Patent 10713672

PTAB challenges

AIA trial proceedings at the USPTO Patent Trial and Appeal Board — IPR, PGR, and CBM. Petitioners, judge panels, claim-level invalidation outcomes from Final Written Decisions, and Federal Circuit appeals. The single most important defensive datapoint after litigation history.

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Proceedings on file (0)

All PTAB activity →

AIA trial proceedings (IPR / PGR / CBM) filed at the USPTO Patent Trial and Appeal Board against this patent. Sourced from the USPTO Open Data Portal and refreshed every six hours; each proceeding number deep-links to the PTAB E2E docket.

No PTAB proceedings on file. This patent has not been challenged via IPR, PGR, or CBM. The absence is itself a signal — well-asserted patents eventually attract IPRs. The LLM analysis below may surface filings the ODP feed hasn’t indexed yet.

PTAB challenges

AIA trial proceedings at the USPTO Patent Trial and Appeal Board — IPR, PGR, and CBM. Petitioners, judge panels, claim-level invalidation outcomes from Final Written Decisions, and Federal Circuit appeals. The single most important defensive datapoint after litigation history.

✓ Generated

Proceedings overview

The USPTO ODP API returns no AIA trial proceedings for US patent 10713672 as of the most recent ingest. Therefore, there is no PTAB activity on file for this patent.

Strategic summary

As there are no PTAB proceedings on file for US patent 10713672, all claims of the patent (claims 1-17) are currently untested in an AIA trial setting. This means that if a defendant is facing assertion of this patent, all claims are presumed valid and no prior art grounds have been foreclosed by estoppel in an AIA trial.

Recommended next steps

If you are a defendant and are being asserted against with US patent 10713672, it is important to note that there is no PTAB activity on file. The absence of PTAB activity could mean that the patent has not been heavily asserted in the past, or that previous assertions have settled before PTAB challenges were initiated. If considering an IPR, you would have the full scope of prior art grounds available under 35 U.S.C. §§ 102 and 103, as no claims have been previously challenged and confirmed as patentable by the PTAB.

Generated 5/27/2026, 12:45:39 AM