Intelectual Property (IP)

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01 ), and Mazie Hirono (D-HI) also reintroduced the Promoting and Respecting Economically Vital American Innovation Leadership (PREVAIL) Act, which would significantly reform Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) practice.

PREVAIL was first introduced in 2023 and perhaps most notably included changes to standing requirements for PTAB petitioners. The latest version of the bill revises the section on standing to a requirement that petitioners “certify” they are an entity that:[by the petitioner as to standing]A) is a nonprofit organization;

B) “is currently engaging in, or has a bona fide intent to engage in, conduct within the United States that reasonably could be accused of infringing 1 or more claims of the challenged patent”;

C) “would have standing to bring a civil action in a court of the United States seeking a declaratory judgment of invalidity with respect to 1 or more claims of the challenged patent”; or

  1. D) “has been sued in a court of the United States for infringement of the challenged patent.”
  2. IPWatchdog Founder and CEO Gene Quinn said the changes to PREVAIL 2025 “don’t seem to substantively change the meaning or intent of the bill” and that the revisions to the standing requirements, in theory, should not make a huge difference. He explained:
  3. “PREVAIL now separates provisions relating to consequences for those that are real parties in interest and a certification requirement that would seem to functionally require petitioners have standing in the Constitutional sense. This This The The While it is easy to envision gamesmanship with this bifurcation between RPI and a certification that the challenger has no intent to profit from the challenge, is currently engaging in infringing conduct, could bring a civil action in federal court, or has been sued in federal court for infringement, still, PREVAIL 2025 seems like an important step forward toward a better, fairer PTAB, and one where enterprises like RPX and Unified Patents will–or at least should–find it extremely difficult to operate.”
  4. Like the previous versions, the newly introduced bill still:

Does away with joinder for time-barrred parties;

Applies estoppel at the time the challenge is filed rather than after the Final Written Decision;

Institutes a “clear and convincing evidence” standard for patent invalidity at the PTAB and require claims be interpreted using the “plain and ordinary meaning” standard used in district courts;

  • Requires the Director to establish a Code of Conduct for PTAB judges and would demand more transparency of the USPTO Director with respect to their involvement in PTAB decisions;
  • Requires parties to choose whether to bring their action at the PTAB or in district court, but not both, in an effort to end duplicative proceedings;
  • Ends the practice of filing reexaminations following failed PTAB petitions;
  • Ends fee diversion; and
  • Mandates reports that would evaluate “the impact of patents and abusive demand letters on small businesses” and expand access to patent-searching databases that are available only in-person at public search facilities.
  • As part of the goal to increase transparency at the PTAB, the bill would also establish that PTAB judges who decide whether to institute a post-grant proceeding would not be the same judges who decide the outcome of the proceeding.
  • The Center for American Principles Policy Fellow Patrick Kilbride said the changes to both PREVAIL and PERA 2025 “reflect a healthy, deliberative and ongoing legislative process that gives the inventor community ample opportunity to optimize the final outcomes for the patent system” and that “together, PERA, PREVAIL, and RESTORE go a long way to restoring the Constitutional principle that Americans have a right to own their own work, whether it results from physical or mental labors.”
  • A fact sheet on the bill is available here and the full text of the bill is available here.

Image Source: Deposit Photos

Author: jovannig

Image ID: 12633480

Eileen McDermott

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Story originally seen here

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