ConnectQuest v. Oura Health: Proximity Notification Patent Dispute Ends in Dismissal
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📋 Case Summary
| Case Name | ConnectQuest, LLC v. Oura Health Oy |
| Case Number | 6:23-cv-00423 |
| Court | Western District of Texas, Chief Judge Xavier Rodriguez |
| Duration | June 6, 2023 – April 30, 2024 329 days |
| Outcome | Settled (Dismissal with Prejudice) |
| Patents at Issue | |
| Accused Products | Oura Ring (smart ring), Campus security in a close proximity notification system, Distributed data in a close proximity notification system |
Case Overview
A patent infringement lawsuit targeting one of the wearable technology industry’s fastest-growing companies concluded quietly but significantly on April 30, 2024. ConnectQuest, LLC filed suit against Finnish smart ring manufacturer Oura Health Oy in the Western District of Texas, asserting four U.S. patents covering close proximity notification systems — technology increasingly embedded in consumer wearables, campus security platforms, and distributed mobile communication networks.
Case No. 6:23-cv-00423 ended with a joint dismissal with prejudice, suggesting the parties reached a private resolution after 329 days of litigation. While settlement terms remain undisclosed, the case offers meaningful intelligence for patent attorneys navigating proximity-tech IP disputes, in-house counsel monitoring wearable device litigation risk, and R&D teams developing products in the Bluetooth, NFC, and short-range communication space.
This analysis examines the patents at issue, procedural trajectory, legal representation strategy, and the competitive implications of this resolved proximity notification patent infringement dispute.
The Parties
⚖️ Plaintiff
A plaintiff entity asserting patents directed at close proximity notification systems — technology architectures enabling location-aware alerts and data exchange between nearby devices.
🛡️ Defendant
Finnish smart ring manufacturer of the Oura Ring, a premium smart ring tracking biometric data including sleep, heart rate, and activity.
Patents at Issue
This case involved four U.S. patents covering close proximity notification system architectures, including distributed data handling and campus security applications — claim families directly relevant to short-range wireless communication functionality embedded in modern wearable devices.
- • US9693190B2 (App. No. 14/977,069)
- • US9628949B2 (App. No. 14/977,100)
- • US9219981B2 (App. No. 14/546,118)
- • US9219980B2 (App. No. 14/546,090)
Developing a product with proximity features?
Check if your wearable tech or IoT device might infringe these or related patents before launch.
Litigation Timeline & Procedural History
The complaint was filed on **June 6, 2023**, in the **Western District of Texas**, before **Chief Judge Xavier Rodriguez**. The case closed **April 30, 2024**, after **329 days** — a duration consistent with pre-trial resolution before significant dispositive motion practice or claim construction proceedings reached conclusion.
The Western District of Texas remains one of the most active patent litigation venues in the United States, known for its structured scheduling orders and experienced patent bench. Chief Judge Rodriguez oversees a substantial patent docket, making venue selection here a deliberate strategic choice by ConnectQuest.
The case resolved at the **first instance/district court level**, with no record of appeal, PTAB inter partes review petitions, or ITC parallel proceedings reflected in the available case data. The relatively swift 329-day resolution — from filing to dismissal — suggests that either early settlement negotiations advanced promptly or that Oura’s three-firm defense team created leverage sufficient to accelerate resolution.
The Verdict & Legal Analysis
Outcome
The case concluded via **joint motion to dismiss filed by both parties**, granted by Chief Judge Rodriguez pursuant to **Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(2)**. The court ordered:
- All claims asserted by ConnectQuest against Oura Health **dismissed with prejudice**
- **Each party to bear its own attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses**
The dismissal with prejudice — as opposed to without prejudice — is legally significant: ConnectQuest cannot refile the same claims against Oura on these four patents. The mutual fee-bearing arrangement is a standard hallmark of confidential settlement, neither party conceding liability or prevailing-party status.
Key Legal Issues
The underlying cause of action was a straightforward **patent infringement claim**. No damages figure was disclosed, and no injunctive relief was sought or granted on the public record. The absence of a court-determined outcome means no formal claim construction order, validity ruling, or infringement finding is available for precedential analysis.
However, the procedural posture reveals strategic dynamics. ConnectQuest’s assertion of **four patents across two related application families** reflects a portfolio bundling approach — common in NPE litigation to increase settlement leverage by multiplying the claims requiring defense resources. Oura’s deployment of **three law firms and seven attorneys** signals a defense posture designed to signal financial commitment and litigation endurance, tactics frequently deployed to accelerate settlement on favorable terms.
The “dismissed with prejudice / each party bears own fees” language strongly suggests a **confidential licensing agreement or lump-sum settlement** was reached — a commercially rational outcome given Oura Health’s growth trajectory and the commercial sensitivity of prolonged patent litigation for a company actively pursuing enterprise health partnerships.
Freedom to Operate (FTO) Analysis for Wearable Tech
This case highlights critical IP risks in wearable technology integrating proximity features. Choose your next step:
📋 Understand Litigation Impact
Learn about the specific risks and implications for proximity tech in wearables.
- View all 4 patents in this dispute
- See key players in proximity notification IP
- Understand claim scope relevant to short-range communication
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High Risk Area
Proximity notification, distributed data architectures
4 Patents Asserted
Against a leading wearable tech company
Dismissal with Prejudice
Case resolved without full trial
✅ Key Takeaways
Dismissal with prejudice + mutual fee-bearing = strong indicator of confidential settlement; structure discovery and scheduling accordingly.
Search related case law →Western District of Texas remains strategically attractive for patent assertion in technology sectors.
Explore venue analytics →Monitor the ConnectQuest portfolio for assertions against other wearable or campus-tech companies.
Start monitoring my competitors →Review existing product FTO analyses covering proximity notification and distributed data communication architectures.
Benchmark defense costs →Proximity notification and campus security system features carry documented assertion risk — document design decisions and prior art searches contemporaneously.
Start FTO analysis for my product →Distributed data architectures in short-range communication devices warrant proactive claim mapping against US9219980B2 and US9219981B2.
Try AI patent drafting →Frequently Asked Questions
Four U.S. patents: US9693190B2, US9628949B2, US9219981B2, and US9219980B2, covering close proximity notification systems and distributed data architectures.
The parties filed a joint motion to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(2), indicating a private resolution. The court dismissed all claims with prejudice, with each party bearing its own fees and costs.
It signals continued NPE interest in asserting proximity and notification patents against wearable device manufacturers, reinforcing the need for proactive FTO analysis and portfolio monitoring in this sector.
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PatSnap IP Intelligence Team
Patent Research & Competitive Intelligence · PatSnap
This analysis was produced by the PatSnap IP Intelligence Team — a group of patent analysts, IP strategists, and data scientists who work daily with PatSnap’s global patent database of over 2 billion structured data points across patents, litigation records, scientific literature, and regulatory filings.
The team specialises in tracking landmark litigation outcomes, translating complex court rulings into actionable IP strategy, and identifying the competitive intelligence implications for R&D and legal teams. All case analysis is grounded in primary sources: official court records, USPTO filings, and Federal Circuit opinions.
References
- PACER — Federal Court Records
- USPTO Patent Center — Patent Details
- Cornell Legal Information Institute — Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
- PatSnap — IP Intelligence Solutions for Law Firms
- ConnectQuest LLC v. Oura Health Oy, Case No. 6:23-cv-00423 (W.D. Tex. Apr. 30, 2024)
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. All case information is drawn from publicly available court records. For platform capabilities, visit PatSnap.
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