Quantum Stream Inc. v. Charter Commc'ns, Inc.
This text of 309 F. Supp. 3d 171 (Quantum Stream Inc. v. Charter Commc'ns, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PAUL A. ENGELMAYER, District Judge:
Plaintiff Quantum Stream Inc. ("Quantum") brings this patent infringement action against defendants Charter Communications, Inc. and Spectrum Management Holding Company, LLC (together, "Charter"). Quantum alleges infringement of three of its patents that relate to the pairing of "secondary" advertising content based upon a user's real-time selection of "primary" content or upon other data, so as to result in a customized presentation of content and dependent advertising to the user.
Before the Court now is Charter's motion to dismiss this action for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Charter argues that Quantum's three patents are drawn to patent-ineligible subject matter and are thus invalid under § 101 of the Patent Act,
I. Background1
A. The Parties
Quantum is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New York *174City. Relevant here, it owns, by assignment, the three patents at issue, possessing "the exclusive right to sue and to recover damages for infringement of" each of them. Complaint ¶¶ 1, 9-14. Defendant Charter Communications, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in St. Louis, Missouri. Defendant Spectrum Management Holding Company, LLC is a Delaware corporation based in New York City and Stamford, Connecticut.
B. The Patents
1. Overview of the Three Patents
The three patents at issue in this case are
Each patent has the same specification and each is entitled, "Content Distribution System and Method," although the claims of each patent are different. In describing how the patents relate to the pairing of secondary advertising content based upon the user's own selection of primary content or upon other data, the patents elaborate in their specification that they "relate[ ] generally to content distribution systems and, more particularly, to a system for distributing digital content associated with a container based on a relationship between attributes associated with the digital content and attributes associated with a defined region of the container." '136 Patent at 1:28-32.2 The "container," in turn, is "any digital transmission," into which primary content and secondary content may be added, which the specification goes on to describe as something that "may constitute, or be included in, any digital transmission, such as television or radio programming, web pages, and the like."
The specification elaborates that containers contain "vacancies," particular spaces that are reserved to be filled with secondary advertising content yet to be determined. See
The basis by which secondary content is selected to fill each "vacancy" is accomplished *175by reference to "attributes" that correspond to both the vacancies themselves and the content units that could be selected to occupy them.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
PAUL A. ENGELMAYER, District Judge:
Plaintiff Quantum Stream Inc. ("Quantum") brings this patent infringement action against defendants Charter Communications, Inc. and Spectrum Management Holding Company, LLC (together, "Charter"). Quantum alleges infringement of three of its patents that relate to the pairing of "secondary" advertising content based upon a user's real-time selection of "primary" content or upon other data, so as to result in a customized presentation of content and dependent advertising to the user.
Before the Court now is Charter's motion to dismiss this action for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Charter argues that Quantum's three patents are drawn to patent-ineligible subject matter and are thus invalid under § 101 of the Patent Act,
I. Background1
A. The Parties
Quantum is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New York *174City. Relevant here, it owns, by assignment, the three patents at issue, possessing "the exclusive right to sue and to recover damages for infringement of" each of them. Complaint ¶¶ 1, 9-14. Defendant Charter Communications, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in St. Louis, Missouri. Defendant Spectrum Management Holding Company, LLC is a Delaware corporation based in New York City and Stamford, Connecticut.
B. The Patents
1. Overview of the Three Patents
The three patents at issue in this case are
Each patent has the same specification and each is entitled, "Content Distribution System and Method," although the claims of each patent are different. In describing how the patents relate to the pairing of secondary advertising content based upon the user's own selection of primary content or upon other data, the patents elaborate in their specification that they "relate[ ] generally to content distribution systems and, more particularly, to a system for distributing digital content associated with a container based on a relationship between attributes associated with the digital content and attributes associated with a defined region of the container." '136 Patent at 1:28-32.2 The "container," in turn, is "any digital transmission," into which primary content and secondary content may be added, which the specification goes on to describe as something that "may constitute, or be included in, any digital transmission, such as television or radio programming, web pages, and the like."
The specification elaborates that containers contain "vacancies," particular spaces that are reserved to be filled with secondary advertising content yet to be determined. See
The basis by which secondary content is selected to fill each "vacancy" is accomplished *175by reference to "attributes" that correspond to both the vacancies themselves and the content units that could be selected to occupy them.
The container, vacancies, and secondary content units are described in the patents as not limited to any particular format or information medium, other than analog information forms. Instead, the specification states that "[a] vacancy may be included in any digital medium such as digital video or digital audio, web pages, email, and the like. Correspondingly, the unit of content that fills a vacancy can constitute any digital medium."
Quantum alleges infringement of "at least" claim 1 of each of the three patents. See Complaint ¶¶ 34 ( '626 Patent, cl. 1), 38 ( '228 Patent, cl. 1), and 42 ( '136 Patent, cl. 1). These claims disclose as follows:
As to the '626 Patent :
1. A system for providing secondary content for inclusion in video content, the system comprising:
a consumer device comprising:
at least one network connector for receiving secondary content selected based on targeted criteria and for receiving (a) video content having at least one vacancy, and (b)
*176information relating to the video content, wherein the information relating to the video content includes one or more attributes associated with the at least one vacancy;
at least one storage device for storing the secondary content and information relating to the secondary content, wherein the information relating to the secondary content includes one or more attributes; and
at least one processor for inserting the secondary content to fill the at least one vacancy of the video content, wherein the insertion is based on matching the one or more attributes associated with the at least one vacancy with the one or more attributes of the information relating to the secondary content; and
at least one server interface for transferring the video content and the secondary content to the consumer device;
wherein the consumer device outputs the secondary content within the at least one vacancy of the video content.
'626 Patent, cl. 1.
Claim 1 of each of the other two patents, the '228 Patent and the '136 Patent, are quite similar, with the '228 Patent being a narrower invention subsumed by the '136 Patent.3 The narrowing is accomplished by the use of two servers in the '228 Patent, one for the storage and selection of secondary digital video advertisements and another for the transmission of a primary content digital video program. The '136 Patent differs in that while it could utilize the same configuration of two servers as described in the '228 Patent, it does not require precisely two servers, but instead could use additional servers. Both patents use a "network" and "network connectors" to connect the servers to a "consumer device," which inserts the secondary advertising into the vacancies contained within the primary content.
As such, both patents differ from the '626 Patent in that the "consumer device" in the '228 and '136 Patents does not contain a "storage device" for storing secondary advertising content. In the '626 Patent, the "processor" of the consumer device draws from such a device to select secondary advertising content based upon attributes evaluated in a selection function and inserts that secondary content into primary content vacancies. Instead, in the '228 Patent, the secondary advertising content is delivered to the consumer device over a network from a "second server," in which a "storage device" of secondary advertising content is located. And in the '136 Patent, it is delivered over a network from at least one "second server" that transmits the selected secondary advertising content to the consumer device. In both the '228 and '136 Patents, the selection of the particular secondary advertising content is accomplished in the "second server" (the '228 Patent discloses a "processor" in the second server for this function), while the processor in the consumer device in both the '228 and '136 Patents is used for insertion of the already selected secondary advertising content into the primary content vacancies.
Claim 1 of the '136 Patent is thus broader and discloses:
1. A system for targeting digital video advertisements to consumers, the system comprising:
*177at least one first server comprising a first network connector, wherein the at least one first server is connected to at least one consumer device over a network and is configured to transmit a digital video program, having at least one vacancy, to the at least one consumer device through the first network connector and over the network;
at least one consumer device comprising:
at least one second network connector, wherein the at least one consumer device is configured to receive, through the at least one second network connector, the digital video program from the at least one first server and the digital video advertisements from at least one second server, wherein at least one of the digital video advertisements is selected for transmission to the at least one consumer device based on comparing targeted criteria to at least one attribute of the at least one of the digital video advertisements; and
at least one processor configured to insert the selected at least one of the digital video advertisements into the at least one vacancy of the digital video program.
'136 Patent, cl. 1.
Finally, claim 1 of the '228 Patent discloses:
1. A system for targeting digital video advertisements to consumers, the system comprising:
at least one first server comprising a first network connector, wherein the at least one first server is connected to at least one consumer device over a network and is configured to transmit a digital video program to the at least one consumer device through the first network connector and over the network, wherein at least one vacancy is associated with the digital video program;
at least one second server comprising:
at least one storage device for storing a plurality of digital video advertisements, wherein at least one digital video advertisement has at least one attribute;
at least one processor configured to select at least one digital video advertisement from the plurality of digital video advertisements, wherein the selection is based on comparing targeted criteria to the at lease on attribute of the at least one digital video advertisements; and
a second network connector, wherein the at least one second server is connected to the at least one consumer device over the network and is configured to transmit the selected advertisement to the at least one consumer device through the second network connector and over the network; and
at least one consumer device comprising:
a third network connector, wherein the at least one consumer device is configured to receive the digital video program and the selected advertisement through the third network connector and over the network; and
at least one processor configured to insert the selected advertisement into the at least one vacancy as the consumer is viewing the digital video program.
'228 Patent, cl. 1.
*178In addition to these three claims, there are six other independent claims across the patents, for a total of nine independent claims. (There are various dependent claims as well.) The independent claims are as follows: '626 Patent cl. 1; '228 Patent cls. 1, 14, 23; '136 Patent cls. 1, 18, 43, 45, 60.
The patents utilize various forms of generic computers or devices. These include a "consumer device" to deliver the content to the user, which includes various types of devices, such as computers, '136 Patent at 9:44-46, televisions and radios,
The patents also state that the arrangements described as potential implementations of their inventions are not limited to those that the patents particularly articulate. Instead, the specifications state that the example of a means of implementation is given "for purposes of illustration and description" and "is not exhaustive and does not limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching or may be acquired from practicing the invention."
The independent claims thus set out systems of generic components that together constitute a process of matching secondary advertising content to a user's selection of primary content. The dependent claims, in turn, provide at most additional specificity as to the potential attributes of the content, or of the methods of moving such content through generic components. For example, in the '136 Patent, which has the greatest number of dependent and independent claims, claim 2 provides that the consumer device in the system of claim 1 is a "set top box;" and claims 3-5 provides that the "targeted criteria," upon which matching the attributes of secondary advertising content and user-selected content would be based, are "consumer profiles," "contextual content," and "demographic information." '136 Patent, cls. 2-5. Other dependent claims specify other categories of the "demographic information" mentioned in claim 5, such as "at least one of a network address of the consumer and a profile of the consumer."
2. Use of Claim 1 as Representative
Although the Court has reviewed all the claims-independent and dependent-in each of the three patents, the Court agrees with defendants that claim 1 of each patent may be treated as representative claims for purposes of the § 101 inquiry. That is because there is no "distinctive significance of any claim limitations other than those included" in claim 1 of each patent, see Affinity Labs of Tex., LLC v. DIRECTV, LLC ,
To be sure, Quantum argues that no particular claim can be treated as representative, because "each system has its own architecture and advantages over prior ad insertion systems." Pl. Br. at 14. But the Court's evaluation of the claims reveals that, beyond claim 1 of each patent, they do not differ meaningfully in manners relevant to the § 101 inquiry. For example, the dependent claims at most recite additional specified arrangements of types of generic attributes that might be considered in the selection of secondary content. See, e.g. , '136 Patent, cls. 7-8 (providing for use of "age and physical location of the consumer" as part of the "demographic information for selecting the at least one digital video advertisement"). Nor are the differences among the representative claims meaningful within the context of the § 101 inquiry. All-albeit through seemingly differing arrangements of types of generic devices-implement the same idea of customizing advertising based upon other criteria, such as a user's selection of primary content.
Quantum notes, for example, that claim 1 of the '136 Patent"calls for comparing targeted criteria to attributes of the ads, which is not in claim 1 of the '626 Patent," which calls for "insertion based on matching of attributes of [the] vacancy with attributes 'of the information relating to the secondary content,' which is not in claim 1 of the '136 or '228 Patent." Pl. Br. at 14-15 (quoting '626 Patent, cl. 1). But this purported distinction does not supply a persuasive basis to treat the claims as meaningfully different. Each in substance calls for the comparing of various types of criteria to either (in Quantum's words) "attributes of the ads" (the '136 Patent ) or "information relating to the secondary content" (the '626 Patent ). The Court considers these claims to be "substantially similar and"-for the reasons developed below-"linked to the same abstract idea" because they "recite little more than the same abstract idea," Content Extraction and Transmission LLC v. Wells Fargo Bank, Nat'l Ass'n ,
C. Procedural History
On March 7, 2017, Quantum filed its Complaint. Dkt. 1. On May 26, 2017, Charter filed the instant motion to dismiss, and *180included a memorandum of law and a Declaration of Daniel L. Reisner in support. Dkts. 20-22. On May 31, 2017, the Court issued an order advising Quantum of its right, under Rule 15(a)(1)(B), to file an amended complaint as a matter of course, and, in the alternative, setting a deadline for Quantum's opposition to Charter's motion to dismiss. Dkt. 26. On June 16, 2017, Quantum filed a memorandum of law in opposition to the motion to dismiss. Dkt. 27 ("Pl. Br."). On June 23, 2017, Charter filed a reply. Dkt. 29.
On June 29, 2017, the Court held an initial conference, and, on June 30, 2017, the Court approved the parties' proposed case management plan and scheduling order. Dkt. 34. On July 19, 2017, the Court held argument on the instant motion. See Dkt. 37 ("Tr.").4
II. Applicable Legal Standards
To survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a complaint must plead "enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face." Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly ,
In considering a motion to dismiss, a district court must "accept[ ] all factual claims in the complaint as true, and draw[ ] all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff's favor." Lotes Co. v. Hon Hai Precision Indus. Co. ,
III. Discussion
In moving to dismiss, Charter argues that the three patents are invalid under § 101 of the Patent Act because their claims are drawn to patent-ineligible subject matter, and that claim construction is not required because the patents are invalid under any reasonable construction of their claims. The Court agrees that the three patents at issue claim as their invention *181the abstract idea of customizing a selection of secondary content based upon the selection of primary content or other qualities, and are thus invalid under § 101, and that this is so under any reasonable construction of their claims.
A. Section 101 of the Patent Act
"Whether a claim is drawn to patent-eligible subject matter under § 101 is a threshold inquiry[.]" In re Bilski ,
Section 101 of the Patent Act sets out the categories of inventions that are eligible for patent protection. It provides:
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.
The Court there explained the reason for excluding "laws of nature, physical phenomena, and abstract ideas" from protection under § 101 as driven by a concern that innovative work could otherwise be deterred.
At the same time, the Court has recognized, "too broad an interpretation of this exclusionary principle could eviscerate patent law. For all inventions at some level embody, use, reflect, rest upon, or apply laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract ideas." Mayo ,
To guide the § 101 inquiry into whether a patent is drawn from patent-eligible subject matter, the Supreme Court has established a two-step framework, sometimes referred to as the Mayo / Alice inquiry.
First, a court must determine "whether the claims at issue are directed to one of [the] patent-ineligible concepts." Alice ,
Relevant to the first step inquiry, "an abstract idea does not become non-abstract by limiting the invention to a particular field of use or technological environment, such as the Internet." Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Bank (USA) ,
If the first step of the inquiry reveals that the patent is directed to a patent-ineligible concept, the Court turns to the next step, which directs a court to evaluate whether the patent, despite its patent-ineligible subject matter, nevertheless claims a patent-eligible application. As the Supreme Court framed that inquiry in Alice , "we then ask, 'what else is there in the claims before us?' " by considering "the elements of each claim both individually and 'as an ordered combination' to determine whether the additional elements 'transform the nature of the claim' into a patent-eligible application." Alice ,
Addressing this step in the context of computers, the Federal Circuit has emphasized: "A simple instruction to apply an abstract idea on a computer is not enough." Intellectual Ventures ,
B. Applying the Mayo / Alice Inquiry to the Three Patents at Issue
Charter argues that the three patents at issue are beyond the scope of § 101 because they are drawn to the abstract idea of pairing secondary content with primary content based upon criteria. Quantum, in contrast, argues that its patents constitute a "paradigm shift, causing ad systems to behave in an unconventional manner" by providing for real-time insertion of advertisements, selected on attributes or other criteria, instead of "preinserted" ads that result in all consumers viewing the same advertising content. Quantum contends that this constitutes a patent-eligible "improvement *184in computer systems." Pl. Br. at 1. Applying the Mayo / Alice inquiry, the Court concludes that the patents are patent-ineligible because they are directed at the abstract idea of custom advertising and lack an inventive concept.
1. Mayo / Alice Step One: Abstract Idea
The Court first inquires whether the claims in the '626 Patent, the '228 Patent, and the '136 Patent are directed toward a patent-ineligible concept. Alice ,
Guided by Supreme Court and Federal Circuit precedent, the Court concludes at step one of the Mayo / Alice inquiry that the claims of the three patents are directed to an ineligible abstract idea: specifically, custom advertising based upon consumer qualities or other data. The patents claim processes for creating a customized flow of content in which the ads that fill the primary content's vacancies for such ads are selected based on various criteria, whether related to the user's selection of primary content itself or to qualities about the user, such as physical location. The different patents and claims envision different arrangements of generic computers to implement this concept in different ways. But, at bottom, they do not represent or describe improvements in computing systems, specific new software or hardware or technology, or some other type of computing method that improves the computer's functionality or makes it more efficient, such as an information "structure designed to improve the way a computer stores and retrieves data in memory," Enfish ,
Indeed, Quantum's patents claim ideas that are strikingly similar to abstract ideas relating to customization of products that the Federal Circuit and the Supreme Court have held to be non-patentable. See Alice ,
The Federal Circuit's decision in Intellectual Ventures is particularly apposite. There, the Federal Circuit held that a patent that "generally relates to customizing web page content as a function of navigation history and information known about the user," was drawn to an ineligible abstract idea.
Other cases have found similar processes involving the bare customization of content, including the customized presentation of content, to embody abstract ideas and thus to be unpatentable. For example, the Federal Circuit has held that a "customized user interface" in which "a user may elect to have a customized interface such as a radio dial, a playlist, or targeted advertising based on demographic information provided by the user" is an unpatentable abstract idea. Affinity Labs of Tex., LLC v. Amazon.com Inc. ,
This Court, too, in fact, has held that customizing content based on user preferences or other data is an abstract idea and is therefore, without more, patent-ineligible. In one of the first decisions applying Alice , this Court held that a meal planning process that could be used to design customized meals based upon the user's preferences was drawn to an abstract idea and was thus unpatentable. DietGoal Innovations LLC v. Bravo Media LLC ,
As another example, in Lumen View , Judge Cote concluded that the patent there for "computer assisted matchmaking" was drawn to a patent-ineligible abstract idea. Lumen View ,
Similarly here, the three patents at issue claim computerized methods of pairing secondary content with a user's selection of primary content. The criteria disclosed in the claims are broad. They include criteria very similar to criteria held abstract in Intellectual Ventures , such as selections of *186ad content based on the user's "age and physical location," '136 Patent, cl. 7; see also '626 Patent, cls. 15, 17 (disclosing that "age and physical location" are part of the "demographic information," which is used "for identifying the secondary content for insertion into the at least one vacancy"), on "time and date qualifications for the vacancy," and on other "[s]tatic attributes" such as "required secondary content type (such as teenage advertising, sales opportunity, syndicated news, an audio stream), the physical size and location of the vacancy ... or classification of the vacancy," '136 Patent at 6:46-50. This task of customization has been performed-as the Federal Circuit recognized in Intellectual Ventures -in numerous contexts. These include outreach to potential consumers or users by a wide range of entities. For example: an advertising company or a content provider that utilizes sophisticated and complex formulae to customize advertisements to numerous particular consumers. Or a college radio station that runs different advertisements shortly before or during a sporting event than during final exam period. The three patents, notably, do not recite any specialized formulae or specific methods of selecting content. Instead, they merely recite potential types of attributes that could be harnessed as part of such a selection function. And they then recite generic types of equipment that interact with each other in various arrangements to create a customized presentation of content, whether in real time or otherwise.
The arrangements described in Quantum's patents do not themselves affect and are not designed to improve the functioning of a computer process. Rather, fairly captured, they describe the familiar and unremarkable process of matching secondary advertising content with primary content so as to provide a unified (tailored) presentation to the particular user. And the system arrangements in each of the three patents, which are cast at a very general level, at most, "provide[ ] a new and presumably better method," Parker v. Flook ,
The Court therefore concludes that the three patents, despite their slight differences, are drawn to the patent-ineligible abstract idea of customized advertising, in which a unification of primary content and secondary advertising content is delivered to a consumer based upon various potential functions.
2. Mayo / Alice Step Two: Inventive Concept
Having determined that the claims at issue are directed to an abstract idea, the Court now considers, at step two of the Mayo / Alice inquiry, whether the claims or elements of the claim contain an "inventive concept" that transforms the otherwise patent-ineligible abstract idea into a patent-eligible application of that idea. See Alice ,
Quantum mainly argues that its patents' claims set forth specific implementations of customizing advertising content through the pairing of secondary content with primary content that renders its claims patentable. Quantum argues, for example, that "the independent claims include: (1) a system with a specific arrangement of servers, network connectors, and consumer devices that are performing specific operations; (2) delivery of video programs to the consumer device separately from targeted video ads; and (3) a processor in the customer *187device that inserts a targeted video ad into the video program as the video program is viewed by the consumer." Pl. Br. at 17. It notes that other independent claims describe additional elements: "(4) video content including a vacancy into which video ads are inserted; and (5) using attributes associated with the video content/vacancy and video ads to identify available video ads for insertion into the video content."
These claims do not introduce an inventive concept. As the Federal Circuit has held, the straightforward implementation of the benefits of an abstract idea does not itself give rise to an inventive concept, including when it is to be accomplished through generic computer equipment that performs the implementation of the abstract idea. Rather, an inventive concept requires that "the claims do significantly more than simply describe that abstract method." Ultramercial, Inc. v. Hulu, LLC ,
Significant in this regard, the implementation described in the patents entails the use of various generic devices, without more. The patents describe, at a high-level, the application by a computer of the abstract idea of customization-for example, the delivery of the primary content to the consumer and the insertion, by a "processor" in a "consumer device," of the customized secondary advertising content that had been selected into the vacancies in the customer's primary content. These, however, are "[s]teps that do nothing more than spell out what it means to 'apply it on a computer' [and] cannot confer patent-eligibility." Intellectual Ventures ,
Notably, too, the claims of the three patents here disclose steps that could be performed by a human operator or in the human mind. This too weighs against Quantum at step two. A human mind could evaluate attributes or other criteria (e.g. , *188the user's age), derive from these tailored secondary advertising content, and implement these selections by using a simple device that inserts digital advertising content into the stream of primary content. See Cybersource ,
The Court therefore holds that Quantum's three patents at issue, regardless of the slight differences among them, do not contain an inventive concept sufficient to make them a patentable application of the abstract idea of customized advertising.
3. Claim Construction Is Not Required
Opposing the motion to dismiss, Quantum argues that it would be premature for the Court to invalidate the patents at the threshold, and that the Court should first engage in claim construction. But, because the system arrangements disclosed in the claims of the three patents would be invalid under § 101 under any reasonable construction, claim construction would not aid the Court in resolving the § 101 claim of invalidity, or elucidate any dispositive legal issue, and thus is not required in order to rule on the patents' validity under § 101. See, e.g. , DietGoal ,
Claim construction "is not an inviolable prerequisite to a validity determination under § 101." Bancorp Servs. ,
Here, the claims of the three patents are straightforward such that formal claim construction is unnecessary to define or illuminate their content or clarify any uncertain *189legal determination. The subject matter of the three patents and their claims is simply a series of generic computer system arrangements for implementing the abstract idea of customized advertising, including customization in real time, by filling "spaces" in primary content with secondary advertising content. Under any reasonable construction, the claims of the three patents are drawn to patent-ineligible subject matter, obviating any need for claim construction.6
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the '626 Patent, the '228 Patent, and the '136 Patent are each invalid under § 101.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the '626 Patent, the '228 Patent, and the '136 Patent are drawn to patent-ineligible subject matter, and Charter's motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim is therefore granted. The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to terminate all motions currently pending, and to close this case.
SO ORDERED.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
309 F. Supp. 3d 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quantum-stream-inc-v-charter-commcns-inc-ilsd-2018.