Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. v. Power2b, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 2025
Docket23-1630
StatusUnpublished

This text of Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. v. Power2b, Inc. (Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. v. Power2b, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. v. Power2b, Inc., (Fed. Cir. 2025).

Opinion

Case: 23-1630 Document: 47 Page: 1 Filed: 02/12/2025

NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD., SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS AMERICA, INC., Appellants

v.

POWER2B, INC., Appellee ______________________

2023-1630 ______________________

Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2021- 01257. ______________________

Decided: February 12, 2025 ______________________

BENJAMIN HABER, O’Melveny & Myers LLP, Los Ange- les, CA, argued for appellants. Also represented by ABI- GAIL GRACE MCFEE, NICHOLAS WHILT, RYAN KEN YAGURA; WILLIAM FINK, Washington, DC; THOMAS MCCLINTON- HARRIS, Newport Beach, CA.

MARK THOMAS DEMING, Polsinelli PC, Chicago, IL, ar- gued for appellee. Also represented by ADAM PETER DAN- IELS, Los Angeles, CA; JASON WIETJES, Dallas, TX. Case: 23-1630 Document: 47 Page: 2 Filed: 02/12/2025

2 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD. v. POWER2B, INC.

______________________

Before HUGHES, MAYER, and STARK, Circuit Judges. STARK, Circuit Judge. Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. and Samsung Electron- ics America, Inc. (collectively, “Samsung”) filed for inter partes review (“IPR”) of a patent owned by Power2B, Inc. (“Power2B”), which is directed to interaction with an inter- active screen on a device. Central to the appeal is the Board’s construction of “an impingement of an electromag- netic radiation spot,” which the Board construed as requir- ing electromagnetic radiation to perform the impingement. J.A. 29-30. Applying this construction, the Board found that Samsung’s asserted prior art did not disclose this lim- itation of the challenged claims. Samsung appeals, argu- ing that “impingement” should be given its plain and ordinary meaning, which includes an object interrupting or blocking electromagnetic radiation without that object hav- ing to project or reflect radiation. We conclude that the Board construed the claim language too narrowly. Accord- ingly, we vacate and remand for the Board to consider Sam- sung’s challenges under the correct construction. I A Power2B’s U.S. Patent No. 9,317,170 (the “’170 pa- tent”) is entitled “Interactive Devices.” J.A. 50. It claims priority to an application with a priority date of March 14, 2007. The ’170 patent is directed to interactive devices, in- cluding Personal Digital Assistants, and methods for users to interact with those devices. In some embodiments, a user interacts with the device using a light-emitting stylus or remote, beaming light onto the surface of the device. In other embodiments, a user interacts with the device using a non-light-emitting stylus or the user’s finger to select items on the interactive surface. For example, a device Case: 23-1630 Document: 47 Page: 3 Filed: 02/12/2025

SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD. v. POWER2B, INC. 3

may emit beams of light, i.e., electromagnetic radiation, that are interrupted by the user’s finger when the finger approaches the screen, and the device then detects the in- terruption of those beams of light. At issue in this appeal is claim 1, which recites: An interactive assembly comprising: at least one interactive surface element, at least a first region of the at least one inter- active surface element having first user sensible functionality and at least a second region of the at least one interactive sur- face element having second functionality, different from the first user sensible func- tionality; at least one input sensor located in propin- quity to at least one of the at least one in- teractive surface element, each of the at least one input sensor being configured to provide an output indicative of an impinge- ment of an electromagnetic radiation spot on at least one of the at least one first re- gion and the at least one second region of the at least one interactive surface ele- ment; ... wherein the at least one input sensor in- cludes a detector assembly arranged at at least one edge of the interactive surface el- ement; . . . and wherein the arrangement of detec- tor elements is configured to detect electro- magnetic radiation at a baseline level and to sense a position of at least one object with respect to the interactive surface Case: 23-1630 Document: 47 Page: 4 Filed: 02/12/2025

4 SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD. v. POWER2B, INC.

element and wherein the utilization cir- cuitry is further configured to provide an output according to a location of at least one detector element in the arrangement for which at least one of an amount of radi- ation detected and a change in the amount of radiation detected exceed a first prede- termined threshold. J.A. 127 (emphasis added). Also involved in this appeal is claim 28, which depends from claims which depend from claim 1, and recites: An interactive assembly according to claim 27, wherein the array detection output includes infor- mation corresponding to a location of an impinge- ment point of the object on the interactive surface element coinciding with a viewing plane. J.A. 128 (emphasis added). Claim 30, also at issue, simi- larly claims “impingement of an electromagnetic radiation spot.” Id. B Samsung’s petition challenges the patentability of Power2B’s claims based on prior art including U.S. Patent App. Pub. No. 2002/0118177 (“Newton”), “Protected Touch Panel Display System.” J.A. 1643. Newton is directed to a display screen located inside a protective barrier, where sections of the screen are touch activated. Emitters along the protective barrier emit energy beams, and detectors de- tect when a user touches the display screen by interrupting the energy beams. Newton states that “[a] finger, stylus or other pointing device placed on or adjacent to the touch panel display screen will interrupt the energy beams emit- ted by the emitters. In response to detecting the interrup- tion of the energy beams, the detectors may generate signals from which the touch panel display system is able Case: 23-1630 Document: 47 Page: 5 Filed: 02/12/2025

SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD. v. POWER2B, INC. 5

to calculate the location of the touch on the touch panel dis- play screen.” J.A. 1652 ¶ 25. The second prior art reference Samsung relies on is U.S. Patent App. Pub. No. 2003/0034439 (“Reime”), enti- tled “Method and Device for Detecting Touch Pad Input.” J.A. 1600. Reime is directed to “[a] method and system for detecting the presence of an object at a touch pad device” having designated interaction areas on the screen and “op- tical sensor components, each including an optical receiver and . . . emitters positioned at opposite sides of the receiver such that when an object is present at the touch pad device, the changes in the receiver output can be used to determine the location of the object.” J.A. 1600. Reime depicts pencils and fingers interacting with the touchpad and explains: When a user uses an object such as a pencil 100 or a finger 100’ (FIG. 2A) to touch the touch pad 5, some light 110 emitted from the emitter 10 encoun- ters the surface of the object 100. Part of the light 110 reflects off the object 100 and is received by the receiver 30. Likewise, some light 120 emitted from the emitter 20 encounters the surface of the object 100 and then reflects off the object 100 to receiver 30. J.A. 1620. In short, Reime’s receivers rely on light reflected from objects to determine the location of the object over the touch pad. C Samsung petitioned for IPR of claims 1, 2, 6-8, 13-14, 16, 18, 19, 21-23, 26, and 30 of the ’170 patent. In its peti- tion, Samsung contended that the claim terms did not need explicit construction. Samsung also argued that the im- pingement limitation was met by references, including Newton, which disclosed a user’s finger interrupting beams of light over portions of an interactive surface.

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