Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Happy New Year -- and a brief overview of key industry issues and conflicts in 2018

First, I wish all of my readers a Happy, Healthy, and Prosperous New Year!

Primarily this first post after the turn of the year is about a quick overview of some key industry issues and conflicts to watch in 2018. In addition, I'd like to mention that my app, Quizcover, is now available on the U.S. App Store (click here to download), and I've just issued a press release on it. But as I promised in a recent post, I'm going to keep those two activities--the trivia game app and the patent/antitrust/policy blog--perfectly separate from now on.

The following industry issues and conflicts were big in 2017 and should be very interesting to watch in 2018:

  • The World v. Qualcomm

    Ever since I can remember, no information and communications technology company has ever faced as many simultaneous and earth-spanning antitrust problems as Qualcomm: unilateral-conduct investigations by competition authoritities in the United States, Europe and Asia; thorough merger reviews of Qualcomm's proposed acquisition of NXP; and antitrust lawsuits brought by Apple in multiple jurisdictions. Then there's at least one other company (analysts believe it's Huawei) that stopped paying license fees. Some early-stage decisions made by federal judges in the Northern and Southern Districts of California didn't work out well for Qualcomm. It's losing the most momumental multi-front war any company in this industry has ever been embroiled in.

    From the outside it's always easy to say: they should settle, especially since they can't realistically win. It's never a bad idea to promote peace, and here it's just impossible to imagine that all those regulators and judges and private parties are wrong and Qualcomm (plus Maureen Ohlhausen, the last woman standing in Qualcomm's corner) are right. But let's be realistic: there is so much at stake here that Qualcomm will most likely still be the first item on my list for next year's first blog post, too.

  • The (failed) EU vs. Silicon Valley

    In the past, the EU was more selective about which IT antitrust issues to pursue, and it got a lot of support from various stakeholders all the time. But by now it looks like DG COMP (the EU Commission's antitrust enforcement unit) and policy makers are trade warriors and completely out of control. The EU's take on U.S. technology giants appears to be: "If you can't beat'em, tax'em." Literally, by creating a new digital tax and/or other measures that have the same effect; slightly less literally, by making up "state aid" cases (such as the one involving Apple) out of thin air and imposing huge fines.

    The two key questions about the continuation of the EU's war on Silicon Valley will be: how far will the EU institutions (including the Court of Justice of the EU) ultimately go? And when will there be some serious backlash?

    The question we don't have to ask--since the answer is the most resounding "no" you can imagine--is whether any of this will make Europe more innovative or more competitive. Europe will fall further behind in the age of the digital economy. It's more concerned with its history than with its future. As an Australian politician once said, Europe is like an endless seminar about itself. I seriously don't believe it has a bright future. It's going down the tubes already, with entire generations being lost in some EU member states that have youth unemployment rates beyond imagination. The EU is part of the problem, not part of the solution, though it does get something right every once in a while, such as its recent guidelines on standard-essential patents.

  • Silicon Valley vs. The White House

    Since President Trump took office about a year ago, Silicon Valley has engaged in political activism that went beyond what made business sense. Obviously, companies don't like restrictions regarding whom they can hire, so "buy American, hire American" runs counter to their global ambitions. And some major U.S. companies were presuambly afraid of losing business opportunities with governments, corporations and consumers in certain countries, and with parts of the U.S. economy and population, if they didn't distance themselves from various decisions and statements by President Trump. Up to a certain point, that's just corporate interests. But Silicon Valley companies opposed Trump in ways that clearly weren't justified to any significant extent by business interests, and at times they took positions that the Supreme Court largely disagreed with and that amounted to Trump-bashing and cheap shots.

    Some of the things that happened last year should give companies pause. The tax reform that Congress passed and President Trump signed into law before Christmas is great news for tech companies of all sizes. The aforementioned EU trade war on U.S. tech companies may increasingly make it necessary for them to get help from the Trump Administration. Then there are subjects such as net neutrality. I don't mean to imply that the Trump Administration retaliated against tech giants in that context, but it definitely didn't help their cause to be at loggerheads with the President all the time.

    I hope there will be a more constructive and rational relationship in 2018.

  • Whatever little is left of Apple v. Samsung (design patent damages)

    If the Supreme Court had allowed the Federal Circuit's statutory interpretation with respect to a disgorgement of a design patent infringer's unapportioned profits to stand, the consequences would have been really bad. Design patents would overnight have become the most lucrative arrow in any patent troll's quiver. Fortunately, the Supreme Court already made it clear in 2016 that infringer's profits are formally unapportioned but limited to the relevant "article of manufacture" (which may or may not be the entire end product). After that strategic victory for reasonableness, the two most important questions left to be answered were the test for determining the article of manufacture and the related burden of proof. Judge Koh answered those questions in ways that Apple can live with and Samsung and many are happy about. Compared to the questions before the SCOTUS and subsequently before Judge Koh, the remaining proceedings are significantly less strategic, but there still is the risk of an award that will encourage design patent trolling. Imagine this kind of "negotiation" between a troll wielding a (possibly overbroad) design patent against an accused infringer:

    TROLL: You know § 289 (unapportioned disgorgement of infringer's profits). Why don't you just pay us X million dollars to eliminate the risk of a devastating defeat.

    COMPANY: We don't think there really is much of a risk. The Supreme Court held that the relevant article of manufacture must be determined. The Department of Justice proposed a test that the Northern District of California adopted and probably all other courts will view very favorably, too.

    TROLL: So what? Samsung ended up paying Apple half a billion dollars at any rate. Shouldn't we negotiate?

    COMPANY: Well... we really don't think the outcome of Apple v. Samsung has a bearing on what we're discussing with you because our lawyers will present a strong "article of manufacture" argument to the court and the jury from the start, optimized for the DoJ's proposed test. But...we are willing to pay you half of what you're demanding.

    That fictitious conversation explains why I hope the outcome will be a reasonable one this spring.

  • Nobody (?) v. Amazon

    To be clear, I'm a very happy Amazon customer (store and AWS alike). I have nothing against that company, and this final bullet point is actually an expression of my admiration for how Amazon has managed to avoid the kinds of disputes that other major players have to deal with all the time. For example, those "smartphone patent wars" never hit Amazon. Little Barnes & Noble had to defend itself against a Microsoft suit, but no major patent holder ever went after Amazon (just trolls).

    It could be that certain strategic "anti-Android" patent holders--none of whom ever even mentioned Amazon to me in connection with patent infringement lawsuits--didn't want to lose Amazon as a reseller. So nobody sued them, and there weren't any antitrust complaints that I'd have heard of.

    There's a good chance that Amazon, apart from maybe having to pay the U.S. Postal Service a bit more in the future and the EU's "if you can't beat'em, tax'em" kinds of challenges, will continue to be able to steer clear of major disputes and conflicts. Admirable, but in no small part attributable to its unique (and enviable) position. While some thought that Jeff Bezos' private acquisition of The Washington Post would add to his clout, it probably isn't an asset under President Trump, but it may still help Amazon in Washington circles.

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