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The Death of Google's Patents?
patent law blog ^ | Jul 21, 2008 | John F. Duffy

Posted on 07/24/2008 8:52:07 AM PDT by N3WBI3

The Patent and Trademark Office has now made clear that its newly developed position on patentable subject matter will invalidate many and perhaps most software patents, including pioneering patent claims to such innovators as Google, Inc.

In a series of cases including In re Nuijten, In re Comiskey and In re Bilski, the Patent and Trademark Office has argued in favor of imposing new restrictions on the scope of patentable subject matter set forth by Congress in § 101 of the Patent Act. In the most recent of these three—the currently pending en banc Bilski appeal—the Office takes the position that process inventions generally are unpatentable unless they “result in a physical transformation of an article” or are “tied to a particular machine.”[1] Perhaps, the agency has conceded, some “new, unforeseen technology” might warrant an “exception” to this formalistic test, but in the agency’s view, no such technology has yet emerged so there is no reason currently to use a more inclusive standard.[2]

The Bilski en banc hearing attracted enormous attention, and yet there has remained a sense among many patent practitioners that the PTO’s attempts to curtail section 101 would affect only a few atypical patent claims. The vast bulk of patents on software, business and information technology are thought by some not to be threatened because those innovations are typically implemented on a machine—namely, a computer—and the tie to a machine would provide security against the agency’s contractions of § 101. Even if that view were right, the contraction of patent eligibility would be very troubling because the patent system is supposed to be designed to encourage the atypical, the unusual and the innovative. But that view is wrong.

The logic of the PTO’s positions in Nuijten, Comiskey and Bilski has always threatened to destabilize whole fields of patenting, most especially in the field of software patents. If the PTO’s test is followed, the crucial question for the vitality of patents on computer implemented inventions is whether a general purpose computer qualifies as a “particular” machine within the meaning of the agency’s test. In two recent decisions announced after the oral arguments in the Bilski case, Ex parte Langemyr (May 28, 2008) and Ex parte Wasynczuk (June 2, 2008),[3] the PTO Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences has now supplied an answer to that question: A general purpose computer is not a particular machine, and thus innovative software processes are unpatentable if they are tied only to a general purpose computer.

That stark answer should capture the attention of the many inventors and firms owning, or seeking to own, patents on innovative computer implemented processes, for the PTO’s new interpretation of patentable subject matter provides a clear avenue to reject patent applications and to invalid issued patents on all such innovations without regard to how meritorious or creative the innovation is. To understand the sweeping implications of this new position, we need only to consider how the PTO’s position applies to the patent on Google’s PageRank technology, which is surely one of the most famous and valuable of all modern software patents and which is now almost surely invalid under the agency’s position.

The Patent on Google’s PageRank Technology

Google has constructed its web search technology using a “technology for ranking web pages” that the company refers to as “PageRank.”[4] This patented technology was developed by Larry Page and Sergey Brin while they were attending Stanford University.[5] Stanford owns the patent, and Google holds a perpetual license on the technology that is exclusive through at least 2011.[6] The first claim of this important patent reads:

A computer implemented method of scoring a plurality of linked documents, comprising:

obtaining a plurality of documents, at least some of the documents being linked documents, at least some of the documents being linking documents, and at least some of the documents being both linked documents and linking documents, each of the linked documents being pointed to by a link in one or more of the linking documents;

assigning a score to each of the linked documents based on scores of the one or more linking documents; and

processing the linked documents according to their scores.

U.S. Pat. No. 6,285,999 (filed Jan. 9, 1998, issued Sept. 4, 2001).[7].

How does Google’s patent fare under the position advanced by the government in Bilski? The first part of the government’s test recognizes the patentable eligibility for processes that result in “a physical transformation of an article.” Google’s PageRank process seems to fail that part of the test, for the process merely generates a set of scores (which are merely numbers) that are then used to score or rank documents. The documents themselves probably do not qualify as physical articles under the government’s restrictive test, for the documents are typically virtual webpages. Moreover, even if the documents would count as physical articles, they are not transformed; the process merely ranks them. The total output from the Google patent is just a mass of intangible data, and worse still it is intangible data about intangible documents. Simply put, there’s no “physical,” no “transformation,” and no “article.” Indeed, Google’s process is even less physical than the process at issue in Bilski, which involved hedging the volatility in money flows. Dollars and cents seem real and physical enough for many people. If processes affecting money flows do not qualify as producing a physical transformation, it seems impossible to imagine that a process would qualify where it only scores virtual documents by virtual links to other virtual documents.

The second part of the PTO’s proposed eligibility test is thus crucial. Unlike the patent claim in Bilski, which was not limited to machine implemented hedges, Google’s PageRank patent claim expressly states that it is “computer implemented.” But the government’s test does not merely require a connection to a machine; it requires a tie to a particular machine.

On a recent panel held after the oral argument in Bilski, I raised the issue of Google’s patent claim with Ray Chen, the lawyer who represented the PTO in Bilski, and he asserted that, under the PTO’s position, the Google claim was probably still patentable.[8] But in light of the PTO’s subsequent decisions in Langemyr and Wasynczuk, it is increasingly hard to see how Google’s PageRank patent survives. Nor is that one patent an anomaly in Google’s portfolio.[9] Indeed, other patents owned by Google include claims that do not even include a formal limitation to a computer.[10] Google might have thought that the patent system would surely protect new technological developments that are highly creative and socially valuable. The PTO’s new position proves that view mistaken.

Langemyr and Wasynczuk

The patent claim at issue in Langemyr covers a “method executed in a computer apparatus” for producing a model of a physical system using a set of partial differential equations.[11] Even though Langemyr’s claimed invention is more closely tied to the physical world than Google’s PageRank technology is—Langemyr is, after all, modeling the physical systems rather than scoring virtual documents by their virtual links to other virtual documents—the PTO Board still had little difficulty finding that Langemyr’s claimed process does not contain a “physical transformation” and therefore does not qualify as patentable subject matter under the first part of the PTO’s test. The Board reasoned that the claimed process produced no “transformation of subject matter but merely an abstract mathematical expression that is created from the previous steps.”[12] The process, the Board noted, “does not require any physical output into the real world.”[13] Precisely the same can be said of Google’s patented process, which produces merely mathematical expressions—a set of ranks or scores—and lacks any physical output into the real world.

Thus for both Langemyr and Google, patent eligibility under the PTO’s test comes down to the interpretation of the second part of the PTO’s test. Both the Langemyr and Google patent claims are expressly limited to processes “executed” (Langemyr) or “implemented” (Google) on a general purpose computer, and the Langemyr decision holds that “the limitation that the method is ‘executed in a computer apparatus’ does not tie the method to a ‘particular machine.’”[14] The key flaw in Langemyr’s claim, the PTO Board reasoned, was its general applicability to all computer: “Any and all computing systems will suffice, indicating that the claim is not directed to the function of any particular machine. … Thus, the claimed method is not tied to ‘a particular machine,’ but rather is tied only to a general purpose computer.” [15]

In these crucial passages, the PTO Board has provided the foundation for rejecting and invalidating huge swaths of software patents, including not merely Langemyr’s claims, but those of Google, Microsoft, IBM and many other companies. If we want to evaluate the PTO’s ongoing attempts to constrict § 101, it does not seem an understatement to say that the constriction is truly breathtaking, given that the PTO’s position pushes outside the patent system Google’s PageRank patent, even though that patent covers one of the most widely known and commercially successful innovations of our era.

This is not, however, the end of the story. The PTO’s decision in Ex parte Wasynczuk provides one final twist so Kafkaesque as to strain credulity.

As in Langemyr, the invention at issue in Wasynczuk relates to a “computer-implemented” process for modeling physical systems.[16] As in Langemyr, the PTO Board in Wasynczuk holds the broadest claim in the application to be unpatentable subject matter because “the sole structural limitation recited is the ‘computer-implemented system’ of the preamble” and that limitation “is not any particular apparatus” because the computer could be “essentially any conventional apparatus that performs the claimed functions.”[17]

Yet unlike in Langemyr, the application in Wasynczuk also included a narrower claim in which “the first simulating step [of the claimed process] is performed on ‘a first physical computing device’ and the second simulating step is performed on ‘a second physical computing device.’”[18] The PTO Board holds that claim to be patentable subject matter. The Board concluded that the collection of the two “physical computing devices” operating together “is ‘a particular apparatus’ to which the process is tied, not simply a generic computing device for performing the steps.”[19] Distribution of the process over two general purpose computing devices quite clearly seems to be the key to patentability in the Board’s view, for the Board emphasized that the narrower claim covered only the embodiment in Wasynczuk’s specification that “uses two computing devices” not the embodiment that “uses a single computer.”[20] In sum, an innovative process is not patentable when operating on a single computer processor but is when operating on two processors, even though the Board recognizes that the process in the unpatentable claim “is essentially the method” set forth in the patentable claim.[21]

Google’s PageRank patent claim is of course not saved by the PTO’s caveat that two computer processors are better one when it comes to patentable subject matter. The PageRank claim requires only computer implementation and is thus invalid under both Langemyr and Wasynczuk. But the Wasynczuk definition of “particular machine” opens up vast possibilities for future litigation. In an age when even simple laptops often contain multiple processors, many patent claims could be written as functioning on multiple “physical computing devices.” Will such claims generally be patent eligible? Will dual core processors operating on a single chip (e.g., Intel’s Centrino Duo® chip) constitute a “particular machine”? Or will the processors have to be physically separate chips or physically separate computers? Will the patent claims have to specify that certain steps occur only on one processor while other steps occur solely on the other? Will the result be different if the processors share steps to some degree? All these and many more fascinating questions will provide ample billable hours for patent attorneys even as inventors look on with utter horror and disbelief at the crucial importance the legal system is placing on distinctions that are technologically meaningless to the innovations sought to be patented.

Requiem (?) for Google’s Patent

The apparent death of Google’s pioneering PageRank patent under the PTO’s new rule for patentable subject matter may be a cause for celebration among those who are philosophically opposed to property rights in innovation and are eager to confine the patent system’s ambit. It will surely be cause for mourning among those who believe that allowing patents on cutting edge technologies has served the country well for more than two centuries and that a radical departure from the traditional approach would be unwise. And it is likely to generate puzzlement among business people and innovators, who may wonder how agency decisions supposedly premised on the need for ensuring that “that the patent system be directed to protecting technological innovations”[22] have ended up rendering unpatentable innovations in search engine technology, computer modeling, bioinformatics and many other innovations in cutting edge fields related to software and information technology.

Undeniably, however, the pallor now cast upon Google’s patents and many other software patents highlight the stakes in the Federal Circuit’s pending en banc decision in Bilski. The PTO Board’s reasoning in Wasynczuk also reveals that the agency’s proposed new rule for patentable subject matter will not produce certainty but will instead open up software patents to new and previously unimagined litigation over the precise scope of the concept of a “particular machine.” Vast industries of modern innovation must now wait to see whether the courts will follow the agency’s lead.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: intellectualproperty; patent
For quite some time many people have said that some of the software patents issued were a joke, now hopefully many will get thrown out..
1 posted on 07/24/2008 8:52:08 AM PDT by N3WBI3
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To: antiRepublicrat

This seems like something in which you would find interest..


2 posted on 07/24/2008 8:52:46 AM PDT by N3WBI3 (Ah, arrogance and stupidity all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari)
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To: N3WBI3

Instead of patents, Google and others may have to resort to a mix of copyrights, and trade secrets.

With that, the laws for stealing trade secrets will have to be more stringent.


3 posted on 07/24/2008 9:10:04 AM PDT by bioqubit
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To: N3WBI3
has always threatened to destabilize whole fields of patenting, most especially in the field of software patents.

For about 20 years granting software and business method patents has been destabilizing the patent system. Looks like this is a good move back to saner days.

4 posted on 07/24/2008 9:19:35 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: N3WBI3
Patents aren't worth the paper they're printed on
5 posted on 07/24/2008 10:16:11 AM PDT by pabianice
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To: N3WBI3
Awesome development!

Software patents are a Bad Idea, IMO.

6 posted on 07/24/2008 1:18:52 PM PDT by TChris (Vote John McCain: Democrat Lite -- 3% less liberal than a regular Democrat!)
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To: pabianice

His case emphasizes how we need to rid ourselves of junk patents, leaving the assumption that those left are actually quality. Then we need a system that vigorously enforces those quality patents that people have actually been trying to market, but got infringed by the big guys (as opposed to paper patents used by patent trolls to extort money from inventive companies).


7 posted on 07/24/2008 1:19:25 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: N3WBI3
So for those of us keeping score, Google will lose it's patent buy "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" will be protected by copyright basically forever...

Beam me up Scotty!!

8 posted on 07/24/2008 1:43:24 PM PDT by BlueMondaySkipper (Involuntarily subsidizing the parasite class since 1981)
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To: BlueMondaySkipper

one fight at a time... the forever copyright has to come soon enough..


9 posted on 07/24/2008 1:57:21 PM PDT by N3WBI3 (Ah, arrogance and stupidity all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari)
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To: N3WBI3

Software is simply mathematical processes, which are not, and never should have been patentable.

Now is someone wants to develop a custom embedded system with software running on it, then the apparatus or machine could be patentable, but not just the software - or any software that runs on any computer. It is still just mathematical process- adding, subtracting, shifting ones and zeros.

Copyright the software maybe, but it should not be patentable.

“One click checkout” patent my @$$!


10 posted on 07/24/2008 7:28:09 PM PDT by hadit2here ("Most men would rather die than think. Many do." - Bertrand Russell)
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To: N3WBI3

This sounds like a boon to chip and memory makers, Google claiming prior art has to only refile a patent each time they update the server CPU’s in their data centers. They already have custom designed hardware, all they have to do is files patents for each possible hardware configuration, say 5,000,000 patents for each current patent. Matter of fact, the timing of the latest public disclosure by Google on their data center came directly after these patent decisions were made public. http://news.cnet.com/8301-10784_3-9955184-7.html
So by May 30th, Google might already have been preparing to defend and expand it’s patents by connecting them to specific hardware configurations.

Google probably has the computing power to permanently backlog the Patent Office if they take that approach.


11 posted on 07/24/2008 9:21:31 PM PDT by JerseyHighlander
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To: hadit2here

Why would a chemical process be pantabale but not a mathematical one?

Dont get me wrong the patenet should still have to pass the obviousness test


12 posted on 07/24/2008 10:27:13 PM PDT by N3WBI3 (Ah, arrogance and stupidity all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari)
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To: N3WBI3
Why would a chemical process be pantabale but not a mathematical one?

"Physical transformation" seems to ring a bell for me.

Hey, I don't make the rules, I just remember there being a long ago ruling that "mathematical process" was not patentable, which was equally long ago disregarded by the PTO when they started granting software patents.

I'm gonna take out a patent on "1+1=2" and make beeeelyuns of dollars.

#8^D

13 posted on 07/25/2008 11:20:53 AM PDT by hadit2here ("Most men would rather die than think. Many do." - Bertrand Russell)
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To: bioqubit
With that, the laws for stealing trade secrets will have to be more stringent.

Perhaps for stealing trade secrets. Reverse engineering and reproducing trade secrets should continue to remain legal. Any ambiguity should be removed.

Reverse Engineering should be legal in ALL cases.

14 posted on 07/25/2008 11:25:09 AM PDT by Dinsdale
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To: N3WBI3
So...now does Microsoft forget about wanting Yahoo?

See this:

Microsoft and the Yahoo patent portfolio ( Software giant could be after a hidden prize ...patents )

15 posted on 07/25/2008 1:16:47 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (No Burkas for my Grandaughters!)
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