throbber
www.uspto.gov
`
`UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
`United States Patent and TrademarkOffice
`Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS
`P.O. Box 1450
`Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450
`
`18/091,106
`
`12/29/2022
`
`Manabu MAEDA
`
`P67663
`
`2498
`
`125331
`
`7590
`
`10/02/2023
`
`Panasonic Intellectual Property Corporation
`of America c/o Greenblum & Bernstein, P.L.C.
`1950 Roland Clarke Place
`
`EXAMINER
`
`GARTLAND, SCOTT D
`
`RDOO
`
`10/02/2023
`
`ELECTRONIC
`
`Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding.
`
`Thetime period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication.
`
`Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the
`following e-mail address(es):
`
`gbpatent @ gbpatent.com
`
`PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07)
`
`

`

`
`
`Disposition of Claims*
`1-16 is/are pending in the application.
`)
`Claim(s)
`5a) Of the above claim(s) ___ is/are withdrawn from consideration.
`Cj} Claim(s)
`is/are allowed.
`Claim(s) 1-16 is/are rejected.
`S)
`) © Claim(s)___is/are objected to.
`Cj) Claim(s
`are subjectto restriction and/or election requirement
`)
`S)
`* If any claims have been determined allowable, you maybeeligible to benefit from the Patent Prosecution Highway program at a
`participating intellectual property office for the corresponding application. For more information, please see
`http://Awww.uspto.gov/patents/init_events/pph/index.jsp or send an inquiry to PPHfeedback@uspto.gov.
`
`) )
`
`Application Papers
`10) The specification is objected to by the Examiner.
`11)0) The drawing(s) filedon__ is/are: a)(J accepted or b)( objected to by the Examiner.
`Applicant may not request that any objection to the drawing(s) be held in abeyance. See 37 CFR 1.85(a).
`Replacement drawing sheet(s) including the correction is required if the drawing(s) is objected to. See 37 CFR 1.121 (d).
`
`Priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119
`12)1) Acknowledgment is made of a claim for foreign priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(a)-(d) or (f).
`Certified copies:
`c)Z None ofthe:
`b)() Some**
`a)C All
`1... Certified copies of the priority documents have been received.
`2.1) Certified copies of the priority documents have beenreceived in Application No.
`3.1.) Copies of the certified copies of the priority documents have been receivedin this National Stage
`application from the International Bureau (PCT Rule 17.2(a)).
`* See the attached detailed Office action for a list of the certified copies not received.
`
`Attachment(s)
`
`1)
`
`Notice of References Cited (PTO-892)
`
`Information Disclosure Statement(s) (PTO/SB/08a and/or PTO/SB/08b)
`2)
`Paper No(s)/Mail Date
`U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
`
`3)
`
`(LJ Interview Summary (PTO-413)
`Paper No(s)/Mail Date
`4) (J Other:
`
`PTOL-326 (Rev. 11-13)
`
`Office Action Summary
`
`Part of Paper No./Mail Date 20230908
`
`Application No.
`Applicant(s)
`48/091,106
`MAEDAetal.
`
`Office Action Summary Art Unit|AIA (FITF) StatusExaminer
`SCOTT D GARTLAND
`RDOO
`Yes
`
`
`
`-- The MAILING DATEof this communication appears on the cover sheet with the correspondence address --
`Period for Reply
`
`A SHORTENED STATUTORY PERIOD FOR REPLYIS SET TO EXPIRE 3 MONTHS FROM THE MAILING
`DATE OF THIS COMMUNICATION.
`Extensions of time may be available underthe provisions of 37 CFR 1.136(a). In no event, however, may a reply betimely filed after SIX (6) MONTHSfrom the mailing
`date of this communication.
`If NO period for reply is specified above, the maximum statutory period will apply and will expire SIX (6) MONTHSfrom the mailing date of this communication.
`-
`- Failure to reply within the set or extended period for reply will, by statute, cause the application to become ABANDONED (35 U.S.C. § 133).
`Any reply received by the Office later than three months after the mailing date of this communication, evenif timely filed, may reduce any earned patent term
`adjustment. See 37 CFR 1.704(b).
`
`Status
`
`1) Responsive to communication(s) filed on 29 December 2022.
`C) A declaration(s)/affidavit(s) under 37 CFR 1.130(b) was/werefiled on
`
`2a)() This action is FINAL. 2b)¥)This action is non-final.
`3)02 An election was madeby the applicant in responseto a restriction requirement set forth during the interview
`on
`; the restriction requirement and election have been incorporated into this action.
`4)\0) Since this application is in condition for allowance except for formal matters, prosecution as to the merits is
`closed in accordance with the practice under Exparte Quayle, 1935 C.D. 11, 453 O.G. 213.
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 2
`
`DETAILED ACTION
`
`Continuation
`
`1.
`
`This application is indicated as a continuation application of U.S. Application No.
`
`16/452,158 filed on 25 June 2019, now U.S. Patent 11,574,340, which is a
`
`continuation of U.S. Application No. 14/276,225 filed on 13 May 2014, now U.S.
`
`Patent 10,380,635 (“Parent Application” or “Parent Applications”). See MPEP
`
`§201.07. In accordance with MPEP §609.02(II)(A)(2) and MPEP §2001.06(b)(last
`
`paragraph), the Examiner has reviewed and considered the prior art cited in the
`
`Parent Application. In further accordance with MPEP §2001.06(b) (last paragraph),
`
`all documents cited or considered ‘of record’ in the Parent Application are now
`
`considered cited or ‘of record’ in this application.
`
`Status
`
`2.
`
`This communication is in responseto the application filed on 29 December 2022.
`
`Claims 1-16 are pending and presented for examination.
`
`Notice of Pre-AlA or AIA Status
`
`3.
`
`The present application, filed on or after March 16, 2013, is being examined
`
`under the first inventor to file provisions of the AIA.
`
`Priority
`
`4.
`
`The later-filed application must be an application for a patent for an invention
`
`whichis also disclosed in the prior application (the parent or original nonprovisional
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 3
`
`application or provisional application). The disclosure of the invention in the parent
`
`application and in the later-filed application must be sufficient to comply with the
`
`requirements of 35 U.S.C. 112(a) or the first paragraph of pre-AlA 35 U.S.C. 112,
`
`except for the best mode requirement. See Transco Products, Inc. v. Performance
`
`Contracting, Inc., 38 F.3d 551, 32 USPQ2d 1077 (Fed. Cir. 1994).
`
`The disclosure of neither of the prior-filed applications, Application Nos.
`
`16/542,158 and 14/276,252, fail to provide adequate support or enablementin the
`
`manner provided by 35 U.S.C. 112(a) or pre-AlA 35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph for
`
`one or more claims of this application. The instant claims, as originally filed and
`
`presented for examination, indicate receiving a purchase history of household goods
`
`and clothing from a plurality of users and extracting from that purchasehistory to
`
`recommenda household good or clothing to the first user. The only supportfor this
`
`conceptat the instant application is at the original claims and the original Abstract;
`
`however, neither the claims, Abstract, or specification of at least Parent Application
`
`16/452,158 contain such support. Any support at the indicated Parent Application(s)
`
`is not related to the scope of “household goods’.
`
`Further, dependent claims 7 and 15 each recite “selection by the second
`
`processor of the recommendation for one of the household goods purchased by the
`
`second user is based on the second user's purchase history of clothing”. There is no
`
`description support at any of the instant or former Abstracts or descriptions. Only the
`
`instant original claims
`
`As such, the Applicant has not complied with one or more conditions for receiving
`
`the benefit of an earlier filing date under the 35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 4
`
`requirement. Since the claim asoriginally filed are part of the specification, the
`
`applicant does have support for an interactive mapin the instant application but the
`
`instant application is granted a priority date as of the filing date of the instant
`
`applicant which is November 18, 2019.
`
`5. Applicant states that this application is a continuation or divisional application of
`
`the prior-filed application. A continuation or divisional application cannot include new
`
`matter. Applicant is required to delete the benefit claim or change the relationship
`
`(continuation or divisional application) to continuation-in-part because this
`
`application contains the following matter not disclosedin the prior-filed application:
`
`Asindicated above, instant claims 1 and 9, asoriginally filed and presented for
`
`examination, indicate receiving a purchase history of household goods andclothing
`
`from a plurality of users and extracting from that purchase history to recommend a
`
`household good or clothing to the first user: “receiving, from the network and storing
`
`in a second memory with a second processor, the purchasehistory of one or more
`
`of household goods and clothing by a plurality of users of the one or more of the
`
`household goods and clothing; extracting with the second processor from the
`
`second memory a second user, from among the plurality of users, who has
`
`purchased a household good or clothing with a design or function similar to a
`
`household good or clothing purchasedbythe first user; transmitting, with the second
`
`processor, over the networkto the first processor, a recommendation for the first
`
`user of a household goodor clothing purchased by the second user, which is stored
`
`in the first memory” — at least Parent Application 16/452158 provides no support,
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 5
`
`and Parent Application 14/276,225 is not co-pending and also does not provide
`
`support. There also is no indication (also as indicated above) of supportat either of
`
`the Parent Applications regarding the recommendation selection for a household
`
`appliance being a second user’s clothing purchase(asat instant claims 7 and 15).
`
`Merely cancelling the above identified claims would not be sufficient to
`
`correct the priority issue. As the originally filed claims are considered to be part of
`
`the specification, cancelling the claims would not remove the subject matter from the
`
`applicant’s specification. Therefore, the specification would still be considered to
`
`contain new matter by virtue of the originally filed claims. As such, the instant
`
`applicant cannot maintain a relationship of “continuation” and the applicant must
`
`change the relationship to “continuation-in-part’. See MPEP 211.05.
`
`Information Disclosure Statement
`
`6.
`
`The information disclosure statement (IDS) submitted on 29 March 2023 was
`
`filed after the mailing date of the application on 29 December 2022. The submission
`
`is in compliance with the provisions of 37 CFR 1.97. Accordingly, the information
`
`disclosure statement is being considered by the examiner.
`
`Examiner’s Note
`
`7. The Examiner notes that there is no indication of what is meant by “household
`
`goods’ — the phraseis not found anywherein the specification, except the Abstract,
`
`in fact the term “household” is only found in the Abstract, and the term “good”is only
`
`found at Applicant J] 0221 (“The information providing system may recommend a
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 6
`
`curtain, a carpet, and furniture from a purchasehistory of clothing, such as clothes,
`
`instead of a home appliance, and may recommend a home appliance. This makes it
`
`possible to provide information about various products that suit the user based on
`
`information about a user who possessessimilar goods.”) and Applicant {| 0222 (“the
`
`extracted information includes information about what kind of other programs a user
`
`watching a similar program watches, what kind of recipe of food a user makes
`
`immediately after the user watches a program with similar content, what kind of
`
`product a user purchases immediately after the user watches a program with similar
`
`content. This makes it possible to, for example, recommenda recipe regarding food
`
`that appearsin the television program. This also makes it possible to recommend a
`
`recipe of food good for health after watching a program about health.”). Based on
`
`the above lack of explanation or description, this is regarded as a breadth (and field
`
`of use) issue (i.e., what is considered to be a “household good”), rather than a
`
`specific indefiniteness issue, and the claim interpretation applied is that any product,
`
`good, or merchandize that a household, customer, or consumer would purchase
`
`(apparently including clothing, carpets, and/or curtains) is considered to be a
`
`household good.
`
`8.
`
`The Examiner notes that whether a “household good” and/or “clothing” is
`
`requested and/or recommended(as at independent claims 1 and 9), and/or whether
`
`that request or recommendation includes a household appliance, a curtain, a carpet,
`
`and/or a shelf (as at dependent claims 2-8 and 10-16), are all fields of use and/or
`
`printed matter. The processing and selection encompasses any second user that
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 7
`
`has purchased (apparently) anything related to the request (since dependent claims
`
`indicate recommending an appliance based on a clothing purchase, and/or
`
`recommending a curtain, carpet, or shelf based on an appliance purchase);
`
`therefore, any record of anyone purchasing a (vaguely) related productis
`
`encompassedbythe claims. Therefore, the processing is (or would be) the same
`
`regardless whatis requested and/or what is recommended — thereis literally no
`
`indication of whatis, or is not, a household good; however, even if something other
`
`than a household good or clothing were requested (e.g., investments, stocks,
`
`services, contractors, etc.), the processing would merely provide a recommendation
`
`based on matching. The aboveindicated products (i.e., household goods, clothing,
`
`appliance, curtain, carpet, shelf) are also printed matter since there is no functional
`
`relationship between the item(s) and the substrate —i.e., the message(s), message
`
`medium, message transmission or reception, etc. MPEP § 2103.1.C.(A) indicates a
`
`field of use may be grantedlittle if any patentable weight, and MPEP § 2111.05
`
`indicates that when there is no functional relationship to the substrate, little if any
`
`patentable weight may be granted. This is to say the transmitting, receiving, and
`
`extraction claimed are not functionally related or altered based on the items/products
`
`claimed(the claims literally encompass requesting or recommending a white
`
`appliance versus a black appliance, for instance — this has no definable meaning or
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 8
`
`relation to any matching or processing indicated), solittle if any patentable weight
`
`may be granted to suchlimitations.
`
`Claim Rejections - 35 USC § 112
`
`The following is a quotation of the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112(a):
`(a) INGENERAL.—The specification shall contain a written description of the invention, and
`of the manner and process of making and usingit, in suchfull, clear, concise, and exact terms
`as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains, or with whichit is most nearly
`connected, to make and use the same, and shall set forth the best mode contemplated by the
`inventor or joint inventor of carrying out the invention.
`
`The following is a quotation of the first paragraph of pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. 112:
`The specification shall contain a written description of the invention, and of the manner and
`process of making and usingit, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any
`person skilled in the art to whichit pertains, or with whichit is most nearly connected, to make
`and use the same, and shall set forth the best mode contemplated by the inventor of carrying
`out his invention.
`
`The following is a quotation of 35 U.S.C. 112(b):
`(bo) CONCLUSION.—The specification shall conclude with one or more claims particularly pointing out
`and distinctly claiming the subject matter which the inventor or a joint inventor regards as the invention.
`
`The following is a quotation of 35 U.S.C. 112 (pre-AlA), second paragraph:
`The specification shall conclude with one or moreclaims particularly pointing out and distinctly
`claiming the subject matter which the applicant regards as his invention.
`
`9. Claims 6-8 and 14-16 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 112(a) or 35 U.S.C. 112
`
`(pre-AlA), first paragraph, as failing to comply with the enablement
`
`requirement. The claim(s) contains subject matter which was not described in the
`
`specification in such a way as to enable one skilled in the art to whichit pertains, or
`
`with which it is most nearly connected, to make and/or use the invention.
`
`Claims 7-8 and 15-16 are rejected under 35 U.S.C.112(a) or 35 U.S.C. 112 (pre-
`
`AlA), first paragraph, because the specification, while being enabling (despite having
`
`no description whatsoever for what someone could imagine for certain
`
`circumstances (e.g., recommending some goods, such the same or
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 9
`
`complimentary/accessory items, based on a second user clothing purchase), the
`
`description does not reasonably provide enablement for the scopeof the claims —
`
`that a second user’s clothing purchase may somehowbe any reasonable basis to
`
`recommend household goods such as, e.g., a refrigerator, a computer, a vehicle, a
`
`desk, a chair, etc. etc. The specification does not enable any person skilled in the art
`
`to whichit pertains, or with which it is most nearly connected, to make and/or use
`
`the invention commensurate in scope with these claims. Parent claims 1 and 9 recite
`
`that the extracting of information (i.e., to select a recommendation) is regarding or of
`
`items “with a design or function similar to [that which is/was] purchased bythe first
`
`user’, but there is no apparent connection or correlation regarding design or function
`
`of clothing as compared to household goods (at claims 7 and 15), or a curtain,
`
`carpet, or shelf (at claims 8 and 16). Neither the claims nor the description indicate
`
`or require any connection, there is no description of the basis for making selection
`
`related to the second user’s clothing purchase(s) (i.e., the specification just says,
`
`essentially, “do it”), and the claims broadly and literally encompass ALL types of
`
`household goods andclothing.
`
`The same analysis applies to claims 6 and 14, where claims 6 and 14 recite “a
`
`comparison of the design, color, or characteristic function” of the first and second
`
`user’s household appliances; however, the recommendation is indicated as “one of
`
`the curtain, the carpet, and the shelf’. There appears to be no correlation between
`
`comparing appliances and recommending a curtain, carpet, or shelf. There appears
`
`to be no indication or description regarding how a recommendation is formulated or
`
`selected for recommending a curtain, carpet, or shelf based only on a comparison of
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 10
`
`the design, color, or function of an appliance (i.e., just because both the first and
`
`second users have white kitchen appliances does not appearto have any relation to
`
`recommending a curtain, carpet, or shelf — but that is what claims 6 and 14 say).
`
`Regarding the Wands factors (see MPEP §§ 2164.01(a)), the Examiner finds that
`
`with regard to factor:
`
`A) The breadth of the claims include any and all household goods that may be
`
`recommended, and also any and all clothing that may be purchased — there is no
`
`limiting or correlation at either the specification or the claims. The only support for
`
`the claims appears to be the claims themselves asincludedin the originalfiling.
`
`(B) The nature of the invention — there does not appear to be, and there is no
`
`description regarding any correlation between any household goods and/or any
`
`clothing. The only description related to this is Applicant § 0221 (as submitted)
`
`indicating “The information providing system may recommenda curtain, a carpet,
`
`and furniture from a purchasehistory of clothing, such as clothes, instead of a home
`
`appliance, and may recommend a home appliance.” This merely indicates to
`
`recommend something based on a clothing purchase, but not how to make the
`
`association or selection of anything — it just says “do it’, but not with any more logic
`
`or reasoning than finding a needle in a hay stackby just doing it. There is no
`
`apparent connection or correlation between the “design or function” indication of
`
`data used at the independent claims and the clothing purchase that is claimed as
`
`used to select a recommendation for household goods at dependent claims 6-8 and
`
`14-16.
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 11
`
`(C) The state of the prior art and (D) The level of one of ordinary skill — there
`
`does not appearto be any state of the art nor any level of ordinary skill regarding
`
`recommending a household good based on a second user's clothing purchase(s),
`
`exceptin the broadest sense(s) as indicated above where, e.g., the clothing is
`
`considered a household good and the recommendation is for a related article of
`
`clothing.
`
`(E) The level of predictability in the art — based on the above, there is no actual
`
`level of predictability in the art. The only level of predictability would be based on the
`
`relationship of the goods, clothing, and user(s), but none of that is described by the
`
`specification or required by the claims. The parent independentclaims indicate the
`
`extracted data (as the only information available for use as a selection basis)
`
`(F) The amount of direction provided by the inventor — there is no direction
`
`provided in the specification, other than (as indicated above) to just arbitrarily
`
`recommend anything a household or consumer could purchase since someone else
`
`bought some article of clothing. Household goods are not discussed outside of the
`
`Abstract, and the only mentions of clothes or clothing is the Abstract mention (as
`
`mirroring the claims) of recommending based on a second user’s purchasehistory,
`
`and the Applicant § 0221 (as above) merely saying just do it.;
`
`(G) The existence of working examples; and (H) the quantity of experimentation
`
`needed to makeor usethe invention based on the content of the disclosure — there
`
`are no working examples provided, there is no indication of how such a basis for
`
`recommending would be anything but a random, arbitrary selection of any product
`
`-
`
`there is no connection or correlation of the first and second users other than the first
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 12
`
`and second users bought something “with a design or function [that is] similar’, and
`
`dependentclaims 2 and 10 indicate this merely includes the “design, color, or
`
`characteristic function” — so, if a second user has purchased a whiteshirt, it is within
`
`the claim scopeto arbitrarily recommend a white refrigerator to the first user. There
`
`is no reasonable connection, correlation, or explanation regarding how such a
`
`recommendation system would or could reasonably work, nor how to make such a
`
`system work. The recommendations made appear to encompass merely being an
`
`arbitrary, random choice/selection.
`
`10. Claims 1-16 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 112(b) or 35 U.S.C. 112 (pre-AlA),
`
`second paragraph, as being indefinite for failing to particularly point out and
`
`distinctly claim the subject matter which the inventor or a joint inventor, or for
`
`pre-AlA the applicant regards as the invention.
`
`Independent claims 1 and 9 eachrecite A) “transmitting a request, withafirst
`
`processor ofthe first user, via a network, for recommended household goods and
`
`clothing for the first user’, B) “extracting with the second processor from the second
`
`memory a second user’, and C) that the second user has purchased a household
`
`goodor clothing with “a design or function similar to a household good or clothing
`
`purchasedbythe first user” (citing to claim 1, similar phrasing used at claim 9).
`
`With respect to A), the Examiner is uncertain whether the requestis for
`
`“household goods AND clothing” (emphasis added — requiring a single requestfor
`
`both the household goods AND the clothing), or if this should be household goods or
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 13
`
`clothing. The extracting performed, and the transmitted response, as well as the
`
`displaying is phrased in the alternative — that only one or the other of household
`
`goods OR clothing is considered for the response and display. The claim would
`
`apparently not be infringed unless thereis a single request(i.e., “a request”) that
`
`requests a recommendation of both household goods and clothing. However, it also
`
`appears, as indicated above, that clothing would be “nousehold goods”, so the
`
`Examiner is also uncertain what the difference would be and/or if two products are
`
`necessarily requested (one considered as a ‘household good” and the other
`
`“clothing’). The Examiner suggests phrasing the “transmitting a request’ in the
`
`alternative for clarity (e.g., “for at least one of household goods andclothing”, or “for
`
`one or both of household goods and clothing’, or similar). The claim is being
`
`interpreted as the request being for at least one of households and/or clothing.
`
`With respectto B), it appears to be impossible to extract a second user froma
`
`second memorythat is understood to be a computer or machine memory — the claim
`
`recites extracting an actual person, not just records of a second person. The
`
`Examiner suggests reciting extracting records or purchasehistory of a second user
`
`instead — that seems to be whatis intended (but the claims do not currently reflect
`
`this).
`
`With respectto C), first, there is no extraction or receiving or determining of any
`
`designs or functions of any household goodor clothing; therefore, it appears
`
`impossible to compare the designs or functions for similarity. Second, there is no
`
`indication that there are any records available regarding purchases bythe first user
`
`— the first user is not in any manner required or indicated as included in the purchase
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 14
`
`history records that are received. Third, the Examiner has searched for a similarity
`
`standard that may be used to determine whether designs or functions are “similar”
`
`and finds no indication regarding how they may be compared, whatlevel of similarity
`
`is required, or even what is considered a function. For instance, dependentclaims 6
`
`and 14 (as examples that are necessarily included) indicate “wherein the household
`
`goods include a household appliance, a curtain, a carpet, and a shelf’; therefore, is
`
`the function of a curtain to hang on a wall or cover a wall? Is any picture, mural,
`
`drawing, etc. then considered to be similar in function, even though they are very
`
`different objects. Similarly, a carpetliterally only functions to lie on a floor — although
`
`some may be hung on a wall; so, is a carpet of similar function to the curtains (they
`
`both are hung from a wall, apparently)? Is a couch, or table, or chair(s), of similar
`
`function to a carpet since theyall just lie on a floor? There is no indication provided
`
`in the description regarding whatlevel or type of similarity is required. Therefore, the
`
`term “similar” is a relative term which renders the claim indefinite. The term “similar”
`
`is not defined by the claim, the specification does not provide a standard for
`
`ascertaining the requisite degree, and one ofordinary skill in the art would not be
`
`reasonably apprised of the scope of the invention, as indicated above.
`
`Claims 2-8 and 10-16 depend from claims 1 and 9, but do not resolve the above
`
`issues and inherit the deficiencies of the parent claim(s); therefore claims 2-8 and
`
`10-16 are also indefinite.
`
`Dependentclaims 6 and 14 recite “wherein the household goods include a
`
`household appliance, a curtain, a carpet, and a shelf’, and dependent claims 8 and
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 15
`
`16 recite “wherein the household goods include curtain, a carpet, and a shelf’.
`
`Claims 6 and 8 depend from claim 1, whereas claims 14 and 16 depend from claim
`
`9. The phrase “the household goods’at claims 6, 8, 14, and 16 maybereferring to
`
`the requested household goods, the purchasehistory data of the plurality of users
`
`(at claim 1), the stored recommended household goods (at claim 8), the purchase of
`
`a household good by a second user, or the transmitted and displayed household that
`
`is being recommended. There is no indication what instance of “the household
`
`goods”is being referenced by dependentclaims 6, 8, 14, and 16.
`
`Further, claims 6 and 14 recite “a comparison of the design, color, or
`
`characteristic function” of the first and second user’s household appliances;
`
`however, the recommendation is indicated as “one of the curtain, the carpet, and the
`
`shelf’. There appears to be no correlation between comparing appliances and
`
`recommending a curtain, carpet, or shelf. The Examiner notes, however, that it may
`
`be that the extracting is entirely separate from the recommendation, and the
`
`extracting is not to be regarded as having any meaningful limitation — regardless of
`
`the comparing, the system will recommend any curtain, carpet, or shelf that anyone
`
`has ever purchased. The Examiner has no idea whatthe claim is actually intended
`
`to mean, but for examination purposes, the Examiner is interpreting this as ANY
`
`product comparison to produce any recommendation as being regarded as
`
`encompassed — i.e., anticipating or obvious.
`
`Claim Rejections - 35 USC § 101
`
`35 U.S.C. 101 reads as follows:
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 16
`
`Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of
`matter, or any new and useful improvementthereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the
`conditions and requirementsofthis title.
`
`11. Claims 1-16 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 101 becausethe claimed invention
`
`is directed to an abstract idea without significantly more.
`
`Please see the following Subject Matter Eligibility (“SME”) analysis:
`
`For analysis under SME Step 1, the claims herein are directed to a method
`
`(claims 1-8) and “information providing device” (i.e., ,a machine or article of
`
`manufacture) (claims 9-16), which would be classified under one ofthe listed
`
`statutory classifications (SME Step 1=Yes).
`
`For analysis under revised SME Step 2A, Prong 1, independentclaim 1 recites a
`
`method for recommending household goods and clothing information to a first user
`
`of the household goods and clothing, comprising: transmitting a request, withafirst
`
`processor of the first user, via a network, for recommended household goods and
`
`clothing for the first user, to be received and stored in a first memory and displayed
`
`on a displayof the first user; receiving, from the network and storing in a second
`
`memory with a second processor, the purchase history of one or more of household
`
`goods and clothing by a plurality of users of the one or more of the household goods
`
`and clothing; extracting with the second processor from the second memory a
`
`second user, from among the plurality of users, who has purchased a household
`
`good or clothing with a design or function similar to a household goodor clothing
`
`purchasedbythe first user; transmitting, with the second processor, over the
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 18/091 ,106
`Art Unit: RDOO
`
`Page 17
`
`networkto the first processor, a recommendation for the first user of a household
`
`good or clothing purchased by the second user, whichis storedin the first memory;
`
`and displaying on the display of the first user, as instructed by the first processor, the
`
`recommended household good or clothing purchased by the second user.
`
`Independent claim 9 is analyzed in the same manner as claim 1 above since
`
`directed to an information providing device ... comprising: a terminal device of the
`
`first user having a display for displaying ...; a first memory of the terminal device; a
`
`communicating interface of the terminal device configured to transmit a request, via
`
`a network, [for the goods and clothing] to be received and stored in the first memory
`
`and displayed on the display of the terminal device of the first user; and receive ...
`
`from a second processor via the network and storing [the recommendeditems] in
`
`the first memory; and a controller of the terminal device comprising a first processor
`
`configured to: transmit via the communication interface the request ... to be received
`
`and storedin the first memory and displayed on the display of the terminal of the first
`
`user, receive via the communi

This document is available on Docket Alarm but you must sign up to view it.


Or .

Accessing this document will incur an additional charge of $.

After purchase, you can access this document again without charge.

Accept $ Charge
throbber

Still Working On It

This document is taking longer than usual to download. This can happen if we need to contact the court directly to obtain the document and their servers are running slowly.

Give it another minute or two to complete, and then try the refresh button.

throbber

A few More Minutes ... Still Working

It can take up to 5 minutes for us to download a document if the court servers are running slowly.

Thank you for your continued patience.

This document could not be displayed.

We could not find this document within its docket. Please go back to the docket page and check the link. If that does not work, go back to the docket and refresh it to pull the newest information.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

You need a Paid Account to view this document. Click here to change your account type.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

Set your membership status to view this document.

With a Docket Alarm membership, you'll get a whole lot more, including:

  • Up-to-date information for this case.
  • Email alerts whenever there is an update.
  • Full text search for other cases.
  • Get email alerts whenever a new case matches your search.

Become a Member

One Moment Please

The filing “” is large (MB) and is being downloaded.

Please refresh this page in a few minutes to see if the filing has been downloaded. The filing will also be emailed to you when the download completes.

Your document is on its way!

If you do not receive the document in five minutes, contact support at support@docketalarm.com.

Sealed Document

We are unable to display this document, it may be under a court ordered seal.

If you have proper credentials to access the file, you may proceed directly to the court's system using your government issued username and password.


Access Government Site

We are redirecting you
to a mobile optimized page.





Document Unreadable or Corrupt

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket

We are unable to display this document.

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket