Gabara v. Facebook, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 4, 2020
Docket1:19-cv-09890
StatusUnknown

This text of Gabara v. Facebook, Inc. (Gabara v. Facebook, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gabara v. Facebook, Inc., (S.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ----------------------------------- X : THADDEUS GABARA, : : Plaintiff, : 19cv9890(DLC) : -v- : OPINION AND ORDER : FACEBOOK, INC., : : Defendant. : : ----------------------------------- X

APPEARANCES

For plaintiff: Thaddeus Gabara P.O. Box 512 New Providence, NJ 07974

For the defendant: Calvin E. Wingfield Jr. Goodwin Procter LLP The New York Times Building 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

DENISE COTE, District Judge:

Defendant Facebook, Inc. (“Facebook”) has moved to dismiss this patent infringement action on the ground that the patents at issue claim patent-ineligible subject matter. See 35 U.S.C. § 101 (“Section 101”). For the reasons that follow, the defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted. Background The following facts are drawn from the Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) and documents integral to that pleading. Thaddeus Gabara (“Gabara”) alleges that Facebook is committing

direct, induced, and contributory infringement of five U.S. patents: Nos. 8,930,131 (the “‘131 Patent”); 8,620,545 (the “‘545 Patent”); 8,836,698 (the “‘698 Patent”); 8,706,400 (the “‘400 Patent”); and 9,299,348 (the “‘348 Patent”). The SAC alleges infringement by three Facebook products: Facebook 360, 3D Photos, and Workplace by Facebook. The Image Patents Four of Gabara’s five patents concern the same subject matter and contain substantially similar specifications. The ‘698 Patent was filed on December 26, 2011. The ‘698 Patent is related to Patent No. 8,532,919 (the “‘919 Patent”), also filed on December 26, 2011. The ‘545, ‘400, and ‘131 Patents -- filed

on August 14, 2013; December 5, 2013; and April 21, 2014, respectively -- all claim priority to the ‘919 Patent. The ‘545, ‘400, ‘131, and ‘698 Patents will be referred to as the Image Patents. The Image Patents work with a “portable unit,” such as a smart phone, that can display portions of a background image that is larger than the unit’s viewing screen. The user of the unit moves the device to bring other portions of the background image into view. With this invention, the unit acts like a “Sliding Window” to provide views of the off-screen background

image by moving the unit itself. The prior art technology, by contrast, requires the user to scroll on the portable unit in order to view an off-screen portion of the background image. For example, consider a background image of a map displaying two cities: City A on the screen of the unit and City B out of view. If the user wished to move the view displayed on the device to City B, the prior art technology required the user to move the stationary background image by scrolling with her fingers. The Image Patents allow a user to view City B on the map by moving the portable unit itself. As alleged in the SAC, a significant benefit of the Image Patents is that they “take advantage of existing hardware that is commonplace in mobile

devices, such as accelerometers and gyroscopes,” allowing the Image Patents to be deployed across a wide range of devices. The ‘400 Patent is entitled “Method and apparatus of physically moving a portable unit to view an image of a stationary map.” It issued on April 22, 2014, and is representative of each of the four Image Patents. The Abstract of the ‘400 Patent explains the invention as follows: A background map remains stationary while a portable unit moves within a plane parallel to the screen of the portable unit. As the user moves the unit, images of the background map appear on the screen of the portable device. The user scans the stationary map presented on the screen of the portable unit. This has several benefits since now relative distances and angular displacements within the plane between objects that are outside of the range of the screen of the handheld unit can be immediately be [sic] located and placed into view on the screen of a portable unit. The handheld unit is like a Sliding Window which provides a view of this image of a stationary map lying in the background of the portable unit.

Figure 10a in the specification of the ‘400 Patent shows the prior art, in which the user had to move the background image itself. Figure 10b illustrates how the Image Patents operate by permitting the user to navigate across the background image by moving the device. Those illustrations are reproduced below: Ory 90° psd A 5.2 sa & OS nun f a Tid □ 3-2 42 S 270" . % at 4 . i.) i, et . @ □ t tf = 10-4 ay 5-4 58 So Bad o \ Kee OA 10-1 a 10-3000 . f — ‘ Sliding Map Movement Innovative Device Movement 1) Device Remains Stationary 1) Map Remains Stationary 2) Movement of Map in 2) Movement of Device Directly Increments Prevents Intuitive Correlates With Map Grasp of Map Dimensions Dimensions 3) Lacks intuitive Distance and Angie 3) Provides Intuitive Distance and Angle FIG. 10a FIG. 10b

The *400 Patent contains twenty-one claims: three independent claims and eighteen dependent claims. Claim 1 of the ‘400 Patent recites:! 1. A method of moving a portable unit to search for a new location comprising the steps of: displaying an image on a screen of the portable unit matched and superimposed to a corresponding portion of a background image of a stationary map; mapping a first point of the display image located ina center of the screen of the portable unit toa corresponding reference point in the background image of the stationary map; moving the portable unit to display a new portion of the background image of the stationary map on the screen;

1 For the purposes of the § 101 analysis, Claim 1 of the ‘400 Patent is representative of all the claims in the Image Patents.

identifying a new location in the new portion of the background image;

determining a first vector between the center of the screen of the portable unit and the new location; and

moving the center of the screen of the portable unit to the new location as determined by the first vector.

The fifth patent on which Gabara brings suit is the ‘348 Patent. The ‘348 Patent, issued on March 29, 2016, is entitled, “Method and apparatus for obtaining information from the web.” It is a continuation of an application filed on January 26, 2011. The invention operates on a “portable wireless system” to “improve the operations of a group” communicating electronically. As Gabara asserts in the SAC, the invention embodied in Claim 7 of the ‘348 Patent “extract[s] key information from the ongoing conversation and generat[es] additional topics to continue” the conversation. The invention “utilizes voice recognition, speech to text, and other blocks emulating various Finite State Machines (FSM)” to interact with the participants’ conversation and provide new topics for discussion. The ‘348 Patent contains three independent claims and sixteen dependent claims. The SAC identifies Claim 7 of the ‘348 Patent as “exemplary” and describes only that claim. In full, Claim 7 recites: 7. An intelligent conversation system augmenting, a conversation between two or more individuals comprising:

a determination circuit configured to segregate the conversation into topics and to extract search parameters from the topics, wherein the search parameters are sent to a search engine and search results corresponding to the search parameters are received from the search engine;

a memory configured to store the search results; and

a finite state machine configured to sequence through the search results to generate recall topics.

The ‘348 Patent does not describe how it improves upon the prior art. The SAC asserts that the invention in the ‘348 Patent “actively and dynamically contribute[s] to a conversation,” and that this is an improvement over existing technology that will only search for new topics when called upon to do so.

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Gabara v. Facebook, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabara-v-facebook-inc-nysd-2020.