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Justia Weekly Opinion Summaries

Patents
January 1, 2021

Table of Contents

Simio, LLC v. FlexSim Software Products, Inc.

Intellectual Property, Patents

US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

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American Law’s Worst Moment—2020

AUSTIN SARAT

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Austin Sarat—Associate Provost and Associate Dean of the Faculty and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence & Political Science at Amherst College—explains why the police murder of George Floyd was the worst moment of 2020 in American law. Professor Sarat proposes that we remember the event and that date—May 25—as “infamous,” a word reserved for rare and atrocious events like the bombing of Pearl Harbor, in an attempt to capture the brutality and inhumanity of the act.

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Patents Opinions

Simio, LLC v. FlexSim Software Products, Inc.

Court: US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Docket: 20-1171

Opinion Date: December 29, 2020

Judge: Sharon Prost

Areas of Law: Intellectual Property, Patents

Simio’s patent, entitled “System and Method for Creating Intelligent Simulation Objects Using Graphical Process Descriptions,” describes different types of simulations, including those that are event-oriented, process-oriented, and object-oriented. In Simio’s infringement suit, the district court held that certain claims were ineligible for patenting under 35 U.S.C. 101. The Federal Circuit affirmed, applying the two-step “Alice” analysis. The claims are closely aligned to the decades-old computer programming practice of substituting text-based coding with graphical processing; the focus of the claimed advance remains the abstract idea. Considering the claim elements both individually and as an ordered combination, FlexSim “met its burden of showing no inventive concept or alteration of computer functionality sufficient to transform the system into a patent-eligible application.”

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