Ex Parte 7457802 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 31, 201295001233 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 31, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 95/001,233 09/17/2009 7457802 CNXPC.00013 3409 7590 10/31/2012 STEVEN THRASHER 391 SANDHILL DRIVE RICHARDSON, TX 75080 EXAMINER CABRERA, ZOILA E ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3992 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/31/2012 PAPER Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ NEXPLORE CORPORATION Requester, Appellant v. Patent of JASON COLEMAN and STEVEN THRASHER Patent Owners ____________________ Appeal 2012-007849 Inter partes Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B21 Technology Center 3900 ____________________ Before DANIEL S. SONG, JOSIAH C. COCKS, and MICHAEL W. KIM, Administrative Patent Judges. SONG, Administrative Patent Judge DECISION ON APPEAL 1 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 (hereinafter "'802 patent") issued November 25, 2008. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE The '802 patent issued with a single claim. The Requester appeals under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134 and 315 from the Examiner's refusal to enter the numerous proposed rejections of claim 1. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. §§ 134(b) and 315 (2002). The Requester merely relies on its Appeal Brief (hereinafter "App. Br.") and has not filed a Reply Brief in response to the Examiner's Answer (hereinafter "Ans."). We AFFIRM the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejections. THE INVENTION The claim of the '802 patent is directed to a method of enhancing internet searching and reads as follows (Claims App'x.): 1. A method of enhancing internet searching by using at least five sources of information to determine a topical relevance, the method comprising: automatically using content of a first internet page to compute a content topical relevance score; automatically using links to the first internet page content to compute a link topical relevance score; automatically using an editorial description to compute an editorial description topical relevance score; automatically using a content provider description to compute a content provider description topical relevance score; automatically using active HTML to compute an active HTML topical relevance score; and automatically using the relevance scores to compute a total relevance score. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 3 PROPOSED REJECTIONS NOT ADOPTED The Examiner refused to adopt the following anticipation rejection of claim 1 which was proposed by the Requester: 1. Under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as anticipated by Wilson.2 The Examiner also refused to adopt the following rejections of claim 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 103 which were proposed by the Requester: 2. Admitted prior art (hereinafter "APA") in view of Wu.3 3. Diligenti4 in view of Wu. 4. APA in view of Wu and Cohen.5 5. Diligenti in view of Wu and Kraft.6 6. Diligenti in view of Mauldin7 and Kraft. 7. Kim8 in view of Wu. 8. Kim in view of Wu and Cohen. 9. Kim in view of Wu and Kraft. 10. Kim in view of Walther9 and Kraft. 11. Diligenti in view of Wesinger10 and Kraft. 12. Diligenti in view of Ntoulas11, Wesinger and Kraft. 2 Jeffery Wilson, U.S. 2008/0140626 A1 (pub. Jun. 12, 2008). 3 Harris Wu et al., Harvesting Social Knowledge From Folksonomies, August 22, 2006. 4 Michelangelo Diligenti et al., Web Page Scoring Systems for Horizontal and Vertical Search, May 7, 2002. 5 Gerald D. Cohen et al., U.S. 2008/0104542 A1 (pub. May 1, 2008). 6 Reiner Kraft et al., U.S. 6,633,867 B1 (Oct. 14, 2003). 7 Michael L. Mauldin. U.S. 5,748,954 (May 5, 1998). 8 Brian S. Kim et al., U.S. 7,356,530 B2 (Apr. 8, 2008). 9 Eckart Walther, WO2005/091175 A1 (pub. Sep. 29, 2005). 10 Ralph Wesinger, Jr. et al., U.S. 5,778,367 (Jul. 7, 1998). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 4 13. Glover12 in view of Seals.13 FINDINGS OF FACT The record supports the following findings of fact (FF) by a preponderance of the evidence. 1. The Specification of the '802 patent states: Traditional methods for search facilitation utilize algorithmic analysis of content, meta-content, context and links to derive associations with keywords or keyphrases (and thus topical) relevance of any content. These methods are all double-tier in that they rely on only two sources of information to determine topical relevance: [t]he content itself and links to that content. (Col. 6, ll. 40-46). 2. The Specification of the '802 patent also states: Additionally, traditional sources if (sic) information on content are highly susceptible to manipulation by the content provider and third parties who may have benign or malignant effects on the value of the resulting search data. (Col. 6, ll. 47-50). 3. The Specification of the '802 patent further states: 5TR [Quintuple-Tier Relevancy] increases the reliability and value of search result data by using more data sources to determine relevancy and using sources that have lower susceptibility to manipulation. (Col. 6, ll. 51-53). 11 Alexandros Ntoulas et al., The Infocious Web Search Engine: Improving Web Searching Through Linguistic Analysis (IW3C2 Proceedings) (2005). 12 Eric J. Glover et al., Using Web Structure for Classifying and Describing Web Pages, May 7, 2002. 13 Michael P. Seals, U.S. 2003/0110158 A1 (Jun. 12, 2003). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 5 4. The Specification of the '802 patent also states: 5TR utilizes five sources of information to determine topical relevance: 1. Content 2. Links to Content 3. Editorial Description 4. Content Provider Description 5. Active HTML (Col. 6, ll. 54-61). 5. The Specification of the '802 patent provides definitions for the five sources of information as follows: Content: This includes the actual text and media files contained in the content itself plus any generic meta tags that are present in the content. A number of assumptions can be made about the content based on content data, including, region, adult rating, taxonomy, segment, etc.-- but most importantly, keyword relevance. Content data is highly susceptible to manipulation and or errors that may make the content very difficult or impossible to locate with a traditional search engine. Links to Content: This includes all known links to the content from other sources, usually confined to those on other domains. A number of assumptions can be made about the content based on link data, including, region, adult rating, taxonomy class, segment, etc.--but most importantly, keyword relevance. Links to content are entirely out of the control of the search engine provider and the content provider and are thus susceptible to third- party manipulation. Editorial Description: This is a unique source of information to 5TR. This comprises an editorial data file that is kept on record for a given piece of content or Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 6 domain. The editorial file contains a hard record of a number of factors about the content, including, region, adult rating, taxonomy class, segment, etc. The editorial file is created and maintained solely by the search engine provider and thus is immune to tampering by the content provider or any third party. Content Provider Description: This is a unique source of information to 5TR. This comprises a data file that may be submitted by the content provider for a domain or narrower portion of content. It allows the content provider to associate the content with a specific region, taxonomy class, segment, etc. This data file is created and maintained by the content provider only and is thus the best record of the intent of the provider. Content ownership is confirmed through a body such as ICANN. The susceptibility of this data to manipulation is very, very low. Active HTML: This is a unique source of information to 5TR. This comprises a proprietary meta tag language with proprietary usage rules. This allows content providers to hard-code associations with regions, taxonomy classes, segments, etc. This enables the content provider to give granular information about content to the search engine provider through the automated crawling of the site. The susceptibility of this data to manipulation is low, but is always isolated to the single document in question. (Col. 6, l. 62-col. 8, l. 6). 6. Wilson discloses a method for improving a search engine index of a web page by converting dynamic web pages to static web pages wherein the web page may be an HTML document (Abstract; ¶¶ [0006], [0017]). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 7 7. Wu discloses a "collaborative tagging system or folksonomy" which "generally refers to the tagging of a collection of documents commonly accessible to a large group." (Pg. 111). 8. Wu states that a benefit of collaborative tagging is that: [u]sers simply create and apply tags on the fly. Folksonomies are inherently open-ended and therefore respond quickly to changes and innovations in the way users categorize content. Collaborative tagging is regarded as democratic metadata generation where metadata is generated by both the creators and consumers of the content. (Pg. 111). 9. Kraft discloses a searching method which uses a search service provider that retrieves documents via a crawler, indexes the documents, and generates abstracts therefrom which are used to generate a search result in response to a user's query (col. 4, ll. 61-62; col. 7, ll. 25-32, 54-58; Fig. 3). 10. Kraft states that "[d]uring a document authoring stage, HTML 'tags' are embedded within the informational content of the document," HTML being a "standard language for attaching presentation and linking attributes to informational content within documents." (Col. 4, ll. 61-64). 11. Mauldin discloses a method for searching and states "the downloaded file is processed to provide such information as a significant word list, an excerpt of the downloaded file, the address, size of the file, and number of words therein, and to save the file's title and any headings and subheadings." (Col. 2, ll. 52-56). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 8 12. Mauldin further discloses that term frequency measure is used to determine significance and the most significant words are stored in a significant word list that "may be used in subsequent searches of the catalog created by the method of the present invention." (Col. 2, ll. 57-59; col. 7, ll. 1-13). 13. Mauldin also teaches that "[a]t step 58, link text, which is text associated with an address, is stored in a separate description file," and generation of an abstract (having title, headings, subheadings, except, size, number of words) that is made available to the end user (col. 6, ll. 44-45; col. 7, ll. 14-22). 14. Walther discloses methods that "allow users to annotate content items found in a corpus," and metadata from annotations can be "aggregated across users and aggregated metadata applied in generating search results." (Abstract; see also ¶ [0011]). 15. Walther states that "[a]s used herein, the term 'annotation' refers generally to any descriptive and/or evaluative metadata related to a document (e.g., a Web page or site) that is collected from a user and thereafter stored in association with that user." (¶ [0011]). 16. Wesinger teaches that it is known to provide information to a search engine's database concerning web pages desired to be listed as a search result (col. 2, ll. 11-15). 17. Wesinger also states that "[s]ubmissions, including textual description and suggested categories, are often subjected to editorial control" and subject to heavy editing and that web pages may be Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 9 placed under different categories from the category intended by the person making the submission (Col. 2, ll. 22-30). 18. Wesinger discloses an information system "in which the information content is entirely user-controlled," the system receiving from the users the information to be electronically published, and classifying and storing the information for searching (Abstract; see also col. 2, l. 58-col. 3, l. 24). 19. Glover discloses classifying and describing web pages by analyzing the document's "anchortext" and "extended anchortext" to create "virtual documents" that provide an indication of the document's content (pgs. 1-4). 20. Glover states that anchortext are "words occurring inside of a link." (Pg. 4). 21. Glover states that extended anchortext are "set of rendered words occurring up to 25 words before and after an associated link (as well as the anchortext itself." (Pg. 4). 22. Glover defines a virtual document as "a collection of anchortexts or extended anchortexts from links pointing to the target document." (Pg. 4). PRINCIPLES OF LAW The patent applicant is entitled to be his or her own lexicographer of patent claim terms and can do so by placing such definitions in the Specification with sufficient clarity to provide a person of ordinary skill in the art with clear and precise notice of the meaning that is to be construed. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 10 See In re Corr, 347 F.2d 578, 580 (CCPA 1965); see also In re Paulsen, 30 F.3d 1475, 1480 (Fed. Cir. 1994). "The inherent teaching of a prior art reference, a question of fact, arises both in the context of anticipation and obviousness." In re Napier, 55 F.3d 610, 613 (Fed. Cir. 1995). "Inherency, however, may not be established by probabilities or possibilities. The mere fact that a certain thing may result from a given set of circumstances is not sufficient." In re Robertson, 169 F.3d 743, 745 (Fed. Cir. 1999). Moreover, a patent composed of several elements is not proved obvious merely by demonstrating that each of its elements was, independently, known in the prior art. Although common sense directs one to look with care at a patent application that claims as innovation the combination of two known devices according to their established functions, it can be important to identify a reason that would have prompted a person of ordinary skill in the relevant field to combine the elements in the way the claimed new invention does. KSR Int’l v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007). ANALYSIS Initially, we note that only those arguments actually made by the Requester have been considered in this decision. Arguments which the Requester could have made but chose not to make have not been considered and are deemed to be waived. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.67(c)(1)(vii). Rejection 1: Anticipated by Wilson The Examiner refuses to adopt the proposed rejection finding that although Wilson discloses the use of HTML tags and metadata of web Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 11 pages, it fails to disclose content provider description, an editorial description, an active HTML, or the use thereof to compute respective relevance scores which are in turn, used to compute a total relevance score as required by claim 1 (Ans. 36, 40). The Requester argues that these limitations are inherently disclosed in Wilson based on the fact that an "Internet page would contain HTML tags" which are utilized by the creator of the page and are "accessed by web crawlers disclosed in Wilson for computing document relevance." (App. Br. 6-7; see also Request 35-37). The Examiner points out that "the '802 patent also states that using two sources of information [i.e., Content and Links to Content] are highly susceptible to manipulation by the content provider and third parties who may have benign or malignant effects on the value of the resulting search data." (Ans. 44). In essence, the Examiner's position is that the HTML tags of Wilson at most corresponds to "content" and "links" described in the '802 patent which are admitted to be known and differ from the content provider description, an editorial description and an active HTML as specifically defined in the Specification of '802 patent. We agree with the Examiner that the Requester has not shown that the limitations at issue are necessarily present in Wilson (Ans. 37, 42). The Requester does not account for the definitions of these limitations as set forth in the Specification of the '802 patent in its Appeal Brief or the Ex Parte Reexamination Request (hereinafter "Request"; Request 35-37). The HTML tags of Wilson relied upon by the Requester appears to correspond to "content" as defined in the Specification of '802 patent which encompasses "generic meta tags" (FF 1, 5, 6). The Requester does not establish through Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 12 persuasive argument or evidence that the tags of Wilson relied upon differ from conventional "generic meta tags." As the Examiner explained, the claim "is not merely adding a third, fourth or fifth relevance scores, but it requires that the chosen sources of information have low susceptibility to manipulation for the purpose of having search result data that is reliable and of value as stated in the '802 patent." (Ans. 44). The Requester does not establish through persuasive argument or evidence that the tags of Wilson relied upon are less susceptible to manipulation or tampering than conventional tags. While the Requester also asserts that the Examiner did not take the entirety of Wilson into consideration and merely focused on limited portions of the reference cited by the Requester (App. Br. 8), this assertion is refuted by the Examiner (Ans. 42) and the Requester does not direct our attention to specific evidence or disclosure in Wilson to demonstrate that the Examiner's findings are erroneous. Furthermore, whereas it is reasonable to expect the Requester to explain how Wilson inherently discloses the limitations at issue as defined in the Specification of the '802 patent to thereby refute the Examiner's findings, it is unreasonable to require the Examiner to somehow demonstrate necessary absence of the claim limitations in Wilson merely based on the Requester's assertion that the limitations are present. The Requester further argues it is most likely that a person of ordinary skill in the art would understand how relevance computations are made because the '802 patent fails to specifically describe a particular calculation algorithm (App. Br. 9). However, this reasoning is not persuasive in that the claim still requires relevance computations using specific sources of Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 13 information, including inter alia, "content provider description" as specifically defined. Moreover, the claimed method still requires computation of not only a total relevance score, but also computation of an editorial description of topical relevance score, a content provider description of topical relevance score, and an active HTML topical relevance score which have not been demonstrated as being disclosed in Wilson. Finally, whereas the Requester questions why it would not "be obvious to add a fifth relevance score (i.e., content provider description) to obtain a total relevance score" (App. Br. 8), the proposed rejection is that of anticipation. Therefore, in view of the above, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the Requester's proposed rejection based on Wilson. Rejection 2: Obvious Over APA and Wu The Examiner refuses to adopt the Requester's proposed rejection based on APA and Wu stating, inter alia, that "there is no disclosure in Wu as to computing topical relevance scores for particular sources of information such as 'editorial description', 'content provider description' and 'active HTML' as recited in claim 1." (Ans. 50). The Requester points out that use of "content" and "links" have been admitted by the '802 patent to be known in the art (see FF 1), and further relies on Wu for disclosing the remaining limitations (Request 39-40), and for "teaching that it was known in the art for a content provider (or anyone, for that matter) to generate metadata concerning an Internet document via a collaborative tagging system (a.k.a., folksonomy)," the tags describing a document's content which may be used to compute a relevancy score (App. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 14 Br. 10). The Requester concludes that "it would be obvious for one of ordinary skill to take what was already known (i.e., Internet content topical relevance score, link topical relevance score) and combine relevance scores computed from other sources of Internet content data (i.e., metadata tags and files provided by others - including editors, content providers, etc.) to achieve the claimed invention." (App. Br. 11). As observed by the Examiner (Ans. 50), Wu specifically states that the metadata tags are generated by both the creators of the content and consumers of the content (FF 7, 8). Hence, the metadata tags of Wu appear to correspond to "content" described in the Specification of the '802 patent which is susceptible to manipulation by the content provider and third parties, and does not correspond to the recited "content provider description" as defined therein. The Requester further asserts the Examiner erred in assuming that "Wu does not preclude the possibility that a content provider maintains a separate data file including document tags." (App. Br. 11-12). However, the Requester does not direct our attention to where Wu discloses or suggests such separate data files for document tags of the content provider versus consumers, or provide persuasive rationale as to why such separate data files, and securing of the document tags provided by the content provider, would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill. In addition, as the Examiner also observes, the Requester is using descriptive metadata tags of Wu for both the recited "editorial description" and "content provider description," but the claims and Specification of the '802 patent are clear in that these terms refer to different sources of information chosen for lower susceptibility to manipulation (Ans. 50-51). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 15 The Requester has not meaningfully addressed this issue raised by the Examiner. The Requester also asserts that the Examiner failed to consider Wu in its entirety and merely looked for the exact recited teaching of the claims therein (App. Br. 10). However, this is disputed by the Examiner who states that full consideration of the admitted prior art and Wu was made (Ans. 50). The Requester fails to direct our attention to where or how Wu discloses the limitations at issue or otherwise renders the claim obvious to thereby demonstrate the Examiner's error. Correspondingly, we discern no error in the Examiner's finding that APA and Wu do not disclose the required limitations of claim 1 and sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on APA and Wu. Rejection 3: Obvious Over Diligenti and Wu The Requester relies on arguments submitted in Rejection 2 with respect to the disclosure of Wu, and further relies on Diligenti for disclosing the admittedly known "content" and "links", and for disclosing "several of the algorithms utilized in the industry to compute the often sought page ranking for use in determining relevancy during an Internet search." (App. Br. 12; see also Request 43-44). The Examiner refused to adopt the proposed rejection finding that whereas Diligenti was relied upon for disclosing content and links recited in the claim, Diligenti fails to cure the deficiencies of Wu which does not disclose the required "editorial description", "content provider description", "active HTML", or computation of topical relevance scores based thereon (Ans. 52-53). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 16 We are not persuaded of Examiner error for the reasons already discussed supra relative to Rejection 2. Whereas the Requester asserts that the Examiner treated the obviousness analysis as an anticipation analysis (App. Br. 13), this argument is refuted by the Examiner who states that a "full consideration of Diligenti and Wu was made." (Ans. 53). In this regard, the Requester does not direct our attention to where or how Diligenti or Wu discloses the limitations at issue or otherwise renders the claim obvious to thereby demonstrate that the Examiner erred. Hence, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Diligenti and Wu. Rejection 4: Obvious Over APA, Wu and Cohen The arguments proffered by the Requester with respect to this proposed rejection (App. Br. 13-15) are similar to that of Rejection 2 discussed above in that the Requester relies on Wu for disclosing the required "editorial description" and "content provider description", but the Requester further relies on Cohen for the required "active HTML" (Request 47-48). Hence, the analysis of Rejection 2 as discussed supra applies in that Wu fails to disclose the required "editorial description" and "content provider description" limitations. Correspondingly, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Wu and Cohen. Rejection 5: Obvious Over Diligenti, Wu and Kraft The arguments proffered by the Requester with respect to this proposed rejection (App. Br. 15-16) are also similar to that of Rejection 2 in Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 17 that the Requester relies on Wu for the required "editorial description" and "content provider description" limitations (Request 51-52). Hence, the same analysis of Rejection 2 set forth supra applies with respect to Wu. The Requester also relies on Kraft for these same limitations as well as for the limitation reciting "active HTML" (Request 51-52). The Requester asserts that a person of ordinary skill in the art would be "highly cognizant of the practice of considering the strength and quality of a given authority's metadata description of an Internet document when determining relevance," so that it would have been obvious "to consider multiple sources of descriptive metadata concerning an Internet document, in conjunction with document content and inbound document links, when determining the document's relevance to a given search query." (Request 50-51). The Examiner finds that Kraft does not disclose computing "an editorial description topical relevance score", "a content provider description topical relevance score", or computing a total relevance score by combining the required at least five relevance scores, thereby concluding that the claim is not obvious (Ans. 58-60). We find no error in the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection. We initially observe that the Specification of the '802 patent teaches that "editorial description", "content provider description" and "active HTML" information sources differ from each other and are selected to minimize susceptibility to tampering and manipulation thereby teaching criticality of these sources of information (FF 5; see also FF 1-3). In contrast, the Requester's proposed rejection relies on the same HTML tags of Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 18 Kraft as corresponding to both the recited "content provider description" and the recited "active HTML." In addition, the Requester's arguments are not persuasive because the Requester does not account for the definition of "content provider description" as set forth in the Specification of the '802 patent. At least with respect to the asserted disclosure of "content provider description," Kraft notes that HTML is a "standard language for attaching presentation and linking attributes to informational content within documents" (FF 9, 10). Thus, the HTML tags relied upon by the Requester appears to correspond to generic metatags of "content" admitted to be known in the art which is susceptible to manipulation instead of the recited "content provider description" as defined in the Specification of the '802 patent. The Requester does not establish through persuasive argument or evidence that the HTML tags of Kraft differ from conventional tags so as to be less susceptible to manipulation or tampering in the manner "content provider description" is defined. We also observe that the claimed method further requires computation of not only a total relevance score, but also of an editorial description topical relevance score, a content provider description topical relevance score, and an active HTML topical relevance score which are each used to compute the total relevance score. The Requester has not provided a persuasive rationale, nor is it apparent, why a person of ordinary skill would select these sources of information, compute separate topical relevance scores based thereon, and use them to compute a total relevance score. Thus, in view of the above, we Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 19 sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the rejection based on the combination of Diligenti, Wu and Kraft as proposed. Rejection 6: Obvious Over Diligenti, Mauldin and Kraft In this proposed rejection, the Requester relies on Diligenti as in Rejection 3, relies on Kraft as disclosing the limitations "content provider description" and "active HTML" as in Rejection 5, and further relies on Mauldin as disclosing the limitations pertaining to "editorial description" as well as "content provider description." (Request 54-56). The Examiner finds that while Mauldin discloses creation of description files for each queries, it fails to disclose the steps of automatically using editorial description or content provider description to compute corresponding topical relevance scores (Ans. 61; FF 13). We find no error in the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection. We initially observe that as discussed above, Kraft does not disclose "content provider description." Further, whereas the Requester asserts that this limitation is also disclosed in Mauldin, this reference appears to merely disclose using the content of the document itself (FF 11, 12). Such content or processed information does not correspond to the recited "content provider description," which, as is defined in the Specification of the '802 patent (FF 5), constitutes data "submitted by the content provider for a domain or narrower portion of content" so as "to associate the content with a specific region, taxonomy class, segment, etc." The Requester does not set forth evidence or persuasive argument to account for the pertinent limitation. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 20 Furthermore, as noted with respect to Rejection 5, the claimed method further requires computation of an editorial description topical relevance score, a content provider description topical relevance score, and active HTML topical relevance score, as well as the total relevance score based on the topical relevance scores. The Requester has not provided a persuasive rationale, nor is it apparent, why a person of ordinary skill would select these sources of information, compute separate topical relevance scores based thereon, and use the computed topical relevance scores to compute a total relevance score in the manner claimed. The remaining arguments of the Requester are substantively similar to those of the previously discussed rejections. Thus, in view of the above, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on the combination of Diligenti, Mauldin and Kraft. Rejection 7: Obvious Over Kim and Wu In this proposed rejection, the Requester relies on Kim stating that it "clearly teaches the first two elements and the last element of Claim 1 of the '802 patent." (Request 56, 58-59). As to the remaining limitations of claim 1 directed toward "editorial description", "content provider description", "active HTML" as well as computing corresponding topical relevance scores, the proposed rejection relies on Wu's disclosure (Request 57, 60-61; App. Br. 19). However, we find the Requester's assertions unpersuasive for the reasons set forth relative to Rejection 2 discussed supra. The Requester also asserts that the Examiner erred because the Examiner "provided no discussion of the Kim reference" (App. Br. 19). Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 21 However, as noted by the Examiner, Kim was relied upon by the Requester for "content" and "links" already admitted to be known in the '802 patent (Ans. 63) rendering Kim superfluous and discussion thereof unnecessary. Correspondingly, we do not find error in the Examiner's refusal to adopt the Requester's proposed rejection based on the combination of Kim and Wu. Rejection 8: Obvious Over Kim, Wu and Cohen This proposed rejection is similar to Rejection 7 discussed supra, but the Requester relies on Cohen for the recited "active HTML" (Request 63, 66-67; see also App. Br. 20). Hence, the analyses of Rejections 2 and 7 as discussed supra apply in that Wu fails to disclose the required "editorial description" and "content provider description" limitations. The remaining arguments are also substantively similar to those of the previously discussed rejections. Correspondingly, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Kim, Wu and Cohen. Rejection 9: Obvious Over Kim, Wu and Kraft This proposed rejection is also similar to Rejection 7 discussed supra, but the Requester relies on Kraft for the recited "active HTML" (Request 69, 72, 73; see also App. Br. 22). Hence, the analyses of Rejections 2 and 7 apply in that Wu fails to disclose the required "editorial description" and "content provider description" limitations or the computation of topical relevance scores based thereon. The remaining arguments are also substantively similar to those already discussed rejections. Correspondingly, Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 22 we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Kim, Wu and Kraft. Rejection 10: Obvious Over Kim, Walther and Kraft This proposed rejection is similar to Rejection 9 except that the Requester relies on Walther for the required "editorial description", "content provider description" and computation of topical relevance scores based thereon (Request 74, 75, 77-79; see also App. Br. 24). In particular, the Requester asserts that the disclosed metadata annotations of Walther corresponds to the editorial description and content provider description, and that they can be considered when ranking the relevance of a page to the query terms (Request 74, 77, 78). The Examiner refused to adopt the proposed rejection finding that Walther does not disclose "editorial description" of search engine provider as the Requester asserts, but rather, defines the disclosed annotation as referring to metadata that is collected from a user, and thereafter stored in association with the user (Ans. 66 citing Walther [0011]). Hence, the Examiner finds that the disclosed annotation is not secured and does not meet the definition of "editorial description" as defined in the Specification of the '802 patent (Ans. 66, 67). In addition, the Examiner notes that the Requester relies on "annotation" of Walther for both "editorial description" and "content provider description," but the claims and Specification of the '802 patent is clear that these terms refer to different information sources (Ans. 67). The Examiner further notes that the claim further requires Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 23 computation of topical relevance scores based thereon which is also not taught or suggested by Walther (Ans. 67). We agree with the Examiner. Walther discloses that the annotations relied upon by the Requester are provided by the user (FF 14, 15), and thus, are readily subject to tampering or manipulation contrary to the definitions of "editorial description" and "content provider description" (FF 5). Moreover, the Requester has not provided a persuasive rationale, nor is it apparent, why a person of ordinary skill would select the recited sources of information, compute separate topical relevance scores based thereon, and use the computed topical relevance scores to compute a total relevance score. Correspondingly, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Kim, Walther and Kraft. Rejection 11: Obvious Over Diligenti, Wesinger and Kraft This proposed rejection is similar to Rejection 6, but the Requester relies on Wesinger for the claimed limitations "editorial description" and "content provider description" based on its disclosure of a search engine that receives submissions of textual description and suggested categories and editors that edit such submissions (Request 81-83; FF 16-18; see also App. Br. 25). The Requester relies on Kraft, asserting that it also discloses "content provider description" as well as "active HTML" because it discloses HTML metadata (Request 81-83; FF 10). The Examiner refused to adopt the proposed rejection stating that "textual description" of Wesinger is not "editorial description" or "content provider description" recited in the claim and defined in the Specification of Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 24 the '802 patent (Ans. 70, 71). The Examiner further contends that even if "textual description" of Wesinger is considered to be the recited "editorial description" or "content provider description", Wesinger is silent as to computing a topical relevancy score based on the textual description (Ans. 70, 71). Furthermore, the Examiner finds that whereas Kraft discloses descriptive HTML tags, such tags are not "content provider description" as defined in the '802 patent which is secure, but rather, are "content" which is a separate component and highly susceptible to manipulation. (Ans. 73). Correspondingly, the Examiner also argues that Kraft also does not describe computing of a content provider description topical relevance score as well, and using the same to compute a total relevance score (Ans. 73). We are not persuaded that the Examiner erred. Initially, at least with respect to the asserted disclosure of "content provider description" and "active HTML" by Kraft, the analysis set forth with respect to Rejection 5 is applicable. In particular, the Specification of the '802 patent makes clear that these are two distinct sources of information, whereas the proposed rejection relies on the same HTML tags of Kraft as corresponding to both the recited "content provider description" and the recited "active HTML." Moreover, Kraft discloses the use of a "standard language for attaching presentation and linking attributes to informational content within documents" (FF 9, 10) and thus, the HTML tags relied upon by the Requester appears to correspond to "content" admitted to be known in the art instead of the "content provider description" claimed. As to Wesinger, it appears to disclose "editorial description" in its discussion of the prior art search engine's edit and control of the submitted Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 25 textual description and suggested categories (FF 17). Wesinger further discloses an information system that is "entirely user-controlled" which appears to correspond to "content provider description" (FF 18). However, Wesinger suggests the use of the disclosed information system as a solution to the above prior art search engine's editing and control, thereby leading one of ordinary skill in the art in a direction divergent from the claimed invention. In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994)("A reference may be said to teach away when a person of ordinary skill, upon reading the reference, would be discouraged from following the path set out in the reference, or would be led in a direction divergent from the path that was taken by the applicant."). Furthermore, as discussed supra, the claimed method requires computation of an editorial description topical relevance score, a content provider description topical relevance score, and active HTML topical relevance score, as well as computing a total relevance score using the topical relevance scores. The Requester has not provided a persuasive rationale, nor is it apparent, why a person of ordinary skill would select the recited sources of information, compute separate topical relevance scores based thereon, and use the computed topical relevance scores to compute a total relevance score. Correspondingly, in view of the above, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Diligenti, Wesinger and Kraft. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 26 Rejection 12: Obvious Over Diligenti, Ntoulas, Wesinger and Kraft This proposed rejection is similar to Rejection 11 discussed supra, but the Requester relies on Ntoulas as well as Wesinger for the recited "editorial description" asserting that Ntoulas also teaches preparation of an editorial description which is used to determine document relevance (Request 83-86; see also App. Br. 26-27). The Requester's arguments are also substantially the same as those presented in Rejection 11 (App. Br. 26-27). Correspondingly, the analysis supra with respect to Wesinger and Kraft as to the limitation "content provider description" and computation of separate topical relevance scores are applicable. Hence, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the proposed rejection based on Diligenti, Ntoulas, Wesinger and Kraft. Rejection 13: Obvious Over Glover and Seals In arguing that the Examiner erred in refusing to reject claim 1 based on the combination of Glover and Seals, the Requester asserts that Glover teaches each of the limitations of the claim except for the "active HTML" limitation (Ans. 27; Request 87-89). In particular, the Requester relies on the "virtual document" disclosed in Glover as corresponding to the recited "editorial description" of claim 1 (Request 89). The Requester asserts that "active HTML" limitation is disclosed in Seals, and that Seals also discloses "content provider description" as well (Ans. 27; Request 87-89). The Examiner disagrees and finds that Glover fails to disclose "editorial description", computation of an editorial description topical relevance score, and computation of a content provider description topical Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 27 relevance score as required by the claim (Ans. 75). In this regard, the Examiner argues that Glover merely discloses known prior art "content" and "links" being used to determine relevance (Ans. 76), such sources of information being susceptible to manipulation, and different from the claimed "editorial description" and "content provider description" as defined in the '802 patent (Ans. 75). We are not persuaded that the Examiner erred in refusing to adopt the rejection proposed by the Requester. Glover discloses the use of a document's "anchortext" and "extended anchortext" to create "virtual documents" (FF 19, 22), the created virtual documents being relied upon by the Requester as corresponding to the recited "editorial description" of claim 1 (Request 89). The virtual documents are specifically disclosed by Glover as being words inside of, and proximate to, the link. (FF 20-22). In this regard, the virtual documents of Glover are generated from "content" which is defined by the Specification of the '802 patent as "actual text and media files contained in the content itself plus any generic meta tags that are present in the content." (FF 5). The Requester does not explain, nor is it apparent to us, how such anchortexts and extended anchortexts can be considered to be "a hard record of a number of factors about the content, including, region, adult rating, taxonomy class, segment, etc." as described in the definition of "editorial description." Instead, the anchortext and extended anchortext of Glover are content itself (FF 20, 21), and not description about the content. Hence, again, the Requester does not account for the definitions of these limitations Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 28 as set forth in the Specification of the '802 patent in its Appeal Brief or the Ex Parte Reexamination Request. Moreover, whereas the Requester asserts that it is within the capability of a person of ordinary skill in the art to "construct a system whereby page content, inbound links, editorial description, and content provider description are considered in determining the overall relevance of the Interne[t] page to give such a query" (Request 87), we again observe that the claim requires "editorial description" as specifically defined in the Specification of the '802 patent, as well as computation of not only of a total relevance score, but also an editorial description topical relevance score and a content provider description topical relevance score. The Requester has not provided a persuasive rationale, nor is it apparent, why a person of ordinary skill would select these sources of information, compute separate topical relevance scores based thereon, and use them to compute a total relevance score. Finally, whereas the Requester also asserts that the Examiner did not fully consider the Glover reference (App. Br. 28), this argument is refuted by the Examiner who states that the entirety of the references were considered (Ans. 75), and the Requester does not direct our attention to where or how Glover discloses the limitations at issue or otherwise renders the claim obvious to thereby demonstrate the Examiner's error. Correspondingly, we sustain the Examiner's refusal to adopt the rejection based on Glover and Seals as proposed by the Requester. Appeal 2010-007849 Reexamination Control 95/001,233 Patent US 7,457,802 B2 29 CONCLUSION The Examiner did not err in not adopting any of the Requester's proposed rejection of claim 1. Requests for extensions of time in this inter partes reexamination proceeding are governed by 37 C.F.R. §§ 1.956 and 41.77(g). AFFIRMED ack cc: Patent Owner: STEVEN THRASHER 391 SANDHILL DRIVE RICHARDSON, TX 75080 Third Party Requester: CARSTENS & CAHOON, LLP P.O. BOX 802334 DALLAS, TX 75380 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation