ex. 1007, 2:54– 57, 3:35–36, 3:42–45, 5:55–60, 6:40–7:14, 7:30–33; Ex. 1002 ¶ 100). According to Petitioner, In the resulting Kovatch/Neal combination, when the user speaks an information request, HeyAnita first accesses the user’s preferred web site for that information, and if the requested information is not found at that preferred web site, HeyAnita accesses the remaining web sites in the “list of valid destinations” that matched the user’s request, sequentially (e.g., in order of preference among suppliers as Neal teaches) until the requested information is found in one of the matching web sites or until all the matching web sites have been accessed with negative result. Id. at 14. In terms of the web site examples given in Kovatch, Petitioner argues that, in the Kovatch/Neal combination, HeyAnita’s computer (Application Server or overall Anita Server) is configured to first access a first web site (e.g., Amazon) of the destination tree’s plurality of web sites and, if the information to be retrieved (e.g., the price of a CD the user wants to buy) is not found at that first web site, access the remaining web sites (e.g., CD Now) sequentially (e.g., in order of the user’s preference ranking of the web sites) until the information is found (“the results of the match are reported to the user”—Neal, 6:42–44) or until the plurality of web sites has been accessed (“the search IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 38 fails to identify the desired item from any” web site—Neal, 7:30–33). Id. at 32–33 (citing Ex. 1002 ¶ 158). In the Patent Owner Response, Patent Owner argues that Kovatch does not teach claim limitation 1j because it does not demonstrate sequentially accessing pre-selected web sites until the information to be retrieved has been found or all of the web site addresses have been accessed. PO Resp. 35–36. As noted above, Petitioner does not argue that Kovatch teaches claim limitation 1j by itself and, instead, Petitioner relies on the combination of Kovatch and Neal. Pet. 12–15. Thus, Patent Owner’s argument is misplaced. In any case, Patent Owner concedes that Kovatch “discloses one scenario where multiple websites are accessed by the HeyAnita system, and that is when the user wants HeyAnita to find the best price for an item from two websites.” PO Resp. 35–36 (citing Ex. 1005, Fig. 4, 20:30–21:3). Thus, Kovatch teaches accessing multiple pre-selected web sites. We further find that Neal teaches accessing a first dataset of a plurality of datasets and, if the information to be retrieved is not found at the first dataset, sequentially accessing the plurality of datasets until the information to be retrieved is found or until the plurality of datasets has been accessed. Ex. 1007, 6:41–7:14. Viewing these teachings together, Kovatch and Neal teach limitation 1j. We address below whether a skilled artisan would have had reasons to combine these teachings. Patent Owner also argues that Neal does not teach accessing web sites and, instead, describes accessing static datasets in a partitioned database. PO Resp. 37. Petitioner, however, does not cite Neal for a teaching of accessing web sites; rather, Petitioner contends that Kovatch teaches accessing web sites. Pet. 13–14, 32 (citing Ex. 1005, 13:33–14:1, 15:1–34, IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 39 17:28–18:5; Ex. 1002 ¶ 157). Patent Owner’s argument, therefore, is misplaced. As noted above, we find (and Patent Owner concedes) that Kovatch teaches accessing a plurality of web sites. Ex. 1005, 17:31–18:8, 20:30–21:3, Fig. 4; PO Resp. 35–36. Patent Owner further argues that Neal teaches away from Petitioner’s proposed combination with Kovatch. PO Resp. 37. According to the Federal Circuit, “[a] reference may be said to teach away when a person of ordinary skill, upon reading the reference, would be discouraged from following the path set out in the reference, or would be led in a direction divergent from the path that was taken by the applicant.” In re Mouttet, 686 F.3d 1322, 1333–34 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (quoting In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994)) (alteration in original). However, “the ‘mere disclosure of alternative designs does not teach away.’” Id. at 1334 (quoting In re Fulton, 391 F.3d 1195, 1201 (Fed. Cir. 2004)). Indeed, “just because better alternatives exist in the prior art does not mean that an inferior combination is inapt for obviousness purposes.” Id. (citing Gurley, 27 F.3d at 553). Specifically, Patent Owner (PO Resp. 37), points to disclosure in Neal describing disadvantages of a keyword search strategy (e.g., “users must be familiar with the appropriate key word terms that are likely to yield the desired data records”) and disadvantages of a classification search strategy (e.g., “users may not always anticipate the proper classification of certain records, and may search the wrong categories for their desired database record”). Ex. 1007, 2:16–65. Neal then describes a “preferred embodiment” in which “the system manager will expand the scope of the search strategies from ‘exact’ string matches, along a continuum of search methodologies, including perhaps fuzzy logic strategies.” Id. at 7:14–17. According to IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 40 Neal, “[t]he purpose of expanding the search strategies is to avoid the situation wherein the search fails to identify the desired item from any data set, and thereby drops into logical block 222 a negative search result is reported to the user.” Id. at 7:28–32. Patent Owner argues that “Neal advocates for employing a sequence of search algorithms from the narrowest to the most broad.” PO Resp. 38 (citing Ex. 1007, 7:56–58; Ex. 2059 ¶ 124). Patent Owner contends that Neal teaches away from a combination “that employs a single keyword matching search strategy.” Id. Patent Owner argues that Petitioner’s combination of Kovatch and Neal results in a system that only sequentially searches datasets using a single keyword matching search strategy, and not the cascading sequence of search methodologies described by Neal. Id. at 37–39. We do not agree with Patent Owner that Neal teaches away from a system that employs a single keyword matching search strategy. Indeed, Neal’s preferred embodiment expressly contemplates such a system. For example, Neal describes employing a first “exact string search” methodology to search a first data set (Figure 2, block 206). Ex. 1007, 6:34– 46. This appears to be what Patent Owner considers a “single keyword matching search strategy.” PO Resp. 37–38. Neal describes that if this search of the first data set does not yield a match, the system searches a second data set using a second search methodology (Figure 2, block 210). Ex. 1007, 6:47–52. However, in the preferred embodiment there is no requirement that the second search methodology in 210 must be different from the first search methodology in 206. For example, if the first preferred supplier did not yield an exact string match to the input search term, the same search methodology could be applied to a second preferred supplier’s catalog. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 41 Id. at 6:59–65. Thus, Neal expressly teaches using a single keyword search strategy on a first dataset and the same keyword search strategy on a second dataset, without necessarily employing a cascading sequence of different search methodologies. See Reply 19. Patent Owner further argues that Neal’s teaching of searching products in a database would not have been applicable to retrieving information from a web page. PO Resp. 39–40. In particular, Patent Owner argues that Kovatch’s HeyAnita system expects a single result when it requests information from web pages, while Neal describes returning multiple results in an example of a search for pens. Id. (citing Ex. 1007, 7:34–8:24; Ex. 2059 ¶ 127); see also Sur-reply 17. Petitioner responds that it cites Kovatch for using Kovatch’s search methodologies (not Neal’s) on its web sites and Neal for a teaching to try another supplier if a first supplier does not have a requested item. Reply 20. We agree with Petitioner that Patent Owner does not appear to be addressing Petitioner’s proposed combination. Rather, Patent Owner’s argument is akin to a contention that one would not have bodily incorporated Neal’s particular search of a supplier record into Kovatch’s system. However, “[i]t is well-established that a determination of obviousness based on teachings from multiple references does not require an actual, physical substitution of elements”; rather, “the test for obviousness is what the combined teachings of the references would have suggested to those having ordinary skill in the art.” Mouttet, 686 F.3d at 1332–33. Patent Owner further argues that Petitioner does not address how a skilled artisan would apply Neal’s invention, in which data is pre-segmented into datasets, to Kovatch’s web sites, which “do not lend themselves to be segmented into searchable items of multiple tiers.” PO Resp. 40 (citing IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 42 Ex. 1007, 3:13–17, 5:30–31; Ex. 2059 ¶ 129). Petitioner responds that Kovatch’s data is segmented into multiple web sites, which are searched separately. Reply 20. According to Petitioner, in its proposed combination, each dataset searched is a web site. Id. at 21. In the Sur-reply, Patent Owner argues that Petitioner “does not explain how a [person of ordinary skill in the art] would apply Neal’s hierarchical ordering to Kovatch’s websites.” Sur-reply 18. According to Patent Owner, Neal describes a system manager that tightly controls and pre-segments the data that are searched and establishes a hierarchical order of multiple tiers in the database. Id. at 18–19 (citing Ex. 1007, 3:13–17). Patent Owner once again argues against bodily incorporating Neal into Kovatch without considering Petitioner’s proposed combination. As noted above, Petitioner combines Kovatch’s teachings of searching web sites with Neal’s teaching of searching a next dataset if a first dataset does not have a requested item. Reply 20. Petitioner does not contend that a skilled artisan would have incorporated Neal’s complete algorithm in Kovatch’s system. In the Sur-reply, Patent Owner argues that “Kovatch does not teach any search methodology.” Sur-reply 16. According to Patent Owner, “a web parser, parses the HTML tags on a web page to expose or render the data to the user; it does not search any data, and Kovatch’s web parser is no different.” Id. Patent Owner does not cite evidence to support this contention (which was not raised in the Patent Owner Response). First, claim 1 does not recite searching. Rather, it recites “access[ing]” web sites and “retriev[ing]” data from the web sites. Petitioner points out where Kovatch teaches this. Pet. 32 (citing Ex. 1005, 13:33–14:1, 15:1–34, 17:28– 18:5). According to Kovatch, “Anita Query Engine 4 generates web queries needed to fulfill user’s request and sends them to Anita State Machine and IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 43 Web Parser 8.” Ex. 1005, 17:31–32. “Anita State Machine and Web Parser 8 browses the Internet/web 11 to retrieve information requested by the user. It parses each received page to convert unstructured text into structured datasets.” Id. at 18:1–3. We find that this teaches accessing web sites and retrieving data from those web sites. Second, we find that this disclosure in Kovatch teaches searching web sites (browse, queries, request), and Patent Owner’s attorney argument to the contrary is not persuasive. We find that, in Petitioner’s proposed combination, Kovatch’s HeyAnita system would access a first of a plurality of web sites (e.g., using Anita Query Engine 4 and Web Parser 8, Ex. 1005, 17:31–32) and, if the information to be retrieved is not found at the first web site, the HeyAnita system would sequentially access the plurality of web sites until the information is found or until the all of the plurality of web sites have been accessed, per the teachings of Neal (Ex. 1007, 6:41–7:13, 7:28–32, Fig. 2). Accordingly, we find that Kovatch and Neal teach claim limitation 1j. In sum, the combination of Kovatch and Neal teaches each limitation of claim 1. c) Reasons to combine the teachings of Kovatch and Neal Petitioner argues that a skilled artisan would have combined the teachings of Kovatch and Neal “to achieve the benefits Neal describes of ‘maximiz[ing] the likelihood of finding the desired [information]’ while ‘efficiently us[ing] computing resources’ by ‘increasing the efficiency of the search process by first searching in the most desirable data sets.’” Id. (quoting Ex. 1007, 3:19–20, 4:65–5:2 (brackets supplied by Petitioner); citing Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 103–105). Although Neal does not describe its IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 44 hierarchical search in terms of web sites, Mr. Lipoff testifies that this technique would have been applicable to other types of information requests, including obtaining information from web sites. Id. at 15 (citing Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 103–105). Petitioner contends that Neal’s product searches are analogous to those described in Kovatch. Id. Mr. Lipoff testifies that a skilled artisan would have had a reasonable expectation of success incorporating Neal’s functionality in HeyAnita’s Application Server. Ex. 1002 ¶ 106. Patent Owner characterizes Petitioner’s allegations as arguing that Neal would “speed up” Kovatch’s HeyAnita system. PO Resp. 41–42. Patent Owner argues that Kovatch was not concerned with delay that occurred with web-based retrieval systems and, instead, relied on that delay to provide opportunities for the HeyAnita system to insert advertisements in the “dead space” between a user’s question and the system’s retrieval of an answer. Id. (citing Ex. 1005, 3:13–14, 5:20–22, 6:9–11, 16:14–15; Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 133–134). Mr. Occhiogrosso testifies that “speeding up Kovatch’s system would create less dead air time and would inhibit its ability to generate revenue from playing advertisements for the user as it awaited the information to be retrieved from the web site.” Ex. 2059 ¶ 134. Petitioner replies that it does not argue that a skilled artisan would have used Neal’s teachings to “speed up” Kovatch’s system. Reply 21–22. Rather, Petitioner argues, the Petition focused on efficiently using computing resources. Id. (citing Pet. 12–14). According to Mr. Lipoff, the efficiency benefits would have been independent of speed. Ex. 1057 ¶¶ 16– 17; Reply 22 (“[W]here Kovatch would search one website . . . , the Kovatch/Neal combination that then tries a second website would not necessarily respond faster.”). As Petitioner points out (Reply 22), Patent Owner’s expert, Mr. Occhiogrosso, admits that lowering the number of web IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 45 sites a system searches to find information would lower the expenditure of resources. Ex. 1051, 42:21–43:10. Petitioner further responds that Kovatch does not teach playing advertisements while waiting for information to be retrieved; rather, it first retrieves the requested information and then generates an audio stream with both the commercials and retrieved information. Reply 22–23 (citing Ex. 1005, 14:1–8, 18:1–15; Ex. 1057 ¶ 18). Petitioner’s characterization of Kovatch is correct (and Patent Owner’s incorrect). Kovatch’s system first navigates to a destination and retrieves requested information (step 6), then generates commercials (step 8), then intermixes the commercials and information (step 9), and finally returns speech to the user (step 10). Ex. 1005, 14:1–8. We find unavailing Patent Owner’s argument that, when combined, Neal’s teachings would have an adverse impact on Kovatch’s generation and presentation of advertisements. Patent Owner further argues that a skilled artisan would not have been motivated to make Kovatch’s system more fault tolerant because “HeyAnita was already a fault tolerant system that took steps to maximize the likelihood of finding the requested information.” PO Resp. 42–43 (citing Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 135–137). Patent Owner argues that Kovatch describes an example in which the HeyAnita system searches multiple web sites for information without being prompted. Id. at 43 (citing Ex. 1005, 20:29–21:3; Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 136–137); Sur-reply 22–23. As another example of fault tolerance, Patent Owner argues that Kovatch’s system is “highly interactive” and “uses clarification questions if the user’s query does not narrow the result set down to one destination.” PO Resp. 43–44 (citing Ex. 1005, 4:25– 27, 21:10–11, 21:19–25). Petitioner replies that it is not arguing fault tolerance; rather Petitioner argues that the combination would have IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 46 increased the efficiency of the search process. Reply 23. In particular, Petitioner argues, the Kovatch/Neal combination improves the likelihood of finding information by searching a next web site rather than stopping after a first failure. Id. at 24 (citing Ex. 1057 ¶¶ 19–21). Petitioner argues that this would have been more logical, would have resulted in a shorter dialog, and would automatically provide fallback results from another web site without wasting time reporting a failure and asking for instructions. Id. (citing Ex. 1057 ¶ 22). We agree with Petitioner that Patent Owner’s arguments regarding fault tolerance are not directed to any arguments or evidence Petitioner is advancing. We find that Neal’s teachings would have made Kovatch’s system more efficient and would have conserved computing resources. Neal expressly states that its teachings “would efficiently use computing resources,” and would “increas[e] the efficiency of the search process by first searching in the most desirable data sets.” Ex. 1007, 3:19–20, 4:65–67. Mr. Lipoff reiterates these benefits in his testimony. Ex. 1002 ¶ 102. Thus, we find that a skilled artisan would have had reasons, with rational underpinning, to combine Kovatch and Neal. We also find, based on Mr. Lipoff’s uncontroverted testimony, that a skilled artisan would have had a reasonable expectation of success in combining the teachings of Kovatch and Neal. Id. ¶ 106. d) Claims 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 Regarding claim 2, we find that Kovatch describes that its server is connected to and searches “the Internet.” See, e.g., Ex. 1005, Fig. 3 (Internet 11); Pet. 34. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 47 Regarding claim 4, we find that Kovatch’s voice enabled device can be a standard telephone. See, e.g., Ex. 1005, Fig. 1 (Telephone 15); Pet. 34. Regarding claim 5, based on Mr. Lipoff’s uncontroverted testimony, we find that it would have been obvious to implement HeyAnita’s Speech Recognition Engine to analyze phonemes. Ex. 1002 ¶ 166; Pet. 35–36. Regarding claim 6, we find that Kovatch’s description of recognizing and converting “free-form speech” and “natural language sentences” teaches that Kovatch’s “speaker-independent speech recognition device is configured to recognize naturally spoken speech commands.” Pet. 36; Ex. 1005, 13:28–29, 14:28–15:3, 20:15–22:21; Ex. 1002 ¶ 167. Regarding claim 7, we find that Kovatch teaches content descriptors that indicate portions of web sites that contain the information to be retrieved, for example indicating in a weather web site where to insert a zip code to retrieve weather information and where on the web site to find the results. Ex. 1005, 15:11–14, 15:23–34; Pet. 36–37; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 169–180. Regarding claims 10 and 13, we find that Kovatch teaches a ranking associated with web site addresses indicating the order in which to access a plurality of pre-selected web sites, for example ranking Amazon’s web site over that of CD Now and accessing those web sites in that order. Ex. 1005, 16:28–34, 19:8–10, 23:25–29; Pet. 38; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 171–173. Regarding claim 14, Mr. Lipoff testifies that an obvious implementation of the Kovatch/Neal combination would have been to store the retrieved information in a memory operatively connected to the computer (Application Server or overall Anita Server), to allow the computer to retrieve the information and process it by translating it into the voice prompts as Kovatch describes. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 48 Ex. 1002 ¶ 176. Based on this uncontroverted testimony, we find that Kovatch and Neal teach the additional limitation of claim 14. Patent Owner does not present separate arguments challenging Petitioner’s allegations for claims 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14. 4. Conclusion of Obviousness As explained above, the combination of Kovatch and Neal teaches each limitation of claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14. Petitioner has introduced persuasive evidence that a skilled artisan would have had reasons to combine the teachings of Kovatch and Neal with a reasonable expectation of success. Patent Owner does not argue or introduce evidence of objective indicia of nonobviousness. In sum, upon consideration of all the evidence, we conclude that Petitioner has proved by a preponderance of the evidence that claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch and Neal. D. Obviousness of Claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14 over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti Petitioner contends that claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti. Pet. 39–45. 1. Scope and Content of the Prior Art—Overview of Chakrabarti Chakrabarti discloses a “[s]ystem and method for focus[]ed Web crawling.” Ex. 1008, code (54). The system generates a database of web pages that is focused on a predefined topic or topics, for subsequent efficient searching of the database by users. Id. at 2:56–60. The system includes a IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 49 “watchdog” module that periodically determines new (not yet visited) and old web pages to consider in searches. Id. at 3:15–21. The system includes a computer that accesses the World Wide Web via the Internet. Id. at 4:14–16. The computer includes a focused crawler that may be executed by the computer. Id. at 4:26–28. The focused crawler adds outlinks of a web page to a crawl database when the web page is relevant to the predefined topic or topics. Id. at 3:41–46; see also id. at 6:26–27 (stating that outlinks “lead to Web pages other than the Web page represented by the URL field 36.”). The focused crawler accesses a topic analyzer that compares the content of a web page with a predefined topic or topics and generates a response representative of how relevant the web page is to the topic. Id. at 4:61–65. The system generates the crawl database, which solely contains information on web pages that pertain to the topic or topics of interest. Id. at 5:14–17. The crawl database includes a web page table that includes corresponding link tables, each of which is an edge table relative to the web page table. Id. at 5:17–21. The web page table includes a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) field that represents a web page URL. Id. at 5:31– 34. The link table is further associated with the URL field. Id. at 6:16–17. Using Chakrabarti’s system, a user can generate a query for information and, in response, a conventional browser or searcher associated with the computer accesses the crawl database to retrieve a list of relevant web pages. Id. at 6:35–40. The browser responds to the query with web pages relevant to the predefined topic. Id. at 6:44–46. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 50 2. Claim 9, Differences Between the Claimed Subject Matter and Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti / Conclusion of Obviousness Claim 9 depends from claim 1 and adds “said computer is further configured to periodically search said internet to identify new web sites and to add said new web sites to said plurality of web sites.” Petitioner contends that a skilled artisan would have added Chakrabarti’s web crawling feature to the combination of Kovatch and Neal such that the HeyAnita server periodically searches the Internet to identify new web sites and to add the new web sites to its listing of web sites. Pet. 44; see also id. at 41–44. Mr. Lipoff testifies that this would have been more efficient and would have increased the likelihood of finding a user’s requested information. Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 183–185. Mr. Lipoff further testifies that this would have been a predictable use of prior art elements according their established functions. Id. ¶ 186. Patent Owner does not contest Petitioner’s allegations as to claim 9. On the complete record, including Mr. Lipoff’s uncontroverted testimony, we find that Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti teach each limitation of claim 9 and that a skilled artisan would have had reasons, with rational underpinning, to combine the references with a reasonable expectation of success. Patent Owner does not argue or introduce evidence of objective indicia of nonobviousness. In sum, upon consideration of all the evidence, we conclude that Petitioner has proved by a preponderance of the evidence that claim 9 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 51 3. Claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 Petitioner asserts Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti against claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 “if limitation [1j] were interpreted to require accessing more than two web sites.” Pet. 44–45. On the complete record, neither party contends that claim limitation 1j includes this requirement. Accordingly, we need not reach whether claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 also would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti.9 E. Obviousness of Claim 14 over Kovatch, Neal, and DeSimone Petitioner contends that claim 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and DeSimone. Pet. 45–49. Petitioner asserts Kovatch, Neal, and DeSimone against claim 14 because, it contends, the combination with DeSimone “meets claim 14 differently than the Kovatch/Neal combination alone.” Id. at 46. As noted above, Petitioner has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that claim 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch and Neal, and Patent Owner does not dispute Petitioner’s additional allegations for claim 14. Accordingly, we need not reach whether claim 14 also would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and DeSimone.10 9 Petitioner’s allegations also include the contention that claim 9 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti by virtue of Chakrabarti teaching limitation 1j. We do not reach this contention. As noted above, we find that Kovatch and Neal teach each limitation of claim 1 and Chakrabarti teaches the additional limitation of claim 9. 10 For the same reasons, we do not reach Patent Owner’s arguments (PO Resp. 45–46) that a skilled artisan would not have had reasons to combine DeSimone with the teachings of Kovatch and Neal. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 52 F. Obviousness of Claim 14 over Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti, and DeSimone As noted above, we do not reach whether claim 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti, as Petitioner has shown that it would have been obvious over Kovatch and Neal. For the same reasons, we need not reach whether claim 14 also would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti, and DeSimone. G. Obviousness of Claim 9 over Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti Petitioner contends that claim 9 would have been obvious over Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti. Pet. 50–63. The parties dispute whether Kurganov-262 is prior art to claim 9. The ’431 patent claims priority to Application No. 09/776,996 (“the ʼ996 application”) as a continuation application. Ex. 1001, code (63). Kurganov-262 is the publication of the ’996 application. Ex. 1004, code (21). Petitioner indicates that the disclosure in Kurganov-262 is substantially identical to that of the ’431 patent. Pet. 50, 55. Patent Owner states that “Kurganov-262 is the priority document for the ’431 Patent and provides disclosure of each and every claim element of the challenged claims.” PO Resp. 30. Petitioner contends that the limitation “said computer is further configured to periodically search said internet to identify new web sites and to add said new web sites to said plurality of web sites,” as recited in claim 9, is not disclosed in the ʼ996 application. Pet. 50–53. Petitioner contends that the ’996 application discloses the rest of claim 9’s limitations (those incorporated from claim 1, from which claim 9 depends). Id. at IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 53 55–61 (claim chart mapping Kurganov-262 to claim 1). According to Petitioner, Chakrabarti supplies the additional limitation of claim 9. Patent Owner advances no specific arguments contesting Petitioner’s assertions regarding the disclosures of Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti. PO Resp. 46–50. Rather, Patent Owner argues that Kurganov-262 is not prior art because claim 9 has written description support in the ʼ431 patent, thus entitling these claims to a priority date preceding that of Kurganov-262’s publication (November 29, 2001). Id. The parties’ dispute, then, is whether Kurganov-262 provides written description support for the additional limitation of claim 9. The parties agree that Kurganov-262 describes all of the limitations of claim 1. If Kurganov-262 does provide written description support for claim 9, then it is not prior art to claim 9, and would not provide a basis to render claim 9 obvious. On the other hand, if Kurganov-262 does not provide written description support for claim 9, it is prior art to claim 9, and we then would evaluate whether Kurganov-262 in combination with Chaktrabarti renders claim 9 obvious. 1. Kurganov-262 does not provide written description support for claim 9 A description adequate to satisfy 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 1, must “clearly allow persons of ordinary skill in the art to recognize that [the inventor] invented what is claimed.” In other words, the test for sufficiency is whether the disclosure of the application relied upon reasonably conveys to those skilled IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 54 in the art that the inventor had possession of the claimed subject matter as of the filing date. Ariad Pharms., Inc. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 598 F.3d 1336, 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (en banc) (citation omitted, alteration in original). “[T]he hallmark of written description is disclosure,” and the test requires an objective inquiry into the four corners of the specification from the perspective of a person of ordinary skill in the art. Based on that inquiry, the specification must describe an invention understandable to that skilled artisan to show that the inventor actually invented the invention claimed. Id.; see also Vas-Cath, Inc. v. Mahurkar, 935 F.2d 1555, 1563–64 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (stating that “the applicant must also convey with reasonably clarity to those skilled in the art that, as of the filing date sought, he or she was in possession of the invention,” which, “for purposes of the ‘written description’ inquiry, [is] whatever is now claimed”). Petitioner asserts that the ’431 patent11 describes a “first embodiment . . . for allowing users to browse information sources, such as web sites,” and a “second embodiment . . . for controlling . . . household devices.” Pet. 50 (citing Ex. 1001, 4:30–32, 17:36–46) (alterations by Petitioner). According to Petitioner, neither the first embodiment, the second embodiment, nor “mixing-and-matching” elements from the first and second embodiments provides written description support for claim 9. Id. at 51–54. Thus, 11 The panel recognizes that the relevant issue for determining whether Kurganov-262 is prior art is whether the ’996 application contains written description support for the challenged claims. However, when identifying such support, Petitioner and Patent Owner both cite to the disclosure of the ’431 patent, which both parties agree has the same disclosure (apart from claims) as the ’996 application, which published with materially the same disclosure as Kurganov-262. Following the parties’ convention, we also cite to the ’431 patent. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 55 according to Petitioner, the effective filing date of claim 9 is no earlier than the actual filing date of the ’431 patent (April 9, 2004), and Kurganov-262 is prior art under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). Id. at 54–55; Ex. 1001, code (22). Patent Owner points to the ’431 patent’s Abstract and Summary of the Invention, and its disclosure that the inventive system “dynamically adapt[s] to changes in the rapidly evolving web sites that exist on the Internet.” PO Resp. 46–47 (citing Ex. 1001, Abstract, 2:66–3:3, 17:26–28). Patent Owner also points to three paragraphs within Kurganov-262 that Patent Owner argues describes “getting information from Lycos and Yahoo, which include[s] web crawling functionality.” Id. at 47 (citing Ex. 1004 ¶¶ 30, 39, 4212). Based on these disclosures, Patent Owner asserts that a skilled artisan would have understood that a web search system would include the ability to identify new web sites or engage in web crawling, and would need to adapt to the changing Internet by identifying new web sites. Id. (citing Ex. 2059 ¶ 149). Patent Owner argues that this is “confirmed by a review of the system that inventors reduced to practice prior to filing the provisional application that led to the issuance of the ’431 Patent, which included this functionality.” Id. (citing Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 44–91). Patent Owner also asserts that the first and second embodiments described in the ʼ431 patent––one browsing web sites and the other browsing devices––“are not exclusive” and that the skilled artisan would have understood that the description for browsing devices “is equally applicable to web sites and to the first embodiment system for browsing web sites.” PO Resp. 47–48. Patent Owner alleges that “the devices in the 12 These paragraphs correspond to Exhibit 1001, 5:33–53, 7:35–9:40, 14:36– 15:30. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 56 second embodiment may in fact be web sites, and operate similarly to the first embodiment.” Id. at 48 (citing Ex. 1001, 17:50–58; Ex. 1004 ¶ 54). Patent Owner also alleges that “[w]ithout ‘identify[ing] new websites’ it would be impossible for the system to ‘dynamically adapt to changes in the rapidly evolving web sites that exist on the Internet’” as discussed in the ’431 patent. Id. at 48–49 (quoting Ex. 1001, 17:23–28; citing Ex. 1004 ¶ 51; Ex. 2059 ¶ 153 (second alteration by Patent Owner)). Patent Owner then explains how it believes the ’431 patent’s discussion of “polling” and “pinging” the devices of the first embodiment would apply equally to the web sites of the second embodiment. Id. at 49–50 (citing Ex. 1001, 16:56– 17:12, 19:17–19; Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 154–155). Petitioner contends that Patent Owner provides no evidence that the skilled artisan would have recognized that the ʼ431 patent’s web search system would include the ability to identify new web sites or engage in web crawling, and “[e]ven if web crawling were known and obvious to add to what is described, obviousness is insufficient for written description.” Reply 26 (citing Ex. 1049, 84–87; Ex. 1057 ¶¶ 23–24; Lockwood v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 107 F.3d 1565, 1571–72 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (“It is the disclosures of the applications that count. Entitlement to a filing date does not extend to subject matter which is not disclosed, but would be obvious over what is expressly disclosed. It extends only to that which is disclosed.”)). Petitioner also asserts that Patent Owner has not produced evidence to support its argument that claim 9 was reduced to practice, and “[e]ven if it had, that is irrelevant to written description in the parent specification.” Id. at 26–27 (citing Enzo Biochem, Inc. v. Gen-Probe Inc., 323 F.3d 956, 969 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (“[P]roof of a reduction to practice, absent an adequate description in the specification of what is reduced to IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 57 practice, does not serve to describe or identify the invention for purposes of § 112, ¶ 1.”)). Petitioner disagrees with Patent Owner’s assertion that dynamic adaptation to changes in web sites would not be possible without identifying new web sites because the changes in web sites described by the ’431 patents occur “within known websites.” Id. at 27 (citing Ex. 1001, 2:30–41, 16:44–55, 17:26–28; Ex. 1057 ¶ 27). We agree with Petitioner that the ’431 patent describes adapting to changes within already known websites, not adapting to changes on the Web involving unknown websites. Thus, the ’431 patent’s description of adapting to changes in web sites does not provide written description support for claim 9. Petitioner also disagrees with Patent Owner’s argument that “the ‘second embodiment’ ‘could never detect a new device’ unless it polls devices not in the database” because, according to Petitioner, “the specification directly refutes this––the second embodiment polls ‘devices . . . listed in database 508.’” Reply 27 (quoting PO Resp. 49; citing Ex. 1001, 19:10–28). Petitioner also explains why it believes that Patent Owner’s assertions regarding “polling” of web sites is unsupported and erroneous. Id. at 28 (citing Ex. 1057 ¶¶ 28–29). In response, Patent Owner asserts that the support for claim 9 “comes from the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art and the Kurganov[- 262] application’s disclosure of its second embodiment.” Sur-reply 23. Patent Owner also asserts that “[t]he polling of devices . . . in the second embodiment is not limited to known devices” because the application expressly discloses adding new devices and, if that “were restricted to known devices, new devices could never be added.” Id. at 24. Patent Owner also asserts that “the disclosure of polling or pinging devices 500 IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 58 should be understood [to] refer to the IP addresses or potential locations of devices, not the devices themselves.” Id. at 25. We are persuaded by Petitioner that sufficient written description support does not exist in Kurganov-262 for claim 9, which requires the computing device to be “configured to periodically search via one or more networks to identify new web sites and to add the new web sites to the plurality of web sites.” Pet. 50–54. Thus, we determine that Kurganov-262 is available as prior art against the challenged claims. On the complete record, Patent Owner fails to direct us to specific disclosure within Kurganov-262 that evidences written description for claim 9. Rather, Patent Owner’s citations to the ʼ431 patent fail to describe with adequate precision how the computing device is configured to periodically search the network(s) to identify new web sites and add such new web sites to the plurality of web sites that are accessed. PO Resp. 46– 50. For example, Patent Owner provides several citations to the ʼ431 patent that lack specificity regarding claim 9. Id. at 46–48. Patent Owner then points to the ʼ431 patent disclosure that In the preferred [second] embodiment, the devices 500 appear as “web sites” connected to the network 502. This allows a network interface system, such as a device browsing server 506, a database 508, and a user interface system, such as a media server 510, to operate similar to the web browsing server 102, database 100 and media server 106 described in the first preferred embodiment above. PO Resp. 48 (quoting Ex. 1001, 17:50–58) (alteration by Patent Owner). Patent Owner contends that “this disclosure shows that the devices in the second embodiment may in fact be web sites, and operate similarly to the first embodiment.” Id. We are not persuaded by this argument. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 59 The disclosure referenced by Patent Owner indicates that the devices “appear as ‘web sites’ connected to the network.” Ex. 1001, 17:50–52 (emphasis added). To “appear” as a web site is not the same as being a web site. Also, the ʼ431 patent’s use of quotation marks around the term “web site” in column 17 strongly suggests that the devices are not actual web sites––particularly considering the ʼ431 patent’s numerous listings of actual web sites without such quotation marks. See, e.g., id. at 6:19, 6:63, 13:33– 34, 14:37–38, 18:37–40. This disclosure within the ʼ431 patent supports Mr. Lipoff’s testimony, relied on by Petitioner, that the skilled artisan “would have understood this to teach that the devices are, of course, not actually web sites, but only ‘appear’ to the device browsing server as URLs.” Ex. 1002 ¶ 220. We credit that testimony because it is supported by a reasonable reading of the ʼ431 patent. We find that Petitioner has shown that this description of devices appearing as web sites does not provide written description support for claim 9. Furthermore, Patent Owner has not produced evidence sufficient to show why these two embodiments would have been recognized by a skilled artisan as being interchangeable. For example, as we noted in our Institution Decision, “the first embodiment describes polling known web sites and modifying their ranking number based on the individual web site’s response and speed, and does not appear to search for new web sites.” Dec. 51 (citing Ex. 1001, 7:4–8). We observed that the second embodiment’s “detection of a new device appears to be carried out by polling or ‘pinging’ periodically all known devices listed in a database,” and “[i]f . . . the server receives an unexpected response, then the device is identified as being ‘new’.” Id. (citing Ex. 1001, 19:19–28). On the complete record, Patent Owner has not adequately explained how such a periodic polling of known devices IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 60 described in the second embodiment could “be applied to identify new web sites––presumably to find additional sources of ‘desired data,’ which is an objective of the first embodiment.” Id. (citing Ex. 1001, 4:44–46). Rather, on the complete record, Patent Owner’s evidence is not sufficient to support its assertions regarding what a skilled artisan “would understand” based on the ʼ431 patent’s disclosure. See PO Resp. 48–50. For example, Patent Owner asserts that “[a] [person of ordinary skill in the art] would understand that” polling or pinging “describes a process where by existing and new devices and/or websites are discovered,” and that “‘polling’ includes asking for information from a website, including a listing of URLs or asking a website of a search engine to provide new website information.” Id. at 49–50 (citing Ex. 2059 ¶¶ 153–155). We are not persuaded by this line of argument because we afford minimal weight to Patent Owner’s reliance on paragraphs 153–155 of Mr. Occhiogrosso’s testimony (Ex. 2059). PO Resp. 48–50. This testimony provides very little detail beyond what is argued in the Patent Owner Response. See 37 C.F.R. § 42.65 (“Expert testimony that does not disclose the underlying facts or data on which the opinion is based is entitled to little or no weight.”). We furthermore agree with Petitioner that the ʼ431 patent distinguishes between “polling” and “searching.” Reply 28; Ex. 1001, claim 8 (reciting the computing device of “the system of claim 1 wherein the computer is further configured to periodically poll each of said web sites”). Therefore, we agree with Petitioner (Reply 28) that a skilled artisan would not have understood the “polling” disclosed in column 19 as “including searching for new . . . web sites.” PO Resp. 48. We also are not persuaded by Patent Owner’s assertion that a skilled artisan “after reading the specification of the ʼ431 Patent, would understand IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 61 that a web search system would include the ability to ‘identify new websites’ or engage in web crawling,” and “would need to adapt to the changing internet by identifying new websites.” Id. at 47 (citing Ex. 2059 ¶ 149). This contention is also insufficiently supported. The evidence cited in support of this assertion is a document (“Lipoff Dep. (Rough)”) that is not part of this proceeding. Ex. 2059 ¶ 149. We also agree with Petitioner that Patent Owner here attempts to argue that it would have been obvious to extend the ’431 patent’s disclosure to identifying new websites. Reply 26. However, introducing evidence that it would have been obvious in light of the ’431 patent’s disclosure is not sufficient to support an argument that the ’431 patent provides written description support. See Lockwood, 107 F.3d at 1571–72. Furthermore, Patent Owner relies on a reduction-to-practice theory that, even if true, is not relevant to the issue of whether written description exists in the ʼ431 patent for claim 9. See Enzo Biochem., 323 F.3d at 969 (“[P]roof of a reduction to practice, absent an adequate description in the specification of what is reduced to practice, does not serve to describe or identify the invention for purposes of § 112, ¶ 1.”) In sum, Petitioner has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that Kurgonov-262 is prior art to the subject matter of claim 9. 2. Obviousness of claim 9 over Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti Turning now to obviousness, as noted above, Petitioner contends that Kurganov-262 discloses every limitation of claim 1, but not claim 9, and that Chakrabarti’s teachings would have supplied what was missing from Kurganov-262 for claim 9. Pet. 55–63. Petitioner identifies disclosure IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 62 within Kurgonov-262 that teaches or suggests the limitations of claim 1. Id. at 55–61. Petitioner then argues that a skilled artisan would have incorporated Chakrabarti’s web-crawling teachings, and would have done so essentially for the same reasons discussed in Section II.D.2 above for the combination of Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti. Id. at 62–63. Because Patent Owner focused its arguments solely on the issue of whether Kurganov-262 is prior art, Petitioner’s assertions regarding the substantive teachings of Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti remain unrebutted on the complete record. PO Resp. 46–50; Sur-reply 23–25. Patent Owner likewise does not address Petitioner’s proffered reasons why a skilled artisan would have combined these teachings. PO Resp. 46–50; Sur-reply 23–25. We have reviewed the disclosures of Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti relied on by Petitioner, as well as the explanations provided by Mr. Lipoff, and are persuaded that the limitations of claim 1 are taught in Kurganov-262 and the additional limitations of claim 9 are taught in Chakrabarti. Pet. 55– 63; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 225–228; Ex. 1004; Ex. 1008. Petitioner also persuades us that a skilled artisan would have been motivated to apply Chakrabarti’s techniques for web crawling to Kurganov-262’s system, and would have had a reasonable expectation of successfully doing so, thus arriving at the subject matter of claim 9 of the ʼ431 patent. Pet. 62–63; Ex. 1002 ¶¶ 229–233. On the complete record, including Mr. Lipoff’s uncontroverted testimony, we find that Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti teach each limitation of claim 9 and that a skilled artisan would have had reasons, with rational underpinning, to combine the references with a reasonable expectation of success. Patent Owner does not argue or introduce evidence of objective indicia of nonobviousness. In sum, upon consideration of all the evidence, IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 63 we conclude that Petitioner has proved by a preponderance of the evidence that claim 9 would have been obvious over Kurganov-262 and Chakrabarti. H. Obviousness of Claim 14 over Kurganov-262 and DeSimone Petitioner contends that claim 14 would have been obvious over Kurganov-262 and DeSimone. Pet. 63–68. Petitioner contends that Kurganov-262 does not provide written description support for and, thus, would be prior art to, claim 14 “[i]f claim 14 is interpreted to require more than temporary storage of the user-requested retrieved information in memory for converting the information to audio.” Id. at 63–64. However, neither party contends that claim 14 should be interpreted to require more than temporary storage of user-requested retrieved information in memory for converting the information to audio. Accordingly, on the complete record, we need not reach whether Kurganov-262 would be prior art to claim 14 in that circumstance, or whether claim 14 would have been obvious over Kurganov-262 and DeSimone. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 64 III. CONCLUSION13 Petitioner has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14 would have been obvious. 13 Should Patent Owner wish to pursue amendment of the challenged claims in a reissue or reexamination proceeding subsequent to the issuance of this decision, we draw Patent Owner’s attention to the April 2019 Notice Regarding Options for Amendments by Patent Owner Through Reissue or Reexamination During a Pending AIA Trial Proceeding. See 84 Fed. Reg. 16,654 (Apr. 22, 2019). If Patent Owner chooses to file a reissue application or a request for reexamination of the challenged patent, we remind Patent Owner of its continuing obligation to notify the Board of any such related matters in updated mandatory notices. See 37 C.F.R. § 42.8(a)(3), (b)(2). IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 65 In summary:14 IV. ORDER In consideration of the foregoing, it is hereby: ORDERED, based on a preponderance of the evidence, that claims 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, and 14 are unpatentable; 14 As noted above, we do not reach whether claims 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, and 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and Chakrabarti; whether claim 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti, and DeSimone; whether claim 14 would have been obvious over Kovatch, Neal, and DeSimone; or whether claim 14 would have been obvious over Kurganov-262 and DeSimone. Claims 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/ Basis Claims Shown Unpatentable Claims Not shown Unpatentable 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal 1, 2, 4–7, 10, 13, 14 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti 9 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal, DeSimone 14 103(a) Kovatch, Neal, Chakrabarti, DeSimone 9 103(a) Kurganov-262, Chakrabarti 9 14 103(a) Kurganov-262, DeSimone Overall Outcome 1, 2, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, 14 IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 66 FURTHER ORDERED, because this is a final written decision, the parties to this proceeding seeking judicial review of our Decision must comply with the notice and service requirements of 37 C.F.R. § 90.2. IPR2020-00846 Patent 7,076,431 B2 67 For PETITIONER: Elisabeth Hunt Gregory Nieberg Richard Giunta WOLF, GREENFIELD & SACKS P.C. Ehunt-ptab@wolfgreenfield.com Gnieberg-ptab@wolfgreenfield.com Rgiunta-ptab@wolfgreenfield.com For PATENT OWNER: Michael McNamara Michael Renaud William Meunier MINTZ, LEVIN, COHN, FERRIS, GLOVSKY & POPEO, P.C. mmcnamara@mintz.com mtrenaud@mintz.com wameunier@mintz.com Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation