Court Opinion

ID: 4511902
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-03-02 17:00:40.523946+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:34:25.841944
License: Public Domain

Case: 18-1450     Document: 148    Page: 1   Filed: 03/02/2020

    United States Court of Appeals
        for the Federal Circuit
                    ______________________

   COMCAST CORPORATION, COMCAST CABLE
    COMMUNICATIONS, LLC, COMCAST CABLE
     COMMUNICATIONS MANAGEMENT, LLC,
  COMCAST BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS, LLC,
 COMCAST HOLDINGS CORPORATION, COMCAST
  SHARED SERVICES, LLC, ARRIS ENTERPRISES,
  INC., ARRIS GLOBAL LTD., ARRIS GROUP, INC.,
 ARRIS INTERNATIONAL PLC, ARRIS SOLUTIONS,
      INC., ARRIS TECHNOLOGY, INC., PACE
       AMERICAS, LLC, TECHNICOLOR, S.A.,
   TECHNICOLOR CONNECTED HOME USA LLC,
             TECHNICOLOR USA, INC.,
                    Appellants

                              v.

       INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION,
                   Appellee

      ROVI CORPORATION, ROVI GUIDES, INC.,
                    Intervenors
              ______________________

                2018-1450, 2018-1653, 2018-1667
                    ______________________

    Appeals from the United States International Trade
 Commission in Investigation No. 337-TA-1001.
                 ______________________

                    Decided: March 2, 2020
                    ______________________
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 2                 COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

     DONALD B. VERRILLI, JR., Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP,
 Washington, DC, argued for all appellants. Appellants
 Comcast Corporation, Comcast Cable Communications,
 LLC, Comcast Cable Communications Management, LLC,
 Comcast Business Communications, LLC, Comcast Hold-
 ings Corporation, Comcast Shared Services, LLC also rep-
 resented by GINGER ANDERS; DAVID LISSON, Davis Polk &
 Wardwell LLC, Menlo Park, CA; STEVEN ANZALONE, Win-
 ston & Strawn LLP, Washington, DC.

     SIDNEY A. ROSENZWEIG, Office of General Counsel,
 United States International Trade Commission, Washing-
 ton, DC, argued for appellee. Also represented by RONALD
 TRAUD, DOMINIC L. BIANCHI, WAYNE W. HERRINGTON.

     JEFFREY A. LAMKEN, MoloLamken LLP, Washington,
 DC, argued for intervenors. Also represented by MICHAEL
 GREGORY PATTILLO, JR., RAYINER HASHEM; RODERICK
 GEORGE DORMAN, McKool Smith PC, Los Angeles, CA;
 JOSHUA WRIGHT BUDWIN, JOEL LANCE THOLLANDER, Aus-
 tin, TX; DOUGLAS AARON CAWLEY, Dallas, TX; JOHN M.
 WHEALAN, Chevy Chase, MD.

     MITCHELL G. STOCKWELL, Kilpatrick Townsend &
 Stockton LLP, Atlanta, GA, for appellants ARRIS Enter-
 prises, Inc., ARRIS Global Ltd., ARRIS Group, Inc., ARRIS
 International plc, ARRIS Solutions, Inc., ARRIS Technol-
 ogy, Inc., Pace Americas, LLC. Also represented by JOSHUA
 HAMILTON LEE, MICHAEL TURTON; MATTHEW MEYER,
 Menlo Park, CA; JOSHUA B. POND, Washington, DC.

    PAUL M. BARTKOWSKI, Adduci, Mastriani & Schaum-
 berg, LLP, Washington, DC, for appellants Technicolor,
 S.A., Technicolor Connected Home USA LLC, Technicolor
 USA, Inc.

     JOHN THORNE, Kellogg, Hansen, Todd, Figel &
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 COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N                  3

 Frederick, P.L.L.C., Washington, DC, for amicus curiae
 Verizon Services Corp. Also represented by GREGORY G.
 RAPAWY, ARIELA M. MIGDAL.
                 ______________________

    Before NEWMAN, REYNA, and HUGHES, Circuit Judges.
 NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.
      Appellants Comcast Corporation, Comcast Cable Com-
 munications, LLC, Comcast Cable Communications Man-
 agement, LLC, Comcast Business Communications, LLC,
 Comcast Holdings Corporation, Comcast Shared Services,
 LLC (collectively “Comcast”); ARRIS Enterprises, Inc.,
 ARRIS Global Ltd., ARRIS Group, Inc., ARRIS Interna-
 tional plc, ARRIS Solutions, Inc., ARRIS Technology, Inc.,
 Pace Americas, LLC (collectively “ARRIS”); and Techni-
 color SA, Technicolor Connected Home USA LLC, and
 Technicolor USA, Inc. (collectively “Technicolor”) appeal
 the decision and orders of the United States International
 Trade Commission (“ITC” or “Commission”). The ITC’s rul-
 ings 1 are in accordance with law and supported by substan-
 tial evidence, and are affirmed.
                        BACKGROUND
     Rovi Corporation and Rovi Guides, Inc. (collectively
 “Rovi”) filed a complaint with the ITC alleging violation of
 Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930. Rovi asserted, inter
 alia, infringement of claims 1, 2, 14, and 17 of United

     1   Certain Digital Video Receivers and Hardware and
 Software Components Thereof, Inv. No. 337-TA-1001,
 USITC Pub. 4931, 2017 WL 11249982 (Dec. 6, 2017)
 (“Comm. Op.”); Certain Digital Video Receivers and Hard-
 ware and Software Components Thereof, Inv. No. 337-TA-
 1001, USITC Pub. 4931, 2017 WL 3485153 (May 26, 2017)
 (“Final ID”).
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 4                  COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

 States Patent No. 8,006,263 (“the ’263 patent”) and claims
 1, 3, 5, 9, 10, 14, and 18 of United States Patent No.
 8,578,413 (“the ’413 patent”). Rovi stated, and the Com-
 mission found, that Comcast’s customers directly infringe
 the ’263 and ’413 patents by using Comcast’s X1 system.
 The Commission found that Comcast is in violation of Sec-
 tion 337 by importing the X1 set-top boxes that are used in
 the infringing system.
      The ’263 and ’413 patents describe and claim an inter-
 active television program guide system for remote access to
 television programs. The asserted claims require a remote
 program guide access device, such as a mobile device, that
 is connected to an interactive television program guide sys-
 tem over a remote access link, whereby users can remotely
 access the program guide system. Claim 1 of the ’263 pa-
 tent is representative:
     1. A system for selecting television programs over
        a remote access link comprising an Internet
        communications path for recording, compris-
        ing:
     a local interactive television program guide equip-
         ment on which a local interactive television
         program guide is implemented, wherein the lo-
         cal interactive television program guide equip-
         ment includes user television equipment
         located within a user’s home and the local in-
         teractive television program guide generates a
         display of one or more program listings for dis-
         play on a display device at the user’s home; and
     a remote program guide access device located out-
         side of the user’s home on which a remote ac-
         cess interactive television program guide is
         implemented, wherein the remote program
         guide access device is a mobile device, and
         wherein the remote access interactive televi-
         sion program guide:
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 COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N                      5

     generates a display of a plurality of program list-
        ings for display on the remote program guide
        access device, wherein the display of the plural-
        ity of program listings is generated based on a
        user profile stored at a location remote from the
        remote program guide access device;
     receives a selection of a program listing of the plu-
         rality of program listings in the display,
         wherein the selection identifies a television
         program corresponding to the selected program
         listing for recording by the local interactive tel-
         evision program guide; and
     transmits a communication identifying the televi-
         sion program corresponding to the selected pro-
         gram listing from the remote access interactive
         television program guide to the local interac-
         tive television program guide over the Internet
         communications path;
     wherein the local interactive television program
        guide receives the communication and records
        the television program corresponding to the se-
        lected program listing responsive to the com-
        munication using the local interactive
        television program guide equipment.
 ’263 patent col. 28, ll. 27–63.
     The administrative law judge (“ALJ”) conducted an in-
 vestigation and trial, and found violation of Section 337.
 The ALJ found that the X1 set-top boxes are imported by
 ARRIS and Technicolor, and that “Comcast is sufficiently
 involved with the design, manufacture, and importation of
 the accused products, such that it is an importer for pur-
 poses of Section 337.” Final ID at *11. The full Commis-
 sion affirmed “the Final ID’s findings and conclusion that
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 6                   COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

 Comcast imports the X1 STBs 2 into the United States.”
 Comm. Op. at *7.
     The full Commission affirmed “the Final ID’s conclu-
 sion that the X1 systems meet all of the limitations of the
 asserted claims” and “Comcast’s customers directly in-
 fringed the ’263 and ’413 patents through their use of the
 X1 systems in the United States.” Id. at *10–11. The Com-
 mission stated that “[t]he Final ID’s unreviewed findings
 also conclude that Comcast induced that infringement,”
 and that “Comcast also instructs, directs, or advises its cus-
 tomers on how to carry out direct infringement of the as-
 serted claims of the ’263 and ’413 patents with the X1
 STBs.” Id. The Commission affirmed that Comcast vio-
 lated Section 337.
     For ARRIS and Technicolor, the full Commission af-
 firmed the finding of the Final ID that these entities do not
 directly infringe the asserted claims because they do not
 provide a “remote access device” as required by the claims.
 Id. at *13; Final ID at *162. The Final ID also found that
 they do not contributorily infringe because the set-top
 boxes have substantial non-infringing uses. Id. at *163.
     The Commission issued a limited exclusion order and
 cease and desist orders directed to the Comcast respond-
 ents. The limited exclusion order excludes importation of
 the X1 set-top boxes by Comcast, including importation by
 ARRIS and Technicolor on behalf of Comcast:
     Digital video receivers and hardware and software
     components thereof that infringe one or more of
     [the asserted claims of the ’263 patent and the ’413
     patent] that are manufactured by, or on behalf of,
     or are imported by or on behalf of [Comcast,] or any

     2  The Commission refers to the set-top boxes as
 “STBs” in the Commission Opinions and Determinations.
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     of their affiliated companies, parents, subsidiaries,
     agents, or other related business entities, or their
     successors or assigns, including ARRIS and Tech-
     nicolor to the extent they import such products on
     behalf of [Comcast], are excluded from entry for
     consumption into the United States . . . .
 Certain Digital Video Receivers and Hardware and Soft-
 ware Components Thereof, Inv. No. 337-TA-1001, USITC
 Pub. 4931 (August 2019) (limited exclusion order) (footnote
 omitted). The Commission also issued six cease and desist
 orders to each of the Comcast entities, ordering that each
 entity:
     [C]ease and desist from conducting any of the fol-
     lowing activities in the United States: importing,
     selling, offering for sale, leasing, offering for lease,
     renting, offering for rent, marketing, advertising,
     distributing, transferring (except for exportation),
     and soliciting U.S. agents or distributors for, cer-
     tain digital video receivers and hardware and soft-
     ware components thereof covered by [the asserted
     claims of the ’263 patent and the ’413 patent] in vi-
     olation of section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 . . . .
 Id. (cease and desist orders).
     Comcast, ARRIS, and Technicolor appeal, and Rovi
 participates as intervenor. On appeal Comcast does not
 dispute direct infringement by its customers, and does not
 dispute that it induces infringement by its customers. In-
 stead, Comcast argues that its conduct is not actionable un-
 der Section 337 because Comcast’s inducing conduct “takes
 place entirely domestically, well after, and unrelated to,
 the article’s importation” and also that Comcast does not
 itself import the articles. Comcast Br. 1–2. ARRIS and
 Technicolor argue that the Commission does not have au-
 thority to issue an exclusion order “that blocks the impor-
 tation of articles manufactured and imported by ARRIS
 and Technicolor despite the Commission’s determination
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 8                   COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

 that ARRIS and Technicolor did not violate Section 337 and
 did not infringe the asserted patents.” ARRIS Br. 14.
                         DISCUSSION
 Standards of Review
    The Commission’s factual findings are reviewed for
 support by substantial evidence. Honeywell Int’l, Inc. v.
 U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 341 F.3d 1332, 1338 (Fed. Cir.
 2003). Legal conclusions receive de novo review. Id.
     To remedy violation of Section 337, “the Commission
 has broad discretion in selecting the form, scope, and ex-
 tent of the remedy, and judicial review of its choice of rem-
 edy necessarily is limited.” Hyundai Elecs. Indus. Co. v.
 U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 899 F.2d 1204, 1209 (Fed. Cir.
 1990). The court “may set aside the Commission’s choice of
 remedy only if it is legally erroneous, arbitrary and capri-
 cious, or constitutes an abuse of discretion.” Fuji Photo
 Film Co. v. U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 386 F.3d 1095, 1106
 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
                               I
                     MOTION TO DISMISS
     The ’263 patent expired on September 18, 2019 and the
 ’413 patent expired on July 16, 2019. The Appellants have
 moved for dismissal of this appeal on the ground that the
 appeal has become moot, for after a patent expires “the
 ITC’s limited exclusionary order and cease and desist or-
 ders as to that patent have no further prospective effect.”
 Hyosung TNS Inc. v. U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 926 F.3d
1353, 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2019). The Appellants also request
 vacatur of the Commission’s determination of violation of
 Section 337.
     The Commission and Rovi oppose, stating that there
 are continuing issues and actions to which these rulings
 are relevant, whereby appellate finality is warranted be-
 cause there are ongoing “collateral consequences,”
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 COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N                   9

 referring to two ITC investigations on unexpired Rovi pa-
 tents that involve imported X1 set-top boxes. The Commis-
 sion identifies Certain Digital Video Receivers and Related
 Hardware and Software Components, Inv. No. 337-TA-
 1103 (“1103 Investigation”) and Certain Digital Video Re-
 ceivers, Broadband Gateways, and Related Hardware and
 Software Components, Inv. No. 337-TA-1158 (“1158 Inves-
 tigation”).
      It appears to be undisputed that these investigations
 are likely to be affected by the decisions here on appeal.
 For example, in the 1103 Investigation the ALJ stated that
 “[t]he Federal Circuit’s ruling” in the present appeal “will
 affect the finding” in that investigation. 1103 Investiga-
 tion, 2019 WL 2953268, at *2 (June 3, 2019). And in the
 1158 Investigation there is a similar issue of importation,
 with the date for completion of the investigation set for Oc-
 tober 29, 2020, pursuant to Commission Rule 210.51(a)(1).
 1158 Investigation, 2019 WL 2880853, at *2 (July 3, 2019).
     It is recognized that “a case may remain alive based on
 collateral consequences, which may be found in the pro-
 spect that a judgment will affect future litigation or admin-
 istrative action.” Hyosung, 926 F.3d at 1358 (citing 13C
 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H.
 Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3533.3.1 (3d ed.
 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted)). Although in
 Hyosung the court held that co-pending district court liti-
 gation did not avert mootness of an ITC decision after pa-
 tent expiration, the pending actions here involve unexpired
 patents related to the same imported X1 set-top boxes. The
 Commission states that the issues on appeal concern the
 scope of Section 337 as a matter of statutory interpretation.
    We conclude that there are sufficient collateral conse-
 quences to negate mootness. The motion for dismissal is
 denied.
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  10                  COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

                               II
                  THE SECTION 337 VIOLATION
      The Final ID and the full Commission found violation
  of Section 337. 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a) includes:
       (1) Subject to paragraph (2), the following are un-
       lawful . . . .
          (B) The importation into the United States,
          the sale for importation, or the sale within
          the United States after importation by the
          owner, importer, or consignee, of articles
          that—
          (i) infringe a valid and enforceable United
          States patent . . . .
  It is not disputed that Comcast’s customers directly in-
  fringe the ’263 and ’413 patents. It is also undisputed that
  Comcast induces its customers to directly infringe these
  patents. Comcast’s argument is that Section 337 is not vi-
  olated for two reasons: first, that the imported X1 set-top
  boxes are not “articles that infringe” because the boxes do
  not infringe the patents at the time of importation; and sec-
  ond, that Comcast is not the importer of the X1 set-top
  boxes, but takes title to the imported boxes only after the
  boxes are imported by ARRIS and Technicolor.
                               A
  “Articles that Infringe”
      Comcast argues that the Commission’s authority under
  Section 337 is limited to excluding articles that infringe at
  the time of importation. Comcast states that this is the
  holding of Suprema, Inc. v. U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 796
F.3d 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (en banc). The Commission and
  Rovi respond that Suprema establishes that imported arti-
  cles infringe in terms of Section 337, when infringement
  occurs after importation.
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  COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N                         11

      In Suprema this court considered Section 337 as ap-
  plied to infringement after importation, stating:
      Section 337 contemplates that infringement may
      occur after importation. The statute defines as un-
      lawful “the sale within the United States after im-
      portation . . . of articles that—(i) infringe . . . .” The
      statute thus distinguishes the unfair trade act of
      importation from infringement by defining as un-
      fair the importation of an article that will infringe,
      i.e., be sold, “after importation.”               Section
      337(a)(1)(B)’s “sale . . . after importation” language
      confirms that the Commission is permitted to focus
      on post-importation activity to identify the comple-
      tion of infringement.
  Id. at 1349 (alteration and emphasis in original) (citations
  omitted). The court held that “the Commission’s interpre-
  tation that the phrase ‘articles that infringe’ covers goods
  that were used by an importer to directly infringe post-im-
  portation as a result of the seller’s inducement is reasona-
  ble.” Id. at 1352–53.
       Comcast argues that Suprema should be limited to its
  facts, whereby the inducement liability must be attached
  to the imported article at the time of the article’s importa-
  tion. Comcast states that the imported X1 set-top boxes
  are incapable of infringement until the X1 set-top boxes are
  combined with Comcast’s domestic servers and its custom-
  ers’ mobile devices. Comcast contends that any inducing
  conduct of articles that infringe occurs entirely after the
  boxes’ importation.
      The Commission correctly held that Section 337 ap-
  plies to articles that infringe after importation. See Su-
  prema, supra. The Commission found:
      Moreover, even if the location of Comcast’s induc-
      ing conduct were legally relevant, and it is not,
      Comcast designed the X1 STBs to be used in an in-
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  12                   COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

       fringing manner, and directed their manufacture
       overseas—requiring, among other things, overseas
       installation of the relevant software onto the STBs.
       Final ID at 9–12, 232, 234; Wing Shing Pdts. (BVI),
       Ltd. v. Simatelex Manufactory Co., 479 F. Supp. 2d
388, 409–11 (S.D.N.Y. 2007) (“[N]umerous courts
       have held that, in contrast to §§ 271 (a) and (c),
       § 271 (b) applies to extraterritorial conduct.”); see
       also, e.g., Honeywell, Inc. v. Metz Apparatewerke,
       509 F.2d 1137, 1141–42 (7th Cir. 1975); MEMC
       Elec. Materials, Inc. v. Mitsubishi Materials Silicon
       Corp., 2006 WL 463525, at *7 (N.D. Cal. 2006).
       Comcast then directed the importation of those
       STBs to Comcast facilities in the United States. Fi-
       nal ID at 9–12. Comcast’s inducing activity took
       place overseas, prior to importation; it took place at
       importation; and it took place in the United States,
       after importation. See, e.g., id. at 9–12, 232–37,
       399.
  J.A. 85 n.13. It is undisputed that direct infringement of
  the ’263 and ’413 patents occurs when the imported X1 set-
  top boxes are fitted by or on behalf of Comcast and used
  with Comcast’s customers’ mobile devices. Reversible error
  has not been shown in the Commission’s determinations
  that the X1 set-top boxes imported by and for Comcast for
  use by Comcast’s customers are “articles that infringe” in
  terms of Section 337.
                                 B
  “Importer” under Section 337
      Section 337 prohibits the “importation into the United
  States, the sale for importation, or the sale within the
  United States after importation by the owner, importer, or
  consignee, of articles that” infringe a valid patent. 19
  U.S.C. § 1337(a)(1)(B)(i). Whether a party is an importer
  in terms of Section 337 is a question of fact, and the Com-
  mission’s finding is reviewed for support by substantial
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  COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N                  13

  evidence. In re Orion Co., 71 F.2d 458, 462 (C.C.P.A. 1934)
  (“This is substantial evidence that, at the time of the acts
  complained of by the complainant, the Orion Company was
  an importer or consignee of slide fasteners.”).
      Comcast argues that it is not an importer of the X1 set-
  top boxes, in that the importer of record is ARRIS or Tech-
  nicolor. Comcast states that it does not physically bring
  the boxes into the United States and it does not exercise
  any control over the process of importation. The Commis-
  sion and Rovi respond that Comcast is an importer in terms
  of Section 337 because Comcast causes the X1 set-top boxes
  to enter the United States.
      The Final ID found that the X1 set-top boxes “are so
  tailored to Comcast’s system and requirements that they
  would not function within another cable operator’s sys-
  tem.” Final ID at *11. “Further, the software at issue in
  the heart of this investigation is attributable squarely to
  Comcast.” Id. The Final ID concluded that “the evidence
  shows that Comcast is sufficiently involved with the de-
  sign, manufacture, and importation of the accused prod-
  ucts, such that it is an importer for purposes of Section
  337.” Id.
      The Final ID sets forth extensive evidence of Comcast’s
  control over the importation of the X1 set-top boxes, includ-
  ing that Comcast requires that the X1 set-top boxes “ad-
  here to its specifications and acceptability standards.” Id.
  at *10. Comcast also “[p]rovides ARRIS and Technicolor
  with detailed technical documents” so the X1 set-top boxes
  “operate as required by Comcast within its network to pro-
  vide services to Comcast subscribers.” Id. The “products
  are designed only for Comcast” and Comcast restricts
  ARRIS’s “ability to sell the products without Comcast’s per-
  mission.” J.A. 135.
      The Final ID found that Comcast “[k]nows the im-
  ported products are manufactured abroad and imported
  into the United States” and requires ARRIS and
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  14                 COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N

  Technicolor “to deliver the accused products to Comcast de-
  livery sites in the United States.” Final ID at *10–11. The
  Final ID found that “Comcast alone controls the volume of
  accused products that enter the United States, through
  forecasts and orders sent to ARRIS and Technicolor.” J.A.
  136.
       The Final ID also found that Comcast “[r]equires
  ARRIS and Technicolor to handle importation formalities,
  such as fees, documentation, licenses, and regulatory ap-
  provals.” Id. The Final ID concluded that “Comcast is suf-
  ficiently involved in the importation of the accused
  products that it satisfies the importation requirement, un-
  der 19 U.S.C. § 1337(A)(1)(B).” Final ID at *405.
      The full Commission concluded that Comcast is an im-
  porter of the X1 set-top boxes. The Commission stated that
  “Section 337, as applied to Comcast’s relevant conduct
  here, requires importation of articles, proof of direct in-
  fringement, and proof of inducement, all of which have
  been established by the record. It is no defense to the vio-
  lation of a trade statute that Comcast, from the United
  States, actively induces the infringement by its users as to
  the imported X1 STBs.” Comm. Op. at *12.
      The Commission’s findings of importation by or for
  Comcast of articles for infringing use are supported by sub-
  stantial evidence. The Commission’s determination of vio-
  lation of Section 337 is in conformity to the statute and
  precedent.

                              III

                THE LIMITED EXCLUSION ORDER
      ARRIS and Technicolor argue that Section 337 limits
  exclusion orders to articles “imported by any person violat-
  ing the provision of this section.” 19 U.S.C. § 1337(d)(1).
  ARRIS and Technicolor argue that the limited exclusion or-
  der is improperly applied to them because they were found
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  COMCAST CORP. v. U.S. INT’L TRADE COMM’N                15

  not to be infringers or contributory infringers. The Final
  ID found that the X1 set-top boxes are non-infringing when
  imported, and that contributory infringement does not lie
  because the boxes as imported have non-infringing uses
  such as watching live television.
      The Commission responds that the exclusion order as
  applied to ARRIS and Technicolor is within ITC discretion
  to enforce Section 337, because the order is limited to im-
  portations on behalf of Comcast, of articles whose intended
  use is to infringe the patents at issue.
       The Commission has discretion in selecting a remedy
  that has a reasonable relation to the unlawful trade prac-
  tice. See Cisco Systems, Inc. v. U.S. Int’l Trade Comm’n,
  873 F.3d 1354, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (“Blocking imports of
  articles that induce patent infringement has a reasonable
  relationship to stopping unlawful trade acts.”). The Com-
  mission points out that ARRIS and Technicolor were re-
  spondents in the investigation, and the exclusion order is
  limited to articles imported on behalf of Comcast. On these
  facts, the limited exclusion order is within the Commis-
  sion’s discretion as reasonably related to stopping the un-
  lawful infringement, and is affirmed.
                         CONCLUSION
       The rulings and remedial actions of the Commission
  are in accordance with law, and the underlying findings are
  supported by substantial evidence. The Commission’s de-
  cision and implementing orders are affirmed.
                         AFFIRMED