Ex Parte Briscoe et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardDec 30, 201310593442 (P.T.A.B. Dec. 30, 2013) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ Ex parte ROBERT J. BRISCOE, ARNAUD JACQUET, ANDREA SOPPERA, and SEBASTIEN CAZALET ____________________ Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 Technology Center 2400 ____________________ Before JAMES R. HUGHES, JEFFREY S. SMITH, and JUSTIN BUSCH, Administrative Patent Judges. BUSCH, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON REQUEST FOR REHEARING Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 2 Appellants request rehearing under 37 C.F.R. § 41.52 of our Decision mailed October 1, 2013 (“Decision”), in which we affirmed the Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 1-14. Appellants filed the Request for Rehearing (“Request”) on December 2, 2013. A request for rehearing must state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked by the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“the Board”) in rendering the original decision. 37 C.F.R. § 41.52. Appellants’ Request asserts the Decision was in error because the Board misapprehended and/or overlooked various arguments from Appellants’ Appeal Brief, Reply Brief, and oral argument. Request 2-11. ANALYSIS Appellants’ Point #1 Essentially, Appellants argue Cain’s receipt of an RREQQ message (and handling of the message) is not the same as the recited “receiving path characterization information” and deriving therefrom “information indicative of a characteristic of a portion of” a downstream path. Request 2- 4. The details of the argument include the sub-arguments that Cain’s receipt of an RREQQ message to establish a route involves an “entirely different concept[]” than Appellants’ invention (Request 2) and that the information received in Cain is not actual path information (i.e., not “information that characterizes a portion of an ‘actual’ downstream path” as opposed to a desired characteristic) (Request 2-4). Appellants also nominally argue in this point that Cain’s provider node, not an intermediate node, makes decisions. Request 4-5. These are the same arguments Appellants presented in their prior briefs. App. Br. 14, 16-20; Reply 2-5. The Board did not Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 3 misapprehend or overlook these arguments, but rather found them unpersuasive. Decision 5-7. To reiterate, Appellants’ arguments that the types of information received in Cain and in Appellants’ invention “involve entirely different concepts” is unpersuasive because we do not look to the concept of what is being claimed beyond how it is embodied in the limitations of the claim. Rather, we evaluate the recited language, giving the claims the broadest reasonable interpretation in light of the Specification. While the goals and concepts of Appellants’ invention may differ from what is disclosed by Cain, we are not persuaded that the claim limitations distinguish over Cain’s disclosure. Below, we address Appellants’ arguments that Cain does not receive actual path information and that it is Cain’s provider node, rather than an intermediate node, making decisions. Appellants’ Points #2 and #3 Appellants provide further argument that Cain’s receipt of desired QoS information does not disclose the recited limitation. Request 5-7. Appellants repeatedly reference the recited limitations of the “path characterization information being dependent on information fed back from the receiver node to the provider node” and the intermediate node receives path characterization information from an upstream node and “derive[es] therefrom information indicative of a characteristic of a portion of the path between the intermediate node and the receiver node” to argue that Cain does not disclose “‘actual’ path characterization information that characterizes a portion of an ‘actual’ downstream path,” as opposed to a desired characteristic of a potential path. Request 5; see also Request 2-10. Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 4 Appellants provide multiple exemplary phrases for which Appellants assert the plain and ordinary meaning implicitly refers to an actual element. Request 5-6. For example, Appellants assert the phrase “a characteristic of the actual road ahead” means, to the ordinary English language user, the same as the phrase “a characteristic of the road ahead”. On the other hand, such phrases do not equate to the phrase “a desired characteristic of the road ahead”. Request 6. Appellants then conclude that Cain’s information contained in the RREQQ messages identifying requested QoS metrics for a downstream path do not disclose the recited “information indicative of a characteristic of a portion of the path between the intermediate node and the receiver node.” Request 7. We do not find Appellants’ arguments persuasive. As an initial matter, we note that the claim recites “path characterization information being dependent on information fed back” and deriving “information indicative of a characteristic [of a portion of a downstream path]” from path characterization information. We understand and fully considered Appellants’ arguments but we disagree with Appellants’ assertion that the Examiner’s construction is unreasonably broad. Appellants acknowledge that it is reasonable “to consider Cain’s route request messages (RREQQ) to contain some sort of ‘path characterization information’ – because those messages contain QoS metrics.” Request 8-9. As explained in the Decision, subsequent RREQQ messages are sent in response to a receiver node sending a QoS error message to the provider node. Decision 4-5. Therefore, because these subsequent RREQQ messages would not be sent without receiving the error message from the receiver node, the RREQQ messages are “dependent on information fed back from the receiver node to the Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 5 provider node,” giving the claim its broadest reasonable interpretation. As Appellants have acknowledged that Cain’s RREQQ messages contain path characterization information and we find they are dependent on fed-back information, we agree that Cain discloses the recited path characterization information. Furthermore, and also as explained in the Decision, the Examiner finds the QoS metric contained within Cain’s RREQQ message discloses the recited “information indicative of a characteristic.” Decision 4 (citing Ans. 11). Appellants’ claims recite that the “information indicative of a characteristic [of a portion of a downstream path]” is derived from path characterization information. This QoS metric derived from the RREQQ messages is “indicative” of the quality of service of a portion of a downstream path. To continue one of Appellants’ analogies, we find the phrase “information indicative of a characteristic of a road between Seattle, Washington and San Diego, California” to be an apt comparison (we further note that in all of Appellants’ analogies, the phrase proposed by Appellants focused on characteristics of certain elements rather than information indicative of such characteristics). In the exemplary path from Seattle to San Diego, “information indicative of” the characteristic of speed at an intermediate point (such as Portland, Oregon) would reasonably include an indication of whether or not a particular road supports the ability to go 65 miles per hour (or any other speed). This indication would be analogous to information indicative of whether a part of a downstream is capable of providing a given quality of service. In summary, the broadest reasonable Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 6 interpretation of “information indicative of a characteristic” is much broader than the actual value of a characteristic. Given that we find Cain discloses the recited path characterization information and that the QoS metric contained within Cain’s RREQQ messages is derived by the intermediate node from the path characterization information, we find Cain discloses “deriving [from path characterization information] information indicative of a characteristic of a portion of the path between the intermediate node and the receiver node.” In the section titled “Point #3,” Appellants further clarify that Appellants’ argument regarding the path characterization is related to an assertion that Cain discloses only required or request path characterization information and not actual path characterization information. Request 7-10. This potential interpretation of Appellants’ arguments was addressed in the Decision for completeness. The clarified argument was thoroughly addressed below and herein. Appellants’ Point #4 Appellants argue the Board did not address Appellants’ arguments that it is Cain’s provider node, not an intermediate node, that selects a manner of treatment for forwarding and forward data downstream. Request 10-11. The Decision found that the Examiner sufficiently identified where Cain disclosed the recited limitations as occurring at or present in an intermediate node. Decision 4 (citing Ans. 3-5, 10-15), 5. Appeal 2011-006165 Application 10/593,442 7 DECISION We have considered the reasons Appellants provide as grounds for reversal, but adhere to the original Decision and affirm the Examiner’s rejections of the claims as obvious. Therefore, Appellants’ request has been granted to the extent that the Decision has been reconsidered, but denied with respect to making any modifications therein. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv). See also 37 C.F.R. § 41.52(b). DENIED msc Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation