Ex Parte Miller et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardJun 18, 201812327496 (P.T.A.B. Jun. 18, 2018) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/327,496 12/03/2008 46321 7590 06/20/2018 CRGOLAW STEVEN M. GREENBERG 7900 Glades Road SUITE 520 BOCA RATON, FL 33434 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Steven M. Miller 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 ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. RSW920080015US1 (232) 5306 EXAMINER LIN, SHERMAN L ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2447 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 06/20/2018 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address(es): docketing@crgolaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte STEVEN M. MILLER, LAWRENCE S. RICH, and RITCHARD L. SCHACHER Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327 ,496 Technology Center 2400 Before ST. JOHN COURTENAY III, THU A. DANG, and LARRY J. HUME, Administrative Patent Judges. DANG, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants 1 appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Final Rejection of claims 1-17. 2 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm. A. INVENTION According to Appellants, the invention relates to "the field [ of] file sharing in an instant messaging session." Spec. ,r 1. 1 According to Appellants, the real party in interest is International Business Machines Corporation. App. Br. 2. 2 In a prior Decision (Appeal Number 2012-012177, decided March 27, 2015), we affirmed the Examiner's rejection of claims 1-17 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over the teachings of Fulmer, Rudd, and Vuong (in view of Ferguson, Hu, Kindig, or NightFalcon). Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 B. ILLUSTRATIVE CLAIM Claim 1 is exemplary: 1. A method for clipboard object sharing in an instant messaging session, the method comprising: establishing an instant messaging session between a source instant messaging client and a target instant messaging client; exchanging a list of supported clipboard object formats between the source and target instant messaging clients; requesting transfer of a clipboard object resulting from having been placed in a clipboard area of memory of a computer from a cut-copy-paste type operation from the source instant messaging client for pasting into the target instant messaging client during the instant messaging session; determining whether or not the target instant messaging client supports a format of the clipboard object based upon the exchanged list and displaying in a user interface of the target instant messaging client a clipboard indicator indicating whether or not the clipboard holds a clipboard object able to be pasted into the target instant messaging client; and, transferring the clipboard object to the target instant messaging client as a paste only if the target instant messaging client supports the format of the clipboard object. C. REJECTIONS 1) Claims 1, 9, and 10 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki et al. (US 2005/0004986 Al; published Jan. 6, 2005) and Farber et al. (US 2005/0232232 Al; published Oct. 20, 2005). 2) Claims 2, 3 11, and 12 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki, Farber, and Rudd et al. (US 2002/0120693 Al; published Aug. 29, 2002). 3) Claims 4 and 13 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki, Farber, Fulmer et al. (US 2006/0036703 Al; published Feb. 16, 2006), and Ferguson (US 2002/0178232 Al; published Nov. 28, 2002). 2 Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 4) Claims 5 and 14 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki, Farber, and Ferguson. 5) Claims 6 and 15 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki, Farber, and Hu et al. (US 2007 /0078938 Al; published Apr. 5, 2007). 6) Claims 7 and 16 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki, Farber, and Kindig et al. (US 2005/0197906 Al; published Sept. 8, 2005). 7) Claims 8 and 17 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) over Aoki, Farber, and NightFalcon (Disable 'Other users logged-on' warning on shutdown, ANANDTECH.COM (Apr. 26, 2005), http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=1585566 (last visited Sept. 29, 2010)). II. ISSUES The dispositive issue before us is whether the Examiner erred in finding the combination of Aoki and Farber teaches or suggests a method comprising "determining whether or not the target instant messaging client supports a format of the clipboard object." Claim 1 (emphasis added). III. FINDINGS OF FACT The following Findings of Fact (FF) are shown by a preponderance of the evidence. Aoki 1. Aoki discloses a process for transferring a segment of document from a sending computer's clipboard to a receiving computer's clipboard via an instant messaging system. ,r 36; Fig. 2A. The transfer can be invoked by a copy and paste operation. ,r,r 37, 42; Fig. 2B. The messaging client can "retrieve the entirety of the clipboard," from the sending computer, transmit all the data across the IM channel, whether messaging client can understand 3 Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 it or not (i-f 43), and "[i]t is then up to the receiving computer's application to determine which of the multiple formats it is able to consume." Id. Farber 2. Farber discloses a process for bypassing transcoding operations between communication terminals, including transmitting information about encoding capabilities of a distant side to a local side, and information about encoding capabilities of the local side to the distant side. Abst. The information about the encoding capabilities can be used on the other side to look up a subset list of supported "encoding formats," such as a "supported codec list." ,r 22. The method can be used to set up a TFO between the communication terminals, where at least one codec encodes speech signals, and, if it is determined that the terminals have at least one codec in common, a data connection can be established without having to insert transcoding functions between the two terminals. ,r,r 25-26. IV. ANALYSIS We have reviewed the Examiner's rejection in light of Appellants' arguments presented in this appeal. Arguments which Appellants could have made, but did not make in the Brief are deemed to be waived. See 37 C.F.R. § 4I.37(c)(l)(iv). On the record before us, we are unpersuaded the Examiner has erred. We adopt as our own the findings and reasons set forth in the rejections from which the appeal is taken and in the Examiner's Answer, and provide the following for highlighting and emphasis. Claim 1 Appellants concede that "[i]n review of Aoki, Appellants recognize the teaching of object transfer in an IM session." App. Br. 6. Although Appellants further recognize that the Examiner relies on Farber to disclose 4 Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 and suggest "exchanging a list of supported clipboard object formats" and "determining whether or not the target instant messaging client supports a format of the clipboard object" as claimed, Appellants contend "Farber has nothing to do with IM sessions." Id. In particular, Appellants contend Farber is absent of "any suggestion of the claimed 'clipboard object formats between the source and target instant messaging clients."' Id. at 8. Further, according to Appellants, the Examiner "has not even attempted to account in either Aoki or Farber for the claimed 'only if the target instant messaging client supports the format of the clipboard object."' Id. at 8. Additionally, although Appellants acknowledge that Farber discloses a determining if the communication systems have a "codec type in common" (App. Br. 8, citing Spec ,r 26), Appellants contend that a "codec-decoder is not a 'format."' App. Br. 9. We have considered all of Appellants' arguments and evidence presented. However, we agree with the Examiner's findings, and find no error with the Examiner's conclusion that claim 1 would have been obvious over the teachings and suggestions of Aoki in combination with Farber. Although Appellants contend that "Farber has nothing to do with IM sessions," (App. Br. 6), we note that the Examiner rejects the claim as obvious over the combination of Aoki and Farber, wherein the Examiner relies on Aoki for teaching and suggesting communications in IM sessions. Ans. 15. The test for obviousness is what the combination of Aoki and Farber teaches or would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art. See In re Merck & Co., 800 F.2d 1091, 1097 (Fed. Cir. 1986). Here, the Examiner relies on Aoki to teach and suggest "retrieving data from a clipboard and transmitting the data across IM session into a 5 Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 receiving computer's clipboard." Ans. 15; FF 1. Further the Examiner relies on Farber to teach and suggest that "if the terminal has the appropriate codec, [it] would negate the need to include transcoding functions which Farber seems to discourage." Ans. 16; FF 2. According to the Examiner, to a skilled artisan, "Farber suggests the ideal situation of both terminals supporting the format via the appropriate codec." Ans. 16. Farber, Appellants concede, suggests a communication system for exchanging and changing "encoding formats" between terminals for speech messages. App. Br. 7-8; FF 2. Although, Appellants contend Farber only determines a "codec type" in common, and that the codec is not a format (App. Br. 9), we agree with Examiner's conclusion that a skilled artisan would have understood determining the codec in common in Farber comprises determining a format in common-that is, "a terminal supports a format if the terminal has the appropriate codec." Ans. 16. In other words, Farber's exchanging and changing encoding formats between terminals comprises determining whether the terminals have a codec type in common (FF 2), wherein the skilled artisan would have found it obvious that generally determining whether terminals have the appropriate encoding format comprises determining whether the terminal supports the format. Thus, we agree with the Examiner's conclusion that it would have been obvious to a skilled artisan to apply Farber's teaching and suggestion of encoding format matching, in the IM system of Aoki, and thus arrive at "determining whether or not the target instant messaging client supports a format of the clipboard object" in claim 1. As the Examiner explains, such determination would thereby "improve[] cost of overhead in communications when terminals must cooperatively process between 6 Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 differing data formats" (Ans. 17) in a system, including the IM system of Aoki. Therefore, on this record, we find the Examiner provided sufficient articulated reasoning with some rational underpinning to support the legal conclusion of obviousness. In re Kahn, 441 F.3d 977,988 (Fed. Cir. 2006). As to Appellants' argument concerning the limitation "only if the target IM client supports the format of the clipboard object" (App. Br. 8), we find no error with the Examiner's finding that the combination of Aoki (FF 1) and Farber (FF 2) teaches and suggests the limitation. Ans. 14--15. Further, we note that "only if' is a condition, wherein conditional steps employed in a method claim need not be found in the prior art if, under the broadest reasonable interpretation, the method need not invoke those steps. See Ex parte Schulhauser, No. 2013-007847, 2016 WL 6277792 at *4 (PTAB April 28, 2016) (precedential) (holding "[t]he Examiner did not need to present evidence of the obviousness of the remaining method steps of claim 1 that are not required to be performed under a broadest reasonable interpretation of the claim .... "); see also Ex parte Katz, No. 2010-006083, 2011 WL 514314, at *4--5 (BPAI Jan. 27, 2011). 3 Applying this reasoning here, we conclude the broadest reasonable interpretation of method claim 1 includes situations that fail to satisfy the situational ("only if the target IM supports") conditional precedents, and in 3 See also Applera Corp. v. Illumina, Inc., 375 F. App'x 12, 21 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (unpublished) (affirming a district court's interpretation of a method claim as including a step that need not be practiced if the condition for practicing the step is not met); Cybersettle, Inc. v. Nat'! Arbitration Forum, Inc., 243 F. App'x 603, 607 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (unpublished) ("It is of course true that method steps may be contingent. If the condition for performing a contingent step is not satisfied, the performance recited by the step need not be carried out in order for the claimed method to be performed."). 7 Appeal2018-000023 Application 12/327,496 these situations, the contested language following the condition precedent is not required to be performed. Therefore, such arguments are not commensurate with the broadest reasonable interpretation of claim 1. See Schulhauser, at *4--5 (precedential). For the aforementioned reasons, and on this record, we find a preponderance of the evidence supports the Examiner's underlying factual findings and legal conclusion of obviousness regarding the rejection of independent claim 1 over Aoki and Farber. Appellants do not provide substantive arguments for claims 2-17 separate from those of claim 1 (App. Br. 9-11), and thus, we also sustain the rejections of: 1) claims 9 and 10 over Aoki and Farber; 2) claims 2, 3, 11, and 12 over Aoki, Farber, and Rudd; 3) claims 4 and 13 over Aoki, Farber, Fulmer, and Ferguson; 4) claims 5 and 14 over Aoki, Farber, and Ferguson; 5) claims 6 and 15 over Aoki, Farber, and Hu; 6) claims 7 and 16 over Aoki, Farber, and Kindig; and 7) claims 8 and 17 over Aoki, Farber, and NightFalcon. See 37 C.F.R. § 4I.37(c)(l)(iv). V. CONCLUSION AND DECISION We affirm the Examiner's rejections of claims 1-17 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l )(iv). See 37 C.F.R. § 4I.50(f). AFFIRMED 8 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation