Federal Circuit Clarifies the Applicability of Alice to Software Patents

Sep 27, 2016

Reading Time : 1 min

The Federal Circuit held that the patents did,  in fact, claim eligible subject matter because the invention did not simply take a process that had been done before and automate it with a computer.  Rather, the invention claimed a whole new way of animating. Before the invention, animators had manually animated a 3-D model’s facial features to make it appear as if it were speaking. The court reasoned that “[i]t is the incorporation of the claimed rules, not the use of the computer that improved the existing technological process by allowing automation of further tasks.” This is different from other Alice cases where the claimed computer process and the prior process were carried out in the same way. The court also noted that, by claiming automatic animation rules, the patents were not preempting other ways of automatically animating 3-D models (something that claiming a previously existing process now executed by a computer would do).

 The Federal Circuit’s decision may make it easier for software patents to survive invalidity challenges. If the claims in the patent involve steps or processes different from prior process (aside from being done by a computer), the patent might be valid under Alice.

 McRO, Inc., dba Planet Blue v. Bandai Namco Games America Inc. et al (Fed. Cir. Sept. 13, 2016). [Reyna (opinion), Taranto, Stoli]

Share This Insight

Previous Entries

IP Newsflash

December 9, 2025

The Federal Circuit recently denied a petition for a writ of mandamus that challenged the PTO Director’s reliance on “settled expectations” to discretionarily deny two inter partes review (IPR) petitions. In so doing, the court explained that, while it was not deciding whether the Director’s use of “settled expectations” was correct, the petitioner’s arguments about what factors the Director may consider when deciding whether to institute an IPR or post-grant review (PGR) are not generally reviewable and did not provide sufficient basis for mandamus review here.

...

Read More

IP Newsflash

December 5, 2025

District courts are split on whether a complaint can provide the required knowledge for post-suit indirect and willful infringement in that same lawsuit. Chief Judge Connolly in the District of Delaware recently confirmed that, consistent with his prior opinions, the complaint cannot serve as the basis for knowledge for either a claim of post-suit indirect infringement or a demand for willfulness-based enhanced damages in that lawsuit.

...

Read More

IP Newsflash

December 3, 2025

The Federal Circuit recently held that a patentee acted as its own lexicographer to define a claim term even though it did not explicitly define the term. Rather, because the patentee consistently and clearly used two terms interchangeably to describe the same structural feature and did so in all of the embodiments in which the feature appeared, the patentee impliedly gave the term its own, unique definition.

...

Read More

IP Newsflash

December 2, 2025

The Federal Circuit recently held an asserted patent was not entitled to its priority date because the priority application lacked written description support for the asserted claims. In so doing, the court explained that broad disclosures that do not provide reasonably specific support for narrower claims do not meet the written description requirement. The court also considered whether the inventor’s testimony showed they possessed the full scope of the claimed genus at the priority date or whether it was more likely the inventors first became aware of the claimed embodiments from public disclosures of the accused product.

...

Read More

© 2025 Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. All rights reserved. Attorney advertising. This document is distributed for informational use only; it does not constitute legal advice and should not be used as such. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Akin is the practicing name of Akin Gump LLP, a New York limited liability partnership authorized and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority under number 267321. A list of the partners is available for inspection at Eighth Floor, Ten Bishops Square, London E1 6EG. For more information about Akin Gump LLP, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP and other associated entities under which the Akin Gump network operates worldwide, please see our Legal Notices page.