Request for Comments on Trial Proceedings Under the America Invents Act Before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, 36474-36477 [2014-15171]
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36474
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 124 / Friday, June 27, 2014 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Telecommunications and
Information Administration
Multistakeholder Process To Develop
Consumer Data Privacy Code of
Conduct Concerning Facial
Recognition Technology
National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of Open Meeting.
AGENCY:
The National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) will convene a
meeting of a privacy multistakeholder
process concerning the commercial use
of facial recognition technology on July
24, 2014.
DATES: The meeting will be held on July
24, 2014 from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.,
Eastern Time. See Supplementary
Information for details.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held in
the Boardroom at the American Institute
of Architects, 1735 New York Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Verdi, National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce, 1401
Constitution Avenue NW., Room 4725,
Washington, DC 20230; telephone (202)
482–8238; email jverdi@ntia.doc.gov.
Please direct media inquiries to NTIA’s
Office of Public Affairs, (202) 482–7002;
email press@ntia.doc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: On February 23, 2012,
the White House released Consumer
Data Privacy in a Networked World: A
Framework for Protecting Privacy and
Promoting Innovation in the Global
Digital Economy (the ‘‘Privacy
Blueprint’’).1 The Privacy Blueprint
directs NTIA to convene
multistakeholder processes to develop
legally enforceable codes of conduct
that specify how the Consumer Privacy
Bill of Rights applies in specific
business contexts.2 On December 3,
2013, NTIA announced that it would
convene a multistakeholder process
with the goal of developing a code of
conduct to protect consumers’ privacy
and promote trust regarding facial
recognition technology in the
commercial context.3 On February 6,
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SUMMARY:
1 The Privacy Blueprint is available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/privacyfinal.pdf.
2 Id.
3 NTIA, Facial Recognition Technology, https://
www.ntia.doc.gov/other-publication/2013/privacymultistakeholder-process-facial-recognitiontechnology.
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2014, NTIA convened the first meeting
of the multistakeholder process,
followed by additional meetings
through June 2014.
Matters to Be Considered: The July 24,
2014 meeting is a continuation of a
series of NTIA-convened
multistakeholder discussions
concerning facial recognition
technology. Stakeholders will engage in
an open, transparent, consensus-driven
process to develop a code of conduct
regarding facial recognition technology.
The July 24, 2014 meeting will build on
stakeholders’ previous work. More
information about stakeholders’ work is
available at: https://www.ntia.doc.gov/
other-publication/2014/privacymultistakeholder-process-facialrecognition-technology.
Time and Date: NTIA will convene a
meeting of the privacy multistakeholder
process regarding facial recognition
technology on July 24, 2014, from 1:00
p.m. to 5:00 p.m., Eastern Time. The
meeting date and time are subject to
change. The meeting is subject to
cancelation if stakeholders complete
their work developing a code of
conduct. Please refer to NTIA’s Web
site, https://www.ntia.doc.gov/otherpublication/2014/privacymultistakeholder-process-facialrecognition-technology, for the most
current information.
Place: The meeting will be held in the
Boardroom at the American Institute of
Architects, 1735 New York Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20006. The
location of the meeting is subject to
change. Please refer to NTIA’s Web site,
https://www.ntia.doc.gov/otherpublication/2014/privacymultistakeholder-process-facialrecognition-technology, for the most
current information.
Other Information: The meeting is
open to the public and the press. The
meeting is physically accessible to
people with disabilities. Requests for
sign language interpretation or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to John
Verdi at (202) 482–8238 or jverdi@
ntia.doc.gov at least seven (7) business
days prior to the meeting. The meeting
will also be webcast. Requests for realtime captioning of the webcast or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to John
Verdi at (202) 482–8238 or jverdi@
ntia.doc.gov at least seven (7) business
days prior to the meeting. There will be
an opportunity for stakeholders viewing
the webcast to participate remotely in
the meeting through a moderated
conference bridge, including polling
functionality. Access details for the
meeting are subject to change. Please
refer to NTIA’s Web site, https://
www.ntia.doc.gov/other-publication/
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2013/privacy-multistakeholder-processfacial-recognition-technology, for the
most current information.
Dated: June 24, 2014.
Kathy Smith,
Chief Counsel, National Telecommunications
and Information Administration.
[FR Doc. 2014–15094 Filed 6–26–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–60–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
[Docket No. PTO–P–2014–0031]
Request for Comments on Trial
Proceedings Under the America
Invents Act Before the Patent Trial and
Appeal Board
United States Patent and
Trademark Office, Commerce.
ACTION: Request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Leahy-Smith America
Invents Act (AIA) provided for new
administrative trial proceedings before
the Patent Trial and Appeal Board
(Board). The United States Patent and
Trademark Office (USPTO) issued a
number of final rules and a trial practice
guide in August and September of 2012
to implement the new administrative
trial provisions of the AIA. The USPTO
now is seeking public comment on all
aspects of the new administrative trial
proceedings, including the
administrative trial proceeding rules
and trial practice guide.
DATES: Comment Deadline Date: Written
comments must be received on or before
September 16, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be sent by
electronic mail message over the
Internet addressed to: TrialsRFC2014@
uspto.gov.
Electronic comments submitted in
plain text are preferred, but also may be
submitted in ADOBE® portable
document format or MICROSOFT
WORD® format. Comments not
submitted electronically should be
submitted on paper in a format that
facilitates convenient digital scanning
into ADOBE® portable document
format. The comments will be available
for viewing via the USPTO’s Internet
Web site (https://www.uspto.gov).
Because comments will be made
available for public inspection,
information that the submitter does not
desire to make public, such as an
address or phone number, should not be
included in the comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scott R. Boalick, Vice Chief
Administrative Patent Judge (Acting),
SUMMARY:
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Patent Trial and Appeal Board, at 571–
272–8138.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Sections
3, 6, and 18 of the AIA provided for the
following new Board administrative
trial proceedings: (1) Inter partes
review; (2) post-grant review; (3)
covered business method patents
review; and (4) derivation proceedings.
Public Law 112–29, 125 Stat. 284
(2011). The USPTO issued a number of
final rules and a trial practice guide in
August and September of 2012 to
implement the new administrative trial
provisions of the AIA. See Rules of
Practice for Trials Before the Patent
Trial and Appeal Board and Judicial
Review of Patent Trial and Appeal
Board Decisions, 77 FR 48612 (Aug. 14,
2012) (final rule); Changes to Implement
Inter Partes Review Proceedings, PostGrant Review Proceedings, and
Transitional Program for Covered
Business Method Patents, 77 FR 48680
(Aug. 14, 2012) (final rule); Transitional
Program for Covered Business Method
Patents—Definitions of Covered
Business Method Patent and
Technological Invention, 77 FR 48734
(Aug. 14, 2012) (final rule); Changes to
Implement Derivation Proceedings, 77
FR 56068 (Sept. 11, 2012) (final rule);
and Office Patent Trial Practice Guide,
77 FR 48756 (Aug. 14, 2012).
During the rulemaking to implement
the administrative trial provisions of the
AIA, the USPTO held AIA roadshows in
eighteen cities to engage with the
public. In issuing the administrative
trial proceeding rules and trial practice
guide, the USPTO committed to
revisiting the rules and practice guide
once the Board and public had operated
under the rules and practice guide for
some period and had gained experience
with the new administrative trial
proceedings. The Board and public now
have eighteen months of experience
with the new administrative trial
proceedings, and, therefore, the USPTO
has determined that it is time to seek
public input on the AIA administrative
trial proceeding rules and trial practice
guide in light of this experience.
The USPTO began the process of
revisiting the AIA administrative trial
proceeding rules and trial practice guide
by engaging in a nation-wide listening
tour. The USPTO conducted a series of
eight roundtables in April and May of
2014, held in Alexandria, New York
City, Chicago, Detroit, Silicon Valley,
Seattle, Dallas, and Denver, to share
information concerning the AIA
administrative trial proceedings with
the public and obtain public feedback
on these proceedings. At these
roundtables, the Board provided the
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public with statistics concerning the
administrative trial proceedings, as well
as lessons learned for filing effective
petitions and preliminary patent owner
statements, engaging in successful
discovery and amendment practice, and
effectively presenting a case at oral
hearing. The Board also received
feedback from the public on the AIA
administrative trial proceeding rules
and trial practice guide, as well as on
experiences in general with the AIA
administrative trial proceedings. More
information about the roundtables is
available at https://www.uspto.gov/ip/
boards/bpai/ptab_aia_trial_
roundtables_2014.jsp.
More specifically, during the AIA
roundtables, the USPTO received some
comments of a non-rule specific nature.
The Board does not anticipate these
comments necessitating any changes to
the current AIA trial proceeding rules,
as discussed below.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board’s
Scheduling Order should require parties
to an AIA trial to engage in a settlement
discussion. The current AIA trial
proceeding rules do not dictate the
contents of scheduling orders in AIA
trials. Rather, Appendix A of the Office
Patent Trial Practice Guide (‘‘trial
practice guide’’) provides sample
scheduling orders. Further, the trial
practice guide states, ‘‘There are strong
public policy reasons to favor settlement
between the parties to a proceeding. The
Board will be available to facilitate
settlement discussions, and where
appropriate, may require a settlement
discussion as part of the proceeding.’’
Trial practice guide, section N.
Generally, the Board strongly
encourages the parties to engage in
settlement discussions. Should the
Board move forward with changes to the
AIA trial proceeding rules, the Board
will consider whether to amend
Appendix A of the trial practice guide
to provide an example order in which
the parties are required to engage in a
settlement discussion by a specified
date. The exact content of any
scheduling order will remain within the
discretion of the judge(s) issuing the
order.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that a notice of
appeal from a Board decision rendered
in an AIA trial should be required to be
served on the Solicitor. The USPTO has
experienced problems in the past with
parties who seek an appeal from a Board
decision in an AIA trial failing to
comply with the notice and service
requirements of 37 CFR 90.2. Section
90.2 requires, in pertinent part, ‘‘In all
appeals, the notice of appeal required by
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35 U.S.C. 142 must be filed with the
Director of the United States Patent and
Trademark Office as provided in § 104.2
of this title,’’ and that the notice must
include a description of the issues
expected to be pursued on appeal.
Section 104.2 provides that such notice
should be sent to the Office of the
General Counsel, of which the
Solicitor’s Office is a part. Thus, the
current Office rules governing service of
a notice of appeal already provide for
service on the Solicitor. Importantly,
notice to the Office of the General
Counsel of an appeal taken from a Board
decision provides the Solicitor with an
opportunity to intervene in the appeal
on behalf of the USPTO. Failure to
notify the USPTO properly of the filing
of a notice of appeal may result in the
Solicitor belatedly seeking to intervene
in the appeal once the USPTO becomes
aware of the appeal through other
means. Due to past failures of parties to
comply with this rule, the Board
typically adds a reminder at the end of
final, appealable Board decisions that
the parties must comply with the notice
and service requirements of § 90.2,
should they seek judicial review of the
decision.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board
should not continue a trial if the parties
settle the matter because continuation of
the trial is unfair to the parties. The
statute provides for settlement of inter
partes review, post-grant review, and
covered business method patents review
proceedings. 35 U.S.C. 317, 327, and
section 18(a)(1) of the AIA. The statute
also provides that after termination of
such a proceeding with respect to a
petitioner, if no petitioner remains in
the proceeding, ‘‘the Office may
terminate the review or proceed to a
final written decision.’’ In keeping with
the statute, 37 CFR 42.74(a) provides
that, while the parties may agree to
settle any issue in a proceeding, the
Board is not a party to the settlement
and independently may determine any
question of jurisdiction, patentability, or
Office practice. In issuing this final rule,
the USPTO responded to comments on
this matter explaining that the statutory
language for inter partes and post-grant
reviews confers discretion to the Board
to terminate or proceed to a final written
decision based on the facts in a
particular review. 77 FR at 48469. The
determination by the Board to proceed
to a final written decision is made
taking into account public policy
considerations. In particular, if the
parties settle the matter late in the
proceeding after the Board has reached
a determination of unpatentability as to
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one or more claims of the patent under
review, the Board, in its discretion, may
determine that proceeding to a final
written decision is in the best interests
of the public. Parties seeking to avoid
having a proceeding reach final written
decision after settlement are encouraged
to settle the issues in the proceeding
well in advance of the oral hearing.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables asked for the USPTO’s
interpretation of the estoppel effect of a
Board decision on civil actions and
other proceedings. See 35 U.S.C.
315(e)(2) and 325(e)(2). The scope or
interpretation of the estoppel provisions
of the statute as they pertain to civil
actions and other proceedings outside
the Office is not a matter for comment
by the USPTO. Rather, the federal courts
are best positioned to interpret the
statutory estoppel language as it applies
to civil actions and other proceedings
outside the USPTO in the context of the
particular facts in a given case.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board
should issue more precedential and
informative AIA trial decisions to
provide guidance for practitioners. The
Board has posted representative
decisions from AIA trials on its Web
page. The Board is in the process of
vetting additional AIA trial decisions for
potential designation as precedential
and informative. Additional
precedential and informative AIA trial
decisions will be posted to the Board’s
Web page as these designations are
made. The Board’s Standard Operating
Procedure 2, which concerns
publication of opinions and designation
of opinions as precedential, provides
that an appellant, patentee, petitioner,
or a third party member of the public
may, within 60 days of issuance of an
opinion, request in writing that an
opinion be made precedential by
forwarding the request, along with
accompanying reasons, to the Chief
Judge. SOP2, § II.C. The Board
encourages members of the public to
notify the Chief Judge if members of the
public deem an opinion rendered by the
Board in an AIA trial suitable for
designation as precedential.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board
should make audio files or transcripts of
oral arguments in AIA trials available to
the public. The Board currently employs
court reporters at all AIA trial hearings
to create a written transcript of each
hearing. These transcripts are made
available to the public through the
Patent Review Processing System
(PRPS), which is accessible via the
Board’s Web page.
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At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board
should enhance PRPS to permit nonparties to register to receive notices of
decisions in a case. Another participant
at the AIA roundtables commented that
the Board should enhance PRPS to
provide for better searchability of AIA
trial decisions. The Board is currently in
the process of developing a new PTAB
End-to-End information technology
system (‘‘PTAB E2E’’) that, once fully
deployed, will provide additional
features to the public portion of the
system. The Board will bear in mind the
input received at the AIA roundtables in
developing requirements for PTAB E2E.
In the meantime, interim solutions are
being explored to make AIA trial
decisions more easily accessible and
searchable on the PTAB Web page.
At least one participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board
should offer more statistics about AIA
trial proceedings, including showing the
outcome of final written decisions by
the technology center that issued the
patent and correlating the number of
preliminary patent owner responses
with decisions to institute trial. PRPS
has certain limitations in its structure
that do not allow for easy extraction of
data in an automated fashion. These
limitations make it particularly difficult
and time consuming for the Board to
present statistics on AIA trials.
Currently, the Board calculates AIA trial
statistics through manual data collection
means. With the number of AIA filings
and the number of active AIA trials on
the rise, the Board is finding the
collection of such data to be even more
difficult and time consuming. As
requirements are developed for PTAB
E2E, data extraction and analysis will be
kept in mind so that the next generation
PTAB IT system will allow provision of
more statistical data about AIA trials. In
the meantime, the Board is working to
enhance AIA trial statistics published
regularly on the Board’s Web page.
As discussed previously, the USPTO
is seeking public comment on all
aspects of the new administrative trial
proceedings, including the
administrative trial proceeding rules
and trial practice guide. The following
are issues on which the USPTO is
especially interested in receiving public
comment, as these issues were most
frequently raised during the
roundtables:
Claim Construction Standard
1. Under what circumstances, if any,
should the Board decline to construe a
claim in an unexpired patent in
accordance with its broadest reasonable
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construction in light of the specification
of the patent in which it appears?
Motion To Amend
2. What modifications, if any, should
be made to the Board’s practice
regarding motions to amend?
Patent Owner Preliminary Response
3. Should new testimonial evidence
be permitted in a Patent Owner
Preliminary Response? If new
testimonial evidence is permitted, how
can the Board meet the statutory
deadline to determine whether to
institute a proceeding while ensuring
fair treatment of all parties?
Obviousness
4. Under what circumstances should
the Board permit discovery of evidence
of non-obviousness held by the
petitioner, for example, evidence of
commercial success for a product of the
petitioner? What limits should be
placed on such discovery to ensure that
the trial is completed by the statutory
deadline?
Real Party in Interest
5. Should a patent owner be able to
raise a challenge regarding a real party
in interest at any time during a trial?
Additional Discovery
6. Are the factors enumerated in the
Board’s decision in Garmin v. Cuozzo,
IPR2012–00001, appropriate to consider
in deciding whether to grant a request
for additional discovery? What
additional factors, if any, should be
considered?
Multiple Proceedings
7. How should multiple proceedings
before the USPTO involving the same
patent be coordinated? Multiple
proceedings before the USPTO include,
for example: (i) Two or more separate
AIA trials; (ii) an AIA trial and a
reexamination proceeding; or (iii) an
AIA trial and a reissue proceeding,
8. What factors should be considered
in deciding whether to stay, transfer,
consolidate, or terminate an additional
proceeding involving the same patent
after a petition for AIA trial has been
filed?
9. Under what circumstances, if any,
should a copending reexamination
proceeding or reissue proceeding be
stayed in favor of an AIA trial? If a stay
is entered, under what circumstances
should the stay be lifted?
10. Under what circumstances, if any,
should an AIA trial be stayed in favor
of a copending reexamination
proceeding or reissue proceeding? If a
stay is entered, under what
circumstances should the stay be lifted?
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11. Under what circumstances, if any,
should a copending reexamination
proceeding or reissue proceeding be
consolidated with an AIA trial?
12. How should consolidated
proceedings be handled before the
USPTO? Consolidated proceedings
include, for example: (i) Consolidated
AIA trials; (ii) an AIA trial consolidated
with a reexamination proceeding; or (iii)
an AIA trial consolidated with a reissue
proceeding.
13. Under what circumstances, if any,
should a petition for an AIA trial be
rejected because the same or
substantially the same prior art or
arguments previously were presented to
the USPTO in a different petition for an
AIA trial, in a reexamination proceeding
or in a reissue proceeding?
Extension of 1 Year Period To Issue
Final Determination
14. What circumstances should
constitute a finding of good cause to
extend the 1-year period for the Board
to issue a final determination in an AIA
trial?
Oral Hearing
15. Under what circumstances, if any,
should live testimony be permitted at
the oral hearing?
16. What changes, if any, should be
made to the format of the oral hearing?
General
17. What other changes can and
should be made in AIA trial
proceedings? For example, should
changes be made to the Board’s
approach to instituting petitions, page
limits, or request for rehearing practice?
Dated: June 23, 2014.
Michelle K. Lee,
Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for
Intellectual Property and, Deputy Director of
the United States Patent and Trademark
Office.
[FR Doc. 2014–15171 Filed 6–26–14; 8:45 am]
agency employing persons who are
blind or have other severe disabilities
and to delete products previously
furnished by such agencies.
Comments Must Be Received on
or Before: 7/28/2014.
DATES:
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Procurement List; Proposed Additions
and Deletions
Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Proposed Addition to and
Deletions From Procurement List.
AGENCY:
The Committee is proposing
to add a service to the Procurement List
that will be furnished by nonprofit
SUMMARY:
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Patricia Briscoe,
Deputy Director, Business Operations (Pricing
and Information Management).
[FR Doc. 2014–15048 Filed 6–26–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6353–01–P
Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, 1401 S. Clark Street, Suite
10800, Arlington, Virginia 22202–4149.
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION OR TO SUBMIT
COMMENTS CONTACT: Barry S. Lineback,
Telephone: (703) 603–7740, Fax: (703)
603–0655, or email CMTEFedReg@
AbilityOne.gov.
Procurement List; Additions And
Deletion
AGENCY:
This
notice is published pursuant to 41
U.S.C. 8503(a)(2) and 41 CFR 51–2.3. Its
purpose is to provide interested persons
an opportunity to submit comments on
the proposed actions.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Addition
If the Committee approves the
proposed additions, the entities of the
Federal Government identified in this
notice will be required to procure the
service listed below from nonprofit
agency employing persons who are
blind or have other severe disabilities.
The following service is proposed for
addition to Procurement List for
production by the nonprofit agency
listed:
Service
Service Type/Location: Contact Center,
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD.
NPA: InspiriTec, Inc., Philadelphia, PA.
Contracting Activity: DEPT OF HHS/CMS,
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, Baltimore, MD.
Deletions
Products
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
NY.
ADDRESSES:
The following products are proposed
for deletion from the Procurement List:
BILLING CODE 3510–16–P
36477
NSN: 8115–00–511–5750—Box, Set-Up,
Mailing Dental.
NPA: Blind Industries & Services of
Maryland, Baltimore, MD.
Contracting Activity: DLA TROOP SUPPORT,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
NSN: 7530–01–515–7900—Paper, Printer, Ink
Jet, Photo Quality, Double Side, Matte,
Letter, 99 Bright White.
NSN: 7530–01–515–7471—Paper, Printer, Ink
Jet, Photo Quality, 24 lb., Letter, 94
Bright White.
NPA: Wiscraft, Inc., Milwaukee, WI.
Contracting Activity: GSA/FSS OFC SUP
CTR—PAPER PRODUCTS, NEW YORK,
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Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Additions to and Deletion from
the Procurement List.
This action adds products to
the Procurement List that will be
furnished by nonprofit agencies
employing persons who are blind or
have other severe disabilities, and
deletes a service from the Procurement
List previously furnished by such
agencies.
SUMMARY:
Effective Date: 7/28/2014.
Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, 1401 S. Clark Street, Suite
10800, Arlington, Virginia 22202–4149.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barry S. Lineback, Telephone: (703)
603–7740, Fax: (703) 603–0655, or email
CMTEFedReg@AbilityOne.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
ADDRESSES:
Additions
On 5/2/2014 (78 FR No. 85) and 5/23/
2014 (79 FR No. 100), the Committee for
Purchase From People Who Are Blind
or Severely Disabled published notice of
proposed additions to the Procurement
List.
After consideration of the material
presented to it concerning capability of
qualified nonprofit agencies to provide
the products and impact of the
additions on the current or most recent
contractors, the Committee has
determined that the products listed
below are suitable for procurement by
the Federal Government under 41 U.S.C.
8501–8506 and 41 CFR 51–2.4.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
I certify that the following action will
not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The major factors considered for this
certification were:
1. The action will not result in any
additional reporting, recordkeeping or
other compliance requirements for small
entities other than the small
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 124 (Friday, June 27, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 36474-36477]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-15171]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
[Docket No. PTO-P-2014-0031]
Request for Comments on Trial Proceedings Under the America
Invents Act Before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board
AGENCY: United States Patent and Trademark Office, Commerce.
ACTION: Request for comments.
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SUMMARY: The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (AIA) provided for new
administrative trial proceedings before the Patent Trial and Appeal
Board (Board). The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
issued a number of final rules and a trial practice guide in August and
September of 2012 to implement the new administrative trial provisions
of the AIA. The USPTO now is seeking public comment on all aspects of
the new administrative trial proceedings, including the administrative
trial proceeding rules and trial practice guide.
DATES: Comment Deadline Date: Written comments must be received on or
before September 16, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be sent by electronic mail message over the
Internet addressed to: TrialsRFC2014@uspto.gov.
Electronic comments submitted in plain text are preferred, but also
may be submitted in ADOBE[supreg] portable document format or MICROSOFT
WORD[supreg] format. Comments not submitted electronically should be
submitted on paper in a format that facilitates convenient digital
scanning into ADOBE[supreg] portable document format. The comments will
be available for viewing via the USPTO's Internet Web site (https://www.uspto.gov). Because comments will be made available for public
inspection, information that the submitter does not desire to make
public, such as an address or phone number, should not be included in
the comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scott R. Boalick, Vice Chief
Administrative Patent Judge (Acting),
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Patent Trial and Appeal Board, at 571-272-8138.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Sections 3, 6, and 18 of the AIA provided
for the following new Board administrative trial proceedings: (1) Inter
partes review; (2) post-grant review; (3) covered business method
patents review; and (4) derivation proceedings. Public Law 112-29, 125
Stat. 284 (2011). The USPTO issued a number of final rules and a trial
practice guide in August and September of 2012 to implement the new
administrative trial provisions of the AIA. See Rules of Practice for
Trials Before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board and Judicial Review of
Patent Trial and Appeal Board Decisions, 77 FR 48612 (Aug. 14, 2012)
(final rule); Changes to Implement Inter Partes Review Proceedings,
Post-Grant Review Proceedings, and Transitional Program for Covered
Business Method Patents, 77 FR 48680 (Aug. 14, 2012) (final rule);
Transitional Program for Covered Business Method Patents--Definitions
of Covered Business Method Patent and Technological Invention, 77 FR
48734 (Aug. 14, 2012) (final rule); Changes to Implement Derivation
Proceedings, 77 FR 56068 (Sept. 11, 2012) (final rule); and Office
Patent Trial Practice Guide, 77 FR 48756 (Aug. 14, 2012).
During the rulemaking to implement the administrative trial
provisions of the AIA, the USPTO held AIA roadshows in eighteen cities
to engage with the public. In issuing the administrative trial
proceeding rules and trial practice guide, the USPTO committed to
revisiting the rules and practice guide once the Board and public had
operated under the rules and practice guide for some period and had
gained experience with the new administrative trial proceedings. The
Board and public now have eighteen months of experience with the new
administrative trial proceedings, and, therefore, the USPTO has
determined that it is time to seek public input on the AIA
administrative trial proceeding rules and trial practice guide in light
of this experience.
The USPTO began the process of revisiting the AIA administrative
trial proceeding rules and trial practice guide by engaging in a
nation-wide listening tour. The USPTO conducted a series of eight
roundtables in April and May of 2014, held in Alexandria, New York
City, Chicago, Detroit, Silicon Valley, Seattle, Dallas, and Denver, to
share information concerning the AIA administrative trial proceedings
with the public and obtain public feedback on these proceedings. At
these roundtables, the Board provided the public with statistics
concerning the administrative trial proceedings, as well as lessons
learned for filing effective petitions and preliminary patent owner
statements, engaging in successful discovery and amendment practice,
and effectively presenting a case at oral hearing. The Board also
received feedback from the public on the AIA administrative trial
proceeding rules and trial practice guide, as well as on experiences in
general with the AIA administrative trial proceedings. More information
about the roundtables is available at https://www.uspto.gov/ip/boards/bpai/ptab_aia_trial_roundtables_2014.jsp.
More specifically, during the AIA roundtables, the USPTO received
some comments of a non-rule specific nature. The Board does not
anticipate these comments necessitating any changes to the current AIA
trial proceeding rules, as discussed below.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that the
Board's Scheduling Order should require parties to an AIA trial to
engage in a settlement discussion. The current AIA trial proceeding
rules do not dictate the contents of scheduling orders in AIA trials.
Rather, Appendix A of the Office Patent Trial Practice Guide (``trial
practice guide'') provides sample scheduling orders. Further, the trial
practice guide states, ``There are strong public policy reasons to
favor settlement between the parties to a proceeding. The Board will be
available to facilitate settlement discussions, and where appropriate,
may require a settlement discussion as part of the proceeding.'' Trial
practice guide, section N. Generally, the Board strongly encourages the
parties to engage in settlement discussions. Should the Board move
forward with changes to the AIA trial proceeding rules, the Board will
consider whether to amend Appendix A of the trial practice guide to
provide an example order in which the parties are required to engage in
a settlement discussion by a specified date. The exact content of any
scheduling order will remain within the discretion of the judge(s)
issuing the order.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that a
notice of appeal from a Board decision rendered in an AIA trial should
be required to be served on the Solicitor. The USPTO has experienced
problems in the past with parties who seek an appeal from a Board
decision in an AIA trial failing to comply with the notice and service
requirements of 37 CFR 90.2. Section 90.2 requires, in pertinent part,
``In all appeals, the notice of appeal required by 35 U.S.C. 142 must
be filed with the Director of the United States Patent and Trademark
Office as provided in Sec. 104.2 of this title,'' and that the notice
must include a description of the issues expected to be pursued on
appeal. Section 104.2 provides that such notice should be sent to the
Office of the General Counsel, of which the Solicitor's Office is a
part. Thus, the current Office rules governing service of a notice of
appeal already provide for service on the Solicitor. Importantly,
notice to the Office of the General Counsel of an appeal taken from a
Board decision provides the Solicitor with an opportunity to intervene
in the appeal on behalf of the USPTO. Failure to notify the USPTO
properly of the filing of a notice of appeal may result in the
Solicitor belatedly seeking to intervene in the appeal once the USPTO
becomes aware of the appeal through other means. Due to past failures
of parties to comply with this rule, the Board typically adds a
reminder at the end of final, appealable Board decisions that the
parties must comply with the notice and service requirements of Sec.
90.2, should they seek judicial review of the decision.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that the
Board should not continue a trial if the parties settle the matter
because continuation of the trial is unfair to the parties. The statute
provides for settlement of inter partes review, post-grant review, and
covered business method patents review proceedings. 35 U.S.C. 317, 327,
and section 18(a)(1) of the AIA. The statute also provides that after
termination of such a proceeding with respect to a petitioner, if no
petitioner remains in the proceeding, ``the Office may terminate the
review or proceed to a final written decision.'' In keeping with the
statute, 37 CFR 42.74(a) provides that, while the parties may agree to
settle any issue in a proceeding, the Board is not a party to the
settlement and independently may determine any question of
jurisdiction, patentability, or Office practice. In issuing this final
rule, the USPTO responded to comments on this matter explaining that
the statutory language for inter partes and post-grant reviews confers
discretion to the Board to terminate or proceed to a final written
decision based on the facts in a particular review. 77 FR at 48469. The
determination by the Board to proceed to a final written decision is
made taking into account public policy considerations. In particular,
if the parties settle the matter late in the proceeding after the Board
has reached a determination of unpatentability as to
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one or more claims of the patent under review, the Board, in its
discretion, may determine that proceeding to a final written decision
is in the best interests of the public. Parties seeking to avoid having
a proceeding reach final written decision after settlement are
encouraged to settle the issues in the proceeding well in advance of
the oral hearing.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables asked for the
USPTO's interpretation of the estoppel effect of a Board decision on
civil actions and other proceedings. See 35 U.S.C. 315(e)(2) and
325(e)(2). The scope or interpretation of the estoppel provisions of
the statute as they pertain to civil actions and other proceedings
outside the Office is not a matter for comment by the USPTO. Rather,
the federal courts are best positioned to interpret the statutory
estoppel language as it applies to civil actions and other proceedings
outside the USPTO in the context of the particular facts in a given
case.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that the
Board should issue more precedential and informative AIA trial
decisions to provide guidance for practitioners. The Board has posted
representative decisions from AIA trials on its Web page. The Board is
in the process of vetting additional AIA trial decisions for potential
designation as precedential and informative. Additional precedential
and informative AIA trial decisions will be posted to the Board's Web
page as these designations are made. The Board's Standard Operating
Procedure 2, which concerns publication of opinions and designation of
opinions as precedential, provides that an appellant, patentee,
petitioner, or a third party member of the public may, within 60 days
of issuance of an opinion, request in writing that an opinion be made
precedential by forwarding the request, along with accompanying
reasons, to the Chief Judge. SOP2, Sec. II.C. The Board encourages
members of the public to notify the Chief Judge if members of the
public deem an opinion rendered by the Board in an AIA trial suitable
for designation as precedential.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that the
Board should make audio files or transcripts of oral arguments in AIA
trials available to the public. The Board currently employs court
reporters at all AIA trial hearings to create a written transcript of
each hearing. These transcripts are made available to the public
through the Patent Review Processing System (PRPS), which is accessible
via the Board's Web page.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that the
Board should enhance PRPS to permit non-parties to register to receive
notices of decisions in a case. Another participant at the AIA
roundtables commented that the Board should enhance PRPS to provide for
better searchability of AIA trial decisions. The Board is currently in
the process of developing a new PTAB End-to-End information technology
system (``PTAB E2E'') that, once fully deployed, will provide
additional features to the public portion of the system. The Board will
bear in mind the input received at the AIA roundtables in developing
requirements for PTAB E2E. In the meantime, interim solutions are being
explored to make AIA trial decisions more easily accessible and
searchable on the PTAB Web page.
At least one participant at the AIA roundtables commented that the
Board should offer more statistics about AIA trial proceedings,
including showing the outcome of final written decisions by the
technology center that issued the patent and correlating the number of
preliminary patent owner responses with decisions to institute trial.
PRPS has certain limitations in its structure that do not allow for
easy extraction of data in an automated fashion. These limitations make
it particularly difficult and time consuming for the Board to present
statistics on AIA trials. Currently, the Board calculates AIA trial
statistics through manual data collection means. With the number of AIA
filings and the number of active AIA trials on the rise, the Board is
finding the collection of such data to be even more difficult and time
consuming. As requirements are developed for PTAB E2E, data extraction
and analysis will be kept in mind so that the next generation PTAB IT
system will allow provision of more statistical data about AIA trials.
In the meantime, the Board is working to enhance AIA trial statistics
published regularly on the Board's Web page.
As discussed previously, the USPTO is seeking public comment on all
aspects of the new administrative trial proceedings, including the
administrative trial proceeding rules and trial practice guide. The
following are issues on which the USPTO is especially interested in
receiving public comment, as these issues were most frequently raised
during the roundtables:
Claim Construction Standard
1. Under what circumstances, if any, should the Board decline to
construe a claim in an unexpired patent in accordance with its broadest
reasonable construction in light of the specification of the patent in
which it appears?
Motion To Amend
2. What modifications, if any, should be made to the Board's
practice regarding motions to amend?
Patent Owner Preliminary Response
3. Should new testimonial evidence be permitted in a Patent Owner
Preliminary Response? If new testimonial evidence is permitted, how can
the Board meet the statutory deadline to determine whether to institute
a proceeding while ensuring fair treatment of all parties?
Obviousness
4. Under what circumstances should the Board permit discovery of
evidence of non-obviousness held by the petitioner, for example,
evidence of commercial success for a product of the petitioner? What
limits should be placed on such discovery to ensure that the trial is
completed by the statutory deadline?
Real Party in Interest
5. Should a patent owner be able to raise a challenge regarding a
real party in interest at any time during a trial?
Additional Discovery
6. Are the factors enumerated in the Board's decision in Garmin v.
Cuozzo, IPR2012-00001, appropriate to consider in deciding whether to
grant a request for additional discovery? What additional factors, if
any, should be considered?
Multiple Proceedings
7. How should multiple proceedings before the USPTO involving the
same patent be coordinated? Multiple proceedings before the USPTO
include, for example: (i) Two or more separate AIA trials; (ii) an AIA
trial and a reexamination proceeding; or (iii) an AIA trial and a
reissue proceeding,
8. What factors should be considered in deciding whether to stay,
transfer, consolidate, or terminate an additional proceeding involving
the same patent after a petition for AIA trial has been filed?
9. Under what circumstances, if any, should a copending
reexamination proceeding or reissue proceeding be stayed in favor of an
AIA trial? If a stay is entered, under what circumstances should the
stay be lifted?
10. Under what circumstances, if any, should an AIA trial be stayed
in favor of a copending reexamination proceeding or reissue proceeding?
If a stay is entered, under what circumstances should the stay be
lifted?
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11. Under what circumstances, if any, should a copending
reexamination proceeding or reissue proceeding be consolidated with an
AIA trial?
12. How should consolidated proceedings be handled before the
USPTO? Consolidated proceedings include, for example: (i) Consolidated
AIA trials; (ii) an AIA trial consolidated with a reexamination
proceeding; or (iii) an AIA trial consolidated with a reissue
proceeding.
13. Under what circumstances, if any, should a petition for an AIA
trial be rejected because the same or substantially the same prior art
or arguments previously were presented to the USPTO in a different
petition for an AIA trial, in a reexamination proceeding or in a
reissue proceeding?
Extension of 1 Year Period To Issue Final Determination
14. What circumstances should constitute a finding of good cause to
extend the 1-year period for the Board to issue a final determination
in an AIA trial?
Oral Hearing
15. Under what circumstances, if any, should live testimony be
permitted at the oral hearing?
16. What changes, if any, should be made to the format of the oral
hearing?
General
17. What other changes can and should be made in AIA trial
proceedings? For example, should changes be made to the Board's
approach to instituting petitions, page limits, or request for
rehearing practice?
Dated: June 23, 2014.
Michelle K. Lee,
Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and,
Deputy Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
[FR Doc. 2014-15171 Filed 6-26-14; 8:45 am]
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