Epic IP LLC v. Backblaze, Inc.
This text of 351 F. Supp. 3d 733 (Epic IP LLC v. Backblaze, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WILLIAM C. BRYSON, UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
*735This is a patent infringement action brought by plaintiff Epic IP LLC against defendant Backblaze, Inc. Before the Court is Backblaze's motion to dismiss the complaint based on patent ineligibility under
BACKGROUND
Epic owns
Claim 1 of the '599 patent provides as follows:
1. An on-line chatting method comprising:
facilitating visit [sic: a visit] by a first on-line user to an information page of an information site;
facilitating dynamic formation of a chat session unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room for said first on-line user and a second on-line user to chat with each other; and
facilitating said chat session through which said first and second on-line users chat with each other.
Claim 2 depends from claim 1 and adds that "said facilitating of dynamic formation of a chat session unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room comprises providing a mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session."
Claim 3 depends from claim 2 and adds that "said provision of a mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session comprises providing a selectable icon for said first on-line user to indicate the first on-line user's desire to chat with another non-particularized on-line user."
Claim 4 depends from claim 3 and adds that "said provision of a mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session further comprises providing one or more dialog panels for said first on-line user to specific [sic: specify] one or more descriptive characteristics of said first on-line user."
Claim 19 provides as follows:
19. An information server comprising:
a plurality of information pages to be selectively provided to a client computer responsive to the client computer's request; and
a first script/applet to be included with a responsive information page to *736enable the client computer to initiate dynamic formation of a chat session unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room for a user of the client computer to chat with a second user of interest, also visiting the information server.
On January 24, 2018, Epic filed separate actions against three defendants: AutoNation, Inc. (Case No. 1:18-cv-139), Blue Jeans Network, Inc. (Case No. 1:18-cv-140), and Backblaze, Inc. (Case No. 1:18-cv-141). The actions against Blue Jeans Network and AutoNation, Inc., were subsequently dismissed following settlement.
Backblaze has now sought dismissal of the action against it under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) on the ground that the asserted claims of the '599 patent are directed to abstract ideas and are not eligible for patenting in light of section 101 of the Patent Act. For the reasons set forth in detail below, the Court agrees with Backblaze that the asserted claims of the '599 patent are drawn to abstract ideas and are not patent-eligible.
DISCUSSION
The framework for analyzing the issue of patentable subject matter under
The first step of the two-step analysis requires the court to examine the "focus" of the claim, i.e., its "character as a whole," in order to determine whether the claim is directed to an abstract idea. SAP Am., Inc. v. InvestPic, LLC ,
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WILLIAM C. BRYSON, UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
*735This is a patent infringement action brought by plaintiff Epic IP LLC against defendant Backblaze, Inc. Before the Court is Backblaze's motion to dismiss the complaint based on patent ineligibility under
BACKGROUND
Epic owns
Claim 1 of the '599 patent provides as follows:
1. An on-line chatting method comprising:
facilitating visit [sic: a visit] by a first on-line user to an information page of an information site;
facilitating dynamic formation of a chat session unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room for said first on-line user and a second on-line user to chat with each other; and
facilitating said chat session through which said first and second on-line users chat with each other.
Claim 2 depends from claim 1 and adds that "said facilitating of dynamic formation of a chat session unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room comprises providing a mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session."
Claim 3 depends from claim 2 and adds that "said provision of a mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session comprises providing a selectable icon for said first on-line user to indicate the first on-line user's desire to chat with another non-particularized on-line user."
Claim 4 depends from claim 3 and adds that "said provision of a mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session further comprises providing one or more dialog panels for said first on-line user to specific [sic: specify] one or more descriptive characteristics of said first on-line user."
Claim 19 provides as follows:
19. An information server comprising:
a plurality of information pages to be selectively provided to a client computer responsive to the client computer's request; and
a first script/applet to be included with a responsive information page to *736enable the client computer to initiate dynamic formation of a chat session unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room for a user of the client computer to chat with a second user of interest, also visiting the information server.
On January 24, 2018, Epic filed separate actions against three defendants: AutoNation, Inc. (Case No. 1:18-cv-139), Blue Jeans Network, Inc. (Case No. 1:18-cv-140), and Backblaze, Inc. (Case No. 1:18-cv-141). The actions against Blue Jeans Network and AutoNation, Inc., were subsequently dismissed following settlement.
Backblaze has now sought dismissal of the action against it under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) on the ground that the asserted claims of the '599 patent are directed to abstract ideas and are not eligible for patenting in light of section 101 of the Patent Act. For the reasons set forth in detail below, the Court agrees with Backblaze that the asserted claims of the '599 patent are drawn to abstract ideas and are not patent-eligible.
DISCUSSION
The framework for analyzing the issue of patentable subject matter under
The first step of the two-step analysis requires the court to examine the "focus" of the claim, i.e., its "character as a whole," in order to determine whether the claim is directed to an abstract idea. SAP Am., Inc. v. InvestPic, LLC ,
I. Abstract Idea
A. Governing Principles
Defining an "abstract idea," as that term is used in section 101 jurisprudence, has not proved to be a simple task. Neither the Supreme Court nor the Federal Circuit has ventured a single, comprehensive definition. See Alice ,
First, the courts have characterized "method[s] of organizing human activity" as abstract. See Alice ,
Second, as applied to computer applications, the courts have looked to whether the claim in question is directed to an improvement in computer technology as opposed to simply providing for the use of a computer to perform "economic or other tasks for which a computer is used in its ordinary capacity." Enfish,
Numerous Federal Circuit decisions have drawn the distinction between patent-eligible claims that "are directed to a specific improvement in the capabilities of computing devices," as opposed to " 'a process that qualifies as an "abstract idea" for which computers are invoked merely as a tool.' " Core Wireless ,
Third, in determining whether a particular claim is directed to an abstract idea, courts have focused on whether the claim is purely functional in nature rather than containing the specificity necessary to recite how the claimed function is achieved. The Federal Circuit has focused on the problem of functional claiming in a number of recent section 101 decisions. In those cases, the Federal Circuit, treating the term "abstract" as an antonym of "concrete" or "specific," has analyzed whether the claims before it are sufficiently concrete or specific to be directed to a patent-eligible process rather than a patent-ineligible result. For example, in SAP America ,
As Judge Chen noted for the Federal Circuit in Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, Inc. ,
In Interval Licensing , the Federal Circuit also pointed to the Supreme Court's nineteenth century decisions in O'Reilly v. Morse , 56 U.S. (15 How.) 62,
Other cases from the Federal Circuit have employed the same analysis and applied it to hold claims ineligible under section 101. See Two-Way Media,
*740In re TLI Commc'ns LLC Patent Litig. ,
B. Applying Those Principles to This Case
Each of the above-listed principles that guide the courts' abstract idea inquiries points to the conclusion that the asserted claims of the '599 patent are directed to abstract ideas. First, the claims are directed to a method of organizing human activity. Second, the claims do not recite an improvement in computer technology. Third, the claims are functional in nature; they recite what the objective of the invention is, but not how that objective is to be accomplished. These points are addressed in more detail below.
Asserted claims 1-4 and 19 of the '599 patent are directed to the idea of a "chat session" for users of the Internet. More particularly, the idea underlying the claims is to provide an Internet user the ability to visit a website and then form a group from among those visiting the website to conduct a "chat" independent of the website. That idea can be expressed at several different levels of generality: (1) as the idea of individuals getting together to communicate; (2) as the idea of individuals getting together to communicate over the Internet; or (3) as the idea of individuals getting together to communicate over the Internet by forming a sub-group from the group of individuals visiting a website.
The idea of individuals getting together to communicate is plainly abstract in the sense in which that term has been used in cases addressing the issue of patent eligibility: it is a commonplace occurrence with long historical (indeed, pre-historical) roots. The idea of a sub-group of persons with particular shared interests forming a sub-group for communication is also commonplace in everyday life.
Epic argues that the invention is not drawn to an abstract idea because the activity takes place over the Internet. However, limiting the interpersonal contacts to communications over the Internet does not make the idea any less abstract; the Federal Circuit has made clear that conducting a commonplace activity over the Internet does not avoid the problem of abstractness. See Ultramercial ,
Epic further argues that the claims are not drawn to an abstract idea because the invention entails more than simply setting up a chat room on the Internet. The novelty, according to Epic, is that the invention provides for individuals who are visiting the same website to initiate private chats with one another, separate from the website that the individuals initially visited. The problem, however, is that the idea of a chat session separate from the original website is not an invention; it is a disembodied concept. The asserted claims of the '599 patent recite the concept, but not the way to implement it.
*741Claim 1 is the worst offender. It is wholly devoid of concreteness. It recites an "on-line chatting method" comprising three steps: "facilitating visit [sic] by an on-line user to an information site"; "facilitating the dynamic formation of a chat session, unaffiliated with any pre-established chat room," between the first on-line user and a second on-line user to chat with each other; and "facilitating said chat session through which said first and second on-line users chat with each other." Those steps are just the barebones descriptions of a result. The claim contains no description of any mechanism by which that result is obtained. To use the words of the Federal Circuit in RecogniCorp , claim 1 of the '599 patent is not directed to "a specific means or method for improving technology," but is "simply directed to an abstract end-result."
Independent claim 19 contains nothing of substance beyond what is contained in claim 1, and thus there is no difference between them for section 101 purposes. See Alice ,
Claim 2, which depends from claim 1, simply adds a reference to providing a generic "mechanism to said first on-line user to initiate formation of said unaffiliated chat session." Since the process of facilitating a visit by a user to an information site and facilitating the formation of a chat session necessarily contemplates some mechanism by which the user can communicate his desire to visit the site and join a chat session, claim 2 adds nothing of substance to independent claim 1.
Claim 3, which depends from claim 2, adds a "selectable icon for said first on-line user to indicate the first on-line user's desire to chat with another non-particularized on-line user." The few references in the specification to a "user selectable icon" make clear that the icon is merely a generic description of a mechanism displayed to the user through which the user can indicate his desire to enter a chat session. See '599 patent, col. 5, ll. 45-54;
Claim 4, which depends from claim 3, adds a mechanism, referred to as "one or more dialog panels" for the first on-line user "to specific [sic: specify] one or more descriptive characteristics of said first on-line user." The specification makes clear that the "dialog panel" is merely a generic means for the user to identify characteristics that may be pertinent to the nature of the chat session in which he elects to engage. See '599 patent, col. 6, line 66, through col. 7, line 16. That feature, like the additional features recited in claims 2 and 3, does not add specificity to the claimed invention. Formation of a separate chat session among persons sharing an interest in chatting necessarily requires a means for them to indicate their interest in doing so and naturally requires a means for them to communicate information that would induce others to join such a chat session. Thus, none of the dependent claims overcomes the abstractness of claim 1.
In sum, under governing Federal Circuit precedent, claims 1 and 19 are so general in nature that they are clearly directed to abstract ideas. Dependent claims 2 and 3 add nothing more concrete, as they simply provide an unspecified mechanism by which the user can communicate with the information server. And dependent claim 4 merely provides a means for the user to communicate characteristics that form the basis for generating a chat session with other on-line users. Each of those additional features simply refers to the mechanism by which the user communicates his desires to the system-mechanisms that are implicit in claims 1 and 19 and add no more specificity to the patent claims.
C. Epic's Arguments
1. Epic argues that its patent "address[es] a specific improvement to solve a problem with implementing on-line chat sessions." Dkt. No. 27, at 13. The problem with prior art chat rooms, according to Epic, is that they "were pre-established and required registration."
That characterization of the problem and its solution is simply saying that the problem was that chat sessions were restricted to pre-established chat rooms, rather than being initiated by individuals interested in chatting about a particular subject, while the solution to the problem was to allow individuals to initiate chat sessions without the constraints of a pre-existing chatroom. But that is not a description of the solution to the problem; it is just a description of the problem and an announcement that it has been solved. Nothing in the claims explains how the solution is effectuated.
In the case of claim 1, the proposed "solution" is simply to "facilitate" the establishment of independent chat sessions, which is no solution at all. In the case of dependent claims 2 and 3, the purported solution is the same, with the inclusion of necessarily inherent features of a generic device to initiate the formation of such a session and to indicate a desire to chat with another participant. In the case of claim 4, the additional step is simply a generic device by which the user can specify *743one or more descriptive characteristics to facilitate the formation of a chat session among persons sharing an interest in chatting. In substance, claim 19 merely incorporates the limitations of the first two claims in apparatus form, referring to the mechanism on an information website for initiating the formation of a chat session by use of the generic term "script/applets." Nothing in independent claims 1 and 19, or in dependent claims 2 through 4, offers a specific "solution" to the problem that Epic describes, as opposed to simply announcing that the solution to the problem of not having a way for on-line users to initiate their own chatroom sessions is to enable on-line users to initiate their own chatrooms.
2. Epic next contends that the asserted claims of the '599 patent"are directed to improved computer functionality" and are "rooted in a particular computer technology." Dkt. No. 27, at 11-12. That argument, however, misses the point of the cases that find improvements in computer technology to be non-abstract. That line of cases addresses technological improvements in the way the computer systems operate, not innovations that happen to employ computers. The cases on which Epic relies illustrate this distinction.
Epic places particularly heavy reliance on Finjan, Inc. v. Blue Coat Sys., Inc. ,
The facts of Finjan make it clear how different that case is from this one. The invention in Finjan solved a technological problem in a technological manner, by fashioning a new way of conducting virus scans. The claims in this case, by contrast, involve no improvements to the operation of computers themselves, but only an arguably new use to which conventional computer components can be put. The specification of the '599 patent repeatedly emphasizes that the invention involves only conventional computer and communications components. The only thing that is novel is the use to which those components are put. Under the Federal Circuit cases dealing with non-abstract improvements to computer functionality, that is not enough.
In the context of computer-related technology, the Federal Circuit has repeatedly distinguished, for section 101 purposes, between inventions that are directed to specific improvements to computer functionality and those that are not.
*744See Enfish,
The Federal Circuit's decision in Enfish identified the kinds of inventions that qualify as non-abstract improvements in computer-related technology, "such as a chip architecture, an LED display, and the like."
Other Federal Circuit cases have identified similar technological innovations as non-abstract. For example, in McRO, Inc. v. Bandai Namco Games America Inc., supra , the court rejected an argument that claims directed to computer generation of facial expressions and lip movements on three-dimensional animated characters were ineligible for patenting. The claimed computerized animation process, the court explained, was entirely different from the process employed by human animators.
The Federal Circuit's decision in DDR Holdings, LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P. ,
Epic's claims clearly do not fall within the scope of that line of cases. Epic's claims are not directed to an improvement *745in the operation of computers or computer networks. The specification states on several occasions that merely conventional computer and network components are used to implement the inventions. See '599 patent, col. 3, ll. 40-47 (referring to computer components "known in the art," networking equipment available from identified suppliers, and "the well known Internet");
3. In a series of cases, the Federal Circuit has found claims directed to specific user interfaces in computer-related inventions to be patent-eligible. At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, counsel for Epic argued that this line of cases provides direct support for Epic's argument that the asserted claims of the '599 patent are not directed to an abstract idea. The Court disagrees. The "user interface" cases on which Epic relies all involve improvements in computer technology, not simply the use of a conventional computer for a new purpose.
In Core Wireless Licensing S.A.R.L. v. LG Elecs., Inc. ,
The Core Wireless court emphasized that the claims at issue in that case were directed to "a particular manner of summarizing and presenting information in electronic devices."
Similarly, in Data Engine Techs. LLC v. Google LLC ,
The court in Data Engine noted that representative claim 12 of one of the patents in suit was "directed to more than a generic or abstract idea as it claim[ed] a particular manner of navigating three-dimensional spreadsheets, implementing an improvement in electronic spreadsheet functionality."
The court in Data Engine also distinguished the Federal Circuit's earlier decision in Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Erie Indemnity Co. ,
The concept of a chat session independent of a pre-existing chatroom is not the solution to a technological problem or an improvement in the functioning of computers, computer software, or computer networks. It is more akin to the claim in Erie Indemnity Co., which was directed to the use of an index to search for and retrieve data, a function that was held to be an unpatentable abstract idea. The Core Wireless line of cases thus does not support Epic's argument that its claims are directed not to abstract ideas, but to improvements in computer functionality.
In sum, contrary to Epic's argument, this is not a case in which the invention consists of an improvement to the functioning of a computer or network. Accordingly, the Court concludes that in light of the principles that guide the analysis of the "abstract idea" step of the section 101 *747inquiry, the asserted claims in this case are directed to abstract ideas.
II. Inventive Concept
Turning to the second step of the Alice / Mayo test for patent eligibility, Epic argues that, even if the claims are directed to abstract ideas, the claims contain an "inventive concept" that renders them patent-eligible. Dkt. No. 27, at 18-20.
The "inventive concept" step requires the court to determine whether the claims recite an element or combination of elements that is sufficient to ensure that the patent claims "significantly more" than the ineligible concept itself. Alice ,
On this issue, the Federal Circuit's decision in Electric Power Group is highly instructive. The court in that case first determined that the claims before it were directed to an abstract idea. Upon scrutinizing the claim elements "more microscopically," the court then found "nothing sufficient to remove the claims from the class of subject matter ineligible for patenting."
Inquiry therefore must turn to any requirements for how the desired result is achieved. But in this case the claims' invocation of computers, networks, and displays does not transform the claimed subject matter into patent-eligible applications. The claims at issue do not require any nonconventional computer, network, or display components, or even a "non-conventional and non-generic arrangement of known, conventional pieces" ....
Nothing in the claims, understood in light of the specification, requires anything other than off-the-shelf, conventional computer, network, and display technology for gathering, sending, and presenting the desired information.
The same analysis that the Federal Circuit applied in Electric Power Group applies here. As in Electric Power Group , the asserted claims do not require any non-conventional computer or network, or even a non-conventional and non-generic arrangement *748of known, conventional pieces. Rather, the claims merely call for the initiation of a chat session that is separate from any previously established chat room, by use of a set of generic computer components and display devices. Thus, like the claims in Electric Power Group , the asserted claims in this case do not recite an inventive concept.
To support its contention that the claims satisfy the "inventive concept" requirement, Epic points to the invention generally. Epic contends that the inventive concept is that the '599 claims "are directed to chat sessions that are dynamically formed by the user through an information page and are not affiliated with pre-established chat rooms." Dkt. No. 27, at 19. According to Epic, this is a significant improvement over prior art chat sessions because the prior art chat rooms "were required to be pre-established and often required pre-registration and chatting only at specified times."
Epic's argument amounts to saying that the inventive concept resides in the invention itself, as a whole. But the Federal Circuit has explicitly rejected that approach to the "inventive concept" element of section 101 analysis. In BSG , the court explained that an inventive concept must "ensure[ ] the patent amounts to 'significantly more' than a patent upon the [ineligible concept] itself." BSG ,
As for Epic's argument that, prior to the invention, individuals could not join chat sessions that were unaffiliated with an pre-existing chat room, that argument amounts to saying that the invention, even if directed to an abstract idea, is nonetheless novel and therefore should be patent-eligible. But novelty and patent eligibility are different things. Even if it is true, as Epic asserts, that the systems that were previously used to form chat rooms were more restrictive than Epic's conception, that is not enough to satisfy the "inventive concept" requirement.
The Supreme Court has made this point clear, holding that an abstract idea may be new, but nonetheless unpatentable under section 101. See Mayo ,
*749Synopsys, Inc. v. Mentor Graphics Corp. ,
The problem with the '599 patent, for purposes of the "inventive concept" requirement, begins with the fact that the limitations are expressed through functional terms lacking in specificity or through generic structures described at a very high level of generality. As the Supreme Court said in Alice , "transformation into a patent-eligible application requires 'more than simply stat[ing] the [abstract idea] while adding the words "apply it." ' "
Nor does the application of such conventional elements to a specific field, such as generating a chat session over the Internet, convert the conventional elements into an "inventive concept." It is well established that patent-ineligible subject matter does not become patent-eligible merely by being applied in a particular technological environment. Alice ,
*750Epic contends (Dkt. No. 27, at 18) that Backblaze has "limited its analysis to claim 1" and therefore "does not challenge" that claims 2-4 and 19 are patentable under the second step of the Alice / Mayo inquiry. That is incorrect. Backblaze argues that claim 1 is representative of the other asserted claims for this purpose, see Dkt. No. 23, at 8, and thus it has preserved its "inventive concept" argument as to all of the asserted claims. Setting aside Epic's waiver argument, we agree with Backblaze that dependent claims 2-4 and independent claim 19 fail to recite any inventive concept, for the same reasons that apply to claim 1.
As for the dependent claims, the courts have made clear that adding a degree of particularity through additional limitations does not render dependent claims patent-eligible if the additional limitations merely add further insignificant details and do not convert otherwise patent-ineligible subject matter into a patent-eligible invention. See Affinity Labs , 838 F.3d at 1264 (dependent claims all recited functions that were not inventive but simply constituted "particular choices from within the range of existing content or hardware"); Internet Patents ,
While dependent claims can be patent-eligible even when their corresponding independent claims are patent-ineligible, See, e.g., Berkheimer v. HP Inc. ,
Claim 19 likewise contains nothing of substance beyond what is contained in claim 1, as noted above. The "information page" on which the option to form a chat session is presented to the user and the generic "script/applet" that enables the user to initiate formation of the chat session, are described in the specification as "conventional." See '599 patent, col. 5, ll. 38-41; see also
III. The Appropriateness of Resolving This Case on a Motion to Dismiss
Prior to the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the Court asked the parties to address what factual issues might be presented by the issues raised in the motion that would preclude addressing the patent-eligibility issue on a motion to dismiss. The Court raised that question in light of the recent Federal Circuit decisions in *751Berkheimer v. HP Inc., supra , and Aatrix Software, Inc. v. Green Shades Software, Inc. ,
The parties addressed both of those issues at the hearing. Having heard the parties out on those issues, the Court has concluded that there are no factual issues that would preclude entry of judgment under Rule 12(b)(6) and no claim construction issues that would require the Court to await claim construction before determining whether the plaintiff's claims are patent-eligible.
With regard to factual issues, the Berkheimer and Aatrix cases do not stand for the proposition that a plaintiff can avoid dismissal simply by reciting in the complaint that the invention at issue is novel. As discussed above, section 101 does not turn on novelty, and thus the fact that Epic's apparatus may have been unconventional in providing for chat sessions unaffiliated with a pre-established chat room does not mean that the claims necessarily incorporate an "inventive concept." Moreover, as Judge Moore explained in her opinion concurring in the orders denying rehearing en banc in the Aatrix and Berkheimer cases,
District courts have frequently decided section 101 issues on motions to dismiss, and the Federal Circuit has approved of that procedure on numerous occasions, including in cases post-dating the decisions in Aatrix and Berkheimer. See, e.g., SAP Am., Inc. ,
In this case, as stated above, Epic's general position with respect to the "inventive concept" step of the Alice / Mayo inquiry is that the combination of elements recited in each of the asserted claims amounts to an inventive concept. That is, the assertedly "inventive concept" is the abstract idea itself. As noted, however, the "inventive concept" element of the section 101 analysis requires "significantly more" than the abstract idea itself. At the hearing, Epic asserted that the fact issues with respect to claims 1-4 of the '599 patent are whether the limitations of each of those claims would be well-understood, routine, or conventional to a skilled artisan. But that is merely asking whether the claim as a whole is the inventive concept. With respect to claim 19, Epic asserted that the fact issue is whether the components of the second limitation of that claim would be well-understood, routine, or conventional *752to a skilled artisan. That, again, is just another way of asking whether the claimed invention as a whole would be well-understood, routine, or conventional. Asking about the second limitation amounts to asking about the whole invention because the first limitation of claim 19 (the only other limitation of the claim) recites a server providing information pages to a client computer in response to the client computer's request. That limitation describes the most fundamental service provided by a website and merely sets the background for the second limitation in claim 19. Because Epic has not suggested that there is a factual issue as to whether the asserted claims are directed to something significantly more than the abstract idea itself, Epic has failed to point to a discrete factual issue on which the presence of an "inventive concept" in claim 19 would turn.
As to claim construction, the Federal Circuit has addressed the question whether a motion to dismiss under section 101 can be decided before claim construction. The court has held that a district court may do so if the nature of the claims is clear and it is apparent that claim construction would not affect the patent-eligibility of the claims at issue. See Genetic Techs. Ltd. ,
Epic has not pointed to any claim construction issue that would alter the Court's judgment as to the disposition of the section 101 motion. The claims are straightforward and not technical in nature, and plaintiff's counsel has not pointed to any terms from the asserted claims that would likely give rise to a material dispute over claim construction. At the hearing, counsel contended that the phrase "facilitating dynamic formation of a chat session" in claim 1 should be construed to mean "providing a script/applet that is included with an information page to initiate the dynamic formation of the unaffiliated chat session through a chat session manager." The Court finds Epic's proposed construction to be questionable, as it imports subject matter from an embodiment in the specification and disregards the breadth of the term "facilitating" in claim 1. Nonetheless, even if claim 1 were construed as Epic suggests, the result of the section 101 analysis would be the same, since the effect of that claim construction would simply be to make the method of claim 1 congruent with the apparatus of claim 19, which the Court has also found to be patent-ineligible.
Accordingly, the Court believes it is both feasible and appropriate to decide the section 101 issue now and spare the parties the burdens that would be incurred in delaying disposition of the section 101 issue until after claim construction and summary judgment proceedings, or beyond. Based on the foregoing analysis, the Court holds that claims 1-4 and 19 of the '599 patent are not patent-eligible and therefore grants the defendant's motion to dismiss.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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