Step One and Done to Patent Eligibility: Finjan, Inc. v. Blue Coat Systems, Inc.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Finjan, Inc. v. Blue Coat
Systems, Inc., appeal no. 2016-2520 (Fed. Cir. Jan. 10, 2018), affirmed the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of California’s holding of patent
eligibility of U.S. Patent No. 6,154,844 (the ’844 patent), and in doing so,
provided further guidance for identifying patent eligibility for software-based
patent claims under 35 U.S.C. § 101. The Finjan court affirmed that
software-based innovations can make “non-abstract improvements to computer
technology” and can be held patent-eligible at step one of the two-step
framework set forth by the U.S. Supreme Court in Alice, without even needing to
proceed to step two. i
In 2013, Finjan sued Blue Coat, which is a
division of Symantec, for infringement of four U.S. patents directed to
identifying and protecting against malware. After a bench trial in which the
claims of the ’844 patent were held to be patent eligible, the jury awarded
Finjan almost $40 million in damages for the four patents— $24 million of which
was awarded for infringement of the ’844 patent. The ’844 patent is directed at
a system and method for providing computer security by attaching a security
profile to a downloadable, where the downloadable was construed to mean “an
executable application program, which is downloaded from a source computer and
run on the destination computer.” Julie Mar-Spinola, Finjan’s chief intellectual
property officer and vice president of legal operations, described the ’844
patent as the behavior-based approach to virus scanning pioneered by Finjan.ii
Claim 1 of the ’844 patent, which the court held to be representative, reads:
Claim 1. A method comprising:
receiving by an inspector a
Downloadable;
generating by the inspector a first Downloadable security
profile that identifies
suspicious code in the received Downloadable;
and
linking by the inspector the first Downloadable security profile to
the Downloadable before a web server makes the Downloadable available to web
clients.
The court framed the question at issue as, whether the
behavior-based virus scan of the ’844 patent constitutes an improvement in
computer functionality.iii In holding that it does, the court looked to the ’844
patent specification after first construing two claim terms. As construed, the
court noted that the ’844 patent claims describe “behavior-based” virus scanning
in contrast to traditional “code-matching” virus scanning. iv Moreover, the
court noted that the claimed “security profile” approach allowed better
filtering over prior art methods. v The Finjan court found that the claims
employ “a new kind of file that enables a computer security system to do things
that it could not do before,” such as accumulating and using newly available,
behavior-based information about potential threats to, inter alia, allow
tailoring for different users and ensuring that threats are identified before a
file reaches a user’s computer.vi
Furthermore, relying on the
now-frequently-used common law approach to assess patent eligibility, the court
compared Finjan’s claims to those from Enfish v. Microsoft, vii in which the
Federal Circuit held the claimed invention to be patent eligible; and contrasted
Finjan’s claims to those in several cases holding patent ineligibility.viii The
court succinctly summarized a foundational principle of patent law—that a
result, even if an innovative result, is not itself patentable; and then
proceeded to reconcile that principle with its holding. The court rationalized
that Finjan’s claims recite more than a mere result; instead, they recite
specific steps that accomplish the desired result. Meanwhile, there is no
dispute that an inventive arrangement is disclosed for accomplishing that
result. ix Therefore, the court affirmed the patent eligibility of the claims of
the ’844 patent as “non-abstract and found no need to proceed to step two of
Alice.”x
Takeaways
There are several takeaways from Finjan. xi
Notably, building on its precedent in Enfish, the Federal Circuit has reaffirmed
that purely software-based inventions that do no interact with the tangible
world remain patent-eligible subject matter. Moreover, the Finjan court’s
reasoning reiterates the importance of drafting a patent specification that
showcases and contrasts inadequacies of prior art solutions. Finally, Finjan
underscores the continuing importance of claim construction in obtaining a
favorable patent-eligibility holding—even more so when the claimed method only
recites three steps.
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