Patent 11134316

Prior art

Earlier patents, publications, and products that may anticipate or render the claims unpatentable.

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Prior art

Earlier patents, publications, and products that may anticipate or render the claims unpatentable.

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Prior Art Analysis for US Patent 11134316

This section identifies and describes the most relevant prior art cited against US Patent 11134316, focusing on potential anticipation under 35 U.S.C. § 102. For a claim to be anticipated, every element of the claimed invention must be identically disclosed in a single prior art reference, either expressly or inherently.

The patent 11134316 itself lists prior art keywords as "video," "user," "media," "interactive," and "layer," which broadly define the technical domain. The prosecution history of US11134316 was notably lengthy, involving multiple rounds of rejections and responses, and two examiner interviews, suggesting a thorough consideration of prior art during examination.

The provided patent text for US11134316 does not include a direct list of "References Cited" from the USPTO. However, the litigation document for IPR2025-01485 mentions specific prior art references that TikTok Inc. apparently used in its petition, although the IPR was discretionarily denied. These references are "Ohliger" and "Veepio." While the full citations and detailed descriptions of these specific prior art documents are not provided within the patent text, their mention in the context of an IPR challenge indicates their potential relevance.

Based on the information available, a detailed analysis of the most relevant prior art would require access to the full "References Cited" section from the USPTO record for US11134316, as well as the content of the "Ohliger" and "Veepio" references. Without this, a comprehensive anticipation analysis for specific claims under 35 U.S.C. § 102 is not feasible.

General Principle of Anticipation (35 U.S.C. § 102):
Under 35 U.S.C. § 102, a claim is anticipated, and thus not patentable, if the invention was patented, described in a printed publication, in public use, on sale, or otherwise available to the public before the effective filing date of the claimed invention. To anticipate a claim, a single prior art reference must disclose every element of that claim, arranged as in the claim.

To provide a precise prior art analysis for US11134316, the full USPTO record would need to be consulted to identify all cited prior art.

Generated 5/23/2026, 12:47:17 PM