Senate innovation hearing long on assertions, short on support

Opinion post originally published on November 21, 2023, by The Hill, written by Unified’s Co-Founder & CEO, Kevin Jakel.

Earlier this month, the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Intellectual Property held a hearing on the PREVAIL Act, legislation that aims to limit and weaken patent quality reviews at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

The USPTO’s Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) is a public way to review bad patents, and serves as a streamlined alternative to time-consuming, expensive patent infringement lawsuits. PTAB review allows experts to take a second look at some of the many patents the agency issues and pull them back if they do not meet baseline quality standards. This helps innovative companies from all industries fend off wasteful lawsuits from patent trolls; which use thousands of poor-quality patents every year to make baseless patent infringement claims against businesses that are, unlike the trolls, contributing to our economy.

The PTAB has helped hold patent trolling back, cutting costs and increasing U.S. business activity by billions of dollars since Congress created it. Unfortunately, the PREVAIL Act would erode public access to patent quality review by erecting unnecessary barriers to challenging bad patents.

Sound policy should be grounded in data. It is important to correct the record on a few of the most misleading narratives from the hearing, before lawmakers do anything to advance policies that would once again leave innovative American companies vulnerable to wasteful lawsuits.  

First, the PREVAIL Act would weaken, not strengthen, our ability to compete with foreign adversaries like China.

PREVAIL’s advocates claim that the bill is necessary to remain competitive with adversaries like China. Restricting public access to efficient patent quality checks would give foreign competitors more opportunities to rack up their own patents and assert them in U.S. courts, while preventing challenges to poor-quality patents owned by foreign adversaries.

Patent challengers are mostly American companies. And patents being challenged are often owned by foreign entities or linked to litigation funders that can include sovereign wealth funds and other overseas investors. Petitioners based in China, on average, account for less than 5 percent of all PTAB filings; meanwhile, entities based in China file for tens of thousands of U.S. patents each year and their quality is notoriously poor.   

The PREVAIL Act would limit the protections strategically important U.S. industries have against baseless patent troll lawsuits — including those funded by investors in China and elsewhere. 

The PTAB does not overwhelmingly “kill” patents. 

Interest groups have, since before the first PTAB ruling, claimed that review overwhelmingly “kills” patents. As evidence, they repeatedly cite the percentage of PTAB proceedings that reach a final written decision and result in at least one partof a patent being invalidated. 

This cherry-picked number lacks critical context. To begin a review, the PTAB must determine that a petition shows a “reasonable likelihood” that the patent is invalid. Nearly half of challenges are denied outright, never making it close to a final decision.

Just 10 percent of patents that have ever been challenged at the PTAB have been fully invalidated; often, some overreaching claims are canceled, but others remain. One hearing witness noted that patent owners win at the PTAB nearly 60 percent of the time. This is far from automatically “killing” patents. 

Patent review is not used to harass patent owners and small inventors. 

Some lawmakers repeat claims that PTAB review is used to harass patent owners with multiple challenges. However, the USPTO recently concluded that “most patents are challenged by only one petition. Moreover…trials based on multiple petitions are rare.”

The harassment myth is used to justify a new standing requirement that would make PTAB review accessible only to those who have been sued or accused of infringement. As former USPTO Acting Director Joe Matal highlighted in his testimony, a new standing requirement would block review in many cases where a petitioner has a commonsense interest in challenging a bad patent.

The PREVAIL Act’s standing requirement would prevent, for example, many generic drug companies — like Mylan, who has filed more than 100 to date — from challenging broad patents that raise drug prices and would stop a manufacturer from challenging an invalid patent that is being used to sue its customers. Also affected would be small- and medium-sized businesses that patent trolls target with sue-and-settle campaigns. Organizations like the one I founded, Unified Patents, intervene to help stop these abusive patent lawsuits by filing validity challenges on the underlying patents. We are often the only party to shield dozens — and sometimes hundreds — of U.S. businesses that are targeted with baseless litigation.

In short, PREVAIL’s standing policy would leave small businesses alone when facing professional trolls.

The PTAB does not cause duplicative litigation, it resolves it. 

One of the more ironic talking points from the hearing is that 85 percent of PTAB proceedings have related lawsuits in progress, which is evidence of a broken system.  

Congress anticipated that businesses targeted with meritless lawsuits in district court would respond by challenging patents at the PTAB. This was one of the driving forces for creating the more efficient system. Congress urged district courts to pause their cases while patents are reviewed, and they generally do. This avoids unnecessary litigation that might drain resources from plaintiffs and defendants if the patents were granted in error. If PTAB review finds that the patents are valid, then the case continues, not in parallel, but afterward. 

Review is used as a defensive measure, not as a way to proactively attack a patent in two venues. About 80 percent of those who challenge patents at the PTAB have been sued before they file a petition. Meanwhile, 78 percent of patent cases brought in district court do not have a related PTAB review. Defendants do not seek review unless they believe that there is a strong case the patent is invalid. This is exactly what Congress wanted — an efficient way to weed out weak patents. 

Setting the record straight. 

I applaud Congress for exploring new ways to promote innovation, but the PREVAIL Act is a move backward. These misnomers must be corrected, before erroneous narratives are used to justify bad policy. 

Accelerating mmWave 5G adoption substantially increases Device Licensing revenues

Increased throughput and lower latency facilitated by mmWave technology will result in faster handset upgrade cycles and enable new services which translates into improving 5G licensing opportunities. This can lead to billions in industry revenue through technology and patent licensing. The timing is fortuitous as 5G / LTE device shipments are declining as recently attested to by Qualcomm’s 20%+ and Nokia’s 15% declines in device licensing revenues. Unless a new must-have feature or a new performance paradigm is introduced such as what can be enabled by mmWave there is little hope that device licensing will escape its current doldrums.

Dense 5G mmWave infrastructure deployment both outside and indoors is needed to spur consumers and businesses to upgrade their devices to take advantage of the fastest network speeds and lowest latency of 5G. Unfortunately, many operators are not planning to roll out mmWave soon due to its high deployment costs. Even very advanced countries such as South Korea has taken back mmWave frequency because operators balked at the costs of meeting their deployment obligations.  

Lowering equipment costs will spur operators and private network providers to stop delaying and purchase more mmWave equipment. This can only happen if the economics of mmWave deployment make sense. The Alium Open RAN Radio Unit pool can play an important role as it brings cost certainty to radio unit manufacturers thus fostering supplier diversity and competition and hence lower prices, as discussed in a 2023 economic report authored by Harvard Business School Professor Josh Lerner and Bella Private Markets. 

A number of other device licensing markets stand to gain greatly from the timely and robust deployment of mmWave infrastructure. For instance, the 5G IoT and 5G fixed wireless access (FWA) markets are in their infancy and, without a diverse, competitive mmWave radio unit market, rollouts will be pushed out.  

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The loss of potential licensing revenue for Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) needed for 5G FWA over the same period could amount to $3.36 billion. 

For more information, visit the Alium website.

MDSP Technologies navigation patent reexam granted

On November 13, 2023, two months after Unified filed an ex parte reexamination, the Central Reexamination Unit (CRU) granted Unified’s request, finding a substantial new question of patentability on the challenged claims of U.S. Patent 9,239,376, owned and asserted by MDSP Technologies LLC. The ‘376 patent relates to determining the position and acceleration of a mobile device using doppler aided inertial navigation. It has been asserted against Google, Apple, Samsung, Garmin, and TomTom.

View district court litigations by MDSP Technologies. Unified is represented by Patrick Muldoon, John Baird, and Paul Belnap at Duane Morris and by in-house counsel, Jordan Rossen and Roshan Mansinghani, in this proceeding.

To view the reexamination request, visit Unified’s Portal: https://portal.unifiedpatents.com/exparte/90015299

Dialect natural language patent reexam granted

On November 14, 2023, less than two months after Unified filed an ex parte reexamination, the Central Reexamination Unit (CRU) granted Unified’s request, finding a substantial new question of patentability on the challenged claims of U.S. Patent 9,495,957, owned and asserted by Dialect, LLC, an NPE. The ‘957 patent relates to natural language human machine interactions using context information. The patent has been asserted against Amazon and Samsung

View district court litigations by Dialect. Unified is represented by Patrick Muldoon, John Baird, and Paul Belnap at Duane Morris and by in-house counsel, Jordan Rossen and David Seastrunk, in this proceeding.

To view the reexamination request, visit Unified’s Portal: https://portal.unifiedpatents.com/exparte/90015303

IPVal entity, 5G IP Holdings, 5G patent reexam granted

On November 14, 2023, three months after Unified filed an ex parte reexamination, the Central Reexamination Unit (CRU) granted Unified’s request, finding a substantial new question of patentability on the challenged claims of U.S. Patent 10,813,163, owned and asserted by 5G IP Holdings LLC, an NPE and IP Valuation Partners, LLC entity. The '163 patent generally relates to discontinuous reception (DRX) and utilizing slots within subframes to adapt DRX to function within the 5G frame structure. The patent is currently being asserted against Apple and had previously been asserted against Samsung.

View district court litigations by 5G IP Holdings. Unified is represented by Drew Sommer at Greenberg Traurig, and by in-house counsel, David Seastrunk and Jessica L.A. Marks, in this proceeding.

To view the reexamination request, visit Unified’s Portal: https://portal.unifiedpatents.com/exparte/90015277