Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-cand-5_18-cv-06216/USCOURTS-cand-5_18-cv-06216-4/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 830
Nature of Suit: Patent
Cause of Action: 15:1126 Patent Infringement

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Case No. 18-CV-07020-LHK 

ORDER GRANTING CONSOLIDATED MOTION TO DISMISS WITH PREJUDICE

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United States District Court

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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

SAN JOSE DIVISION

VOIP-PAL.COM, INC.,

Plaintiff,

v.

APPLE INC,

Defendant.

VOIP-PAL.COM, INC.,

Plaintiff,

v.

AMAZON.COM, INC, and AMAZON 

TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

Defendants.

Case No. 18-CV-06216-LHK 

ORDER GRANTING CONSOLIDATED 

MOTION TO DISMISS WITH 

PREJUDICE

Re: Dkt. No. 89

Case No. 18-CV-07020-LHK

Re: Dkt. No. 67

Plaintiff Voip-Pal.Com, Inc. filed two related patent infringement suits alleging 

infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 9,537,762 (the “’762 Patent”); 9,813,330 (the “’330 Patent”), 

9,826,002 (the “’002 Patent”); and 9,948,549 (the “’549 Patent”) (collectively, the “Patents-inSuit”). One suit is against Defendant Apple Inc. (“Apple”), Case No. 18-CV-06216, and the other 

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is against Defendants Amazon.com, Inc. and Amazon Technologies, Inc. (collectively, the 

“Amazon Defendants”), Case No. 18-CV-07020. Before the Court is Defendants’ consolidated 

motion to dismiss Plaintiff’s amended complaints pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

12(b)(6). Defendants contend that the asserted claims of the Patents-in-Suit fail to recite patenteligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. ECF No. 671

; Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 89 

(collectively, “Def. Cons. Mot. to Dismiss”). Having considered the submissions of the parties, 

the relevant law, and the record in this case, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ consolidated motion 

to dismiss with prejudice. 

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

The following facts are drawn from Plaintiff’s amended complaints, ECF No. 61 and Case 

No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 81, as the Court must accept the allegations therein as true at the 

motion to dismiss stage, Manzarek v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 519 F.3d 1025, 1031 (9th 

Cir. 2008). 

1. The Parties and Technologies

Plaintiff is a Nevada corporation with its principal place of business in Bellevue, 

Washington. ECF No. 61 (“Amazon FAC”). Plaintiff, through its wholly owned subsidiary 

Digifonica, owns various patents relating to “Internet Protocol (‘IP’) based communication.” Id. 

¶¶ 23, 46. An IP-based system uses the Internet to carry voice and other communications instead 

of a traditional switched circuit network, such as the Public Switched Telephone Network 

(“PSTN”). Id. ¶¶ 17, 21. 

Amazon.com, Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Seattle,

Washington. Id. ¶ 2. Amazon Technologies, Inc. is a Nevada corporation with its principal place 

of business in Seattle, Washington. Id. ¶ 3. Of relevance to the present case, the Amazon 

Defendants sell systems and devices that “support communications, including calling and 

 

1 All references to the docket refer to Case No. 5:18-CV-07020 unless otherwise specified.

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messaging,” using what Plaintiff refers to as the “Amazon Alexa Calling and Messaging System.” 

Id. ¶ 46. These devices include, but are not limited to “the Amazon Echo, Echo Plus, Echo Dot, 

Echo Spot, Echo Show, Echo Connect, Amazon Tap,” and certain Amazon Fire devices, as well as

phones and tablets equipped with certain versions of the Alexa app. Id. ¶ 47. 

Apple is a California corporation with its principal place of business in Cupertino, 

California. Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 81 (“Apple FAC”) ¶ 2. Apple operates two systems 

that are relevant to the present case. First, “Apple’s iMessage® system and service allows devices 

to communicate between participants, e.g., as between a first participant or user registered with 

Apple (such as through an Apple identifier) or that is using an Apple device, and a second user or 

participant that may or may not be a user registered with Apple or that may or may not be using an 

Apple device.” Id. ¶ 48. Second, “Apple’s Facetime® system and service allows devices to 

initiate an audio or video/audio communication between at least two participants which may or 

may not be associated with an Apple identification or Apple devices/software.” Id. ¶ 49. In 

addition, “Apple enables the use of WiFi Calling in conjunction with its iMessage® and 

Facetime® systems and services, which allows an Apple device to initiate communications 

between participants using internet protocol (IP) based communication methods and participants 

using external networks, such as the PSTN.” Id. ¶ 50. 

2. The Patents-in-Suit

Plaintiff alleges that Defendants infringe four patents: the ’762 Patent, the ’330 Patent, the 

’002 Patent, and the ’549 Patent. The ’762 Patent was filed on October 7, 2015 and issued on 

January 3, 2017. The ’330 Patent was filed on December 30, 2016 and issued on November 7, 

2017. The ’002 Patent was filed on January 12, 2017 and issued on November 21, 2017. The 

’549 Patent was filed on October 19, 2017 and issued on April 17, 2018. The Patents-in-Suit are 

all entitled “Producing Routing Messages for Voice over IP Communications.” The Patents-inSuit share the same specification, which is also the specification for the two patents in a related 

case. The parties cite the specification of the ’002 Patent, so the Court does the same. 

Specifically, Plaintiff asserts the following twenty claims:

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Patent No. Asserted Claims

’762 6, 16, 21, 26, 30

’330 3, 4, 12, 14

’002 1, 12, 22, 26, 29

’549 2, 6, 9, 12, 17, 24

In general, the Patents-in-Suit relate to a “system architecture and operation,” FAC ¶ 35, 

for routing IP-based communications, including communications between private IP-based 

networks and external networks such as the Public Switched Telephone Network (“PSTN”). FAC 

¶ 26. The PSTN is the traditional landline telephone system, used primarily for voice 

communications. FAC ¶ 28. An IP-based communication system, by contrast, uses the Internet to 

carry communications such as phone calls—commonly referred to as “Voice-over-IP”—and other 

media (video, photos, etc.). IP telephones are “typically personal computer (PC) based telephones 

connected within an IP network, such as the public Internet or a private network of a large 

organization.” ’002 Patent at 1:22-26. A private network is an organization’s internal 

communication network. FAC ¶ 29. Private networks predate the Patents-in-Suit and Voice-overIP generally. FAC ¶¶ 24, 29. One common form of private network is the “private branch 

exchange (PBX),” which employs private numbering schemes such as “extensions.” FAC ¶¶ 24, 

29. 

Of course, from time to time, users on a private network may need to place a call to 

someone outside of the private network, such as through the PSTN or the public Internet. For that 

reason, “IP telephony switches installed within the IP network enable voice calls to be made 

within or between IP networks, and between an IP network and a switched circuit network (SCN), 

such as the public switched telephone network.” ’002 Patent at 1:30-34. The Patents-in-Suit refer 

to communications within the private network as “system communications” and communications 

with someone outside of the private network as “external network communications.” The Court 

does the same. 

One conventional method for routing calls to an external network is “to require users to 

input a special code (e.g., a prefix digit of ‘9’)” in order to initiate a call on the PSTN; otherwise, 

the call proceeds on the private network. FAC ¶¶ 24, 30. The Patents-in-Suit here disclose a 

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different method for routing calls through the appropriate network and, ultimately, to the recipient 

of the call.

Specifically, the Patents-in-Suit disclose a process for routing a call (or transmission of 

other media) using “identifiers” associated with “callers and callees.”

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’002 Patent at 1:58-64. 

Such identifiers could be, in layman’s terms, a phone number or username. See id. at 2:13-17; 

15:23-25. According to Plaintiff, the technology “evaluat[es] a called party identifier based on 

profile settings (‘attributes’) associated with the calling party.” FAC ¶ 32. Based upon that 

evaluation, the technology “produces a routing message,” id. ¶ 34, containing an appropriate 

routing “address”—“e.g., an address in the system associated with the second participant or of a 

gateway to an external network,” id. ¶ 40—“for receipt by a call controller . . . , thereby causing 

the call controller to establish the call,” id. ¶ 34. Thus, “the asserted claims . . . use a caller’s 

attributes to evaluate a callee identifier against network routing criteria to cause a call to 

automatically be routed over a system network or another network (e.g., such as the PSTN) 

interconnected to the system network through a gateway . . . without the user manually specifying 

which network to use for routing . . . (e.g., by dialing a prefix of ‘9’ to make a PSTN call).” FAC 

¶ 33. Notably, there is no need for the user to manually specify which network to use for routing 

the call. FAC ¶ 33. 

 

2 The Patents-in-Suit use “caller” and “first participant” to mean the individual initiating a call. 

The Patents-in-Suit use “callee” and “second participant” to mean the recipient of a call. The 

Court does the same.

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Figure 1 of the specification is helpful to understanding the invention. 

Looking at Figure 1, “a system for making voice over IP telephone/videophone calls is shown 

generally at [item] 10.” ’002 Patent at 13:20-21. Item 11 is a “super node” located, for example, 

in Vancouver, Canada and providing service to a user (item 12) in Vancouver. Item 21 is a “super 

node” located, for example, in London, England and providing service to a user in London. Id. at 

13:21-26. The Vancouver super node includes a call controller (item 14), a routing controller 

(item 16), a database (item 18), a voicemail server (item 19), and a media relay (item 9). Id. at 

13:48-50. These components of the super node are implemented by computer, either “on a 

common computer system or by separate computers.” Id. at 13:51-53. Users such as a Vancouver 

user (item 12) and a Calgary user (item 15) communicate with the Vancouver super node using the 

internet (item 13). Id. at 13:55-59. Specifically, each user has “a telephone . . . that is capable of 

communicating with the Vancouver supernode . . . using Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) 

messages.” Id. at 13:63-67. 

Suppose the Vancouver user (item 12) is attempting to call the Calgary user (item 15). The 

caller (item 12) sends an SIP invite message to the Vancouver super node (item 10). Id. at 14:51-

54. The SIP invite message contains, among other things, a caller ID field and a callee identifier 

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field. Id. at 16:19-20. In response, the call controller (item 14) sends a routing controller request 

message (referred to in the specification as “RC request message”) to the routing controller (item 

16). Id. at 14:51-56. The RC request message contains, among other things, copies of the caller 

ID field and the callee identifier field from the SIP invite message. Id. at 17:55-58, 16:19-21. The

RC request message causes the routing controller (item 16) to query the database (item 18) using 

the caller ID field in order to locate and retrieve a record associating calling attributes with the 

caller. Id. at 14:56-58; 18:33-37. Example attributes include national dialing digits, international 

dialing digits, country code, local area code, the maximum number of concurrent calls the user is 

entitled to cause, and username. Id. at 18:40-58; 19:37-49. The routing controller (item 16) then 

compares the callee identifier to the caller’s attributes. Id. at 20:13 – 21:29. Based upon the 

comparison, the routing controller (item 16) produces a routing message, which is then sent back 

to the call controller (item 14). Id. at 14:56-58. The call controller (item 14) communicates with 

the media relay (item 9) to create a communications link with the callee (item 15) through the 

media relay (item 9) “to the same node, a different node or to a communications supplier gateway” 

(item 20). Id. at 14:61-64. 

B. Procedural History

The instant motion pertains to two patent infringement suits that have been consolidated 

for pre-trial purposes. ECF No. 40. On May 24, 2018, Plaintiff filed its complaint against Apple 

in Case No. 18-CV-06216 (the “Apple Action”) in the U.S. District Court for the District of 

Nevada. Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 1. The Apple Action was subsequently transferred 

and reassigned to this Court. Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF Nos. 24, 43. 

On June 15, 2018, Plaintiff filed a complaint against Amazon.com, Inc., Amazon 

Technologies, Inc., and Amazon Lab 126 in Case No. 18-CV-07020 (the “Amazon Action”) in the 

U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada. ECF No. 1. Plaintiff then dismissed its allegations 

against Amazon Lab 125. ECF No. 14, 17. The Amazon Action was subsequently transferred and 

reassigned to this Court. ECF Nos. 20, 29. 

Defendants filed a consolidated motion to dismiss the Apple Action and the Amazon 

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Action on February 15, 2019. ECF No. 57. On March 15, 2019, however, Plaintiff moved for 

leave to amend its complaints in both actions. ECF No. 48; Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 67. 

The Court granted Plaintiff’s motion, ECF No. 59, and denied Defendants’ motions to dismiss as 

moot, ECF No. 64. 

On May 17, 2019, Plaintiff filed the operative amended complaints—the Amazon FAC 

and the Apple FAC. ECF No. 61; Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 81. On June 5, 2019, 

Defendants filed the identical consolidated motion to dismiss the amended complaints based upon 

35 U.S.C. § 101 in both cases. ECF No. 67; Case No. 18-CV-06216, ECF No. 89. Plaintiff filed a 

consolidated opposition, ECF No. 69 (“Pl. Opp.”), and Defendants replied, ECF No. 70 (“Def. 

Reply”). The motion is now before the Court. 

In addition, Apple has filed inter partes review petitions with the Patent Trial and Appeal 

Board (“PTAB”) for all four Patents-in-Suit. ECF No. 77 at 4. Those petitions are still pending. 

C. The Related Consolidated Case

The instant actions are related to four other patent infringement suits brought by Plaintiff 

Voip-Pal.Com, Inc. against Defendants Apple (18-CV-06217), AT&T Corp. (18-CV-06177), 

Twitter Inc. (18-CV-04523), and Cellco Partnership d/b/a/ Verizon Wireless Services, LLC

(“Verizon”) (18-CV-06054). This Court consolidated the four suits for pretrial purposes, Case 

No. 18-CV-06217, ECF No. 96 at 9, so the Court refers to them collectively as “the Related 

Consolidated Case.” In those actions, Plaintiff alleged that Apple, AT&T Corp., and Verizon (but 

not Twitter Inc.) infringe various claims of U.S. Patent No. 8,542,815 (the “’815 Patent”) and that 

all four defendants infringe various claims of U.S. Patent No. 9,179,005 (the “’005 Patent”). Id. at

2. The ’815 Patent and the ’005 Patent have the same specification and title as the Patents-in-Suit.

Claiming that the ’815 and ’005 patents are invalid for lack of patentable subject matter

under § 101, the defendants filed an omnibus motion to dismiss all four suits pursuant to Federal 

Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Id. at 10-11. This Court found that the asserted claims of the

’815 and ’005 patents are directed to unpatentable subject matter and granted the motions to 

dismiss. Id. at 44. Accordingly, the Court entered judgment in favor of Defendants Apple,

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Twitter Inc., AT&T Corp., and Verizon on March 25, 2019. Case No. 18-CV-06217, ECF No. 98. 

Plaintiff then appealed to the Federal Circuit, and that appeal is still pending. Case No. 18-CV06217, ECF No. 100. 

II. LEGAL STANDARDS

A. Motion to Dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2) requires a complaint to include “a short and plain 

statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” A complaint that fails to meet 

this standard may be dismissed pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). A complaint 

must contain “enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Bell Atl. Corp. v.

Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007). “A claim has facial plausibility when the plaintiff pleads 

factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable 

for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009). “Dismissal under Rule 

12(b)(6) is appropriate . . . where the complaint lacks a cognizable legal theory or sufficient facts 

to support a cognizable legal theory.” Mendiondo v. Centinela Hosp. Med. Ctr., 521 F.3d 1097, 

1104 (9th Cir. 2008).

In ruling on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, a court must “accept factual allegations in the 

complaint as true and construe the pleadings in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” 

Manzarek, 519 F.3d at 1031. A court need not, however, “assume the truth of legal conclusions 

merely because they are cast in the form of factual allegations.” Fayer v. Vaughn, 649 F.3d 1061, 

1064 (9th Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (internal quotation marks omitted). Mere “conclusory 

allegations of law and unwarranted inferences are insufficient to defeat a motion to dismiss.” 

Adams v. Johnson, 355 F.3d 1179, 1183 (9th Cir. 2004). 

B. Challenging Patent Eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101 on Motion to Dismiss

Defendant’s motion to dismiss argues that the Patents-in-Suit fail to claim patent-eligible 

subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101, as elucidated by the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Alice 

Corp. Pty. Ltd. v. CLS Bank International, 573 U.S. 208 (2014).

The ultimate question whether a claim recites patent-eligible subject matter under § 101 is 

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a question of law. Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Fin. Corp., 850 F.3d 1332, 1338 

(Fed. Cir. 2017) (“Patent eligibility under § 101 is an issue of law[.]”); In re Roslin Inst. 

(Edinburgh), 750 F.3d 1333, 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (same). Although the Federal Circuit has said 

that the § 101 analysis “may contain disputes over underlying facts,” it has also made clear that

patent eligibility can often be resolved on a motion to dismiss. Berkheimer v. HP Inc., 881 F.3d 

1360, 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (“As our cases demonstrate, not every § 101 determination contains 

genuine disputes over the underlying facts material to the § 101 inquiry.”); see also Cleveland 

Clinic Found. v. True Health Diagnostics LLC, 859 F.3d 1352, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (“[W]e have 

repeatedly affirmed § 101 rejections at the motion to dismiss stage, before claim construction or 

significant discovery has commenced.”); Secured Mail Sols. LLC v. Universal Wilde, Inc., 873 

F.3d 905, 912 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (affirming determination of ineligibility made on 12(b)(6) motion). 

Likewise, “claim construction is not an inviolable prerequisite to a validity determination under 

§ 101,” though it may be desirable or even necessary in some cases. Bancorp Servs., L.L.C. v. Sun 

Life Assurance Co. of Can. (U.S.), 687 F.3d 1266, 1273 (Fed. Cir. 2012). 

In other words, where the court has a “full understanding of the basic character of the 

claimed subject matter,” the question of patent eligibility may properly be resolved on the 

pleadings. Content Extraction & Transmission LLC v. Wells Fargo Bank, Nat’l Ass’n, 776 F.3d 

1343, 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2014).

C. Patent-eligible Subject Matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101

Section 101 of Title 35 of the United States Code “defines the subject matter that may be 

patented under the Patent Act.” Bilski v. Kappos, 561 U.S. 593, 601 (2010). Under § 101, the 

scope of patentable subject matter encompasses “any new and useful process, machine, 

manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof.” Id. (quoting 

35 U.S.C. § 101). These categories are broad, but they are not limitless. Section 101 “contains an 

important implicit exception: Laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are not 

patentable.” Alice, 573 U.S. at 216 (citation omitted). These three categories of subject matter are 

excepted from patent-eligibility because “they are the basic tools of scientific and technological 

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work,” which are “free to all men and reserved exclusively to none.” Mayo Collaborative Servs. 

v. Prometheus Labs., Inc., 566 U.S. 66, 71 (2012) (citations omitted). The U.S. Supreme Court 

has explained that allowing patent claims for such purported inventions would “tend to impede 

innovation more than it would tend to promote it,” thereby thwarting the primary object of the 

patent laws. Id. At the same time, the U.S. Supreme Court has cautioned that “[a]t some level, all 

inventions embody, use, reflect, rest upon, or apply laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract 

ideas.” Alice, 573 U.S. at 217 (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, 

courts must “tread carefully in construing this exclusionary principle lest it swallow all of patent 

law.” Id.

In Alice, the leading case on patent-eligible subject matter under § 101, the U.S. Supreme 

Court refined the “framework for distinguishing patents that claim laws of nature, natural 

phenomena, and abstract ideas from those that claim patent-eligible applications of those 

concepts” originally set forth in Mayo, 566 U.S. at 77. Alice, 573 U.S. at 217. This analysis—

commonly known as the “Alice” framework—comprises two steps:

First, we determine whether the claims at issue are directed to one of those patentineligible concepts. If so, we then ask, “[w]hat else is there in the claims before 

us?” To answer that question, we consider the elements of each claim both 

individually and “as an ordered combination” to determine whether the additional 

elements “transform the nature of the claim” into a patent-eligible application. We 

have described step two of this analysis as a search for an “‘inventive concept’”—

i.e., an element or combination of elements that is “sufficient to ensure that the 

patent in practice amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the [ineligible 

concept] itself.”

Id. (alterations in original) (citations omitted); see also In re TLI Commc’ns LLC Patent Litig., 823 

F.3d 607, 611 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (describing “the now familiar two-part test described by the 

Supreme Court in Alice”). The Court refers to these steps as Alice Step One and Alice Step Two, 

respectively. 

1. Alice Step One: Identification of Claims Directed to a Patent-Ineligible Concept

At Alice Step One, a court must “determine whether the claims at issue are directed to a 

patent-ineligible concept,” such as an abstract idea. Alice, 573 U.S. at 218. “The ‘abstract ideas’

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category embodies the longstanding rule that an idea of itself is not patentable.” Id. (internal

quotation marks and alterations omitted). However, neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor the 

Federal Circuit has set forth a “definitive rule” separating “abstract ideas” from concepts that are 

sufficiently concrete so as to require no further inquiry under the first step of the Alice framework. 

Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft Corp., 822 F.3d 1327, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see also Alice, 573 U.S. at 

221 (in which the Court did not “labor to delimit the precise contours of the ‘abstract ideas’ 

category in this case”); Internet Patents Corp. v. Active Network, Inc., 790 F.3d 1343, 1345 (Fed. 

Cir. 2015) (“[P]recision has been elusive in defining an all-purpose boundary between the abstract 

and the concrete[.]”). As a result, in evaluating whether particular claims are directed to patentineligible abstract ideas, courts have generally begun by “compar[ing] claims at issue to those 

claims already found to be directed to an abstract idea in previous cases.” Enfish, 822 F.3d at

1334.

Two of the U.S. Supreme Court’s leading cases concerning the “abstract idea” exception 

involved claims held to be abstract because they were drawn to longstanding, fundamental 

economic practices. See Alice, 573 U.S. at 219 (claims “drawn to the concept of intermediated 

settlement, i.e., the use of a third party to mitigate settlement risk” were directed to a patentineligible abstract idea); Bilski, 561 U.S. at 611-12 (claims drawn to “the basic concept of 

hedging, or protecting against risk” were directed to a patent-ineligible abstract idea because 

“[h]edging is a fundamental economic practice long prevalent in our system of commerce and 

taught in any introductory finance class” (citation omitted)). Alice is of particular relevance here, 

as it involved a computerized invention. 573 U.S. at 213. In general, however, determining 

whether a computer-implemented claim is abstract has proven more “vexing.” CLS Bank Int’l v. 

Alice Corp. Pty., 717 F.3d 1269, 1276 (Fed. Cir. 2013), aff’d, 573 U.S. 208 (2014) (“§ 101 

appears deceptively simple on its face, yet its proper application to computer-implemented 

inventions . . . has long vexed this and other courts.”). Nevertheless, courts considering computerimplemented inventions have distilled “some important principles” from relevant U.S. Supreme 

Court and Federal Circuit precedents in determining whether an invention is directed to an abstract 

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idea. DDR Holdings, LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P., 773 F.3d 1245, 1256 (Fed. Cir. 2014). 

First, the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that information itself is intangible. See 

Microsoft Corp. v. AT & T Corp., 550 U.S. 437, 451 n.12 (2007). Accordingly, the Federal 

Circuit has generally invalidated claims that are directed to some combination of acquiring 

information, analyzing information, and/or displaying the results of that analysis. See 

FairWarning IP, LLC v. Iatric Sys., Inc., 839 F.3d 1089, 1094-95 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (claims 

“directed to collecting and analyzing information to detect misuse and notifying a user when 

misuse is detected” were drawn to a patent-ineligible abstract idea); Elec. Power Grp., LLC v. 

Alstom S.A., 830 F.3d 1350, 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (claims directed to an abstract idea because 

“[t]he advance they purport to make is a process of gathering and analyzing information of a 

specified content, then displaying the results, and not any particular assertedly inventive 

technology for performing those functions”); In re TLI Commc’ns LLC, 823 F.3d at 611 (claims 

were “directed to the abstract idea of classifying and storing digital images in an organized 

manner”); see also Elec. Power Grp., 830 F.3d at 1353-54 (collecting cases).

In another important strand of cases, courts consider whether the claims “purport to 

improve the functioning of the computer itself,” Alice, 573 U.S. at 225—which may suggest that 

the claims are not abstract—or instead whether “computers are invoked merely as a tool” to carry 

out an abstract process, Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1336. The Federal Circuit has followed this approach 

to find claims patent-eligible in several cases. Compare Visual Memory LLC v. NVIDIA Corp., 

867 F.3d 1253, 1259–60 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (claims directed to an improved memory system were 

not abstract because they “focus[ed] on a ‘specific asserted improvement in computer 

capabilities’—the use of programmable operational characteristics that are configurable based on 

the type of processor” (quoting Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1336)); and McRO, Inc. v. Bandai Namco 

Games Am. Inc., 837 F.3d 1299, 1314 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (claims directed to automating part of a 

preexisting method for 3-D facial expression animation were not abstract because they “focused 

on a specific asserted improvement in computer animation, i.e., the automatic use of rules of a 

particular type”); with Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1335–36 (claims were not abstract because they focused 

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“on the specific asserted improvement in computer capabilities (i.e., the self-referential table for a 

computer database)”). 

In the same vein, the Federal Circuit has found that claims directed to a “new and useful 

technique” for performing a particular task were not abstract. See Thales Visionix Inc. v. United 

States, 850 F.3d 1343, 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (holding that “claims directed to a new and useful 

technique for using sensors to more efficiently track an object on a moving platform” were not 

abstract); Rapid Litig. Mgmt. Ltd. v. CellzDirect, Inc., 827 F.3d 1042, 1048, 1050 (Fed. Cir. 2016) 

(holding that claims directed to “a new and useful laboratory technique for preserving 

hepatocytes,” a type of liver cell, were not abstract); see also Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 

187 (1981) (holding that claims for a method to cure rubber that employed a formula to calculate 

the optimal cure time were not abstract).

By contrast, courts have frequently invalidated claims that have a close analogy in the 

brick-and-mortar world, such that the claims cover “‘fundamental practices long prevalent in our 

system’ and ‘methods of organizing human activity.’” Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Symantec 

Corp., 838 F.3d 1307, 1317 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (quoting Alice, 573 U.S. at 219) (alterations omitted)

(finding an email processing software program to be abstract through comparison to a “brick-andmortar” post office); Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Symantec Corp., 100 F. Supp. 3d 371, 383 (D. 

Del. 2015) (“Another helpful way of assessing whether the claims of the patent are directed to an 

abstract idea is to consider if all of the steps of the claim could be performed by human beings in a 

non-computerized ‘brick and mortar’ context.” (citing buySAFE, Inc. v. Google, Inc., 765 F.3d 

1350, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2014)).

Courts will also (or alternatively, as the facts require) consider a related question of 

whether the claims are directed to a mental process or a process that could be performed with 

pencil and paper. See Synopsys, Inc. v. Mentor Graphics Corp., 839 F.3d 1138, 1147 (Fed. Cir. 

2016) (claims for translating a functional description of a logic circuit into a hardware component 

description of the logic circuit were patent-ineligible because the “method can be performed 

mentally or with pencil and paper”); CyberSource Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc., 654 F.3d 1366, 

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1372 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (claim for verifying the validity of a credit card transaction over the Internet 

was patent-ineligible because the “steps can be performed in the human mind, or by a human 

using a pen and paper”); see also, e.g., Mortg. Grader, Inc. v. First Choice Loan Servs. Inc., 811 

F.3d 1314, 1324 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (claims for computer-implemented system to enable borrowers 

to shop for loan packages anonymously were abstract where “[t]he series of steps covered by the 

asserted claims . . . could all be performed by humans without a computer”).

At all events, however, the Federal Circuit has emphasized that “the first step of the [Alice] 

inquiry is a meaningful one.” Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1335. In particular, the court’s task is not to 

determine whether the claims merely “involve” an abstract idea at some level, see id., but rather to 

examine the claims “in their entirety to ascertain whether their character as a whole is directed to 

excluded subject matter,” Internet Patents, 790 F.3d at 1346.

2. Alice Step Two: Evaluation of Abstract Claims for an Inventive Concept

A claim drawn to an abstract idea is not necessarily invalid if the claim’s limitations—

considered individually or as an ordered combination—serve to “transform the claims into a 

patent-eligible application.” Content Extraction, 776 F.3d at 1348. Thus, the second step of the 

Alice analysis (the search for an “inventive concept”) asks whether the claim contains an element 

or combination of elements that “ensure[s] that the patent in practice amounts to significantly 

more than a patent upon the [abstract idea] itself.” 573 U.S. at 217 (citation omitted).

The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that transforming an abstract idea to a patenteligible application of the idea requires more than simply reciting the idea followed by “apply it.” 

Id. at 221 (quoting Mayo, 566 U.S. at 72). In that regard, the Federal Circuit has repeatedly held 

that “[f]or the role of a computer in a computer-implemented invention to be deemed meaningful 

in the context of this analysis, it must involve more than performance of ‘well-understood, routine, 

[and] conventional activities previously known to the industry.’” Content Extraction, 776 F.3d at 

1347-48 (alteration in original) (quoting Alice, 573 U.S. at 225); see also Mortg. Grader, 811 F.3d 

at 1324-25 (holding that “generic computer components such as an ‘interface,’ ‘network,’ and 

‘database’ . . . do not satisfy the inventive concept requirement”); Bancorp Servs., 687 F.3d at 

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1278 (“To salvage an otherwise patent-ineligible process, a computer must be integral to the 

claimed invention, facilitating the process in a way that a person making calculations or 

computations could not.”). 

Likewise, “[i]t is well-settled that mere recitation of concrete, tangible components is 

insufficient to confer patent eligibility to an otherwise abstract idea” where those components 

simply perform their “well-understood, routine, conventional” functions. In re TLI Commc’ns 

LLC, 823 F.3d at 613 (citation omitted) (ruling that a “telephone unit,” a “server,” an “image 

analysis unit,” and a “control unit” limitations did not supply an inventive concept because “the 

recited physical components behave exactly as expected according to their ordinary use”). In 

Alice, for instance, the U.S. Supreme Court held “the use of a computer to obtain data, adjust 

account balances, and issue automated instructions” are “generic computer functions.” 573 U.S. at 

225. “The question of whether a claim element or combination of elements is well-understood, 

routine and conventional to a skilled artisan in the relevant field is a question of fact” that “must 

be proven by clear and convincing evidence.” Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1368. Moreover, “[t]he 

mere fact that something is disclosed in a piece of prior art, for example, does not mean it was 

well-understood, routine, and conventional.” Id. at 1369. 

In addition, the U.S. Supreme Court explained in Bilski that “limiting an abstract idea to 

one field of use or adding token postsolution components [does] not make the concept patentable.” 

561 U.S. at 612 (citing Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 584 (1978)); see also Alice, 573 U.S. at 222 

(same). The Federal Circuit has similarly stated that attempts “to limit the use of the abstract idea 

to a particular technological environment” are insufficient to render an abstract idea patenteligible. Ultramercial, Inc. v. Hulu, LLC, 772 F.3d 709, 716 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (internal quotation 

marks and citation omitted); see also Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Bank (USA), 792 

F.3d 1363, 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“An abstract idea does not become nonabstract by limiting the 

invention to a particular field of use or technological environment, such as the Internet.”).

By contrast, a “non-conventional and non-generic arrangement of known, conventional 

pieces” can amount to an inventive concept. BASCOM Glob. Internet Servs., Inc. v. AT&T 

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Mobility LLC, 827 F.3d 1341, 1350 (Fed. Cir. 2016). For example, in BASCOM, the Federal 

Circuit addressed a claim for Internet content filtering performed at “a specific location, remote 

from the end-users, with customizable filtering features specific to each end user.” Id. Because 

this “specific location” was different from the location where Internet content filtering was 

traditionally performed, the Federal Circuit concluded this was a “non-conventional and nongeneric arrangement of known, conventional pieces” that provided an inventive concept. Id. As 

another example, in Amdocs (Israel) Ltd. v. Openet Telecom, Inc., the Federal Circuit held that 

claims relating to solutions for managing accounting and billing data over large, disparate 

networks recited an inventive concept because they contained “specific enhancing limitation[s] 

that necessarily incorporate[d] the invention’s distributed architecture.” 841 F.3d 1288, 1301 (Fed. 

Cir. 2016), cert. denied, 138 S. Ct. 469 (Nov. 27, 2017). The use of a “distributed architecture,” 

which stored accounting data information near the source of the information in the disparate 

networks, transformed the claims into patentable subject matter. Id.

3. Preemption Concerns 

In addition to these specific guidelines, courts sometimes find it helpful to assess claims 

against the policy rationale for § 101. The U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that the “concern 

that undergirds [its] § 101 jurisprudence” is that of preemption. Alice, 573 U.S. at 223. For that 

reason, courts have readily concluded that a claim is not patent-eligible when the claim is so 

abstract that it preempts “use of [the claimed] approach in all fields” and “would effectively grant 

a monopoly over an abstract idea.” Bilski, 561 U.S. at 612. The converse, however, is not true: 

“[W]hile preemption may signal patent ineligible subject matter, the absence of complete 

preemption does not demonstrate patent eligibility.” FairWarning, 839 F.3d at 1098 (internal 

quotation marks omitted). That is, a claim is not eligible simply because its application of the 

abstract idea is narrow and other uses remain. See, e.g., Ariosa Diagnostics, Inc. v. Sequenom, 

Inc., 788 F.3d 1371, 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“Sequenom’s attempt to limit the breadth of the claims 

by showing alternative uses of cffDNA outside of the scope of the claims does not change the 

conclusion that the claims are directed to patent ineligible subject matter.”). 

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III. DISCUSSION

In their consolidated motion to dismiss, Defendants contend that the asserted claims of the 

Patents-in-Suit are invalid because the claims fall within the “abstract ideas” exception to § 101. 

The Court agrees. The Court begins its analysis by identifying representative claims. The Court 

then applies the Alice framework described above to each of representative claims, beginning with 

Step One and then moving to Step Two. 

A. Scope of Analysis and Representative Claims

The Federal Circuit has held that a district court need not expressly address each asserted 

claim where the court concludes that particular claims are representative because all the claims are 

“substantially similar and linked to the same abstract idea.” Content Extraction, 776 F.3d at 1348 

(quotation marks omitted); see also Mortg. Grader, 811 F.3d at 1324 n.6 (court did not err by 

discussing only one claim where claims did not “differ in any manner that is material to the patenteligibility inquiry”); Alice, 573 U.S. 224-25 (finding 208 claims to be patent-ineligible based on 

analysis of one representative claim). For instance, claims that “contain only minor differences in 

terminology but require performance of the same basic process, . . . should rise or fall together.” 

Smart Sys. Innovations, LLC v. Chicago Transit Auth., 873 F.3d 1364, 1368 n.7 (Fed. Cir. 2017) 

(internal quotation marks omitted). Courts may likewise “treat a claim as representative . . . if the 

patentee does not present any meaningful argument for the distinctive significance of any claim 

limitations not found in the representative claim.” Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1365. 

Here, Defendants contend that Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent is representative of all asserted 

claims across the four Patents-in-Suit. Plaintiff does not believe Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent is 

representative, and instead insists that the Court analyze each individual claim at issue in the 

instant case. 

The Court takes a different approach from the ones urged by the parties. The Court finds 

that the asserted claims can be grouped into four categories and designates a different 

representative claim for each category. First, claim 1 of the ’002 Patent is representative of the 

claims that disclose a five-step method for classifying and then routing a communication between 

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participants. Second, claim 9 of the ’549 Patent is representative of the claims disclosing a 

particular method for classifying the communication, viz., searching a “database” for the “new 

second participant identifier.” ’549 Patent at 38:48-54. Third, claim 26 of the ’002 Patent is

representative of the claims in which the communication is “blocked” instead of being 

“established.” ’002 Patent at 42:32-38. Fourth, claim 21 of the ’762 Patent is representative of 

the claims in which an “error message” is produced. ’762 Patent at 40:10-14. 

The following table summarizes the asserted claims and the corresponding representative 

claims. 

Representative Claim Asserted Claims

Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent Claims 12, 22, 29 of the ’002 Patent

Claims 2, 6, 17 of the ’549 Patent

Claim 9 of the ’549 Patent Claim 24 of the ’549 Patent

Claims 3, 4, 12 of the ’330 Patent 

Claims 16, 30 of the ’762 Patent

Claim 26 of the ’002 Patent Claim 14 of the ’330 Patent

Claim 12 of the ’549 Patent

Claim 21 of the ’762 Patent Claims 6, 26 of the ’762 Patent

1. Representative Claim 1: Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent

Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent (“Representative Claim 1”) recites:

1. A method of routing a communication in a communication 

network system between an Internet-connected first participant 

device associated with a first participant and a second participant 

device associated with a second participant, the method 

comprising:

in response to initiation of the communication by the first 

participant device, receiving, by a controller comprising at least 

one processor, over an Internet protocol (IP) network a first 

participant identifier and a second participant identifier, the 

second participant identifier being associated with the second 

participant device; 

causing the at least one processor to access a database comprising 

user profiles, using the first participant identifier, each user profile 

associating a respective plurality of attributes with a respective 

user, to locate a plurality of first participant attributes;

processing the second participant identifier, using the at least one 

processor, based on at least one of the plurality of first participant 

attributes obtained from a user profile for the first participant, to 

produce a new second participant identifier; 

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classifying the communication, based on the new second 

participant identifier, as a system communication or an external 

network communication, using the at least one processor; 

when the communication is classified as a system communication, 

producing a system routing message identifying an Internet 

address associated with the second participant device, using the at 

least one processor, wherein the system routing message causes 

the communication to be established to the second participant 

device; and

when the communication is classified as an external network 

communication, producing an external network routing message 

identifying an Internet address associated with a gateway to an 

external network, using the at least one processor, wherein the 

external network routing message causes the communication to 

the second participant device to be established using the gateway 

to the external network.

Id. at 37:30 – 38:2. 

In plainer terms, Representative Claim 1 discloses a method of routing a communication 

between a first participant and a second participant by (1) receiving identifiers associated with the 

first and second participants when a communication is initiated, (2) searching a database using the 

first participant identifier and locating a collection of attributes associated with the first 

participant, (3) processing the second participant identifier using at least one first participant

attribute to produce a new second participant identifier, (4) classifying the communication as a 

“system communication” or an “external network communication” “based on” the new second 

participant identifier, and (5) producing a “routing message” that causes the communication to be 

established either within the system or through a gateway to an external network. 

The Court finds that Representative Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent is representative of claims 

12, 22, and 29 of the ’002 Patent and claims 2, 6, and 17 of the ’549 Patent. Although these

claims span two different patents, all of them describe inventions that are “substantially similar 

to,” Content Extraction, 776 F.3d at 1348, or “require performance of,” Smart Sys. Innovations, 

873 F.3d at 1368 n.7, the five-step method in Representative Claim 1. See, e.g., Elec. Power Grp., 

830 F.3d at 1352 (using a single claim as representative of sixteen claims across three patents). 

Claims 12, 22, and 29 of the ’002 Patent 

Turning to the ’002 Patent, Claim 12 is the only other independent asserted claim in the 

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’002 Patent. Claim 12 discloses “an apparatus for routing communications in a communication 

system” that comprises “a controller comprising at least one processor” that carries out the steps 

disclosed in Representative Claim 1. Id. at 40:18-59. The Federal Circuit has repeatedly

emphasized that “the format of the various method, system, and media claims . . . ‘does not change 

the patent eligibility analysis under § 101.’” Bancorp Servs., 687 F.3d at 1276-77. “[S]ystem

claims that closely track method claims and are grounded by the same meaningful limitations will 

generally rise and fall together.” Accenture Glob. Servs., GmbH v. Guidewire Software, Inc., 728 

F.3d 1336, 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2013). Because claim 12 “essentially implement[s] the process of” 

Representative Claim 1 using generic electronic components, it offers no “meaningful limitations

beyond the method claim[].” Id. at 1342. 

The Court next addresses claim 29 because it depends from claim 12. Claim 29 is directed 

to step (5) of the process described in Representative Claim 1. Specifically, claim 29 discloses 

that the “Internet address associated with a gateway to an external network,” ’002 Patent at 37:64-

65, is “select[ed] from among a plurality of Internet addresses associated with a respective 

plurality of gateways to the external network,” id. at 42:49-54. This addition does not describe the 

claimed apparatus but rather the architecture of the underlying communication system upon which 

the apparatus operates. The description claim 29 provides, moreover, is scant. Claim 29 discloses 

only that the communications system has more than one gateway to the external network. Of 

particular relevance, claim 29 does not specify how the particular gateway is selected from the 

plurality of gateways. Nor does claim 29 provide any instruction as to how the communication 

system is designed to support multiple gateways. Indeed, as discussed in greater detail below, the 

patent never defines “gateway” to be anything other than a preexisting, generic portal between the 

private network and the external network. See Part III.C.1.a. Thus, the additional limitation in 

claim 29 is not “distinctive,” Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1365, and does not make claim 29 

materially different from claim 12 or, by extension, Representative Claim 1. 

The same is true of claim 22, which depends from Representative Claim 1. Claim 22

discloses that “producing the system routing message comprises causing the at least one processor 

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to determine the Internet address associated with the second participant device based on the user 

profile for the second participant.” ’002 Patent at 41:55-60. This limitation purports to flesh out 

step (5) of the process described in Representative Claim 1, which requires “producing a system 

routing message identifying an Internet address associated with the second participant device, 

using the at least one processor.” Yet, the contribution made by claim 22 is negligible. 

Representative Claim 1 already disclosed that the routing message “identif[ies]” the “Internet 

address associated with the second participant device” and that the “at least one processor” 

accomplishes this task. Claim 22 adds only that the Internet address is determined “based on the 

user profile for the second participant.” The claim does not disclose how the “user profile” is 

used, it says only that the determination is “based on” the “user profile.” This conclusory 

reference to a “user profile” hardly rises to the level of a “meaningful limitation,” Accenture Glob. 

Servs., 728 F.3d at 1341, that transmutes claim 22 into a different idea for purposes of patenteligibility. See Mortg. Grader, 811 F.3d at 1324 n.6.

Claims 2, 17, and 6 of the ’549 Patent

The Court next addresses claims 2, 17, and 6 of the ’549 Patent. Claim 2 depends from 

independent claim 1, which is not asserted. Claim 1 of the ’549 Patent is a method claim 

disclosing the same steps as Representative Claim 1, with “minor differences in terminology.” 

Smart Sys. Innovations, 873 F.3d at 1368 n.7. Plaintiff does not contend otherwise. The Court 

finds that claim 1 of the ’549 Patent embodies “the same basic process,” id., as Representative 

Claim 1 and is therefore substantially similar to Representative Claim 1. Claim 2 of the ’549 

Patent then merely clarifies that, at step (5), a system communication is established “over an 

Internet Protocol (IP) network.” ’549 Patent at 37:64-67. This limitation is inherent in claim 1, 

which already discloses that the system communication is established “through” “an Internet 

Protocol (IP) address,” id. at 52-53. Moreover, Plaintiff again does not make a “meaningful 

argument,” Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1365, that claim 2 is distinct from claim 1 of the ’549 Patent 

or Representative Claim 1. Accordingly, the Court determines that claim 2 of the ’549 Patent is 

adequately represented by Representative Claim 1. 

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Plaintiff likewise does not point to any distinctive limitations in claim 17 of the ’549 

Patent. Claim 17 is an independent system claim for an apparatus “comprising at least one 

processor” configured to implement the method disclosed by claim 1 of the ’549 Patent. ’549 

Patent at 40:51 – 41:22. The Court finds that the addition of a generic “processor” does not rank 

as a “meaningful limitation,” Accenture Glob. Servs., 728 F.3d at 1341, beyond claim 1 of the 

’549 Patent, and that claim 17 is therefore also represented by Representative Claim 1. 

Claim 6 is another method claim that depends from claim 1 of the ’549 Patent. Plaintiff 

argues Claim 6 is distinctive because it recites a “specific classification method[].” Pl. Opp. at 5. 

The Court disagrees. Claim 6 and Representative Claim 1 disclose “performance of the same 

basic process,” Smart Sys. Innovations, 873 F.3d at 1368 n.7, of classifying a communication as 

either a “system communication” or an “external network communication.” Claim 6 discloses that 

the communication is classified based upon “whether the second participant device is operably 

configured to communicate via the communication system.” ’549 Patent at 38:25-29. In so doing, 

Claim 6 merely explicates what was already inherent in the terms “external network 

communication” or “system communication”—namely, that (i) a system communication is with a 

second participant device that “is operably configured to communicate via the communication

system,” and (ii) an external network communication is with a second participant device that is 

“not operably configured to communicate via the communication system.” Id. at 38:27-33. Claim 

6 thus appends nothing material to Representative Claim 1. 

Accordingly, Representative Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent is representative of claims 12, 22, 

and 29 of the ’002 Patent and claims 2, 6, and 17 of the ’549 Patent. 

2. Representative Claim 9: Claim 9 of the ’549 Patent

Next is claim 9 of the ’549 Patent (“Representative Claim 9”), which depends from claim 8

of the ’549 Patent.

3

 ’549 Patent at 38:55. Claims 8 and 9 of the ’549 Patent recite:

8. The method of claim 1, wherein classifying the communication 

comprises causing the at least one processor to:

 

3 Claim 8 of the ’549 is not asserted by Plaintiff. 

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determine whether a profile associated with the new second 

participant identifier exists in the database, and 

when a profile associated with the new second participant identifier 

does not exist in the database, classify the communication as an 

external network communication. 

9. The method of claim 8, wherein,

when a profile associated with the new second participant identifier 

exists in the database, causing the at least one processor to classify 

the communication as a system communication.

Id. at 38:48-59. 

Representative Claim 9 discloses a method of routing a communication between a first 

participant and a second participant by (1) receiving an identifier associated with the second

participant when a communication is initiated, (2) searching a memory and locating at least one

attribute associated with the first participant, (3) processing the second participant identifier using 

at least one first participant attribute to produce a new second participant identifier, (4) classifying

the communication as a “system communication” or an “external network communication” based 

upon whether a profile associated with the new second participant identifier exists in a database,

and (5) producing a “routing message” that causes the communication to be established either 

within the system or through a gateway to an external network. 

Of relevance here, Representative Claim 9 depends from claim 8 of the ’549 Patent, which 

itself depends from claim 1 of the ’549 Patent. Representative Claim 9 appends to claim 1 of the 

’549 Patent an additional limitation at step (4). Whereas claim 1 of the ’549 Patent broadly recites

“classifying” the communication, Representative Claim 9 specifies a particular method of 

“classifying,” viz., “classifying based on whether a profile associated with the processed second 

participant identifier exists in a database.” Pl. Opp. at 5. To be precise, the communication is 

classified as a “system communication” if the profile exists in the database and as an “external 

network communication” if not. The Court finds, and Plaintiff does not dispute, that this 

additional limitation is the only material difference between Representative Claim 9 and claim 1 of 

the ’549 Patent. Moreover, the Court already found and Plaintiff does not dispute that claim 1 of 

the ’549 Patent is substantially similar to Representative Claim 1 of the ’002 Patent. See supra 

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Part III.A.1. 

As set out below, Representative Claim 9 of the ’549 Patent is representative of claim 24 

of the ’549 Patent; claims 3, 4, 12 of the ’330 Patent; and claims 16, 30 of the ’762 Patent. 

Claim 24 of the ’549 Patent

Claim 24 of the ’549 Patent is an apparatus claim comprising “at least one processor” 

configured to carry out the steps recited in Representative Claim 9. See id. at 42:1-8. Plaintiff 

does not dispute this characterization. Hence, as above, claim 24 merely implements the method 

in Representative Claim 9 and offers no distinctive limitation that is material to the § 101 analysis.

Claims 3, 4, 12 of the ’330 Patent 

The Court next turns to claims 3, 4, and 12 of the ’330 Patent. Claims 3 and 4 depend 

from independent claim 1 of the ’330 Patent, which is not asserted. Like Representative Claim 9, 

claim 1 of the ’330 Patent recites a method for routing a communication between an Internetconnected first participant device and a second participant device. Plaintiff believes this claim 

differs from Representative Claim 9 in two respects, neither of which holds water. First, Plaintiff 

contends claim 1 “recite[s] different aspects of system architecture for establishing a 

communication” at step (5) of the process laid out in Representative Claim 9. Pl. Opp. at 5. That 

is, Representative Claim 9 states that the routing message for a system communication identifies 

“an Internet Protocol (IP) address of a network element through which the communication is to be 

routed,” ’549 Patent at 37:49-54, whereas claim 1 of the ’330 Patent states that the same routing 

message identifies “an Internet address of a communication system node associated with the 

second participant device,” ’330 Patent at 37:57-60. See Pl. Opp. at 5. Yet, the generic term 

“communication system node” provides no additional detail over the equally generic term 

“network element.” There is nothing in the patent or Plaintiff’s brief to suggest that claim 1 does 

anything more than substitute one generic computing term for another.

Second, Plaintiff points out that claim 1 calls for “comparing at least a portion of the 

second participant identifier . . . with at least one of the plurality of first participant attributes,”

’330 Patent at 37:46-48, rather than “processing the second participant identifier, based on the at 

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least one first participant attribute,” ’549 Patent at 37:44-46. See Pl. Opp. at 5 n.7. Again, the 

Court sees no discernible difference between the terms “comparing” and “processing,” as neither 

claim discloses how the comparison or processing is accomplished. Accordingly, the Court 

concludes neither of these “minor differences in terminology,” Smart Sys. Innovations, 873 F.3d at

1368 n.7, differentiates claim 1 or dependent claims 3 and 4 of the ’330 Patent from 

Representative Claim 9. 

Nor do the additional limitations contained in claims 3 and 4 of the ’330 Patent render 

these claims materially different. Claim 3 appends to step (5) of claim 1 that the “communication 

system node” is “one of a plurality of communication system nodes each operably configured to 

provide communications services to a plurality of communication systems subscribers.” ’330 

Patent at 38:13-22; see Pl. Opp. at 5. But as already explained with regard to claim 29 of the ’002 

Patent, this limitation only addresses the structure of the communication system and not the 

claimed process, for it does not disclose how the relevant node is selected from the plurality of 

nodes. Consequently, the limitation does not transform the “basic process,” Smart Sys. 

Innovations, 873 F.3d at 1368 n.7, to which claim 3 is directed. 

As for claim 4, Plaintiff does not allege that the claim contains any distinctive limitations. 

See Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1365. Representative Claim 9 is therefore representative of claims 3 

and 4 of the ’330 Patent in all relevant respects. 

Claim 12 of the ’330 Patent is an independent apparatus claim. However, like several 

other apparatus claims already analyzed, claim 12 simply implements the method in claim 1 of the 

’330 Patent using a generic “controller comprising at least one processor in communication with at 

least one memory storing processor readable instructions.” Id. at 39:9-19. Plaintiff does not argue 

otherwise. Claim 12 is thus directed to the “same basic process” as claim 1 of the ’330 Patent and 

Representative Claim 9. 

Claims 16, 30 of the ’762 Patent 

As for claims 16 and 30 of the ’762 Patent, Plaintiff does not present any argument—let 

alone a “meaningful argument”—for “the distinctive significance of any claim limitations not 

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found in the representative claim,” Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1365. Claim 16 of the ’762 Patent

discloses a “non-transitory computer readable medium encoded with program code for directing 

the at least one processor to execute the method of claim 14.” ’762 Patent at 39:25-27. The patent 

does not invent the “non-transitory computer readable medium,” which is simply a generic vessel 

for generic “program code” that “executes” “the method of claim 14.” The method of claim 14, in 

turn, is the same as the method of Representative Claim 9, with minor differences in terminology. 

Claim 16 is thus directed to the method of Representative Claim 9. Similarly, Claim 30 of the 

’762 Patent is a systems claim that implements the method of claim 7, which recites the same five 

steps in Representative Claim 9. Plaintiff, meanwhile, does not specifically dispute any of the 

foregoing. Accordingly, the Court concludes that claims 16 and 30 of the ’762 Patent are directed 

to the “same basic process” as the one recited by Representative Claim 9. 

3. Representative Claim 26: Claim 26 of the ’002 Patent

Claim 26 of the ’002 Patent (“Representative Claim 26”) is representative of the asserted 

claims that disclose “blocking” of the communication. Representative Claim 26 discloses:

26. The method of claim 1, further comprising:

accessing the database to locate communication blocking information 

associated with the second participant, using the at least one 

processor; and

blocking the communication when the communication blocking 

information identifies the first participant identifier.

Id. at 42:32-38. Thus, the communication is not established if there is “blocking information” 

associated with the callee that identifies the caller as someone to be blocked. Representative 

Claim 26 depends from Representative Claim 1 and adds only the above blocking limitation.

There are two other asserted claims that disclose blocking: claim 14 of the ’330 Patent and 

claim 12 of the ’549 Patent. Plaintiff has articulated no specific objection to treating 

Representative Claim 26 as representative of these claims. For that reason, and as confirmed

below, the Court treats Representative Claim 26 as representative of claim 14 of the ’330 Patent

and claim 12 of the ’549 Patent. 

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Claim 14 of the ’330 Patent

Claim 14 of the ’330 Patent is an apparatus claim that depends from claim 12 of the ’330 

Patent, which the Court already found to be represented by Representative Claim 9. The Court 

finds that the added limitations in claim 14—namely, that the apparatus is also configured to 

“access the at least one database to locate communication blocking information associated with 

the second participant” and “block the communication when the communication blocking 

information identifies the first participant identifier,” ’330 Patent at 39:63 – 40:3, simply 

implement the blocking steps recited by Representative Claim 26. Again, a systems claim that 

“essentially implement[s] the process of” a method claim is appropriately analyzed together with 

the method claim. Accenture Glob. Servs., 728 F.3d at 1341.

Claim 12 of the ’549 Patent

Next, claim 12 of the ’549 Patent is a method claim that depends from claim 1 of the ’549

Patent, which the Court already found to be represented by Representative Claim 1 of the ’002. 

Claim 12 recites two limitations not found in claim 1 of the ’549 Patent or Representative Claim 1: 

(i) routing a communication from a first participant to a third participant device when there is no 

blocking information associated with that device, and (ii) blocking of the communication with the 

third participant device. ’549 Patent at 39:22-38. Neither of these limitations is distinctive, 

however. The routing of communication to a potential third participant is accomplished using the 

same process for routing a communication to the second participant disclosed in Representative 

Claim 1 and Representative Claim 26. So too with the blocking of the communication with the 

third participant device: Claim 12 simply applies the process Representative Claim 26 describes

for blocking a communication to the second participant device, namely, “search[ing] a database 

for communication blocking information associated with the third participant device, and if the 

communication blocking information is found, preventing the further communication from being 

established.” Id. at 39:22-29. In other words, claim 12 essentially reiterates the process disclosed 

by Representative Claim 26 with regard to a third participant. Claim 12 therefore requires 

performance of the “same basic process,” Smart Sys. Innovations, 873 F.3d at 1368 n.7, as 

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Representative Claim 26. 

4. Representative Claim 21: Claim 21 of the ’762 Patent

Last, Claim 21 of the ’762 Patent (“Representative Claim 21”) recites:

21. A method of routing communications in a system in which a first 

participant identifier is associated with a first participant registered 

with the system and wherein a second participant identifier is 

associated with a second participant, the first participant being 

associated with a first participant device operable to establish a 

communication using the system to a second participant device 

associated with the second participant, the system comprising at least 

one processor operably configured to execute program code stored on 

at least one memory, the method comprising:

in response to the first participant device initiating the communication 

to the second participant device, receiving the first participant 

identifier and the second participant identifier from the first 

participant device;

using the first participant identifier to locate, via the at least one 

processor, a first participant profile from among a plurality of 

participant profiles that are stored in a database, the first participant 

profile comprising one or more attributes associated with the first 

participant;

when at least one of the one or more attributes and at least a portion 

of the second participant identifier meet a first network classification 

criterion, producing, via the at least one processor, a first network 

routing message, the first network routing message identifying an 

address in the system, the address being associated with the second 

participant device;

when at least one of the one or more attributes and at least a portion 

of the second participant identifier meet a second network 

classification criterion, producing, via the at least one processor, a 

second network routing message, the second network routing 

message identifying an address associated with a gateway to a 

network external to the system, wherein the second network 

classification criterion is met if the second participant is not registered 

with the system; and

when at least one of the one or more attributes meets a third network 

classification criterion, producing, via the at least one processor, an 

error message and causing prevention of the communication from 

being established. 

’762 Patent at 39:41 – 40:14. Put in plain language, Representative Claim 21 recites a method of 

“routing a communication” between a first participant and a second participant by (1) receiving 

identifiers associated with the first and second participants when a communication is initiated, (2) 

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searching a database using the first participant identifier and locating a collection of attributes 

associated with the first participant, (3) applying “network classification criteria” to the second 

participant identifier and one or more of the first participant attributes and, (4)(a) if a “first 

network classification criterion” is met, producing a routing message that causes the 

communication to be established within the system, (4)(b) if a “second network classification 

criterion” is met, producing a routing message that causes the communication to be established 

through a gateway to an external network, or (4)(c) if a “third network classification criterion” is 

met, producing an “error message” and preventing the communication from being established. 

See ’762 Patent at 39:41 – 40:14. The principal difference separating Representative Claim 21 

from Representative Claim 1 is that, under certain circumstances, an error message is produced 

instead of a routing message, and the communication is not established. 

Representative Claim 21 is representative of the two other claims that recite an “error 

message,” claims 6 and 26 of the ’762 Patent. The Court again emphasizes that Plaintiff has not

specifically identified any limitations in claims 6 and 26 that preclude Representative Claim 21 

from being representative. On top of this concession, the Court below confirms that claims 6 and 

26 are substantially similar to Representative Claim 21.

First, claim 6 of the ’762 Patent is a method claim comprising the same three steps, with 

only trivial additions. See ’762 Patent at 38:10-16, 38:31-33. For instance, claim 6 recites that the 

“the error message is sent to a call controller.” Id. at 38:31-33. The specification indicates that 

the purpose of this step is “to notify the caller” of the error. Id. at 20:26-29. However, neither the 

claim nor the specification explains how sending the error message to the call controller ultimately 

leads to notifying the caller. In any event, such notification is no more than “insignificant 

postsolution activity,” which has no bearing on patent-eligibility under § 101. Bilski, 561 U.S. at 

610 (2010); see Flook, 437 U.S. at 590 (notifying the operator of an abnormality is insignificant 

postsolution activity). The Federal Circuit has repeatedly affirmed that merely “displaying the 

results” of an analytical process does not add anything significant to the process itself. See 

Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. IBG LLC, 921 F.3d 1378, 1386 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (displaying P&L 

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values was not “significantly more” than the concept of obtaining those values). Plaintiff does not 

argue otherwise. Moreover, the claim itself fails to disclose notifying the caller of the error, and 

the Federal Circuit has instructed courts not to “import[] limitations from the specification into the 

claims.” See Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2005). 

Claim 26 is a systems claim that implements the method in Representative Claim 21. To 

reiterate, the Federal Circuit made clear that “system claims that closely track method claims and 

are grounded by the same meaningful limitations will generally rise and fall together.” Accenture 

Glob. Servs., 728 F.3d at 1341. Claim 26 appears to add only one element: a generic “controller”

that is configured to carry out Representative Claim 21’s method. This “generic electronic 

component” is not a “meaningful limitation” under Accenture. Id. at 1342. 

In sum, Representative Claim 21 is representative of claims 6 and 26 of the ’762 Patent. 

B. Alice Step One: The Asserted Claims are Directed to an Abstract Idea

Having concluded that four claims are together representative of the twenty asserted 

claims, the Court now conducts the Alice analysis for the representative claims. The Court begins 

with Alice Step One, at which the Court assesses “whether the claims at issue are directed to a 

patent-ineligible concept”—here, an abstract idea. The Court first analyzes Representative Claim 

1, the only claim for which the parties have provided substantial briefing, and then turns to the 

remaining representative claims. 

1. Representative Claim 1 is Directed to an Abstract Idea 

The Step One inquiry considers the claims “in light of the specification” to determine 

“whether their character as a whole is directed to excluded subject matter.” Enfish, 822 F.3d at 

1335 (citation omitted). Accordingly, the Court conducts its analysis by first identifying what the 

“character as a whole” of Representative Claim 1 is “directed to,” and then determining whether 

this is an abstract idea. In distilling the character of a claim, the Court is careful not to express the 

claim’s focus at an unduly “high level of abstraction . . . untethered from the language of the 

claims,” but rather at a level consonant with the level of generality or abstraction expressed in the 

claims themselves. Id. at 1337; see also Thales Visionix, 850 F.3d at 1347 (“We must therefore 

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ensure at step one that we articulate what the claims are directed to with enough specificity to 

ensure the step one inquiry is meaningful.”). At the same time, even “lengthy and numerous” 

claims may be reduced to a basic abstract concept. See Elec. Power Grp., 830 F.3d at 1351. The 

Court’s inquiry should therefore “center[] on determining the ‘focus’ of the claims.” Two-Way 

Media Ltd. v. Comcast Cable Commc’ns, LLC, 874 F.3d 1329, 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2017), cert. denied, 

139 S. Ct. 378 (2018). 

The Court holds that the character of Representative Claim 1 is an abstract idea: the idea of 

routing a communication based on characteristics of the participants. Claim 1 presents this

abstract idea in five steps: (1) receiving identifiers associated with the first and second participants

when a communication is initiated, (2) searching a database using the first participant identifier 

and locating a collection of attributes associated with the first participant, (3) processing the 

second participant identifier using at least one first participant attribute to produce a new second 

participant identifier, (4) classifying the communication as a “system communication” or an 

“external network communication” “based on” the new second participant identifier, and (5) 

producing a “routing message” that causes the communication to be established either within the 

system or through a gateway to an external network. See ’002 Patent at 37:30 – 38:2. 

Although there is no “single, universal” definition of an abstract idea, the Court looks to

past patentable subject matter cases as helpful guideposts. Amdocs, 841 F.3d at 1294. Three 

themes of the U.S. Supreme Court’s and the Federal Circuit’s jurisprudence demonstrate that

Representative Claim 1 is directed to an abstract idea: (a) the claimed method discloses only 

generalized steps drafted in purely functional terms; (b) it is analogous to well-known, 

longstanding practices; and (c) it does not recite an improvement in computer functionality. The 

Court discusses each in turn. 

a. Representative Claim 1 Discloses Only Generalized Steps Using Purely 

Functional Language

The Federal Circuit has repeatedly said that a claim is abstract if it describes a process in 

“result-based functional language” and fails to “sufficiently describe how to achieve these results 

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in a non-abstract way.” Two-Way Media, 874 F.3d at 1337 (Fed. Cir. 2017); see also Bridge & 

Post, Inc. v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc., No. 2018-1697, 2019 WL 2896449, at *10 (Fed. Cir. July 5, 

2019 (“The distinction between claims that recite functions or results (the ‘what it does’ aspect of 

the invention) and those that recite concrete means for achieving particular functions or results 

(the ‘how it does it’ aspect of the invention) is an important indicator of whether a claim is 

directed to an abstract idea.”). “Indeed, the essentially result-focused, functional character of 

claim language has been a frequent feature of claims held ineligible under § 101.” Elec. Power 

Grp., 830 F.3d at 1356. For that reason, claims reciting “[g]eneralized steps to be performed on a 

computer using conventional computer activity are abstract.” RecogniCorp, LLC v. Nintendo Co., 

Ltd., 855 F.3d 1322, 1326 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks omitted). 

For instance, in Vehicle Intelligence and Safety LLC v. Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC, the 

patent-in-suit claimed methods and systems for screening equipment operators using an “expert 

system” to detect potential impairment. 635 Fed. Appx. 914, 916 (2015). The expert system 

apparently measured equipment operator characteristics and used this information to determine if 

the operator is impaired. Id. But “critically absent from the entire patent is how the . . . decision 

module determines if an operator is impaired based on these measurements.” Id. at 918. The 

Federal Circuit therefore found the patent to be abstract due to “the absence of any details about 

how the ‘expert system’ works.” Id. at 917. 

The Federal Circuit’s recent decision in Innovation Sciences, LLC v. Amazon.com, Inc.

further illustrates the problem with result-focused claims. No. 2018-1495, 2019 WL 2762976

(Fed. Cir. July 2, 2019). There, the Federal Circuit held that the disputed claim was “directed to 

the abstract idea of securely processing a credit card transaction with a payment server.” Id. at *3. 

The Federal Circuit explained: 

The claim recites, in merely functional, result-oriented terms, 

receiving credit card payment information at a server different from 

the server on which the item for purchase is listed, sending the 

payment information “to an established financial channel,” receiving 

a “processing decision” from that channel, sending payment 

confirmation, and updating the server supporting the website listing 

the item that the item was purchased. 

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Id. As a result, the Federal Circuit deemed the claim to be “an abstraction—an idea, having no 

particular concrete or tangible form.” Id. (quoting Ultramercial, LLC, 772 F.3d at 715).

So too here. Representative Claim 1 is worded in such broad, functional terms, so as to 

describe a desired result—routing the communication—without explaining how that result is

achieved. 

To begin with, the Patents-in-Suit do not purport to invent Voice-over-IP communication 

systems. The common specification readily concedes the existence of Voice-over-IP systems as of 

2006, the priority date for the Patents-in-Suit. The specification further concedes that existing

Voice-over-IP systems are configured to “enable voice calls to be made within or between IP 

networks, and between an IP network and a switched circuit network (SCN), such as the public 

switched telephone network (PSTN).” ’002 Patent at 1:30-34. Representative Claim 1 is directed 

only to routing such calls. The Patents-in-Suit certainly did not invent call routing. The FAC 

describes the evolution from human operators—who physically connected calls—to automated 

telephone switches, which were used to support analog and digital voice calls. See FAC ¶¶ 15-19. 

The FAC also describes preexisting methods for routing calls initiated by callers on a private

Voice-over-IP network to callees on the PSTN. See FAC ¶¶ 21-22. 

What Representative Claim 1 purports to invent, then, is a “distinct manner of call 

routing.” FAC ¶ 22. The steps in the method include (1) receiving identifiers associated with the 

first and second participants when a communication is initiated, (2) searching a database using the 

first participant identifier and locating a collection of attributes associated with the first 

participant, (3) processing the second participant identifier using at least one first participant

attribute to produce a new second participant identifier, (4) classifying the communication as a 

“system communication” or an “external network communication” “based on” the new second 

participant identifier, and (5) producing a “routing message” that causes the communication to be 

established either within the system or through a gateway to an external network. However, as set 

forth below, the claim recites nothing more than result-focused steps and generic technology. 

Turning first to step (1), Representative Claim 1 recites receiving generic “identifiers” 

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associated with the first and second participants. The Patents-in-Suit do not purport to invent or 

alter such identifiers, which are preexisting components of Voice-over-IP and PSTN 

communication systems. The specification discloses that “[t]he caller identifier field may include 

a PSTN number or a system subscriber username.” ’002 Patent at 17:61-63. As examples of the 

callee identifier, the specification identifies “a callee telephone/videophone number.” Id. at 15:24-

25. In other words, the first and second participant identifiers consist of either a telephone number 

or a username. Neither telephone numbers nor usernames were invented by the ’002 Patent. The 

FAC acknowledges that telephone numbers have been used in call routing since “the turn of the 

20th century,” FAC ¶¶ 16-19, and that Voice-over-IP systems have used “user identifier[s] such as 

an email or nickname” since their advent, FAC ¶ 22. Besides, the ’002 Patent does not disclose 

the creation of the username, which is “assigned upon subscription or registration into the 

system,” i.e., the private network. ’002 Patent at 15:52-53; see, e.g., id at 4:18-20, 15:3-5. Hence, 

the claim’s step of “receiving” “identifiers” associated with the participants amounts to nothing

more than collecting preexisting information. The Federal Circuit has made clear that “collecting 

information, including when limited to particular content (which does not change its character as 

information), is within the realm of abstract ideas.” Credit Acceptance Corp. v. Westlake Servs., 

859 F.3d 1044, 1055–56 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).

At step (2), Representative Claim 1 claims “access[ing] a database comprising user 

profiles” and “locat[ing]” a user profile associated with the first participant identifier. ’002 Patent 

at 37:41-45. First of all, Representative Claim 1 does not cover the initial creation of the database. 

As a result, the claim’s reference to a database is purely generic. Because the database is generic, 

the claim’s command to “access” the database and “locate” a user profile is likewise generic. 

Under the Federal Circuit’s case law, reading a preexisting database and locating information is an 

unpatentable abstract idea. See CyberSource Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc., 654 F.3d 1366, 1372 

(Fed. Cir. 2011) (“[O]btaining information . . . can be performed by a human who simply reads 

records of . . . transactions from a preexisting database.”). By the same token, Representative 

Claim 1 vaguely defines the user profile as “associating a respective plurality of attributes with a 

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respective user.” ’002 Patent at 37:41-45. The claim does not then define the “attributes,” but the

specification makes clear that the Patents-in-Suit did not invent them or the user profile. The 

specification lists example attributes (national dialing digits, international dialing digits, country 

code, local area code, the maximum number of concurrent calls the user is entitled to cause, 

username, see id. at 18:40-58; 19:37-49), but does not explain how they form a user profile. 

Next, at step (3), Representative Claim 1 proceeds to claim “processing” the second 

participant identifier “based on” one or more of the attributes from the first participant’s user 

profile. Id. at 37:46-50. The claim does not disclose what the “processing” entails, or how the 

attributes associated with the first participant are used in processing. The claim states only that the 

processing “produce[s] a new second participant identifier.” Id. In other words, this step is “so 

broadly worded that it encompasses literally” any form of data manipulation. CyberSource Corp., 

654 F.3d at 1373 (step of claim that required “utilizing the map of credit card numbers to 

determine if the credit card transaction is valid” “is so broadly worded that it encompasses literally 

any method for detecting fraud based on the gathered transaction and Internet address data”

(emphasis added)); see also Clarilogic, Inc. v. FormFree Holdings Corp., 681 Fed. App’x 950, 

954 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (“But a method for collection, analysis, and generation of information 

reports, where the claims are not limited to how the collected information is analyzed or reformed, 

is the height of abstraction.” (emphasis added)).

Step (4) of Representative Claim 1 is similarly vague. The claim calls for “classifying the 

communication, based on the new second participant identifier, as a system communication or an 

external network communication.” Id. at 37:51-54. The claim contains no further detail as to how 

the classification is accomplished—for instance, which criteria matter, and how those criteria are 

applied. The specification describes example criteria, but these are equally generic. For instance,

the specification provides, “The process may involve classifying the call as a private network call 

when the re-formatted callee identifier identifies a subscriber to the private network.” Id. at 2:55-

57. Yet, the specification does not explain how to “identify a subscriber to the private network.” 

The specification further provides, “The process may involve causing a database of records to be 

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searched to locate a direct in dial (DID) bank table record associating a public telephone number 

with the reformatted callee identifier . . . and if a DID bank table record is not found, classifying 

the call as a public network call.” Id. at 2:61-67. Moreover, as in step (2), the “database of 

records” is a preexisting database. The Federal Circuit has time and again found methods that 

“collect[] information” and “analyze[] the information according to one of several rules” to be

within “the realm of abstract ideas.” FairWarning IP, LLC v. Iatric Sys., Inc., 839 F.3d 1089, 

1093 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see also Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Erie Indem. Co., 850 F.3d 1315, 

1327 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (“We have previously held other patent claims ineligible for reciting similar 

abstract concepts that merely collect, classify, or otherwise filter data.”).

Finally, step (5) recites “producing” either a “system routing message” or an “external 

routing message.” ’002 Patent at 37:59-60, 37:67 – 38:1. The specification indicates that the

“system routing message” is a “routing message” that “causes the communication to be 

established” within the system, i.e., the private network. ’002 Patent at 37:59-60; 15:4-7. 

Likewise, an “external routing message” is simply a “routing message” that “causes the 

communication to be established” through a gateway to the an external network. ’002 Patent at 

37:67 – 38:1, 15:7-9. Yet, the claim fails to explain how a routing message is produced or how it 

“causes” the communication to be established. The claim says only that the routing message 

“identif[ies] an Internet address associated with” either (a) the second participant device, in the 

case of a system communication, or (b) a gateway to an external network, in the case of an 

external network communication. Figures 15 and 16 of the specification—which are example 

routing messages—confirm that a routing message simply displays information, viz., an Internet 

address corresponding to the callee and certain optional data. See Microsoft Corp., 550 U.S. at 

451 n.12 (holding that information itself is intangible). Critically, however, the claim and the 

specification do not explain how to “identify” the appropriate Internet address. The claim also 

does not provide any link between step (4)—classifying the communication—and step (5)—

producing the routing message. In other words, the routing message simply displays the results of 

some unrevealed, unexplained process for identifying the appropriate Internet address. 

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As just shown, Representative Claim 1 ultimately amounts to nothing more than the 

abstract idea of collecting data, analyzing it, and displaying the results. The Federal Circuit has 

found similar claims to be purely functional. The Federal Circuit has consistently held that 

“claims focused on collecting information, analyzing it, and displaying certain results of the 

collection and analysis” are directed to an abstract idea.” SAP Am., Inc. v. InvestPic, LLC, 898 

F.3d 1161, 1167 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (invalidating a patent proposing a technique for performing 

statistical analysis on investment data), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 2747 (2019); see also In re TLI 

Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 611 (“[T]he concept of classifying an image and storing the image based 

on its classification” is an abstract idea.). In Representative Claim 1, the data involved are 

“identifiers” and “user profiles” associated with the participants, and the results take the form of a 

“routing message.” As already discussed, these limitations are conventional features of a Voiceover-IP system. That the results of the data analysis are displayed in a routing message “serves to 

limit the field of use of the abstract idea to a particular existing technological environment, but it 

does not render the claims any less abstract.” Innovation Scis., 2019 WL 2762976 at *3 (internal 

quotation marks and alterations omitted); see also Symantec Corp., 838 F.3d at 1320 

(“[P]erformance of an abstract concept in the environment of the telephone network is abstract.”). 

Plaintiff argues that Representative Claim 1 is “not merely directed to information 

gathering and analysis,” though the claim involves information processing. Pl. Opp. at 8. 

According to Plaintiff, “the asserted claims do much more—they enable a telephone call for 

example.” Id. What Plaintiff fails to recognize, however, is that Representative Claim 1 does not 

in fact “enable” a telephone call because the claim fails to explain how to carry out the method for 

enabling a telephone call. The Federal Circuit’s decision in Two-Way Media is particularly 

instructive. There, the Federal Circuit held that two patents claiming a method for routing 

“streams of audio and/or visual information” “over a communication network” were directed to an 

abstract idea. 874 F.3d at 1334-35, 1337. The Federal Circuit said that “[t]he claim requires the 

functional results of ‘converting,’ ‘routing,’ ‘monitoring,’ and accumulating records,’” but 

“recite[s] only conventional computer components.” Id. at 1337-38. As a result, the claim 

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“manipulates data but fails to do so in a non-abstract way.” Id. at 1338. Here, too, Representative 

Claim 1 contains no instructions for how each step of the routing process is accomplished. The 

claim simply requires the functional results of “receiving,” “processing,” and “classifying” a call

based on the participant identifiers, and then ultimately “identifying” an appropriate Internet 

address. 

In short, because the claim is bereft of the critical “how it does it” aspect of the invention, 

Bridge & Post, Inc., 2019 WL 2896449, at *10, Representative Claim 1 is directed to the abstract 

idea of routing a communication based on characteristics of the participants.

b. Representative Claim 1 is Analogous to Well-Known, Longstanding 

Practices 

That Representative Claim 1 is analogous to well-known, longstanding practices in 

telephony lends further support to the Court’s conclusion that the claim is directed to an abstract

idea. In particular, Representative Claim 1 simply discloses the concept of call routing, which can 

be—and has been, in the past—accomplished manually. 

Courts have often compared high technology claims to their manual or “brick-and-mortar” 

counterparts in determining whether claims are directed to an abstract idea. For instance, in 

Symantec, the Federal Circuit concluded that claims relating to “receiving, screening, and 

distributing e-mail” were directed to an abstract idea. 838 F.3d at 1316. The claims at issue 

recited a process of receiving email messages and applying business rules to control the delivery 

of the email messages. Id. at 1316–17. The Federal Circuit found these steps analogous to those 

performed by corporate mailrooms, which “receive correspondence, keep business rules defining 

actions to be taken regarding correspondence based on attributes of the correspondence, apply 

those business rules to correspondence, and take certain actions based on the application of 

business rules.” Id. at 1317. The Federal Circuit therefore concluded that, because the claims 

were directed to “fundamental practices long prevalent in our system and methods of organizing 

human activity,” they were directed to an abstract idea. Id. at 1318 (internal quotation marks 

omitted). 

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Here, the Court finds that Representative Claim 1 is analogous to preexisting practices of 

manual call routing, a “fundamental practice long prevalent in our system.” As established above, 

call routing predates the advent of IP-based communication systems. For example, in the early 

days of telephony, the caller would tell a human operator whom the caller wished to call. FAC ¶ 

15. The operator would then “physically pull out a cable associated with the caller’s phone and 

plug the cable into a socket associated with the callee’s telephone.” Id. “If the callee was 

associated with a different switchboard,” the original operator would involve a second operator “to 

bridge the gap to the appropriate switchboard.” Id. 

Turning to more recent times, Plaintiff also concedes the existence of other methods for 

routing calls initiated by callers on a private Voice-over-IP network to callees on the PSTN. See 

FAC ¶¶ 21-22. According to Plaintiff, one conventional method for routing calls between 

different networks is “to require users to input a special code (e.g., a prefix digit of ‘9’)” in order 

to initiate a call on the PSTN; otherwise, the call proceeds on the private network. FAC ¶¶ 24, 30. 

To do so, the caller would first need to ascertain whether the callee is a subscriber to the network. 

Plaintiff places great weight on the fact that the Patents-in-Suit do not require the caller to “ma[ke] 

an affirmative decision when placing a call as to whether the call” is a systems communication or 

an external network communication. FAC ¶ 24. 

In place of requiring the caller to make an affirmative decision, Representative Claim 1 

recites an unspecified “controller comprising at least one processor” that receives the participant 

identifiers and, with the aid of a “database,” classifies the call. First of all, there can be no doubt 

that the “controller comprising at least one processor” is generic computer machinery. In Alice, 

for instance, the U.S. Supreme Court found that a “data processing system” with a 

“communications controller” and “data storage unit” was “purely functional and generic,” and

therefore insufficient to confer patentability. 573 U.S. at 226 (“Nearly every computer will 

include a ‘communications controller’ and a ‘data storage unit’ capable of performing the basic 

calculation, storage, and transmission functions required by the method claims.”). So too here. 

Pursuant to the specification, the controller is “implemented” as a “module” on a “computer.” 

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’002 Patent at 13:51-53. The specification does not assert that the computer containing the 

controller is specialized in any way, rather than being a generic computer. 

The specification actually describes two types of controllers—a “routing controller” and a 

“call controller”—and it is unclear to which Representative Claim 1 refers. In any event, neither is 

defined in anything other than generic terms by the specification. The specification provides that a

routing controller “includes an RC [routing controller] processor circuit.” Id. at 17:65-67. The 

specification goes on to define the RC processor unit as comprising a processor, different types of 

memory, and an input/output port. Id. at 17:67 – 18:3. The specification describes the call 

controller as including a microprocessor, memory, and an input/output port. Id. at 16:41-50, Fig. 

4. As with the computer, there is no indication that the processor, microprocessor, memory, or

input/output port are specialized. In sum, the controller is some unspecified module composed of 

generic computer components and implemented on a generic computer. 

Furthermore, the steps performed by the controller under Representative Claim 1 are no 

different than the ones that would have been previously performed manually by the caller or by a 

human operator. The claim discloses “receiving” identifiers associated with the caller, 

“processing” the callee identifier using various “attributes” of the caller, and directing the call 

accordingly. This basic process is analogous to, for example, a human operator receiving the 

name of the callee from the caller, comparing the switchboard for the callee to the switchboard for 

the caller, and directing the call by plugging the cord into the appropriate socket on the appropriate 

switchboard. In this analogy, the switchboard is akin to the network (i.e., the private network or 

an external network) and the socket is the Internet address. Nor does the controller generate or 

apply novel data in accomplishing the routing process. As just mentioned, the data used by the 

controller include the participant identifiers and the “attributes” associated with the first 

participant. Those attributes include national dialing digits, international dialing digits, country 

code, local area code, the maximum number of concurrent calls the user is entitled to cause, or

username—none of which are unique to the Patents-in-Suit. 

Thus, the claim provides simple automation of a task previously performed manually. The 

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Federal Circuit has “made clear that mere automation of manual processes using generic 

computers does not constitute a patentable improvement in computer technology.” Credit 

Acceptance Corp., 859 F.3d at 1055. Accordingly, although the claim may increase convenience 

for the caller, it is not directed to an improvement in the IP-based communication system. The 

technological elements of the claim are “known telephony technology” performing “routine 

functions.” BroadSoft, Inc. v. CallWave Commc’ns, LLC, 282 F. Supp. 3d 771, 781 (D. Del. 

2017), aff’d, 739 F. App’x 985 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (“When the call processing system receives a call, 

known telephony technology elements perform the routine functions of accessing stored 

information and directing the call in accordance with the stored instructions provided in advance 

by the called party.”). 

Other courts have come to the same conclusion in cases involving call routing. In Parus 

Holdings, Inc. v. Sallie Mae Bank, the claim at issue “focuses on the automated tasks of (1) 

receiving messages via a phone or Internet connection and then transmitting those messages to a 

subscriber by phone or Internet; and (2) receiving a message from a subscriber by phone or 

Internet and then forwarding that message based on rules established by the subscriber.” 137 F. 

Supp. 3d 660, 672 (D. Del. 2015), aff’d, 677 Fed. App’x 682 (Fed. Cir. 2017). The Federal 

Circuit determined that the claim “calls for using a ‘computer and telecommunications network for 

receiving, sending and managing information from a subscriber to the network and from the 

network to a subscriber.’” Id. The Parus Holdings court then found the claim to be abstract 

because the patent claim had “pre-Internet analogs” that could be performed by humans, such as a 

personal assistant directing calls. Id. In the instant case, Representative Claim 1’s method of 

routing a call by a subscriber of a private network involves a “computer and telecommunications 

network” performing similar steps: first, receiving information from the first participant (i.e., the 

SIP invite message, which contains the first and second participant identifiers); second, managing

that information by “processing” it and “classifying” the call based on undisclosed rules; and 

finally, sending a routing message to the network, which causes the call to be connected to the 

second participant. 

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In addition, in Telinit Techs., LLC v. Alteva, Inc., the court considered a “method for 

initiating telephone calls” by: “(1) receiving a data network request; (2) identifying a telephone 

number associated with that request; (3) signaling a switch to make a call; (4) monitoring the call; 

and (5) providing a user with notifications if there is a change in the status of the call.” 2015 WL 

5578604, at *16-17 (E.D. Tex. Sept. 21, 2015). The Telinit court found that this “is precisely the 

function of a telephone operator.” Id. Again, Representative Claim 1 recites similarly broad, 

functional steps for connecting a communication. 

Plaintiff resists the analogy to switchboard operators. Plaintiff argues that, unlike under 

Representative Claim 1, “[o]perators ‘could’ and did routinely route calls based on callee identifier 

alone.” Pl. Opp. at 17. That is because “[i]n PSTN numbering plans, telephone numbers were 

self-interpreting, (e.g., a country code, area code, or exchange code self-evidently facilitated the 

next step in routing).” Id. (emphasis added). Hence, says Plaintiff, operators would not have 

needed to “evaluate” the callee’s identifier based on “a caller’s profile settings (attributes).” Id. 

As already discussed, however, the specification provides that a caller’s “profile” simply 

comprises “attributes,” at least two of which (i.e., country code, local area code) Plaintiff concedes 

were built into PSTN telephone numbers. Moreover, Plaintiff cannot seriously argue that 

“evaluating” a callee identifier is a distinct “method of analysis.” Thus, Plaintiff’s own 

description of PSTN telephone numbers defeats its argument that operators did not use 

information analogous to that recited in the Patents-in-Suit. 

Furthermore, according to Plaintiff’s own account of early human operators, callers simply 

told the operators the name of the person they wished to call. It was presumably the task of the 

operator to determine the appropriate switchboard and to involve a second operator if necessary. 

Just as Representative Claim 1 involves “evaluating” the callee identifier based on the caller’s 

profile, the decision to involve a second operator would require comparing the switchboard of the 

caller to the switchboard of the callee. The Court is therefore unconvinced by Plaintiff’s attempt 

to distinguish Representative Claim 1 from switchboard operators. 

Plaintiff’s counterargument that a person could not “constitute a physical computer that 

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transmits a telephone call over a physical network,” Pl. Opp. at 14, similarly misses the mark. To 

be sure, a human is not a computer. The point is that, “with the exception of generic computerimplemented steps, there is nothing in the claims themselves that foreclose them from being 

performed by a human.” Symantec Corp., 838 F.3d at 1318; see also CyberSource Corp., 654 

F.3d at 1376 (finding claims invalid where “one could mentally perform the fraud detection 

method that underlies both claims 2 and 3 of the ’154 patent,” though the claim involved 

execution of the method “by one or more processors of a computer system”). Put another way, the 

“physical computer” simply acts as a tool to carry out the abstract process. 

Plaintiff also contends that the presence of several physical components—an “Internet 

connected first participant device,” “a physical device, such as a handheld phone or a computer,” 

and “a physical controller”—create a “distinct high technology network environment.” Pl. Opp. at 

7-8. But again, each of the recited components are generic, and are simply invoked as tools to 

carry out the abstract process. Without any “technical details for the tangible components” in the 

claim or the specification, the invention cannot be said to meaningfully limit the abstract idea of 

call routing. In re TLI Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 612 (“The specification fails to provide any 

technical details for the tangible components, but rather predominately describes the system and 

methods in purely functional terms.”). 

The Federal Circuit rejected a similar argument in Affinity Labs of Texas, LLC v. 

DIRECTV, LLC, 838 F.3d 1253 (Fed. Cir. 2016). In that case, the Federal Circuit concluded that 

the claims at issue were directed to the abstract idea of “providing out-of-region access to regional 

broadcast content.” Id. at 1258. The Federal Circuit reasoned that “[t]he practice of conveying 

regional content to out-of-region recipients” had been employed “by nearly every form of media” 

for decades, and was “not tied to any particular technology.” Id. Relevant here, the Federal 

Circuit recognized that the claims described “wireless delivery of regional broadcast content only 

to cellphones,” but “made clear that merely limiting the field of use of the abstract idea to a 

particular existing technological environment does not render the claims any less abstract.” Id. at 

1258–59 (citations omitted). Instead, the idea “can be implemented in myriad ways ranging from

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the low-tech, such as by mailing copies of a local newspaper to an out-of-state subscriber, to the 

high-tech, such as by using satellites to disseminate broadcasts of sporting events.” Id. at 1258. 

Here, the Court likewise finds that Representative Claim 1 is directed to the abstract idea of 

routing a communication based on characteristics of the participants—a “broad and familiar 

concept” that is “untethered to any specific or concrete way of implementing it.” Id. at 1258. 

c. Representative Claim 1 Does Not Recite an Improvement in Computer 

Functionality 

Plaintiff nevertheless contends that Representative Claim 1 is not directed to an abstract 

idea because it discloses an “improvement in the functioning of a computer” under Enfish, 822 

F.3d at 1337. Pl. Opp. at 8-9. In Enfish, the Federal Circuit reversed the district court’s finding 

that the asserted claims were directed to the abstract idea of “storing, organizing, and retrieving 

memory in a logical table.” 822 F.3d at 1337. The Federal Circuit found that “the claims are not 

simply directed to any form of storing tabular data, but instead are specifically directed to a selfreferential table for a computer database.” Id. That self-referential table, said the court, “is a 

specific type of data structure designed to improve the way a computer stores and retrieves data in 

memory.” Id. at 1339. As a result, in contrast to the claims at issue in Alice and Versata—which 

“can readily be understood as simply adding conventional computer components to well-known 

business practices”—the Enfish claims “are directed to an improvement in the functioning of a 

computer.” Id. at 1338. 

Here, Plaintiff believes that the Patents-in-Suit “improve communication routing 

technology and infrastructure in a manner that overcomes technical limitations in prior art 

systems.” Id. at 9. Specifically, Plaintiff alleges four ways in which Representative Claim 1

improves existing communication routing technology: (1) “user-specific handling,” (2) 

“transparent routing,” (3) “resiliency,” and (4) “communication blocking.” Id. at 10-12; see also 

FAC ¶ 31. Defendants respond that Representative Claim 1 “does not improve any specific 

functionality,” and rather “only uses previously known technology to perform purely functional 

steps.” Def. Cons. Mot. to Dismiss at 12. For the following reasons, the Court rejects each of 

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these four alleged improvements. 

(1) “User-specific handling”

The Court begins with “user-specific handling.” By “user-specific handling,” Plaintiff 

apparently means that the method disclosed by Representative Claim 1 “supports user-specific 

calling styles, e.g., calling styles from any continent or country based on the application of userspecific attributes to callee identifiers and network classification criteria to route a call.” FAC ¶ 

32. The claimed method also supports “special callee identifiers such as usernames.” Id. 

According to Plaintiff this is an improvement because “prior art technology required users to place 

a call by using a specific callee identifier format or by following certain dialing conventions.” Pl. 

Opp. at 10. The Court accepts, as it must at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage, Plaintiff’s allegation that 

prior art technology did not support “user-specific calling styles.” See Aatrix Software, Inc. v. 

Green Shades Software, Inc., 882 F.3d 1121, 1129 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (district court could not 

conclude that the claimed “data file” was conventional in light of plaintiff’s allegations to the 

contrary). The Court further accepts that overcoming this problem would constitute a meaningful 

improvement in call routing technology. Nevertheless, Representative Claim 1 is not directed to

this improvement because the claim does not disclose how to achieve the alleged improvement. 

“[C]laims that are ‘so result-focused, so functional, as to effectively cover any solution to an 

identified problem’ are frequently held ineligible under section 101.” Affinity Labs, 838 F.3d at 

1265 (quoting Elec. Power Grp., 830 F.3d at 1356). 

Two-Way Media again provides a helpful guidepost. There, plaintiff Two-Way Media 

asserted that “the claim solves various technical problems, including excessive loads on a source 

server, network congestion, unwelcome variations in delivery times, scalability of networks, and 

lack of precise recordkeeping.” 874 F.3d at 1339. In analyzing whether the claim solved those 

problems, the Federal Circuit emphasized that the inquiry “must turn to any requirements for how

the desired result is achieved.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in original). The 

Federal Circuit then found that “claim 1 here only uses generic functional language to achieve 

these purported solutions,” and so was abstract. Id. Similarly, in Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, 

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Inc., the Federal Circuit rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the claimed “attention manager” is 

directed to a “technical improvement to display devices.” 896 F.3d 1335, 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2018). 

There, as in Two-Way Media, the claim “simply demand[ed] the production of a desired result 

(non-interfering display of two information sets) without any limitation on how to produce that 

result.” Id. As the Federal Circuit put it, “Instead of claiming a solution for producing that result,

the claim in effect encompasses all solutions.” Id. 

Rather than “patenting a particular concrete solution to [the] problem” of user-specific 

calling styles, Representative Claim 1 “attempt[s] to patent the abstract idea of a solution to the 

problem in general.” Electric Power, 830 F.3d at 1356. In Plaintiff’s own words, the claim 

overcomes the limitations of prior art technology “by evaluating a called party identifier based on 

profile settings (‘attributes’) associated with the calling party.” Pl. Opp. at 10. But any call 

routing system configured to deal with multiple calling styles would necessarily involve 

“evaluating” a called party identifier. Critically, the claims do not explain how the attributes are 

used to evaluate the called party identifier. As a result, Representative Claim 1 “recite[s] the what 

of the invention, but none of the how that is necessary to turn the abstract idea into a patenteligible application.” TDE Petroleum Data, 657 Fed. App’x. at 993 (emphases in original). It 

therefore cannot be said that Representative Claim 1 is directed to “user-specific handling.” 

(2) “Transparent routing”

Plaintiff’s claim that Representative Claim 1 discloses “transparent routing” similarly falls 

short. According to Plaintiff, the claimed method routes a call “transparently to the user, without 

the user specifying which network to use” (such as by dialing a predefined prefix like the number 

9). Pl. Opp. at 11; see also FAC ¶ 36. Plaintiff alleges this is an improvement because “the caller 

may not, and need not, know the network location of the called party.” Pl. Opp. at 11. However, 

these allegations are refuted by the claim and the specification. See Aatrix, 890 F.3d at 1358 (“[A]

court need not accept as true allegations that contradict matters properly subject to judicial notice 

or by exhibit, such as the claims and the patent specification.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). 

Defendant is correct that the claim and the specification “do not specify what information is 

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shared with participants or what the user must manually specify.” Def. Reply at 7. That is, the 

specification explains that the controller receives the “callee identifier” “from the calling 

subscriber,” ’002 Patent at 15:1-2—in other words, the caller must provide the callee identifier. 

Yet, the claim and the specification never indicate that the callee identifier does not contain

information about “which network to use.” On the contrary, the specification defines the callee 

identifier as, “e.g., a callee telephone/videophone number.” Id. at 15:24-25. Plaintiff itself argues

that conventional telephone numbers are “self-interpreting,” in that calls could be routed based 

upon the telephone number alone. Pl. Opp. at 17. The callee’s network must be known in order to 

successfully route a call, which suggests a conventional telephone number does contain 

information about the callee’s network. In providing the callee’s telephone number, then, the 

caller may simultaneously be specifying “which network to use.” 

Even if it is true that the claimed method obviates the need for the caller to actively specify 

the appropriate network, that alone is not sufficient to make Representative Claim 1 non-abstract.

As discussed at length above, Representative Claim 1 simply automates the steps that would have 

been performed manually by the caller. Without more, “mere automation of manual processes 

using generic computers does not constitute a patentable improvement in computer technology.” 

Credit Acceptance Corp., 859 F.3d at 1055. Eliminating manual entry by the caller is, of course, 

inherent in such automation. See Voit Techs., LLC v. Del-Ton, Inc., 757 F. App’x 1000, 1003–04 

(Fed. Cir. 2019) (claims directed to “improved speed or efficiency inherent with applying the 

abstract idea on a computer” are still abstract). The Court must therefore agree with Defendant 

that Representative Claim 1 is not directed to transparent routing. 

(3) “Resiliency”

The Court also rejects Plaintiff’s contention that Representative Claim 1 provides 

“resiliency.” Plaintiff uses the term “resiliency” to mean that the communication system “can 

provide reliable service to large areas including countries and continents” with “very large 

number[s] of subscribers.” FAC ¶ 37; see also Pl. Opp. at 12. Prior systems—i.e., the Public 

Switched Telephone Network (“PSTN”) and private branch exchanges (“PBXs”)—were unable to 

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provide reliable service because they “did not always have other nodes able to take up the load if a 

particular node failed” or if there was a “burst[] of excessive demand.” FAC ¶ 37 (internal 

quotation marks and alterations omitted). The communication system recited in Representative 

Claim 1 allegedly overcomes these limitations by “flexibly assigning nodes to particular 

geographical areas, including the option of adding redundant nodes with overlapping 

responsibility for load sharing.” Id.

Again, the Court accepts all of these allegations as true. The “resiliency” Plaintiff 

describes, however, is not disclosed by Representative Claim 1. Representative Claim 1 is 

directed to a method for routing a communication made on a communication system (i.e., an IPbased communication system)—not to a design for the communication system itself. It is 

therefore unsurprising that neither the claim nor the specification discloses how to design a 

communication system that “makes it simple to allocate or add new nodes and gateways to 

particular regions or routes.” Pl. Opp. at 12. The claim makes no mention of “nodes” at all, and 

the specification references the existence of nodes without defining them. For instance, the 

specification describes the invention as “a process for operating a call routing controller to 

facilitate communication between callers and callees in a system comprising a plurality of nodes 

with which callers and callees are associated.” ’002 Patent at 1:59-62. At most, then, resiliency 

is a feature of the underlying IP-based communication system on which the claim operates. The 

method disclosed by Representative Claim 1 may be capable of directing communications across

redundant nodes, but it does not disclose the allocating or adding of those nodes in the first 

instance. As a result, the Court rejects Plaintiff’s contention that Representative Claim 1 is drawn 

to “resiliency.” 

At this point, the Court takes the opportunity to address a stray argument, appended to the 

end of Plaintiff’s argument on “resiliency.” Plaintiff asserts, “As a further improvement, unlike 

some prior art systems, the technology does not require access to PSTN databases.” Pl. Opp. at 

12. Although Plaintiff fails to develop the argument beyond this single sentence, the Court rejects 

the argument on the merits. The Court does not accept Plaintiff’s allegation that the claimed 

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method “does not require access to PSTN databases.” As with “transparent routing,” this 

allegation is contradicted by the patent itself. Neither the claim nor the specification gives any

details about the “database” accessed in the claimed method; the claim and specification certainly 

do not specify that PSTN databases are not used. In fact, the specification notes that preexisting 

IP telephones “can also access PSTN databases.” Plaintiff’s bare allegation that the claimed 

method does not require access to the PSTN and that this constitutes an improvement cannot

supplement what is actually disclosed by the patent. 

(4) “Communication blocking”

Finally, turning to “communication blocking,” Plaintiff contends that “the technology 

improves over many prior art blocking methods.” However, as discussed above in the designation

of representative claims, Representative Claim 1 does not recite blocking of the communication. 

See also Pl. Opp. 4-5. Consequently, this alleged improvement is inapplicable to Representative 

Claim 1. The Court instead analyzes “communication blocking” solely with regard to 

Representative Claim 26, which the Court has already concluded is representative of the claims 

that recite blocking of the communication. 

Accordingly, the Court agrees with Defendants that Representative Claim 1 does not

“focus on a specific means or method that improves the relevant technology” and is “instead 

directed to a result or effect that itself is the abstract idea and merely invoke[s] generic processes 

and machinery.” McRO, 837 F.3d at 1314; see Def. Cons. Mot. to Dismiss at 12. 

d. Summary

In short, Representative Claim 1 is not directed to an improvement in communication 

routing technology, or in computer functionality more generally. Although Representative Claim 

1 purports to disclose an improved method of call routing, the claim fails to provide any specific 

or concrete means for achieving the desired result. Instead, the claim discloses only broad, 

functional steps such as “receiving” identifiers; “accessing” a database; “processing” an identifier;

“classifying” the communication; and “producing” a routing message. Moreover, due to its level 

of generality, the claim is simply an attempt to implement well-known, longstanding call routing 

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practices using a computer. For these reasons, the Court holds that Representative Claim 1 is 

directed to the abstract idea of routing a communication based on characteristics of the 

participants. 

2. The Remaining Representative Claims are Directed to an Abstract Idea

The Court now turns to each of the remaining representative claims and determines 

whether, in light of its conclusion that Representative Claim 1 is directed to an abstract idea, these 

remaining claims are also directed to an abstract idea. The Court concludes that they are. 

a. Representative Claim 9

Recall that Representative Claim 9, which is claim 9 of the ’549 Patent, discloses a method 

of “routing a communication” between a first participant and a second participant by (1) receiving 

an identifier associated with the second participant when a communication is initiated, (2) 

searching a memory and locating at least one attribute associated with the first participant, (3) 

processing the second participant identifier using at least one first participant attribute to produce a 

new second participant identifier, (4) classifying the communication as a “system communication” 

or an “external network communication” based upon whether a profile associated with the new

second participant identifier exists in a database, and (5) producing a “routing message” that 

causes the communication to be established either within the system or through a gateway to an 

external network. See ’549 Patent 38:48-59. 

As previously discussed, the Court found and Plaintiff does not contest that Representative 

Claim 9 is substantially similar to Representative Claim 1 in all but one respect. Representative 

Claim 1 broadly recites “classifying” the communication as a system communication or an 

external network communication “based on” the new (i.e., processed) second participant identifier. 

In Plaintiff’s own words, Representative Claim 9 adds to Representative Claim 1 the limitation 

that the communication is classified “based on whether a profile associated with the processed 

second participant identifier exists in a database.” Pl. Opp. at 5. Of relevance to the Step One 

analysis, Representative Claim 9 is more specific than Representative Claim 1, which does not 

state how the processed second participant identifier is used to classify the communication.

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The additional limitation does not meaningfully change the character of Representative 

Claim 9. Representative Claim 9, like Representative Claim 1, is directed to the abstract idea of 

routing a communication based on characteristics of the participants. Representative Claim 9 is

narrower, to be sure. It does not encompass all manners of “classifying,” because it is confined to 

classifying based upon whether a profile associated with the new second participant identifier 

exists in a database. But “a claim is not patent eligible merely because it applies an abstract idea 

in a narrow way.” BSG Tech LLC v. Buyseasons, Inc., 899 F.3d 1281, 1287 (Fed. Cir. 2018). “In 

Two-Way Media, we determined that a claimed method was directed, in part, to the abstract idea 

of ‘sending information,’ even though the claim specifically concerned ‘audio/and or visual 

information’ transmitted over a communications network.” Id. (citation omitted). 

Here, searching a database for a particular entry—a generic “identifier”—is no less 

abstract than the broader idea of “classifying” the communication. See, e.g., Content Extraction, 

776 F.3d at 1347 (finding claim is directed to the abstract idea of “1) collecting data, 2) 

recognizing certain data within the collected data set, and 3) storing that recognized data in a 

memory.”). Moreover, humans can and have performed the task manually, such as when looking 

for a listing in a physical phone book. “Adding one abstract idea” (searching a database) “to 

another abstract idea” (classifying) “does not render the claim non-abstract.” RecogniCorp, 855 

F.3d at 1327. The Court therefore finds that Representative Claim 9 is directed to the same 

abstract idea as Representative Claim 1: routing a communication based on characteristics of the 

participants. 

b. Representative Claim 26

Next, Representative Claim 26, which is claim 26 of the ’002 Patent, discloses “the method 

of [Representative] [C]laim 1” plus the additional steps of “accessing the database to locate 

communication blocking information associated with the second participant” and “blocking the 

communication when the communication blocking information identifies the first participant 

identifier.” ’002 Patent at 42:32-39. Other than these blocking steps, Representative Claim 26 is 

identical to Representative Claim 1. 

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The Court finds that the addition of “blocking” does not alter the conclusion that

Representative Claim 26 is directed to an abstract idea. Representative Claim 1, from which

Representative Claim 26 depends, is directed to the abstract idea of routing a communication 

based on characteristics of the participants. Representative Claim 26 clarifies that such routing

may require blocking the communication instead of causing the communication to be established. 

To begin with, Representative Claim 26 discloses “blocking” in purely functional terms, 

without explaining how the blocking is accomplished. The claim and the specification are devoid 

of any details regarding implementation that might “add a degree of particularity.” Ultramercial, 

772 F.3d at 715. The claim does not even indicate when the blocking steps occur in relation to the 

other five steps in Representative Claim 1. 

Meanwhile, Plaintiff acknowledges, as it must, that the Patents-in-Suit did not invent 

communication blocking, and that other methods of blocking communication exist. “[T]he 

concept of screening messages is a basic, long-practiced concept in any communications medium 

or field.” Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. AT & T Mobility LLC, 235 F. Supp. 3d 577, 594 (D. Del. 

2016) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). Indeed, as with Representative Claim 1, 

there is a direct brick-and-mortar analogy to the instant claim. As the Federal Circuit put it in 

Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Symantec Corp., “it was long-prevalent practice for people 

receiving paper mail to look at an envelope and discard certain letters, without opening them, from 

sources from which they did not wish to receive mail based on characteristics of the mail.” 838 

F.3d at 1314. The Symantec court analogized this practice to a claim directed to “characterizing” 

and “filtering” “e-mail based on a known list of identifiers,” and so found the claim to be abstract. 

Characterizing a communication based on generic “blocking information” is no less abstract. 

After all, “filtering” out undesirable messages is the email equivalent of “blocking” undesirable 

communications. 

Nonetheless, as discussed at length above, Plaintiff contends the Patents-in-Suit are not 

abstract because they are directed to four improvements to communication routing technology: (1) 

“user-specific handling,” (2) “transparent routing,” (3) “resiliency,” and (4) “communication 

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blocking.” See supra Part III.B.1.c. The Court rejected the first three improvements but reserved 

its discussion of “communication blocking” for Representative Claim 26—the only representative 

claim that recites communication blocking. The Court now considers whether Representative 

Claim 26 is directed to an improvement in communication blocking technology. 

In Plaintiff’s view, the particular blocking method disclosed by Representative Claim 26 

has three benefits: (1) “using caller-specific attributes associated with a caller’s profile for 

determining, in a caller-specific manner, whether or not initiation of a communication is 

permitted”; (2) “using caller-specific profile attributes to establish whether an attempted 

communication is valid”; and (3) “by supporting selective blocking . . . without interrupting the 

callee or the caller making an explicit choice.” Pl. Opp. at 12; see also FAC ¶ 38. The Court does 

not agree. 

At the outset, the Court discerns no difference between the first and second benefits, both 

of which refer to a “caller-specific” determination whether to route or block the communication. 

As already established, a caller’s “profile” is just a collection of “attributes.” See ’002 Patent at 

37:41-45. The Court therefore analyzes them together rather than treating them as distinct 

benefits. In any event, Representative Claim 26 does not disclose “using caller-specific attributes 

associated with a caller’s profile” or “using caller-specific profile attributes,” to determine 

whether to block a call. Rather, Representative Claim 26 calls for searching a database for 

“communication blocking information associated with the second participant”—the callee. Put in 

plain language, the claimed method involves looking at criteria identifying calls that the second 

participant wishes to block and blocks the call if the first participant is identified. This makes 

sense: There would be no need to examine communication blocking information associated with

the first participant, who initiated the call. It cannot be said, then, that the claimed method is 

directed at “using caller-specific attributes” to make the blocking decision. 

To the extent Plaintiff means to argue that Representative Claim 26 permits the second 

participant to identify specific callers (as opposed to, for instance, blocking all calls for a certain 

period of time) that the second participant wishes to block, the argument still fails. As the Court 

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has repeatedly recognized, a claim is not directed to an alleged improvement in technology unless 

the claim discloses how to achieve the alleged improvement. See supra Part III.B.1.c. 

Representative Claim 26 broadly claims accessing “blocking information associated with the 

second participant” and “blocking the communication when the communication blocking 

information identifies the first participant identifier.” The claim provides no details about the 

“blocking information”—for instance, how the information is generated, what form the 

information takes, or what kind of rules the information is capable of capturing. Under these 

circumstances, Representative Claim 26 attempts to patent the abstract idea of the improvement; 

the claim does not actually disclose how to achieve it. See Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. AT&T 

Mobility LLC, 235 F. Supp. 3d at 594 (claim directed to the idea of screening SMS messages is 

directed to an abstract idea because “the claimed method can be directly analogized to the abstract 

concept performed in the human mind—receiving, analyzing, and making a decision as to whether 

to forward a message based on set criteria”). 

Finally, the third benefit—“supporting selective blocking without interrupting the callee or 

the caller making an explicit choice”—is simply a restatement of “transparent routing,” which the 

Court analyzed in connection with Representative Claim 1. See supra Part III.B.1.c. Here, as 

there, the Court accepts Plaintiff’s allegation that prior blocking methods did not provide this 

benefit. However, “[b]locking a message based on predetermined criteria . . . could be 

analogously performed by a human, instead of by a computer.” See Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. 

AT&T Mobility LLC, 235 F. Supp. 3d at 594. For instance, an individual’s assistant could be 

instructed to decline calls by certain pre-identified callers. The benefit therefore arises entirely 

from automation of a manual process using generic computer components, which “does not 

constitute a patentable improvement in computer technology.” Credit Acceptance Corp., 859 F.3d 

at 1055. 

For these reasons, the Court concludes that Representative Claim 26 is directed to the 

abstract idea of routing a communication based on characteristics of the participants, where 

routing may include blocking the communication. 

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c. Representative Claim 21 

Last, Representative Claim 21, which is claim 21 of the ’762 Patent, discloses a method of 

“routing a communication” between a first participant and a second participant by (1) receiving 

identifiers associated with the first and second participants when a communication is initiated, (2) 

searching a database using the first participant identifier and locating a collection of attributes 

associated with the first participant, (3) applying “network classification criteria” to the second 

participant identifier and one or more of the first participant attributes and, (4)(a) if a “first 

network classification criterion” is met, producing a routing message that causes the 

communication to be established within the system, (4)(b) if a “second network classification 

criterion” is met, producing a routing message that causes the communication to be established 

through a gateway to an external network, or (4)(c) if a “third network classification criterion” is 

met, producing an “error message” and preventing the communication from being established. 

The Court finds that Representative Claim 21 is also directed to the abstract idea of routing a 

communication based on characteristics of the participants. 

The Court first notes that Representative Claim 21 is substantially similar to 

Representative Claim 1 in all respects but one: Representative Claim 21 recites an “error message”

at step (4)(c). Despite some slight differences in wording, the rest of the claim discloses the same 

steps as Representative Claim 1. Steps (1) and (2) of Representative Claim 21 are, on their face, 

the same as steps (1) and (2) of Representative Claim 1. Steps (3)(a) and (3)(b) then simply 

consolidate steps (3) and (4) of Representative Claim 1. Representative Claim 1 separately recites

processing the second participant identifier using one or more of the first participant’s attributes

(step (3) of Representative Claim 1) and then classifying the new second participant identifier 

(step (4) of Representative Claim 1). Representative Claim 21 directly recites classifying the 

combination of the second participant identifier and one or more of the first participant’s 

attributes. ’762 Patent at 39:61-63. Importantly, Representative Claim 21 does not use different 

information or a different technique to classify the communication. The claim uses the same 

second participant identifier, first participant attributes, and generic “classification criteria.” Steps 

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(4)(a)-(b) of Representative Claim 21 are then equivalent to step (5) of Representative Claim 1.

The Court therefore focuses on step (4)(c), which embodies the only meaningful difference 

between Representative Claims 1 and 21. The principal limitation that Representative Claim 21 

adds to the basic process recited by Representative Claim 1 is that, when a certain criterion is met, 

an “error message” is produced instead of a “routing message” and the communication is thereby 

“prevent[ed]” “from being established.” The problem is that this limitation is written in such 

broad, functional terms as to cover the entire abstract idea of producing an error message. The 

“error message” itself is undefined in the ’762 Patent, which suggests that it simply signifies a

generic “message that indicates an error.” In addition, the claim does not give any content to the 

third “network classification criterion.” ’762 Patent at 40:11. Applying an unspecified criterion is 

the height of abstraction. The specification suggests that one example criterion might be when 

“the maximum number of concurrent calls has been reached and no further calls can exist

concurrently,” ’762 Patent at 20:22-29, but the claim itself is not confined to this situation. See

Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (courts should “avoid importing 

limitations from the specification into the claims”). The “important inquiry for a § 101 analysis is 

to look to the claim,” rather than “the specification’s detailed . . . implementation guidelines.” 

Accenture Glob. Servs., 728 F.3d at 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2013); see also ChargePoint, Inc. v. 

SemaConnect, Inc., 920 F.3d 759, 766 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (“[R]eliance on the specification must 

always yield to the claim language . . . .”). We are therefore left with the abstract idea that, under 

certain unspecified circumstances, an “error message” is produced, and the communication is not 

established. 

The combination of multiple abstract ideas is still abstract. RecogniCorp, 855 F.3d at 

1327. Ultimately, then, Representative Claim 21 is directed to the abstract idea of routing a 

communication based on characteristics of the participants, where routing may include preventing 

the communication from being established.

C. Alice Step Two: The Asserted Claims Do Not Recite an Inventive Concept

To briefly review, the Court’s Alice Step One analysis revealed that all of the 

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representative claims—and thus, all of the asserted claims—are directed to an abstract idea. The 

asserted claims may still be patent-eligible, though, if they include an “inventive concept” that is 

“sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice amounts to significantly more” than a patent upon 

the abstract idea itself. Alice, 573 U.S. at 217-18. Hence, Step Two of the Alice inquiry is a 

search for an inventive concept “sufficient to transform the nature of the claim into a patenteligible application.” Id. at 221 (internal quotation marks omitted). 

Below, the Court begins its Step Two inquiry with Representative Claim 1 and then 

proceeds to consider each of the other representative claims in turn. 

1. Representative Claim 1 Does Not Recite an Inventive Concept

At Alice Step One, the Court determined that Claim 1 is directed to the idea of routing a 

communication over an IP-based communication system based on characteristics of the 

participants. “To save the patent at step two, an inventive concept must be evident in the claims.” 

RecogniCorp, 855 F.3d at 1327. In assessing whether a claim recites an inventive concept, the 

Court must consider its elements “both individually and as an ordered combination.” Alice, 573 

U.S. at 217. Accordingly, the Court first analyzes the individual claim elements of Representative

Claim 1 and then turns to the ordered combination of those elements. The Court concludes that 

neither the individual elements nor their ordered combination supplies an inventive concept 

necessary for patent-eligibility. 

a. The Individual Claim Elements Do Not Provide an Inventive Concept

In order to supply an inventive concept, a claim element “must be more than wellunderstood, routine, conventional activity,” DIRECTV, 838 F.3d at 1262, “and cannot simply be 

an instruction to implement or apply the abstract idea on a computer.” BASCOM, 827 F.3d at 

1349. For example, it may be found in an “inventive set of components or methods,” “inventive 

programming,” or an inventive approach in “how the desired result is achieved.” Elec. Power 

Grp., 830 F.3d at 1355. On the other hand, “conventional steps, specified at a high level of 

generality, [are] not enough to supply an inventive concept.” Alice, 573 U.S. at 222 (internal 

quotation marks omitted). Nor are “generic computer, network and Internet components” 

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inventive. BASCOM, 827 F.3d at 1349. Yet, as set forth below, conventional steps and generic 

computer components are all that Representative Claim 1 attempts to monopolize. The Court 

therefore finds no saving inventive concept in the individual elements of Representative Claim 1. 

At no point does Plaintiff affirmatively argue that any individual component is inventive. 

Instead, Plaintiff accuses Defendants of simply asserting “that all the claimed features are part of 

‘conventional telephony systems,’ without a shred of evidence.” Pl. Opp. at 22. But the fact that 

these claim elements are conventional can be discerned from the patent itself—no outside 

evidence is needed. 

First, all of the computing hardware disclosed is conventional. The claim employs a “first 

participant device” and a “second participant device” and a “controller comprising at least one 

processor.” The specification indicates that the “first participant device” and “second participant 

device” are “telephone[s]/videophone[s].” See ’002 Patent at 14:8, 14:51-54, 15:11-12. The first 

participant device is “Internet-connected,” meaning it is an IP telephone/videophone. As for the 

unspecified “controller,” the Court previously observed that the unspecified controller is a module 

implemented on a generic computer, and that it comprises a generic processor. See supra Part 

III.B.1.c. The Patents-in-Suit certainly did not invent computers, processors, 

telephones/videophones, or IP telephones/videophones, and Plaintiff does not assert that 

otherwise. See In re TLI Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 612 (“The specification does not describe a new 

telephone, a new server, or a new physical combination of the two.”); BASCOM, 827 F.3d 1341, 

1349 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“BASCOM does not assert that it invented local computers, ISP servers, 

networks, network accounts, or filtering. Nor does the specification describe those elements as 

inventive.”). These components “simply provide[] the environment in which the abstract idea” of 

call routing “is carried out.” In re TLI Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 614. 

The network structures recited by the claim are similarly well-known. The claim 

references: “an Internet protocol (IP) network”; an “Internet address”; “identifiers”; a “database”; 

“a gateway”; and a “routing message.” Again, not a “shred” of outside “evidence,” Pl. Opp. at 22,

is needed to demonstrate that these are conventional aspects of IP-based telephony. The Court has 

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already recognized multiple times that Plaintiff freely concedes the preexistence of IP-based 

communication systems. The specification itself reveals that each of the recited structures are 

inherent in an IP-based communication system. 

For example, the Patents-in-Suit did not invent “IP networks,” which the specification 

defines as “the public Internet or a private network of a large organization.” ’002 Patent at 1:24-

27. The same is true of generic “Internet addresses” and “identifiers”—the latter of which are 

ordinarily telephone numbers or usernames. See supra Part III.B.1.a. Next, per the Court’s earlier 

finding, neither the claim nor the specification discloses the creation of the “database.” Instead, 

the database is some undefined, preexisting collection of “user profiles,” which are themselves 

generic. The “gateway” is likewise undefined: it is nothing more than a placeholder for the 

structure “through which the call or audio path of the call will be carried” from the private 

network to an external network. Finally, a “routing message” is defined tautologically as 

containing an “Internet address” that “causes” the communication to be established. “Such vague, 

functional descriptions” of computer and network components “are insufficient to transform the 

abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention.” In re TLI Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 615; see also 

Mortg. Grader, 811 F.3d at 1324–25 (“[T]he claims ‘add’ only generic computer components 

such as an ‘interface,’ ‘network,’ and ‘database.’ These generic computer components do not 

satisfy the inventive concept requirement.”). 

Furthermore, none of the five steps in the claimed method enlists the computing elements 

to do anything other than operate in their expected manner. A claim in which “the recited physical 

components behave exactly as expected according to their ordinary use” is not inventive. In re 

TLI Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 615. In buySAFE, Inc. v. Google, Inc., 765 F.3d 1350 (Fed. Cir. 

2014), for example, the Federal Circuit gave the following explanation for its finding that the 

claim’s use of computers was not inventive:

The computer functionality is generic—indeed, quite limited: a 

computer receives a request for a guarantee and transmits an offer of 

guarantee in return. There is no further detail. That a computer 

receives and sends the information over a network—with no further 

specification—is not even arguably inventive.

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Id. at 1355. Similarly, in Two-Way Media, the Federal Circuit found no inventive concept because 

“[n]othing in the claims or their constructions, including the use of “intermediate computers,” 

requires anything other than conventional computer and network components operating according 

to their ordinary functions.” 874 F.3d at 1339.

Here, under Representative Claim 1, the “controller comprising at least one processor” (1) 

receives the first and second participant identifiers, (2) accesses a database “using” the first 

participant identifier and locates a collection of attributes associated with the first participant, (3) 

processes the second participant identifier, (4) classifies the communication as a “system 

communication” or an “external network communication” “based on” the new (i.e., processed)

second participant identifier, and (5) produces a routing message that causes the communication to 

be established. Any generic computer equipped with a generic processor routinely performs the 

tasks of “receiving” data, “accessing” a database, and searching the database to “locate” certain 

information. A generic processor is also, of course, capable of “processing” and “classifying” 

information, particularly as the specification does not disclose what the “processing” or 

“classifying” entails. See supra Part III.B.1.a. Lastly, there is no suggestion that “producing” a 

routing message requires any special functionality. After all, the routing message simply displays

an Internet address in a format readable by an IP-based communication system. Hence, none of 

the functions recited in Representative Claim 1 provides an inventive concept. 

The Court briefly addresses Plaintiff’s remaining argument, on which Plaintiff spends

scarcely a page in its brief. Plaintiff claims that Defendants “stripp[ed] out elements to 

oversimplify the claim,” and that Defendants “do not do justice to the full scope of the patent’s 

disclosure.” Pl. Opp. 22. But Plaintiff makes no attempt to identify any allegedly unconventional 

element that Defendants allegedly “stripped out.” The only specific complaint Plaintiff raises is 

that “Defendants spend no time analyzing the detailed processes shown in Figs. 8A-8D.” Id. 

Figures 8A to 8D depict flowcharts for directing the controller to produce a routing message. ’002

Patent at 11:26-28; 18:24-25. Having reviewed the flowcharts, the Court determines that they too 

contain only the conventional, generic steps of “getting” data, “storing” data, “loading” data, and 

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“sending” data. That the data involved are specific to the communications context is insufficient 

to make the process inventive. “Just as steps that do nothing more than spell out what it means to 

‘apply it on a computer’ cannot confer patent-eligibility, here, steps that generically spell out what 

it means to ‘apply it on a telephone network’ also cannot confer patent eligibility.” See In re TLI 

Commc’ns, 823 F.3d at 615 (internal quotation marks omitted). Although the flowcharts may be

“detailed,” Pl. Opp. 22, “the level of detail in the specification does not transform a claim reciting 

only an abstract concept into a patent-eligible system or method,” Accenture Glob. Servs., 728 

F.3d at 1345. The Court, moreover, has analyzed every aspect of the claim and nonetheless finds

no transformative element that supplies an inventive concept. 

b. The Ordered Combination of Claim Elements Does Not Provide an 

Inventive Concept

Lacking an inventive concept in any of the individual elements of Representative Claim 1, 

Plaintiff contends the ordered combination of elements amounts to an inventive concept. In so 

doing, Plaintiff relies heavily upon BASCOM, in which the Federal Circuit held that “an inventive 

concept can be found in the non-conventional and non-generic arrangement of known, 

conventional pieces.” 827 F.3d at 1350. 

Even when viewed collectively, however, the claim steps “simply instruct the practitioner 

to implement the abstract idea”—i.e., routing a communication based on characteristics of the 

participants—“with routine conventional activity.” Ultramercial, 772 F.3d at 715. Representative 

Claim 1 uses a conventional ordering of steps—first receiving the identifiers, then processing 

them, then using the results in some unspecified way to produce the routing message—

implemented on generic technology. These are “the most basic of steps in data collection, 

analysis, and publication and they are recited in the ordinary order.” EasyWeb Innovations, LLC 

v. Twitter, Inc., 689 F. App’x 969, 971 (Fed. Cir. 2017). Once again, the Court uses Two-Way 

Media as a comparator. In Two-Way Media, the claim at issue was directed to “transmitting 

message packets over a communications network.” 874 F.3d at 1334. The Federal Circuit found 

no inventive concept because the claim recited a “conventional ordering” of the steps of “first 

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processing the data, then routing it, controlling it, and monitoring its reception.” 874 F.3d at 1339. 

Similarly, in In re Villena, the Federal Circuit concluded that a claim reciting the “basic steps of 

receiving user input, producing property valuations, and providing display information” did not 

contain an inventive concept. 745 F. App’x 374, 376 (Fed. Cir. 2018), cert. denied sub nom. 

Villena v. Iancu, 139 S. Ct. 2694 (2019). 

Plaintiff nonetheless gives three reasons why the ordered combination is inventive—none 

of which is persuasive. First, Plaintiff reiterates that the claim “as a whole” overcomes various

“limitations” of prior communication technology. See Pl. Opp. at 22. Plaintiff further contends 

that the Court must accept Plaintiff’s assertion that the invention’s solution to these limitations is 

“unconventional,” because whether a claim limitation is conventional is a “factual issue.” Id. The 

briefing does not specify precisely which “limitations” the claimed method overcomes.

Construing Plaintiff’s briefing liberally, however, the Court takes the argument to be a reference to 

the four improvements of (1) “user-specific handling,” (2) “transparent routing,” (3) “resiliency,” 

and (4) “communication blocking.” However, the Court has considered, and rejected, these 

improvements in connection with its analysis of the first step of the Alice framework. See supra

Section III.A.1.c. As discussed at length above, the claims do not provide any specific method of 

implementation or otherwise explain how to achieve any of the four improvements. Hence, these 

improvements cannot provide an inventive concept because they “simply restate[] what we have 

already determined is an abstract idea.” BSG Tech LLC, 899 F.3d at 1290. As the Federal Circuit 

has emphasized, “a claimed invention’s use of the ineligible concept to which it is directed cannot 

supply the inventive concept that renders the invention ‘significantly more’ than that ineligible 

concept.” Id. at 1291. 

Second, Plaintiff contends that Representative Claim 1 is inventive because it recites

“[u]ser-specific customization of network functionality”—that is, “applying criteria from a caller’s 

profile settings, to make a caller-specific determination as to whether an initiated communication 

is destined for a first network, a second external network, or is invalid according to this caller’s 

profile settings”—is inventive. Pl. Opp. at 23. This, however, is the same thing as “user-specific 

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handling,” which the Court has just rejected as an inventive concept. The Court dismisses

Plaintiff’s attempt to costume this argument in new garb. 

Last, Plaintiff contends that “[t]he claims solve problems necessarily rooted in network 

technology and so are eligible for the same reasons that the claims in DDR Holdings were found 

eligible by the Federal Circuit.” Pl. Opp. at 24 (emphasis in original) (citing DDR Holdings, 773 

F.3d at 1245, 1257). It is true that DDR Holdings involved claims that address “a challenge 

particular to the Internet,” that is, “retaining website visitors.” 773 F.3d at 1256. However, the

DDR Holdings court did not hold that claims that “solve problems necessarily rooted in network 

technology” are per se patent-eligible. On the contrary, the Federal Circuit “caution[ed]” “that not 

all claims purporting to address Internet-centric challenges are eligible for patent.” Id. at 1258. 

As the Federal Circuit explained, the claims in DDR Holdings “stand apart” from many other 

computer-implemented claims “because they do not merely recite the performance of some 

business practice known from the pre-Internet world along with the requirement to perform it on 

the Internet.” Id. at 1257. In this critical respect, the instant case is wholly unlike DDR Holdings. 

Here we have a claim that, as just discussed, does “merely recite the performance” of a practice 

“known from the pre-Internet world”—viz., call routing—along with the generic computer 

components necessary to perform it on an Internet-based communication system. Those computer 

components carry out routine steps using generic elements (e.g., identifiers, user profiles, 

databases) that the patent does not invent. Having failed to specifically rebut these findings, 

Plaintiff’s cursory appeal to DDR Holdings has no merit. 

Accordingly, the ordered combination of the elements in Representative Claim 1 does not 

supply an inventive concept. 

c. Preemption

Plaintiff’s final argument under Alice Step Two is that “the claims do not preempt an 

abstract idea because they recite a particular method of evaluating a callee identifier to determine 

and route to the intended destination, as between two networks. Other routing methods are 

available to all.” Pl. Opp. at 23. 

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The Federal Circuit has “previously considered preemption in both steps one and two of 

the Alice test.” Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Erie Indem. Co., 711 F. App’x 1012, 1019 (Fed. 

Cir. 2017). It is also true that courts have sometimes discussed the Step Two analysis in terms of 

preemption. See, e.g., DDR Holdings, 773 F.3d at 1259 (finding the patent valid only after finding 

that “the claims at issue do not attempt to preempt every application of the idea” embodied in the 

patent). Nevertheless, Plaintiff’s argument “misunderstands the step two inquiry.” BSG Tech 

LLC, 899 F.3d at 1291. The Federal Circuit has made clear that claims are not patent eligible 

merely because they do not preempt an entire field. FairWarning, 839 F.3d at 1098 (“[W]hile

preemption may signal patent ineligible subject matter, the absence of complete preemption does 

not demonstrate patent eligibility.”); see also OIP Techs., Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., 788 F.3d 

1359, 1362–63 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (“And that the claims do not preempt all price optimization or 

may be limited to price optimization in the e-commerce setting do not make them any less 

abstract.). In other words, a claim is not excused from the need to make an inventive contribution

on top of the underlying abstract idea simply because its application of the abstract idea is narrow. 

Hence, where a court has deemed a claim to disclose only patent-ineligible subject matter under 

the Alice framework—as the Court has in the instant case—“preemption concerns are fully 

addressed and made moot.” Ariosa Diagnostics, Inc. v. Sequenom, Inc., 788 F.3d 1371, 1379 

(Fed. Cir. 2015) (alterations in original). Consequently, Plaintiff’s perfunctory preemption 

argument is unavailing. 

d. Summary

Thus, having determined that Representative Claim 1 is directed to the abstract idea of 

routing a communication based on characteristics of the participants, the Court now concludes that 

none of the elements of the claim—either in isolation or combination—amounts to an inventive 

concept. Therefore, because it is drawn to no more than an abstract idea, Representative Claim 1 

fails to meet the standard for patent eligibility under § 101. 

2. The Remaining Representative Claims Do Not Recite an Inventive Concept

Turning to the remaining representative claims, the Court considers whether those claims’ 

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additional limitations contain an inventive concept, even though Representative Claim 1 did not. 

The Court finds no such inventive concept in Representative Claim 9, 26, or 21. 

To briefly summarize the Court’s Step One analysis, the Court found that, like 

Representative Claim 1, Representative Claim 9 is directed to the abstract idea of routing a 

communication based on characteristics of the participants. The Court then found that 

Representative Claim 26 is directed to the abstract idea of routing a communication based on 

characteristics of the participants, where routing may include blocking the communication. Last, 

the Court found that Representative Claim 21 is directed to the abstract idea of routing a 

communication based on characteristics of the participants, where routing may include preventing 

a communication from being established. At Alice Step Two, “the relevant inquiry is not whether 

the claimed invention as a whole is unconventional or non-routine.” BSG Tech LLC, 899 F.3d at 

1290. Rather, the Court assesses only “whether the claim limitations other than the invention’s

use of the ineligible concept to which it was directed” are inventive. Id. Here, Representative 

Claim 9 has the additional limitation that the communication is classified as a “system 

communication” or an “external network communication” based upon whether a profile associated 

with the new second participant identifier exists in a database; Representative Claim 26 has the 

additional element that the communication is “blocked” under certain circumstances; and 

Representative Claim 21 has the additional limitation that an “error message” is triggered under 

certain circumstances. The Court now considers whether these additional elements—either 

individually or in combination with the basic method recited by Representative Claim 1—

transform the asserted claims into patentable inventions.

The answer is no. There is nothing in the three representative claims beyond purely 

functional language describing the abstract result, viz., “classifying” the communication,

“blocking” the communication, and producing an “error message.” The “claim language does not 

explain what is inventive about the . . . feature or explain how it is accomplished.” Move, Inc. v. 

Real Estate All. Ltd., 721 F. App’x 950, 957 (Fed. Cir.), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 457 (2018). Nor 

is there any indication in the claims or the specification that the additional limitations require 

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anything other than conventional computer equipment, performing their ordinary functions. See 

Reese v. Sprint Nextel Corp., 774 F. App’x 656, 661 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (“Nothing in the claims 

requires anything other than conventional telephone network equipment to perform the generic 

functions of receiving and sending information.”). On the contrary, the claims disclose that the 

additional limitations are performed by the same generic “controller” that carries out the method 

disclosed by Representative Claim 1, which the Court previously determined not to be inventive. 

Moreover, Plaintiff has not separately identified an inventive concept in Representative 

Claims 9, 21, or 26. The Court therefore need not labor any further to find one. See BSG Tech 

LLC, 899 F.3d at 1291 (“BSG Tech does not argue that other, non-abstract features of the claimed 

inventions, alone or in combination, are not well-understood, routine and conventional database 

structures and activities.”); Shakur v. Schriro, 514 F.3d 878, 892 (9th Cir. 2008) (litigants waive 

arguments by failing to raise them in an opposition to a motion to dismiss). 

Accordingly, Representative Claims 9, 21, or 26 do not recite patent-eligible subject matter 

under § 101.

D. Defendants’ Consolidated Motion to Dismiss is Not Premature

Plaintiff argues in the alternative that Defendant’s motion is premature because, if

provided the opportunity to engage in discovery, Plaintiff would prove “that the recited invention 

provides specific technological improvements.” Id. at 25. The Court rejects this argument. The 

ultimate question whether a claim recites patent-eligible subject matter under § 101 is a question 

of law. Capital One Fin. Corp., 850 F.3d at 1338. It is true that, under the Federal Circuit’s 

recent case law, “whether a claim limitation or combination of limitations is well-understood, 

routine, and conventional is a factual question.” BSG Tech LLC, 899 F.3d at 1290. However, 

factual evidence is only relevant if “the only issue” is “whether claim limitations are wellunderstood, routine, and conventional.” Id. If, however, “the evidence that aspects of the 

invention are not well-understood, routine, and conventional does not pertain to the invention as 

claimed, it will not create a factual dispute as to these claims.” Aatrix Software, Inc. v. Green 

Shades Software, Inc., 890 F.3d 1354, 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (concurring in the denial of rehearing 

Case 5:18-cv-06216-LHK Document 114 Filed 11/01/19 Page 67 of 68
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Case No. 18-CV-07020-LHK 

ORDER GRANTING CONSOLIDATED MOTION TO DISMISS WITH PREJUDICE

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en banc). 

In the instant case, the Court accepted as true Plaintiff’s allegations that (1) user-specific 

handling, (2) transparent routing, (3) resiliency, and (4) communication blocking are significant 

and unconventional improvements upon prior technology. The Court nevertheless rejected these 

improvements on the ground that the Patents-in-Suit did not disclose how to achieve them. To 

reiterate, the Alice inquiry “must turn to any requirements for how the desired result is achieved.” 

Two-Way Media, 874 F.3d at 1339 (rejecting Two-Way Media’s assertion that “the claim solves 

various technical problems, including excessive loads on a source server, network congestion, 

unwelcome variations in delivery times, scalability of networks, and lack of precise 

recordkeeping”) (emphasis in original). Because neither the claims nor the specification provided 

the critical “how,” the improvements are not attributable to the invention as claimed. See, e.g.,

Accenture Global Servs., 728 F.3d at 1345 (“[T]he important inquiry for a § 101 analysis is to 

look to the claims.”). At bottom, then, the validity of the Patents-in-Suit does not turn on the 

factual issue of whether the alleged improvements are “well-understood, routine, and 

conventional.” See Berkheimer v. HP Inc., 881 F.3d 1360, 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (“As our cases 

demonstrate, not every § 101 determination contains genuine disputes over the underlying facts 

material to the § 101 inquiry.”). As a consequence, Plaintiff’s “proffer of evidence” is orthogonal 

to the Alice inquiry and Defendants’ motion is not premature. 

IV. CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that all of the asserted claims are invalid for 

failure to state patentable subject matter under § 101. The Court therefore GRANTS Defendants’

consolidated motion to dismiss with prejudice. 

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Dated: November 1, 2019

______________________________________

LUCY H. KOH

United States District Judge

Case 5:18-cv-06216-LHK Document 114 Filed 11/01/19 Page 68 of 68