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Pilot Programs Referenced Items (241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248)
(241)                     DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                United States Patent and Trademark Office
                        Docket No. PTO-P-2016-0012

                      Post-Prosecution Pilot Program

AGENCY: United States Patent and Trademark Office, Commerce.

ACTION: Notice; Request for Comment.

SUMMARY: The United States Patent and Trademark Office (Office) is
initiating a Post-Prosecution Pilot Program (P3) to test its impact on
enhancing patent practice during the period subsequent to a final rejection
and prior to the filing of a notice of appeal. This Pilot Program responds
to stakeholder input gathered during public forums held in support of the
Enhanced Patent Quality Initiatived. Under the P3, a panel of examiners,
including the examiner of record, will hold a conference with the applicant
to review the applicant's response to the final rejection of record. In
order to participate in the P3, the applicant will be required to file a
request for consideration under the P3 within two months from the mailing
date of a final rejection and prior to filing a notice of appeal, together
with a response to the final rejection and a statement that the applicant
is willing and available to participate in the conference. The applicant
will have the option of including in the response a proposed non-broadening
amendment to a claim(s). The Office designed the P3 to increase the value
of after final practice by (1) leveraging applicant input obtained through
an oral presentation during a conference with a panel of examiners, and (2)
also providing written explanation for the panel decision. The P3 is also
designed to reduce the number of appeals and issues to be taken up on
appeal to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB), and reduce the number
of Requests for Continued Examination (RCE), and simplify the after final
landscape. This notice identifies requirements and procedures of the P3,
which will govern entry into, and practice under, the P3. This notice also
solicits public comments on the P3 and other suggestions to improve after
final practice and reduce the number of both appeals to the PTAB and RCEs.

DATES: Effective Date: July 11, 2016,
   Duration: The P3 will accept requests beginning July 11, 2016, until
either January 12, 2017, or the date the Office accepts a total
(collectively across all technology centers) of 1,600 compliant requests to
participate under the P3, whichever occurs first. Each individual
technology center will accept no more than 200 compliant requests, meaning
that the P3 may close with respect to an individual technology center that
has accepted 200 compliant requests, even as it continues to run in other
technology centers that have yet to accept 200 compliant requests.
   Comment Deadline Date: Written comments must be received on or before
November 14, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent by electronic mail message over the
Internet addressed to: afterfinalpractice@uspto.gov. Comments may also be
submitted by postal mail addressed to: United States Patent and Trademark
Office, Mail Stop Comments - Patents, Office of Commissioner for Patents,
P.O. Box 1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450, marked to the attention of Raul
Tamayo. Although comments may be submitted by postal mail, the Office
prefers to receive comments by electronic mail message over the Internet in
order to facilitate posting on the Office's Internet Web site.
   The comments will be available for public inspection at the Office of
the Commissioner for Patents, located at Madison Building East, Tenth
Floor, 600 Dulany Street, Alexandria, Virginia. Comments also will be
available for viewing via the Office's Internet Web site
(http://www.uspto.gov). Because comments will be made available for public
inspection, information that is not desired to be made public, such as an
address or phone number, should not be included in the comments.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Raul Tamayo, Senior Legal Advisor
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(telephone (571) 272-7728; electronic mail message (raul.tamayo@uspto.
gov)), Kery Fries, Senior Legal Advisor (telephone (571) 272-7757;
electronic mail message (kery.fries@uspto.gov)), or Jeffrey West, Legal
Advisor (telephone (571) 272-2226; electronic mail message (jeffrey.west@
uspto.gov)). Alternatively, mail may be addressed to Raul Tamayo, Office of
Commissioner for Patents, Attn:  Post-Prosecution Pilot Program, P.O. Box
1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

   Since 2005, the Office has administered the Pre-Appeal Brief Conference
Pilot Program (Pre-Appeal program), which provides an avenue for a patent
applicant to request a review of the basis of a rejection(s) in a patent
application prior to the filing of an appeal brief. See New Pre-Appeal
Brief Conference Pilot Program, 1296 Off. Gaz. Pat. Office 67 (July 12,
2005). Specifically, when an applicant files a notice of appeal together
with a request to participate in the Pre-Appeal program, a panel of
examiners (including the examiner of record) formally reviews the
rejections of record in light of the remarks provided in the request. The
Pre-Appeal program benefits both the applicant and the Office. For example,
if the panel's review determines that the application is not in condition
for appeal, the applicant can save the time and expense of preparing an
appeal brief, and the Office can save resources associated with an appeal
to the PTAB.
   Since 2013, the Office has administered the After Final Consideration
Pilot Program 2.0 (AFCP 2.0). See After Final Consideration Pilot Program
2.0, 78 FR 29117 (May 17, 2013). Under AFCP 2.0, examiners consider a
response filed after a final rejection pursuant to 37 CFR 1.116 that
includes remarks and amendments that may require further search and
consideration, provided that at least one independent claim includes a non-
broadening amendment. The examiner also may conduct an interview with the
applicant when the response does not place the application in condition for
allowance. A goal of AFCP 2.0 is to reduce pendency by reducing the number
of RCEs and encouraging increased collaboration between the applicant and
the examiner to effectively advance the prosecution of the application.
   The P3 program implemented through this notice combines effective
features from the Pre-Appeal and AFCP 2.0 programs with new features. For
example, the P3 provides for (i) an after final response to be considered
by a panel of examiners (Pre-Appeal), (ii) an after final response to
include an optional proposed amendment. (AFCP 2.0), and (iii) an
opportunity for the applicant to make an oral presentation to the panel of
examiners (new). Finally, the panel decision will be communicated in the
form of a brief written summary. Section II of this notice provides a more
complete identification of the requirements and procedures of the P3. This
notice does not discontinue either the Pre-Appeal or AFCP 2.0 pilot
programs.

II. P3 Participation Requirements and Procedures

A. P3 Participation Requirements

   To be eligible to participate in the P3, an application must contain an
outstanding final rejection and be (i) an original utility non-provisional
application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), or (ii) an international utility
application that has entered the national stage in compliance with
35 U.S.C. 371 (see 37 CFR 1.491). A continuing application (e.g., a
continuation or divisional application) is filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and
is thus eligible to participate in the P3. Reissue, design, and plant
applications, as well as reexamination proceedings, are not eligible to
participate in the P3.
    A request for a response under 37 CFR 1.116 to be considered under the
P3 must include the following items: (1) a transmittal form, such as form
PTO/SB/444, that identifies the submission as a P3 submission and requests
consideration under the P3; (2) a response under 37 CFR 1.116 comprising no
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more than five pages of argument; and (3) a statement that the applicant is
willing and available to participate in the conference with the panel of
examiners. Optionally, a P3 request may include a proposed non-broadening
amendment to a claim(s).
   Only one P3 request will be accepted in response to an outstanding final
rejection. If prosecution is reopened and the Office subsequently issues a
new final rejection, the filing of a P3 request in response to the new
final rejection is permitted. Once a P3 request has been accepted in
response to a final rejection, no additional response under 37 CFR 1.116 to
the same final rejection will be entered, unless the examiner has requested
the additional response because the examiner agrees that it would place the
application in condition for allowance.
   There is no fee required to request consideration under the P3. All
papers associated with a P3 request must be filed via the USPTO's
Electronic Filing System-Web (EFS-Web).
   To be eligible to participate in the P3, an applicant cannot have
previously filed a proper request to participate in the Pre-Appeal program
or a proper request under AFCP 2.0 in response to the same outstanding
final rejection, and once a P3 request is accepted, neither a request to
participate in the Pre-Appeal program nor a request for consideration
under AFCP 2.0 will be accepted for the same outstanding final rejection.
1. Timing of the P3 Request
   A P3 request must be filed within two months from the mailing date of a
final rejection and prior to filing a notice of appeal. A P3 request will
be deemed untimely if it is filed (i) more than two months from the mailing
date of the final rejection, (ii) in an application that does not contain
an outstanding final rejection (e.g., a P3 request will not be accepted in
response to a second action non-final rejection), (iii) in response to a
final rejection for which a proper AFCP 2.0 request has been filed, (iv) on
or after the date a RCE or notice of appeal is filed in response to the
same outstanding rejection, or (v) on or after the date an express
abandonment is filed. For information on how the Office will process an
untimely P3 request, refer to Section II.B.1 of this notice. For
information on how a P3 request will be treated if a RCE, notice of appeal,
or express abandonment is filed subsequent to the filing of the P3 request,
but prior to a decision on the P3 request, refer to Section II.B.4 of this
notice.
2. Transmittal Form
   A P3 request must include a transmittal form. The Office advises the use
of form PTO/SB/444, which is available at
http://www.uspto.gov/forms/index.jsp, as the transmittal form. Use of form
PTO/SB/444 will help the Office to quickly identify P3 requests and
facilitate timely processing. In addition, form PTO/SB/444 will help
applicants understand and comply with the requirements and procedures of
the P3. Under 5 CFR 1320.3(h), form PTO/SB/444 does not collect
"information" within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
3. Response under 37 CFR 1.116
   A P3 request must include a response under 37 CFR 1.116. The response
must be a separate paper from the transmittal form, and must comprise no
more than five pages of arguments. Arguments are limited to appealable, not
petitionable, matters (e.g., an argument that the final rejection was
premature is a petitionable matter - see MPEP § 706.07(c)). The Office
considers arguments as encompassing, e.g., conclusions, definitions, claim
charts, and diagrams. If the applicant opts to include a proposed amendment
in the response under 37 CFR 1.116, as further discussed at Section II.A.5
of this notice, arguments presented in the response may be directed to the
patentability of the proposed amended claim(s). The sheet(s) of the
response containing a proposed amendment will not count towards the five-
page limit. If the applicant opts to include an affidavit or other evidence
as part of the response, entry of the affidavit or other evidence will be
governed by 37 CFR 1.116. See MPEP 714.12. In addition, the affidavit or
other evidence will count towards the limit of no more than five pages of
arguments.
   Form PTO/SB/444, or an equivalent transmittal that does not include
arguments, will not count towards the five-page limit. Additionally, a page
of the response that consists solely of, for example, a signature will not
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be counted toward the five-page limit. Thus, for example, a response that
includes five pages of arguments and a sixth page that includes conclusions
and/or definitions would be treated as exceeding the five-page limit.
Furthermore, an applicant may not circumvent the five-page limit by filing
arguments in multiple separate documents. For example, if an applicant
files one document containing five pages of arguments and an additional
document containing arguments, the two documents will be considered
together to ascertain whether the five-page limit has been exceeded.
   The response may be single spaced, but must comply with the requirements
of 37 CFR 1.52(a). Additionally, the response may refer to an argument
already of record rather than repeat the argument. This should be done by
referring to the location of the argument in a prior submission and
identifying the prior submission by title and/or date (e.g., see the
argument at pages 4-6 of the paper titled "Applicant's Response to Final
Office Action" filed on October 1, 2015). A reference to "the arguments of
record" or "the paper dated X" without a pinpoint citation will not be
considered under the P3.
4. Conference Participation Statement
   The P3 request must include a statement by the applicant that the
applicant is willing and available to participate in the conference with
the panel of examiners. Form PTO/SB/444 includes the required conference
participation statement.
   After the Office initially verifies that a P3 request is timely and
compliant, as further discussed at Section II.B.1 of this notice, the
Office will contact the applicant to schedule the conference. If within ten
calendar days from the date the Office first contacts the applicant, the
Office and the applicant are unable to agree on a time to hold the
conference, or the applicant declines to participate in the conference, the
request will be deemed improper and treated in accordance with the
discussion at Section II.B.1 of this notice.
   The applicant may participate in the conference in-person, by telephone,
or by a video conferencing tool set up by the Office, such as
WebEx®. The conference will permit the applicant to present to the
panel of examiners in a manner similar to how an applicant presents an
argument in an ex parte appeal before the PTAB. The applicant's
participation in the conference will be limited to 20 minutes.
   The applicant should advise the Office of any special needs as soon as
possible before participating in a conference. Examples of such needs
include an easel for posters or a projector. The applicant should not make
assumptions about the equipment the Office may have on hand for the
conference. Section II.B.2 of this notice provides more information
regarding the applicant's participation in the conference.
5. Option to Propose Amendment
   The response under 37 CFR 1.116 included with a P3 request optionally
may include a proposed amendment to a claim(s). Entry of any proposed
amendment after a final Office action is governed by 37 CFR 1.116. See
MPEP 714.12. In addition, a proposed amendment under the P3 may not broaden
the scope of a claim in any aspect. For the purposes of the P3, the
analysis of whether a proposed amendment to a claim impermissibly would
broaden the scope of the claim will be analogous to the guidance set forth
in section 1412.03 of the MPEP for determining whether a reissue claim has
been broadened.
   A proposed amendment that focuses the issues with respect to a single
independent claim is the type of proposed amendment that provides the best
opportunity for leading to the application being placed into condition for
allowance. A proposed amendment that contains extensive amendments (either
in terms of the nature of the amendment or number of claims to be amended)
probably will require extensive further consideration and thus likely would
not be effective to place the application in condition for allowance.
Extensive amendments will be considered only to the extent possible under
the time allotted to the examiner under the P3.
   The sheet(s) of the response containing a proposed amendment will not
count towards the five-page limit discussed at Section II.A.3 of this
notice. In accordance with 37 CFR 1.121(c)(1), the sheet(s) of the response
containing the proposed amendment may not contain arguments.

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B. P3 Procedures

1. Technology Center Review
   After receipt of a P3 request, the relevant technology center will
review the request to verify that it is timely, includes a transmittal
form, a response under 37 CFR 1.116 comprising no more than five pages of
arguments (exclusive of any proposed amendment), and the conference
participation statement, and otherwise complies with the requirements of
the P3 set forth at Section II.A of this notice. If the request is timely
and compliant, the technology center will contact the applicant to schedule
the conference.
   If the review finds that the request is untimely or otherwise fails to
comply with the requirements of the P3, a conference will not be held. The
response and any proposed amendment filed with the request will be treated
under 37 CFR 1.116 in the same manner as any non-P3 response to a final
rejection (except that if the request fails to comply because a P3 request
previously has been accepted in response to the same final rejection, the
response and any proposed amendment will be entered only if the examiner
requests them, as mentioned earlier at Section II.A of this notice). The
next communication issued by the Office will indicate the reason that the
request was found to be untimely or otherwise non-compliant, the result of
the treatment under 37 CFR 1.116 of the response and any proposed amendment
filed with the request, and the time period for the applicant to take any
further action that may be required as dictated by the facts. For example,
if the response and any proposed amendment filed together with an untimely
or otherwise non-compliant P3 request fails to place the application in
condition for allowance, the next Office communication will be an advisory
action. On the other hand, if the response and any proposed amendment is
enterable under 37 CFR 1.116 and places the application in condition for
allowance, the next Office communication will be a notice of allowability.
   If the review of a P3 request finds that the request is timely and
complies with the requirements of the P3, but the technology center
reviewing the request has reached its limit of 200 compliant requests
accepted, a conference will not be held. In this situation, the response
and any proposed amendment filed with the request will be treated under
37 CFR 1.116 in the same manner as any non-P3 response to a final
rejection. The Office may need to take appropriate measures to adjust an
examiner's workload if the volume of requests for a P3 conference with any
particular examiner becomes excessive.
   It is critical for P3 participants to understand that the filing of a P3
request will not toll the six-month statutory period for reply to the final
rejection. To avoid abandonment, further action, such as the filing of a
notice of appeal or RCE, will need to be taken within the six-month
statutory period for responding to the final rejection, unless the
applicant receives written notice from the Office that the application has
been allowed or that prosecution is being reopened.

2. The Post-Prosecution Pilot Conference
   After the Office initially verifies that a P3 request is timely and
compliant as discussed at Section II.B.1 of this notice, a Supervisory
Patent Examiner (SPE) (preferably the SPE of the examiner of record) will
coordinate a panel experienced in the relevant field of technology to
review the response under 37 CFR 1.116 filed with the P3 request. The panel
may include the examiner of record, the SPE, and a primary examiner
(preferably the signing primary examiner for the examiner of record, if the
examiner of record is a junior examiner). Every reasonable attempt will be
made to select panel members with the most expertise in the relevant
technological and legal issues raised by the application under
consideration.
   Concurrently, the Office will contact the applicant to schedule the
conference. The applicant may arrange to participate in-person, by
telephone, or by a video conferencing tool, such as WebEx®. Although the
the Office will make every reasonable attempt to accommodate the applicant
and timely schedule the conference, scheduling of the conference lies
within the full discretion of the Office. If within ten calendar days from
when the Office first contacts the applicant, the Office and the applicant
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are unable to agree on a time to hold the conference, or if the applicant
declines to participate in the conference, the request will be deemed
improper and treated in accordance with the discussion at Section II.B.1 of
this notice. If the examiner of record is unable to participate on the
scheduled date of the conference and rescheduling is not possible, the
conference will proceed and the other conferees will gather input from the
examiner prior to the conference if possible. The remaining conferees may,
at their discretion, opt to include in the panel another examiner from the
pertinent art.
   The conference will begin with the applicant's presentation, which is
limited to 20 minutes. The applicant will be excused from the conference at
the end of the presentation. Any materials used by the applicant during the
presentation, e.g., a PowerPoint® or exhibit, will be placed in the
file and will not count against the five-page limit on arguments. Entry of
an affidavit or other evidence included as part of the presentation
materials is governed by 37 CFR 1.116. See MPEP 714.12.
   The applicant may present on appealable, not petitionable, matters
(e.g., applicant may not present an argument that the final rejection was
premature). The applicant may present arguments directed to the outstanding
record, and, if the response filed with the P3 request includes a proposed
amendment, the applicant also may present arguments directed to the
patentability of the amended claim(s).

3. The Notice of Decision from Post-Prosecution Pilot Conference
   The applicant will be informed of the panel's decision in writing via
the mailing of a Notice of Decision from Post-Prosecution Pilot Conference
(form PTO-2324). For an accepted P3 request (refer to Section II.B.1 of
this notice for the procedure that will be followed for an untimely or non-
compliant P3 request), the notice of decision will indicate one of the
following: (a) final rejection upheld; (b) allowable application; or
(c) reopen prosecution. In appropriate circumstances, a proposed amendment
may accompany the notice of decision proposing changes that, if accepted,
may result in an indication of allowability.
a. Final Rejection Upheld
   If the notice of decision indicates "final rejection upheld," the notice
of decision will not contain any additional grounds of rejection or any
restatement of a previously made rejection. Instead, the notice of decision
will summarize the status of the pending claims (allowed, objected to,
rejected, or withdrawn from consideration) and the reasons for maintaining
any rejection, and include an indication of any rejection that has been
withdrawn as a result of the conference.
   For a P3 request that includes a proposed amendment as part of the
response under 37 CFR 1.116, a notice of decision indicating "final
rejection upheld" also will communicate the status of the proposed
amendment for purposes of appeal (entered/not entered). If the proposed
amendment is entered for purposes of appeal, and the notice of decision
indicates which individual rejection(s) set forth in the final Office
action would be used to reject the amended claim(s), then any subsequent
examiner's answer may include the rejection(s) of the amended claim(s), and
such rejection(s) made in the examiner's answer would not be considered a
new ground of rejection.
   If a notice of decision indicates "final rejection upheld," the time
period for taking further action in response to the final rejection expires
on (1) the mailing date of the notice of decision; or (2) the date set
forth in the final rejection, whichever is later. As discussed previously,
to avoid abandonment, the applicant must file a notice of appeal or RCE
within the statutory period for response to the final rejection. Extensions
of time may be obtained under 37 CFR 1.136(a), but the period for response
may not be extended beyond the six-month statutory period for response.
   A notice of decision indicating "final rejection upheld" is not
petitionable. A decision to maintain a rejection is subject to appeal.
Accordingly, the Office will not grant a petition seeking reconsideration
of a panel decision upholding the final rejection. The applicant maintains
the right of appeal under 35 U.S.C. 134 by filing a notice of appeal and an
appeal brief and having the appeal considered by the PTAB.
b. Allowable Application
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   If the notice of decision indicates "allowable application," the notice
of decision will be mailed concurrently with a Notice of Allowance, and the
notice of decision will state that the rejection(s) is/are withdrawn.
c. Reopen Prosecution
   If the notice of decision indicates "reopen prosecution," the notice of
decision will state that the rejection(s) is/are withdrawn and a new Office
action will be mailed. The notice of decision also will state that no
further action is required by the applicant until further notice.

4. Actions that Will Terminate a Post-Prosecution Pilot Conference
   If the applicant files any of the following after the date of filing a
P3 request, but prior to a notice of decision from the panel of examiners,
processing of the P3 request will end without a decision on the merits of
the P3 request: a notice of appeal; a RCE; an express abandonment under
37 CFR 1.138; a request for the declaration of interference; or a petition
requesting the institution of a derivation proceeding. The response and any
proposed amendment filed with the request will be treated under 37 CFR
1.116 in the same manner as any non-P3 response to a final rejection. The
next communication issued by the Office will indicate the reason that
processing of the P3 request was terminated, the result of the treatment
under 37 CFR 1.116 of the response and any proposed amendment filed with
the request, and the time period for the applicant to take any further
action that may be required as dictated by the facts.
   In addition, as stated earlier, once a P3 request has been accepted in
response to a final rejection, no additional response under 37 CFR 1.116 to
the same final rejection will be entered, other than one that the examiner
has requested because the examiner agrees it would place the application in
condition for allowance. This condition of the P3 holds true regardless of
whether the additional response is filed prior to, on the same day as, or
after a notice of decision from the panel of examiners.
   Finally, at any point during the processing of a P3 request, the
examiner may enter an Examiner's Amendment placing the application in
condition for allowance.

III. Request for Comments

   The Office has three main goals for the P3: (1) increase the value of
after final practice; (2) reduce the number of appeals and the issues to be
taken on appeal to the PTAB and the number of RCEs; and (3) streamline the
options available to an applicant during after final practice. The Office
is requesting public comment on the P3 and other suggestions to improve
after final practice and reduce the number of both appeals and issues taken
up for appeal to the PTAB and RCEs. The Office plans to evaluate the public
feedback and the balance between the degree to which the P3 achieves its
goals and the examining resources it expends. The Office will provide
advance notification before modifying and/or extending the P3 or making the
P3 permanent.

July 7,2016                                                 MICHELLE K. LEE
                  Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and
                  Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office

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