Bright Data Ltd. v. code200, UAB

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-00396
StatusUnknown

This text of Bright Data Ltd. v. code200, UAB (Bright Data Ltd. v. code200, UAB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bright Data Ltd. v. code200, UAB, (E.D. Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS MARSHALL DIVISION

LUMINATI NETWORKS LTD., Plaintiff, v. Case No. 2:19-cv-00396-JRG CODE200, UAB ET AL., Defendants.

CLAIM CONSTRUCTION MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is the opening claim construction brief of Luminati Networks Ltd. (“Plaintiff”) (Dkt. No. 86, filed on December 18, 2020),1 the response of Code200, UAB, Oxysales, UAB, and Metacluster LT, UAB (collectively “Defendants”) (Dkt. No. 88, filed on January 4, 2020), and Plaintiff’s reply (Dkt. No. 89, filed on January 8, 2021). The Court held a hearing on the issues of claim construction and claim definiteness on January 29, 2021. Having considered the arguments and evidence presented by the parties at the hearing and in their briefing, the Court issues this Order.

1 Citations to the parties’ filings are to the filing’s number in the docket (Dkt. No.) and pin cites are to the page numbers assigned through ECF. Table of Contents I. BACKGROUND ............................................................................................................... 3 II. LEGAL PRINCIPLES ..................................................................................................... 5 A. Claim Construction ................................................................................................. 5 B. Departing from the Ordinary Meaning of a Claim Term ........................................ 8 C. Definiteness Under 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 2 (pre-AIA) / § 112(b) (AIA) ................... 9 III. AGREED CONSTRUCTIONS...................................................................................... 10 IV. CONSTRUCTION OF DISPUTED TERMS ............................................................... 11 A. “client device” ....................................................................................................... 11 B. “first server” and “second server”......................................................................... 13 C. “sending . . . the first content identifier to the web server using the selected IP address” ............................................................................................................ 15 D. “a response time when communicating” ............................................................... 19 E. “source address”.................................................................................................... 23 F. “for use with a first web server that is a HTTP or HTTPS server that respectively responds to HTTP or HTTPS requests and stores a first content identified by a first content identifier” ..................................................... 27 G. “receiving, by the requesting client device, over the Internet in response to the sending from the second server using the selected IP address” ...................... 29 H. “determining, . . . that the received part of, or the whole of, first content, is valid” and “the determining is based on a received HTTP header according to, or based on IETF RFC 2616” ......................................................... 31 I. “periodically communicating” .............................................................................. 35 V. CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................... 37 I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff alleges infringement of two U.S. Patents: No. 10,484,511 (the “’511 Patent”) and No. 10,637,968 (the “’968 Patent”) (collectively, the “Asserted Patents”). The patents are related through a series of continuation and division applications. They each list an earliest priority claim

to an application filed on October 8, 2009. The ’511 and ’968 Patents share a substantially identical specification, outside of the claim sets. The Court cites the ’511 Patent herein with the understanding that the ’968 Patent includes the same material. The Asserted Patents are related to patents recently construed by the Court in Claim Construction Opinion and Order, Luminati Networks, Ltd. v. Teso LT UAB et al., No. 2:19-cv- 00395-JRG (E.D. Tex. Dec. 7, 2020), Dkt. No. 191 (the “Teso Markman Order”). Specifically, the Court there construed claims in three U.S. Patents: No. 10,257,319 (the “’319 Patent), No. 10,484,510 (the “’510 Patent), and No. 10,469,614 (the “’614 Patent”). The ’319 and ’510 Patents are related to the Asserted Patents and share a substantially identical specification with the Asserted Patents, outside of the claim sets.

In general, the Asserted Patents are directed to technology for improving communications in a communication network. The technology can be generally understood with reference to Figure 3, reproduced and annotated below. Communication devices in a network may be (inclusively) configured as a client (102), an agent (122), or a peer (112, 114, 116). Clients are configured to request content from a web server (152). Peers are configured to store copies of portions of the requested content in cache. Agents are configured to process the clients’ requests for content (solid green arrow) by (1) providing the client with a list of potential alternative sources of the requested content (dashed red arrow) or (2) if there are no suitable alternative sources, providing the client with the requested content which the agent retrieves from the web server (solid magenta arrow). An acceleration server (162) stores a list of IP addresses of communication devices in the network and provides clients with a list of potential agents for the client request (blue solid arrow). □□□□ Patent col.4 1.43 — col.5 1.50, col.10 11.2246, col.12 11.57 — col.15 1.11.

igo Fig. 3

ACCELERATION KS BS C9 oo A STORAGE «© a s _ ihe oo eo & o wy 8 Oy request for content SS cage ise □ content ie errrtt7 I potential sources request for content | t 4 content LN PEER 416

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The abstracts of the Asserted Patents are identical and provide: A system designed for increasing network communication speed for users, while lowering network congestion for content owners and ISPs. The system employs network elements including an acceleration server, clients, agents, and peers, where communication requests generated by applications are intercepted by the client on the same machine. The IP address of the server in the communication request is transmitted to the acceleration server, which provides a list of agents to use for this IP address. The communication request is sent to the agents. One or more of the agents respond with a list of peers that have previously seen some or all of the content which is the response to this request (after checking whether this data is still valid). The client then downloads the data from these peers in parts and in parallel, thereby speeding up the Web transfer, releasing congestion from the Web by fetching the information from multiple sources, and relieving traffic from Web servers by offloading the data transfers from them to nearby peers.

Claim 1 of the ’511 Patent and Claim 1 of the ’968 Patent, the independent claims at issue, recite as follows (with terms in dispute emphasized): ’511 Patent Claim 1.

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Bright Data Ltd. v. code200, UAB, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bright-data-ltd-v-code200-uab-txed-2021.