ASICS Sued for Patent Infringement
The original title:ASICS Sued for Patent Infringement for Routing System in Fitness App
Plaintiff
Boxey Tech LLC sued sports equipment company ASICS America Corporation
(ASICS) for patent infringement on Friday in the Southern District of
Ohio over its fitness tracking app Runkeeper. The plaintiff alleged the
app’s utilization of a system and method that used geographic locations
to create different paths for users to select for their run violated
Boxey Tech’s “Computing Paths Between Geographic Localities” patents.
The
patents-in-suit are U.S. Patent Nos. 8,560,238 (the ‘238 Patent) and
8,731,833 (the ‘833 Patent). The defendant claimed that ASICS knowingly
and willfully directly infringed these patents and it also induced
infringement.
The ’238 patent “recites a non-abstract method…for
computing paths between geographical localities.” Boxey Tech claimed
that this technology resolves the problem of directions if there are no
street names. Claim 13 covers “[a] computer readable storage medium”
enabling the provision of a path between two locations, with the path
determined “at least in part” on a popularity rating.
Claim 1 of
the ’833 patent described a similar method to claim 13 of the ’238
patent. However, claims 7, 16, and 20 of the ’833 patent build on the
first claim. For example, claim 7 causes “the selected path to be
rendered,” claim 16 details a computing system for these geographical
localities, and claim 20 described a component that renders the path
from claim 16’s computing system.
Boxey Tech alleged that ASICS
utilized the method and steps described in the patent. ASICS operates
the site www.runkeeper.com, which provides “geographic location services
for running and other fitness activities.” The plaintiff asserted that
ASICS used the method encompassed in the patents and claims for
Runkeeper. For example, Runkeeper allegedly uses the computer storage
and processes described in the claims. ASICS’s Runkeeper purportedly
infringes claim 13 of the ’238 patent by having users input a location
and select a path generated by the system to get from the “first
geographical locality” to the “second geographical locality.” A user can
input a city and Runkeeper will provide them with popular paths from
their location based on certain criteria. Users can also input a start
and end location in Runkeeper, which will provide different path options
for a user to select; the path options could include a direct path or a
popular path for the user to choose from. As described in the patent,
these different path options will include third and fourth geographical
localities, respectively. Consequently, Boxey Tech has used this to
further assert that ASICS infringed this claim. The examples and
reasoning for ASICS’s infringement of the ’833 patent claims are
similar.
Boxey Tech has sought for ASICS to be adjudged as having
infringed the patents-in-suit. The plaintiff also sought an accounting
of all infringing sales and damages; to permanently restrain and enjoin
defendants from further infringement, an award for damages; pre- and
post-judgment interest, an award for costs and fees; and other relief as
determined by the court.
The plaintiff is represented by Sand, Sebolt & Wernow Co., LPA.
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