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FTC Testifies Before Congress on Impact of Patent Hold-up on Competition and Standard-Essential Patents

by Karne Newburn

On July 30, 2013, Suzanne Munck, Chief Counsel for Intellectual Property at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), testified before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Rights, on the impact of patent hold-up on competition, and standard-essential patents (SEPs).  The hearing covered standard-essential patent disputes and antitrust law. 

Ms. Munck’s testimony focused on SEPs that a patent holder has committed to license on reasonable and non-discriminatory (RAND) terms.  The hold-up, in this context, is the potential that a SEP holder violates its RAND commitment, and then uses the leverage acquired from the standard setting process to negotiate higher royalties or other favorable terms after the standard’s adoption than it could have beforehand.  She explained that patent hold-up is harmful because it can deter innovation, discourage the adoption of standards, reduce the value of standard setting and pass on excess costs to consumers.

To mitigate the threat of patent hold-up she testified that the FTC has “advocated for remedies in district courts and at the International Trade Commission (ITC),” submitted statements to the Federal Circuit and the ITC expressing its concerns, and pursued enforcement actions related to standard setting activity.  Specifically related to enforcement, she commented on the FTC’s ability to use its Section 5 authority when someone claims infringement for intellectual property that is unenforceable or expired, or when someone threatens to sue without any intent to sue.

Ms. Munck concluded with the following remarks: “[T]he Commission believes that competition and intellectual property laws work together to promote innovation.  Voluntary consensus-based standard setting facilitates this purpose; however, including patented technology in a standard creates the potential for patent-hold up.  The Commission will continue to advocate before the federal courts and the ITC for policies that mitigate the potential for patent hold-up, and will bring enforcement actions where appropriate.” 




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U.S. International Trade Commission Grants Injunctive Relief on Standard Essential Patent

by William Diaz and Lincoln Mayer

The U.S. International Trade Commission has issued an exclusion order barring importation of certain older model Apple products for infringing a Samsung patent. The case is significant because the infringed patent was standard essential and encumbered by a commitment to license on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms. Patent holders and potential defendants should carefully monitor further developments regarding the availability of injunctive relief for infringement of standard essential patents.

To read the full article, click here.




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Western District of Washington Sets FRAND Royalty Rates and Range for SEPs

by Nick Grimmer and Stefan Meisner

Last week in Microsoft v. Motorola, the U.S. District Court Western District of Washington became the first U.S. court to set fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND or RAND) royalty rates and range for standard-essential patents (SEPs).  See Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Microsoft v. Motorola, 2:10-cv-01823-JLR (W.D. Wash. Apr. 25, 2013). The suit stems from Microsoft’s allegation that Motorola’s offers to license certain Wi-Fi and video compression SEPs was too high and therefore violated Motorola’s contractual RAND commitments.   This issue is arising with greater frequency in antitrust/IP matters when patent licensing is involved with licensors who are standards setting organizations as well.

Microsoft v. Motorola is important because it is the first thoroughly reasoned decision by a U.S. federal district court that developed a framework for courts to assess FRAND terms for SEPs.  In setting forth the basic principles at issue, the court stated that “a RAND commitment should be interpreted to limit a patent holder to a reasonable royalty on the economic value of its patented technology itself, apart from the value associated with incorporation of the patented technology into the standard.” Id. at 25-26.  So, the court focused its analysis on its conclusion that “the parties in a hypothetical negotiation would set RAND royalty rates by looking at the importance of the SEPs to the standard and the importance of the standard and the SEPs to the products at issue.” Id. at 7.  The court’s analysis employed a modified-version of the Georgia-Pacific factors, which courts use to calculate “reasonable royalty” damages in patent infringement actions.  Of note, the court modified the first Georgia-Pacific factor (the royalties received by the patentee for the patent(s) at issue) to include consideration only of certain types of royalties, i.e., those “comparable to RAND licensing circumstances,” including both “license agreements where the parties clearly understood the RAND obligation, and … patent pools.” Id. at 35-36 (emphasis added).  Another of the court’s noteworthy modifications to the Georgia-Pacific factors is that the fourth factor (the licensor’s policy and marketing program to maintain its patent monopoly via selective licensing), “is inapplicable in the RAND context because the licensor has made a commitment to license on RAND terms and may no longer maintain a patent monopoly by not licensing to others.”  Id. at 36.  Finally, as relates to the final factor (a hypothetical negotiation), the court concluded that “reasonable parties in search of a reasonable royalty rate under the RAND commitment would consider the fact that, to induce the creation of valuable standards, the RAND commitment must guarantee that holders of valuable intellectual property will receive reasonable royalties on that property.” Id. at 40.

Concluding that several of Motorola’s patents provided only minimal contribution to the standards and played only minor importance in the overall functionality of some of Microsoft’s products, and that the characteristics of a similar patent pool (of which Microsoft and Google, Motorola’s parent, are members) “closely align with all of the purposes of [...]

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A New Front in The Patent Wars: CJEU Asked for Guidance on Limits to Injunctive Relief

by Wilko van Weert, Philipp Werner and David Henry

The patent wars between large technology companies continue unabated.  The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) is set to provide guidance on the antitrust rules when holders of standard essential patents seek injunctive relief.

To read the full article, click here.




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