Dolby

Dolby HEVC/AV1 patent affirmed invalid in China

On July 31, 2024, the Beijing Intellectual Property Court (BIPC) confirmed that all claims of Chinese patent CN102256122 were invalid. The CN’122 patent is owned by Dolby International. The claims were initially found invalid by the China National Intellectual Property Administration, but Dolby appealed to the BIPC. CN102256122 was purportedly essential or related to patents purportedly essential to the Access Advance patent pool and SISVEL’s AV1 and VP9 pools.

Unified was represented by Weichixue Law Firm for the appeal, and the case was managed by in-house counsel, Jessica L.A. Marks.

Dolby's HEVC EPO patent found invalid

On May 22, 2024, the European Patent Office revoked the original claims of EP 3767950, owned by Dolby International AB. The original claims of EP‘950 were identified as essential to the Access Advance Patent Pool.

Claims during the opposition process, however, were allowed. But the amended claims of the EP’950 patent do not appear to be essential to the HEVC standard for at least two reasons—(1) the process required by H.265 is different from that recited in the claims and (2) the indicator used in H.265 is a two-bit indicator when the claims recite a one-bit flag.

EP ‘950 is generally directed to tracking reference pictures for use in digital image decoding using a picture order count cycle parameter. The amended claims require a “wrap indicator” that is used to indicate “a transition between two sets of pictures,” with the “wrap indicator being a one bit flag.” The “current picture order count cycle parameter…updat[es] a previous picture order count cycle parameter after receiving the wrap indicator."

Basically, the amended claim's “wrap indicator” indicates to a decoder that the Picture Order Count (POC) has reached its maximum value, which means the set of pictures has changed. Once POC reaches its maximum value, the one-bit “wrap indicator” is sent to notify the decoder and the POC is reset to 0. See, e.g., EP ‘950 at para. [0160]; Reply of the Patent Proprietor to the Notice of Opposition, Dated June 6, 2023 (“a transition between two different sets of pictures take place when a number of pictures in the first set has reached a predetermined maximum value in the number of pictures…this is signaled by a the wrap indicator”).

But H.265 uses a different process. In H.265, the decoder's POC is reset based on the values of a most significant bit (msb) and a least significant bit (lsb). When both the msb and lsb are reset, the POC value is reset. A POC reset indicator (poc_reset_idc) is sent to the decoder to indicate one of four different states for the msb and lsb: (1) poc_reset_idc=0 indicates that neither the msb nor the lsb are reset; (2) poc_reset_idc=1 indicates only the msb is reset; (3) poc_reset_idc=2 indicates that both the msb and lsb are reset; and (4) poc_reset_idc=3 indicates that a state where either only the msb of POC is reset or that both msb and lsb are reset. In the fourth state (when poc_reset_idc=3), an additional indicator is used—full_POC_reset_flag—to differentiate between when only the msb is reset and when both the msb and lsb are reset. Accordingly, a POC reset can be triggered at the decoder when (a) poc_reset_idc=2 or (b) poc_reset_idc=3 and full_POC_reset_flag is present. Thus, the H.265 process involves a poc_reset_idc that is based on the values of the msb and lsb, not the maximum POC. And poc_reset_idc is not a flag, but an indicator with four values where it may cause the POC to reset based on poc_reset_idc’s value alone or the poc_reset_idc’s value in conjunction with a full_POC_reset_flag. See, e.g., Section F.7.4.7.1, F.8.3.1.

Moreover, not only is the process different, but because poc_reset_idc has four values, it is a two-bit indicator, not the required one-bit flag. 

Unified is represented by Dr. Susan E. Keston and Harry Hutchinson of HGF Law, and by in-house counsel, Jessica L.A. Marks and Roshan Mansinghani.

Another Dolby HEVC EPO patent revoked

On February 29, 2024, the European Patent Office revoked all claims of EP 3694209 B1, currently owned by Dolby International AB. EP ‘209 generally relates to video coding techniques that use data hiding to decrease bandwidth. The patent is related to others that have been designated essential to the Access Advance (HEVC) pool. EP ’209 has also been identified as potentially essential to the Versatile Video Coding (VVC) standard. This filing is a part of Unified’s ongoing efforts in its SEP Video Codec Zone.

Unified was represented by Harry Hutchinson and Andrew McGettrick at HGF Law, and by in-house counsel, Jessica L.A. Marks and Roshan Mansinghani.

Dolby HEVC/AV1 patent revoked in EPO

On January 17, 2024, the European Patent Office announced the revocation of all claims of EP 3798988. The EP ‘988 patent is owned by Dolby International AB and is related to patents that have been declared essential to Access Advance and SISVEL’s AV1 patent pools.

Unified is represented by Harry Hutchinson and Andrew McGettrick at HGF Law, and by in-house counsel, Jessica L.A. Marks and Michelle Aspen.

Dolby VVC patent revoked in EPO

On November 30, 2023, the European Patent Office revoked all claims of EP 3675491, owned by Dolby International AB. EP ‘491 generally relates to video coding techniques that use data hiding to decrease bandwidth. The patent is related to patents that are designated essential to the Access Advance patent pool and has also been identified as potentially essential to the Versatile Video Coding (VVC) standard.

Unified was represented by Harry Hutchinson and Andrew McGettrick at HGF Law, and by in-house counsel, Jessica L.A. Marks and Roshan Mansinghani.