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Rovi Mounts Constitutional Challenge to Inter Partes Reviews
Patent Litigation Feature
“In creating inter partes reviews, Congress intended to provide [a] quick and cost effective alternative[] to litigation in the courts . . . It also created an unconstitutional one” (internal citations omitted). So begins the appellate brief filed in April by Rovi Guides, Inc., a subsidiary of TiVo Corporation. Rovi has appealed (2019-1215) the cancellation of claims from one of its “remote interactive program guide” patents by the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB). The company brings a constitutional challenge to this PTAB authority, arguing that because Administrative Patent Judges (APJs) hired to adjudicate inter partes reviews (IPRs) “have the authority to render a final decision on behalf of the United States, without review by any higher executive-branch official”, they are “principal officers” who must be appointed by the US President and confirmed by the US Senate. Earlier this month, the US Department of Justice (USDOJ) filed a notice of intervention in the appeal, the Federal Circuit lifted a temporary stay to await word of the government’s intentions, and that court set a deadline for the USDOJ’s brief on the same day that the brief of appellee and IPR petitioner Comcast is due.
May 23, 2019
Delay in ITC Review of First Infringement Ruling in Scorched Earth Litigation Between TiVo and Comcast
This past Thursday, the International Trade Commission (ITC) postponed its decision reviewing a May 2017 initial determination (ID) that Comcast (337-TA-1001) has infringed three patents asserted against it by TiVo (f/k/a Rovi Corporation). In a 600-page ID (the public version of which was made available in June), Administrative Law Judge David P. Shaw concluded that Comcast’s current set-top boxes infringe certain claims of two of TiVo’s patents, which the ALJ characterizes as generally related to “interactive television guide programs that operate on local devices, such as a set-top box, and remote devices, such as a laptop or mobile phone”. The ID also concludes that Comcast’s “legacy products” infringe those same patents, as well as a third, characterized as broadly related to “a television guide that allow [sic] users to record a program while simultaneously watching another program”. The Commission could issue its decision as soon as this week.
November 12, 2017