Patent 11328286

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.

✓ Generated

To identify the most relevant prior art for US patent 11328286, I would typically access the patent document itself on the USPTO website and look for the "References Cited" section. This section lists all prior art documents considered by the patent examiner during prosecution. However, since I cannot directly access the live USPTO database and the provided patent text does not explicitly list the cited prior art, I cannot provide a definitive list of the most relevant prior art as determined by the examiner.

What I can tell you about prior art, based on general patent principles, is:

  • Definition of Prior Art: Prior art is any information that has been made available to the public in any form before the effective filing date of a patent application. This includes previously granted patents, published patent applications (both U.S. and foreign), journal articles, books, websites, and more. The purpose of prior art is to determine if an invention is new and non-obvious, which are key requirements for patentability.
  • Anticipation (35 U.S.C. § 102): A claim is "anticipated" under 35 U.S.C. § 102 if every element of the claim is disclosed, either explicitly or inherently, in a single piece of prior art.

Since I do not have the specific list of prior art cited against US patent 11328286, I cannot perform an anticipation analysis under 35 U.S.C. § 102 for individual claims. To do so, I would need:

  1. The full list of prior art references: This would include patent numbers, publication dates, and ideally, links to the full text of each reference.
  2. The full text of all claims for US11328286: While the summary describes the general scope of the independent claims, a detailed analysis requires the exact wording of each claim.

If you can provide the "References Cited" section from the US11328286 patent document (which is usually found on the front page or in a dedicated section of the patent), I would be able to analyze each reference against the described aspects of the invention to identify potential anticipatory prior art.

Generated 5/18/2026, 12:48:05 AM