The USPTO has already issued a preliminary rejection of seven
related NTP patents, four of which are the basis of NTP's case. On
Thursday it issued a preliminary rejection of the eighth and final
patent under re-examination – patent number 6,317,592, which
contains five claims relevant to the litigation.
The latest ruling is a boost for RIM, which is battling to avoid
the imposition of an injunction prohibiting the Canadian firm from
selling in the US the BlackBerry and any other products, software
or services using the wireless technology in dispute.
RIM was found guilty of patent infringement in November 2002,
when a jury awarded NTP damages of $53.7 million and imposed the
injunction – which was then stayed pending an appeal.
The injunction was then lifted by a federal appeals court in
August this year, after the court found that the BlackBerry did
infringe some of NTP’s patents, but that one of the lower court’s
key definitions, relating to the term “originating processor," was
too wide. The Court of Appeals therefore returned the case to the
District Court for further arguments over the claims that may have
been affected by the flawed definition.
RIM hopes that the USPTO rulings, which are completely separate
to the litigation process, will boost its arguments before the
District Court.
Speaking to Reuters, NTP lawyer James Wallace explained: "It is
potentially a long, multiyear process. This was to be expected.
This is what we predicted before anything happened in the first
seven cases".
The holding firm is expected to appeal the preliminary
findings.