Ex Parte MunroDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesAug 27, 201211025694 (B.P.A.I. Aug. 27, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________________ BEFORE THE BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES ________________ Ex parte JILLIAN P. MUNRO ________________ Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 Technology Center 2100 ________________ Before BRADLEY W. BAUMEISTER, ERIC B. CHEN, and JENNIFER S. BISK, Administrative Patent Judges. BAUMEISTER, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 2 SUMMARY Appellant appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1-12: Claims 1-5 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Breslin (US 2004/0064436 A1; published Apr. 1, 2004) in view of Curtis (US 2006/0111874 A1; published May 25, 2006; filed Jan. 24, 2005; provisional application filed Sep. 30, 2004) and Mittal (US 2005/0144062 A1; published June 30, 2005; filed Dec. 29, 2003). Claims 6-12 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Breslin in view of Curtis. We reverse. Pursuant to our authority under 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b), we enter a new ground of rejection, rejecting claim 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) as being anticipated by Dalby (US 7,133,901 B1; issued Nov. 7, 2006; filed Nov. 13, 2001). STATEMENT OF CASE Appellant describes the present invention as follows: A business continuity (BC) system is described that includes an asset database, a BC plan, and a BC portal. The asset database contains a complete and up-to-date inventory of the organization’s assets. The BC plan covers a top level administrative unit and all administrative units reporting to the top level administrative unit. The plan contains one or more BC groups that are responsible for a portion of the recovery effort and identifies of one or more mission critical applications that are covered by the plan. The BC portal may be used to maintain the plan, educate employees regarding BC plans, and push information specific to the employee to the employee. Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 3 The information may be predetermined messages or changes to the employee’s role in the recovery effort. (Abstract). Independent claim 1 is illustrative: 1. A computer implemented method, comprising: receiving a request for business continuity plan (BCP) information from a web browser, the web browser associated with a user of the web browser, the user being an employee of an organization, the user having at least one role in the organization and belonging to an administrative unit of the organization; automatically retrieving information from a BCP associated with the user in an asset database; and serving a web page to the web browser, the web page displaying at least the retrieved information from the BCP associated with the user in the asset database according to the user’s at least one role and administrative unit. CONTENTIONS The Examiner relies on the combination of Breslin, Curtis, and Mittal to teach “automatically retrieving information from a BCP associated with the user in an asset database,” as recited in independent claim 1 (Ans. 2-4). Specifically, the Examiner finds Breslin teaches “retrieving information from a BCP” (Ans. 4 (citing Breslin, ¶ ¶ 0011, 0036, 0051)) and Curtis teaches automatic retrieval of information “associated with the user in an asset database” (id. (citing Curtis, ¶ ¶ 0047, 0140)). The Examiner adds Mittal to the combination because “Breslin is not as detailed with the requesting of information being for the business continuity plan (BCP) information” (Ans. 5). The Examiner addresses similar limitations presented Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 4 in independent claims 6 and 111 with the combination of Breslin and Curtis without Mittal (Ans. 8, 9). Appellant argues, inter alia, “the information retrieved in Curtis et al. by the report generator is not ‘associated with a user in an asset database’ as alleged by the Office, but is instead ‘generic’ information about IT assets based on a query” (App. Br. 7). ANALYSIS Appellant’s arguments are persuasive. The Examiner’s proposed combination of Breslin, Curtis, and Mittal fails to teach or suggest automatically retrieving, populating a web page, or displaying information “associated with the user in the asset database,” as recited in independent claims 1, 6, and 11, respectively. Appellant’s invention uses an asset database to deliver business continuity plan (“BCP”) information to users. The recited “asset database” is described as follows: A corporate-wide, or enterprise-wide, policy may be implemented, documented, and its’ [sic: its] compliance measured by encoding policies into an asset database (ADb). ADb is a relational database that reflects the assets of the Firm, and how those assets interrelate. Assets include employees, hardware, software, content, and the like. (Spec. ¶ 0033). 1 Claim 6 recites the limitation “automatically populating the web page with information in the BCP associated with the user in the asset database,” and claim 11 recites the limitation “automatically displaying a business continuity plan (BCP) associated with the user in the asset database.” Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 5 Appellant’s invention uses the information in the asset database to automate the delivery of the BCP to the appropriate users through a web page: The [business continuity] BC portal may display individualized web pages to each employee on their web browser providing BCP information specific to that employee and new information to educate the employee about changes in the BC plan or policies. The BC portal may leverage the ability of ADb to retrieve a person's chain-of-command to ensure that information pushed to an employee is acknowledged and that any information required from the employee is quickly received. (Spec. ¶ 0099). Accordingly, only the relevant information (information that has been associated with the appropriate users or employees) is automatically pushed to the respective web browsers of the appropriate employees. The Examiner fails to establish that Curtis teaches automatically retrieving or displaying information “associated with the user in an asset database,” as recited in independent claims 1, 6, and 11. While the cited passages of Curtis discuss a database storing information about “business issue request results” (¶ 0047) and a web page that permits users to create reports (¶ 0140), the passages do not establish that the information in the report has been “associated with the user in an asset database.” By contrast, as Appellant has argued, the information in Curtis’ report describes IT assets that match the user’s query (App. Br. 7 (citing Curtis, ¶¶ 0047, 0140)). Curtis’ retrieval of information matching a user’s query is not synonymous with the claimed automatic retrieval because Curtis is missing the claimed retrieval of BCP information that is associated with the user. That is, the cited portions of Curtis fail to indicate that the information Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 6 retrieved is a subset of all of the retrievable information – a subset of information that is determined by which specific user is requesting the information. As such, Appellant has persuaded us that the Examiner’s reliance on Curtis in the rejections of claims 1, 6, and 11 is an error. Moreover, the Examiner did not further rely upon either Breslin or Mittal for the claimed automatic retrieval of information “associated with the user in an asset database” (Ans. 4-5). As such, the proposed combination leaves this limitation unaddressed by the cited prior art. Accordingly, we will not sustain the Examiner’s rejection of independent claims 1, 6, and 11, or of claims 2-5, 7-10, and 12, which respectively depend from these independent claims. NEW REJECTION UNDER 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) Pursuant to our authority under 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b), we enter a new grounds of rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e) against claim 1. We hold that claim 1 is anticipated by Dalby (US 7,133,901 B1; issued Nov. 7, 2006). Principles of Law “Before considering the rejections . . ., we must first [determine the scope of] the claims . . . .” In re Geerdes, 491 F.2d 1260, 1262 (CCPA 1974). When presented with a claim including nonfunctional descriptive material, an Examiner must determine whether such material should be given patentable weight. The Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) must consider all claim limitations when determining patentability of an invention over the prior art. In re Gulack, 703 F.2d 1381, 1385 (Fed. Cir. 1983). The PTO may not disregard claim limitations comprised of printed Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 7 matter. See Gulack, 703 F.2d at 1384; see also Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. at 191. However, the PTO need not give patentable weight to descriptive material absent a new and unobvious functional relationship between the descriptive material and the substrate. See Gulack, 703 F.2d at 1386. See also In re Ngai, 367 F.3d 1336, 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2004); In re Lowry, 32 F.3d 1579, 1583-84 (Fed. Cir. 1994). The burden of establishing the absence of a novel, nonobvious functional relationship rests with the PTO. In re Lowry, 32 F.3d at 1584. Ex Parte Halligan, 89 USPQ2d 1355, 1367-1368 (BPAI 2008) (non- precedential). Interpretation of Claim 1 Claim 1 recites, inter alia, “receiving a request for business continuity plan (BCP) information,” “retrieving information from a BCP,” and “serving a web page to the web browser, the web page displaying at least the retrieved information.” No functional relationship exists between the BCP information and the claimed method steps. That is, the same receiving, retrieving, and web page serving and displaying steps could be used to process BCP information or some other semantically different information. In particular, the BCP information is represented by text data, which is conventionally processed and displayed by web browsers (see, e.g., Fig. 13). The content of the claimed BCP information does not change how the process steps are to be performed, though. Nor does the content of the BCP information cause the claimed system to perform any other function. As such, the BCP information is given only limited patentable weight in the determination of whether claim 1 is distinguishable over the prior art. Specifically, the claim requires the function of displaying a subset of information or data based upon the identity of the particular user who is requesting the information. However, no patentable weight is afforded to Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 8 type or content of the information that is retrieved. Whether the information is BCP information or any other type of data contained within a database is immaterial to the question of whether the claim is unpatentable over the prior art. Analysis Dalby discloses the limitations of claim 1, as interpreted above: (i) An integration module 320 receives requests to access the community information system 300 from the user modules 302a-302n (col. 8, ll. 53-61), where the user modules are web browsers (col. 7, ll. 37-41; col. 8, ll. 46-52) as claimed (“receiving a request for business continuity plan (BCP) information from a web browser”). The claimed BCP information is non-functional descriptive material, and as such, does not create a patentable distinction over Dalby’s information that is provided by Dalby’s community information system 300 and which is processed in the same manner. (ii) Each user is represented by a web browser that is used to access the community information system 300 (col. 7, ll. 27-44), and user accounts are used to store information about that user to associate the web browser with the user (col. 8, l. 65-col. 9, l. 2) as claimed (“the web browser associated with a user of the web browser”). (iii) Dalby’s users are employees of an organization (col. 7, ll. 31-34) as claimed (“the user being an employee of an organization”). (iv) The employee users have a role in the organization, such as “president” or “sales representative” and can be attributed to a “division or organization” (col. 4, ll. 18-21; col. 12, ll. 50-55; col. 10, ll. 6-13) as claimed (“the user having at least one role in the Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 9 organization and belonging to an administrative unit of the organization”). (v) Dalby’s system retrieves announcements from a database that are associated with users according to employee attributes in the database (col. 17, ll. 9-11; col.17, ll. 16-20; col. 4, ll. 18-21) as claimed (“automatically retrieving information from a BCP associated with the user in an asset database”). In particular, Dalby’s database 306 stores information about the users, which are employees (col. 4, ll. 18-21; col. 12, ll. 50-55). Likewise, the claimed “asset database” stores “person assets” as shown in Table 2 of Appellant’s Specification. As such, the claimed asset database reads on the Dalby’s database 306, which also stores “person assets” of an organization and associated attributes. Because claimed BCP information is non-functional descriptive material, the type or content of the information does not create a patentable distinction over the Dalby’s information that is also retrieved in the same manner. (vi) Dalby’s webpage 404 is served to the user’s computer running the web browser and displayed (col. 10, ll. 47-50) as claimed (“serving a web page to the web browser”). (vii) The webpage displays the announcements personalized to the employee in the database 306 (col. 17, ll. 21-22) and “web page includes customization based on the recipient's ‘role’ in the system” (col. 10, ll. 7-10) as claimed (“the web page displaying at least the retrieved information from the BCP associated with the user in the asset database according to the user's at least one role and administrative unit”). Again, because claimed BCP information is Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 10 non-functional descriptive material, the type or content of the information does not create a patentable distinction over Dalby’s information, which is also displayed in the same manner. Although we decline to reject every claim under our discretionary authority under 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b), we emphasize that our decision does not mean that the remaining claims are necessarily patentable. Rather, we merely leave the patentability determination of these claims to the Examiner. See MPEP § 1213.02 DECISION The Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 1-12 is reversed. Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b), we enter a new ground of rejection for claim 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e). Rule 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b) states that “[a] new ground of rejection pursuant to this paragraph shall not be considered final for judicial review.” Furthermore, 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b) also provides that Appellant, WITHIN TWO MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE DECISION, must exercise one of the following two options with respect to the new grounds of rejection to avoid termination of the appeal as to the rejected claims: (1) Reopen prosecution. Submit an appropriate amendment of the claims so rejected or new evidence relating to the claims so rejected, or both, and have the matter reconsidered by the examiner, in which event the proceeding will be remanded to the examiner. . . . (2) Request rehearing. Request that the proceeding be reheard under § 41.52 by the Board upon the same record. . . . Appeal 2010-002554 Application 11/025,694 11 No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv). REVERSED 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b) rwk Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation