“Where, as here, the grounds for obviousness are based on a specific combination of references, arguments that ‘attack the disclosures of the two references individually’ lack merit.” – CAFC opinion
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) on Monday in a precedential opinion vacated and remanded a decision of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) that had found Palo Alto Networks (PAN), Inc. failed to establish certain claims of Centripetal Networks, LLC’s Communication Network patents unpatentable as obvious. The CAFC said the PTAB erred by not sufficiently explaining its reasoning with respect to its motivation to combine analysis.
Centripetal’s U.S. Patent No. 10,530,903 is titled “Correlating Packets in Communications Networks.” PAN argued in its petition for inter partes review (IPR) that claims 1–18 would have been obvious over U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2014/0280778 (“Paxton”) and U.S. Patent No. 8,413,238 (“Sutton”) in view of U.S. Patent No. 8,219,675 (“Ivershen”). In its final written decision, the PTAB held that the final limitation of claim 1, “transmitting an indication of the first host responsive to the correlating,” was not proven to be taught by PAN’s proposed combination. The Board said PAN had failed to demonstrate the “necessary bridge” to demonstrate its argument that “Paxton expressly teaches creating a log and notifying a network administrator of the identified host.” Ultimately, the PTAB said it was left “with a correlation from Paxton with no specific actions taken post-correlation, and a transmission from Sutton unrelated to any correlation, but without the necessary bridge showing that one of ordinary skill in the art would have appreciated that the transmission would be responsive to the correlation.”
On appeal, however, the CAFC said the Board failed to explain what it meant by “necessary bridge” and that it merely summarized PAN’s arguments on motivation to combine without making “a clear finding on whether a person of ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to modify Paxton by adding Sutton’s step of transmitting a notification of malicious activity after Paxton’s correlation step as proposed by PAN.” The PTAB’s explanation that it was left with a correlation from Paxton and a transmission from Sutton with no bridge was unclear.
“If the Board meant to say that it found no motivation to combine—and we do not know whether it did—it certainly failed to explain why a person of ordinary skill in the art would not have been motivated to modify Paxton to provide the recited notification as taught by Sutton in response to the correlation disclosed in Paxton,” said the CAFC’s opinion.
Additionally, the Board erred in looking at each reference individually rather than in combination, said the court. “Where, as here, the grounds for obviousness are based on a specific combination of references, arguments that ‘attack the disclosures of the two references individually’ lack merit,” the opinion said. “Here, Paxton and Sutton must be read together, not in isolation.”
Addressing Centripetal’s argument that the Board did consider the references in combination, the CAFC asserted that the “language that Centripetal quotes is not the Board’s analysis, but rather the Board’s recital of Centripetal’s own position.” The court said the PTAB’s analysis of the references in isolation constituted legal error and ultimately remanded the case back to the Board to “clarify and explain” its holding in more detail.

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7 comments so far.
Model 101
December 17, 2024 01:37 pmMore Crookery!
Pro Say
December 17, 2024 01:16 pm“All your patented innovations are belong to us.”
— Your CAFC Overlords
F22strike
December 17, 2024 12:22 pm“37 CFR § 11.701 Communications concerning a practitioner’s services.
A practitioner shall not make a false or misleading communication about the practitioner or the practitioner’s services. A communication is false or misleading if it contains a material misrepresentation of fact or law, or omits a fact necessary to make the statement considered as a whole not materially misleading.”
Assume that a patent attorney failed to inform his or her client that any US patent they might obtain for the client will likely be unenforceable based on claim cancellation statistics in IPR proceedings and anti-patent bias at the CAFC. Assume further that the client spent $50K in attorney fees and costs in obtaining and maintaining a US patent and another $450K in attorney fees and costs in IPR proceedings and an appeal at the CAFC, only to have all of the allegedly infringed claims of the patent cancelled.
There are plenty of plaintiff’s attorneys that would love to try a malpractice case against that patent attorney before a jury based on this scenario. The disgruntled patent owner would surely testify that he/she thought that the patent would give him/her exclusive rights to the invention and that he/she was never informed that it was so easy for the US government to take his/her patent away. The plaintiff’s attorney would argue for an award of damages in the amount of $500K plus lost profits (due to copy-cat competitors) in an amount based on the testimony of a damages expert. Even if the patent attorney wins the malpractice case, that attorney will still suffer a great deal in lost time, lost billing, and emotional distress.
Josh Malone
December 17, 2024 08:25 amThe patent game is rigged.
Max Drei
December 17, 2024 03:57 amAt the academy where USPTO Examiners are trained, how much help do Examiners receive, for the task of “articulating” a reason to combine? Perhaps what is needed is not so much that Examiners need to do a better job of being trained but that the Academy needs to do a better job of training them?
I ask because, here in Europe, the EPO approach to examining for obviousness makes it impossible even to raise an obviousness objection until one has worked out what shall be the precise “articulation”.
Brian
December 17, 2024 12:07 amCAFC would NOT let any patent owner win !
The Federal Circuit is corrupt / captured by Big Tech. Just like other federal agencies capture.
For last 10 years there has be NO patent owner who has won any verdict pass thru the CAFC clutches.
They have been bought and sold and have been told to nu ke any patent owner win!
Julie Burke
December 16, 2024 04:39 pm“On appeal, however, the CAFC said the Board failed to explain what it meant by “necessary bridge” and that it merely summarized PAN’s arguments on motivation to combine without making “a clear finding on whether a person of ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to modify Paxton by adding Sutton’s step of transmitting a notification of malicious activity after Paxton’s correlation step as proposed by PAN.””
Note that USPTO Office of Patent Quality Review found that 30% of the improper 103 rejections failed to include an adequately, clearly articulated reason or rationale (i.e., motivation).
Maybe time to send those PTAB APJs & non-compliant patent examiners back to training academy?