Bonum Certa Men Certa

A US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) Which is Hostile Towards Patent Maximalists May Closely Examine More Patents That Apple Uses Against Android

GNU/Linux-powered devices are habitually being targeted by artsy design patents, but might this end soon?

Designer



Summary: A company which often takes pride in designers rather than developers (art, not technical merit) may lose that leverage over the competition if its questionable patents are taken away by the Supremes

THE SCOTUS, in its current composition at least (many nominations and appointments by Democrats -- a trend that is now changing), has handed down some important decisions on patents over the past half a decade and most of them were favourable to patent reformers. Reformist scope-oriented measures such as restriction if not elimination of software patents are just the tip of the iceberg; a few months ago we wrote about the Lexmark case.



“This time around it's about the second California Apple v. Samsung case (the one that went to trial in 2014, resulting in a $119 million verdict).”
      --Florian Müller
Florian Müller scooped an important story the other day. "I tried to find media reports on Samsung's new Apple v. Samsung Supreme Court petition," he wrote, "and couldn't find any, so maybe I scooped'em all" with the blog post "Samsung is now taking the second Apple v. Samsung patent case to the Supreme Court". To quote: "The first Apple v. Samsung case went all the way up to the Supreme Court and has meanwhile gone all the way back to the Northern District of California to take a new look at the question of design patent damages. But the steps to the Supreme Court are like a revolving door for this huge commercial dispute: a new petition for writ of certiorari (request for Supreme Court review) is already in the making! This time around it's about the second California Apple v. Samsung case (the one that went to trial in 2014, resulting in a $119 million verdict)."

Someone disputed the number, saying that "it'll actually be the third. They had another petition denied on a very technical issue."

Müller insisted, however, that "by "second case" I meant the second case filed by Apple against Samsung in U.S. district court..."

"If this is all that Apple has left in its future plans (suing competitors), then it doesn't look particularly bright; nor does it look innovative..."Techrights had been sceptical of Apple for a long time, even before Apple began attacking Android with patents (there was sabre-rattling even before that, e.g. against Palm). Apple and its nonsensical patents never end. Our sources at the EPO indicate that it's not different in Europe, but we cannot publicly share any further details on that (in order to protect sources). Watch this article from CNN, published just 6 days ago. "Apple often patents interesting hardware or futuristic iPhone designs that may never see the light of day," it says. "But in its latest patent granted on Tuesday, Apple (AAPL, Tech30) describes something a little less innovative, and already wildly popular."

They're ignoring prior art and also neglecting the fact that software patents are a dying breed. If this is all that Apple has left in its future plans (suing competitors), then it doesn't look particularly bright; nor does it look innovative...

We look forward to that (potentially second) SCOTUS case which might, due to Apple, spell doom for design patents, which are often similar to software patents (in the GUI sense).

Life Technologies Corp. v Promega Corp.



"We look forward to that (potentially second) SCOTUS case which might, due to Apple, spell doom for design patents, which are often similar to software patents (in the GUI sense)."SCOTUS rulings on patents actually made a lot of headlines this past week, but this did not involve software patents or anything like that. Mayer Brown LLP, for example, wrote about Life Technologies Corp. v Promega Corp. (at SCOTUS) in lawyers' media. "In an effort to curb efforts to circumvent patent protection," they said, "the Patent Act imposes liability for infringement on anyone who supplies “all or a substantial portion” of a patented invention’s components from the United States for combination overseas. 35 U.S.C. s 271(f)(1). The Federal Circuit had held that a single component—in this case, of a five-component test kit—could be sufficiently important to a patented invention to constitute “a substantial portion.”"

"The Supreme Court has reversed the Federal Circuit in Life Tech v Promega, ruling that manufacture and exportation of a single component of a patented invention assembled in another country is not enough for infringement in the US. However, as a concurring opinion and observers note, the Supreme Court did not indicate how much more than one is enough," MIP wrote.

"IAM is basically ranting about this ruling because SCOTUS didn't rule for patent maximalists."IAM, the lobby of the patent maximalists (disguised as press whilst lobbying/preaching), wrote: "Yet again #SCOTUS left #patent community in the dark on a key part of its latest ruling" (misinformation).

Well, by "patent community" they mean something like "hedge funds of the patent world", not a community per se. And nobody is really left "in the the dark"; it's just a dark day for patent maximalists.

IAM is basically ranting about this ruling because SCOTUS didn't rule for patent maximalists. To quote their blog post about it:

Seven US Supreme Court justices issued their latest patent ruling yesterday in a case that may not have been awaited with the same level of expectancy as next month’s oral arguments in the venue selection case TC Heartland, but which nonetheless showed them sticking to form. As ever with this court it was a case of what wasn’t said as much as what was outlined in the decision.

The case in question, Life Technologies Corp v Promega Corp, involved the supply of a single infringing component manufactured in the US by Life Technologies but then shipped to the UK for assembly. Promega sued citing the Patent Act’s prohibition of the supply from the US of “all or a substantial portion of the components of a patent invention” for combination abroad.


As for Patently-O, it said about Life Technologies Corp. v Promega Corp. that "[i]n a largely-unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court has ruled that the “supply of a single component of a multicomponent invention for manufacture abroad does not give rise to €§271(f)(1) liability.”"

"Patent maximalism is good for nobody except those who make a living from nothing other than patents (no actual invention, production and so on).""Writing for the court," Patently-O added, "Justice Sotomayor found that the “substantial portion” should be seen as a quantitative requirement and that a single component is not sufficient."

The very fact that sites like IAM are upset about it should say quite clearly that it's a good and positive development. Patent maximalism is good for nobody except those who make a living from nothing other than patents (no actual invention, production and so on).

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