Showing posts with label Broadcom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Broadcom. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2022

Ericsson seeks U.S. discovery from Broadcom for use in Apple UK patent litigation involving WiFi chips: Northern District of California

Black Friday was not a very eventful day in U.S. patent and antitrust litigation, but the courts were open for business and Ericsson filed a § 1782 discovery motion with the United States District Court for the Northern District of California:

Ex Parte Application of Telefonaktiebolaget L.M. Ericsson for an Order Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 Granting Leave to Obtain Discovery From Broadcom Corporation for Use in a Foreign Proceeding

This motion for a subpoena is related to an Ericsson v. Apple patent infringement case pending in the High Court of Justice in London. The infringement action was discovered in June (claim no. HP-2022-000013). From the U.S. court filing I've learned that the two patents-in-suit asserted in that UK complaint are EP1721324 on a "method and inductor layout for reduced vco coupling" and EP2220848 on "mobile access to internet-based application with reduced polling. The discovery motion in California is only about EP'324, which is a member of the same patent family as U.S. Patent No. 7,151,430, which I identified as "[t]he most interesting patent-in-suit [remaining] in [ITC] investigation [no. 337-TA-1300]."

The amended particulars of the UK infringement claim state the following:

"The claim for infringement of EP 324 is made in respect of all Apple branded handsets / user equipment / mobile devices that incorporate the Broadcom 'BCM 4387' chip, the Broadcom 'BCM 4378' chip or the Apple 'TMIR36' chip (the '324 Devices')."

Originally, Ericsson listed the iPhone SE, iPhone 13, and Apple Watch Series 7 as exemplary accused devices. Ericsson's UK filing alleges that the iPhone 14 and the Apple Watch Series 8 also infringe EP'324 ("in addition to other later Apple branded devices such as iPhone 14 and Apple Watch Series 8 which it is inferred are also 324 Devices").

Given that Broadcom was already subjected to discovery due to the ITC investigation over a U.S. member of that patent family, the burden on Broadcom is minimal. It's all just about enabling the UK court to see the evidence.

One can deduce from Ericsson's discovery motion that a credible infringement case can be made against Apple gadgets that incorporate a Broadcom WiFi chip, which means the ITC trial (that evidentiary hearing will take place early next year) should get interesting. It seems that the same chip also supports Bluetooth, but that fact does not appear to give rise to infringement allegations here.

Tomorrow the Mannheim Regional Court will render judgment on an Apple countersuit against Ericsson, and the next day the Munich I Regional Court's 21st Civil Chamber will hold two Ericsson v. Apple hearings. Last week's Munich hearings were canceled as someone called in sick, a fact that I mentioned at the end of a recent post that was mostly about an interesting position taken by the ITC staff on public interest concerns surrounding a countercomplaint by Apple over mmWave patents. Next week, both a FRAND trial in the Eastern District of Texas and an ITC trial in the mmWave case I just mentioned will kick off. Later that month (December 21 to be precise), the Munich I Regional Court will hold an Ericsson v Apple FRAND hearing.

Monday, March 22, 2021

Caltech seeks to extend billion-dollar patent win over Apple, Broadcom to Microsoft: new lawsuit in Western District of Texas over Surface, Xbox

According to a patent infringement complaint filed on Friday, Microsoft--famously headquartered in Redmond, WA--has offices at 10900 Stonelake Boulevard, Austin, TX, USA 78759 and 401 East Sonterra Boulevard, San Antonio, TX. Those offices don't seem to be very large, but the per-square-foot cost of doing business there could be staggering: both these places are in the Western District of Texas, the most attractive venue for U.S. patent plaintiffs even ahead of the Eastern District of the same state.

The Western District has displaced the Eastern District. Waco-based Judge Alan Albright is no less patentee-friendly (an understatement) than Judge Gilstrap, but many major tech companies from the West Coast have additional operations in the Austin area, while the Eastern District is rural and easy to avoid. For example, you won't find any Apple Store in the Eastern District by now (though some are just across the border of the federal judiciary district). A certain presence by a defendant is, however, what it makes it easy for patent plaintiffs to avoid that their cases get transferred out of their chosen district under the Supreme Court's TC Heartland case law (PDF).

The California Institute of Technology ("Caltech") is now suing Microsoft in Waco, claiming that the Microsoft Surface portable computers and the Xbox gaming console infringe a handful of WiFi-related--but apparently not standard-essential--patents (this post continues below the document):

21-03-19 Caltech v. Microso... by Florian Mueller

The Caltech v. Microsoft complaint immediately brings two spectacular (or, from the perspective of true innovators, shocking) patent damages verdicts to mind:

Caltech is trying to get the best of both worlds: while leveraging its victory in L.A. (though I wish Apple and Broadcom luck on appeal and don't expect the verdict to be upheld, at least not in full), Caltech transparently attempts to benefit from the Waco patent bonanza.

Caltech is being represented by Quinn Emanuel and a small local firm, Mann Tindel Thompson. Quinn Emanuel is more often seen representing plaintiffs against Apple than against Microsoft, but this blog reported on various cases in which QE worked for Motorola against Microsoft, including the case in which Judge Robart's famous antisuit injunction came down.

I'll follow developments in the Western District more closely now, given that it's the world's #1 hotspot for patent damages just like Munich is the world's #1 venue for patent injunctions.

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Thursday, January 30, 2020

Over WiFi-related patents, L.A. jury awards Caltech $838 million from Apple, $270 million from Broadcom

A Los Angeles jury just awarded the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) $838 million from Apple and $270 million from Broadcom--a total of approximately $1.1 billion--over patents related to the WiFi standard (IEEE 802.11).

WiFi is just a limited part of the technology in a smartphone, and there are numerous patents allegedly essential to that standard as well as non-essential patents with some connection to WiFi. It wouldn't be possible to profitably make phones if one extrapolated a royalty of $1.40 per iPhone--which appears to have been the outcome--to the totality of patents potentially implemented in such a highly complex and multifunctional device.

Based on the complaint as well as Apple and Broadcom's answer to the complaint, I haven't found an indication that the patents are subject to a FRAND licensing commitment. They might cover efficiency gains related to the actual implementation of the standard. I'll update this post, or do a follow-up post, once I've found out.

This is the biggest WiFi damages verdict to my knowledge. Apple and Broadcom have announced their intent to appeal, so we'll see how much of that amount is ultimately awarded. Those verdicts tend to get slashed later on.

The verdict form isn't available on the docket (case no. 2:16-cv-03714, Central District of California) yet.

In jury trials, but not on appeal, university trolls have two psychological advantages over other patent trolls:

  • While conventional trolls have to come up with creative names like "American [Insert Something] Innovations," jurors intuitively associate universities with research and inventiveness.

  • They can claim to pursue a greater good, as opposed to those greedy corporations infringing their patents, as if those university trolls were Robin Hood's patent-related equivalent.

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Saturday, December 7, 2019

Super Mario company paved the way for BMW and Daimler's invalidity defense against a Broadcom patent

There was a time when a video game console manufacturer like Nintendo and car makers like BMW and Daimler were technologically so far apart that one could hardly have imagined the same patent would get asserted against those three organizations. But times have changed, and a patent on programmable texture processing (a computer graphics patent) can now be alleged--whether with or without merit--to read on game consoles as well as car navigation systems (or other computing technology incorporated into a modern automobile).

There also was a time when filed pretty good amicus curiae briefs advocating reasonableness in patent enforcement (particularly, but not only, with respect to standard-essential patents). That, too, has changed.

Time is ticking away for some very old Broadcom patents on the verge of expiry. Last year, however, Broadcom forced the Volkswagen group into a billion-dollar settlement, exploiting the sad state of affairs of German patent law, where injunctions are granted--mnst of the time over patents that would later be held invalid--without an eBay v. MercExchange-like proportionality analysis. One of Europe's best patent judges believes Germany is in breach of EU law for that reason, and at a conference I recently organized in Brussels, a lawyer said the European Commission could, if it wanted, fine Germany for infringement of an EU directive.

The latest insanity--Germany-wide patent injunctions obtained by BlackBerry against Facebook and its WhatsApp and Instagram subsidiaries over four different (most likely invalid) software patents--shows that this situation is unsustainable. Germany's patent infringement judges unanimously oppose reform, but they're not going to be the ones to decide. At the most, they can influence the unelected officials at the ministry of justice, but the German legislature will make the actual decision.

Getting back to Broadcom's efforts to shake down the German automotive industry, it doesn't look like what worked against Volkswagen is too likely to work out the same way against BMW and Daimler--partly because time is not on Broadcom's side, and partly because Broadcom faces more resistance this time around.

Before Broadcom sued BMW and Daimler over EP1177531 on a "method and system for providing programmable texture processing," they also asserted that patent against Nintendo. The company known for video game consolers and for iconic game franchises like Super Mario and Pokémon was alleged to infringe that patent. But Nvidia then brought a nullity action (a complaint seeking invalidation of the patent by the Federal Patent Court of Germany), and Nintendo's lawyers from the Bardehle Pagenberg firm (which often defends BMW as well) convinced the Mannheim Regional Court that the patent was likely going to be annulled because an Nvidia chip sold before the patent's priority date already came with the technique the patent purports to cover.

Of Germany's leading patent infringement venues, the Mannheim Regional Court is by far and away the most responsible one when it comes to staying infringement actions over likely-invalid patents. Daimler will defend itself against a Nokia SEP case in Mannheim on Tuesday (December 10) as the court just confirmed to me on Friday.

Broadcom filed an interlocutory appeal against the order to stay the Nintendo case, and it remains to be seen what the appeals court--the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court, where Judge Andreas Voss ("Voß" in German) presides over the patent-specialized division--will decide. The Mannheim court stayed the cases against BMW and Daimler for the same reason as in the Nintendo case, but reminded the parties in its order to stay the case against Nintendo and the pending interlocutory appeal.

A Broadcom subsidiary named Avago has meanwhile lodged some patent infringement complaints against BMW and Daimler. Daimler will have until January 22, 2020 for its answer to the complaint. But the patent is set to expire a few months later. So Broadcom/Avago may never actually get to enforce an injunction. The timeline in the case against BMW remains to be seen. Avago interestingly brought a lawsuit against BMW in Hamburg, a venue in which I have so far not watched a single patent infringement case. While patent infringement suits can be brought in any federal district in the United States, Germany designates specific courts, and almost all patent cases are filed in Dusseldorf, Mannheim, and Munich. It's not unheard of for someone to file in Hamburg (or Frankfurt, Berlin, or Nuremberg), but it's highly unusual.

I asked BMW for further information on those cases, and after telling me they referred my inquiry to the spokesperson in charge of this topic, I never heard back. Daimler declined to provide any information other than expressing the view that the complaint is meritless. So I had to tape some other sources.

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Friday, July 26, 2019

Macabre Qualcomm-internal presentation used tombstones to illustrate competitors' exits from mobile chipset market

In a medical context, "to exit" means "to die." That particular meaning of the word appears to have served as inspiration for somebody at Qualcomm who made the macabre design choice to depict the exits of key competitors from the mobile chipset market (Freescale in 2008, ST Ericsson in 2010, Texas Instruments in 2011, Broadcom in 2012, and Nvidia in 2014) as a graveyard at the bottom of a chart with tombstones to the left and right (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the image):

The document was highlighted yesterday by MediaTek's amicus curiae brief in support of the FTC's opposition to Qualcomm's motion to stay the enforcement of the FTC's antitrust remedies (this post continues below the document):

19-07-25 MediaTek Amicus Br... by Florian Mueller on Scribd

A MediaTek executive was also a key witness earlier this year in the FTC v. Qualcomm antitrust trial in the Northern District of California. MediaTek, which competes with Qualcomm mostly in the lower-priced market segment, "sells more than 1.5 billion semiconductor chips per year powering cell phones, tablets, voice assistant devices, smart TVs, and media players." Qualcomm's lawyers and expert witnesses sometimes point to the fact that MediaTek succeeded in a certain part of the market in an effort to blame other companies' problems just on their own decisions and execution.

MediaTek's brief focuses on Qualcomm's obligation to extend an exhaustive SEP license on FRAND terms to rival chipset makers. MediaTek argues (and I agree) that it's in the public interest for Qualcomm to begin meeting that obligation sooner rather than later.

The law firm representing MediaTek here is Boies Schiller & Flexner, which also represented Apple against Qualcomm. Boise Schiller's William Isaacson, the American Lawyer Litigator of the Year 2016, was spotted at the FTC v. Qualcomm trial in San Jose in January every single day.

Also yesterday, Qualcomm filed its optional but expected reply brief to the FTC's opposition to the motion to stay enforcement. I've uploaded it to Scribd and will write about it later today, or over the weekend.

A decision to allow various interventions was made a few days ago by the following three Ninth Circuit judges: Judge Mary M. Schroeder, Judge William C. Canby, and Judge Morgan B. Christen. Senior Judges Schroeder and Canby are Carter appointees; Judge Christen was appointed by Barack Obama. At first sight there's no reason to believe that these judges are going to be exceedingly sympathetic to the Trump Administration officials supporting Qualcomm. It wouldn't help Qualcomm either if the panel became aware of any of the various op-eds authored by Qualcomm shills and allies describing FTC v. Qualcomm as "an Obama case."

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Sunday, January 13, 2019

Bipartisan concerns over Qualcomm's efforts to avoid competition from Intel expressed in filings with ITC

A headline starting with the word "bipartisan" reminds us of what happens in the absence of bipartisanship: the cessation of the federal government, commonly called "government shutdown." With paychecks not going out on time, it's more than remarkable that the FTC v. Qualcomm antitrust trial in the Northern District of California is set to continue irrespectively of the shutdown. I agree with what MLex's chief antitrust reporter Mike Swift wrote in the tweet below (both parts--admiration of the FTC staff's efforts and the impression that it has a strong case against Qualcomm):

When an antitrust defendant faces a strong case, and when that case tackles the core of a business model, a company may very well get desperate and try alternative routes in order to avoid a judicial decision that quite probably isn't going to be pretty from Qualcomm's perspective. Qualcomm has not yet presented its own case-in-chief. The FTC will rest its case on Tuesday (as per the current schedule), and then Qualcomm will be in the driver's seat for a few days. But Qualcomm's lawyers have cross-examined the FTC's live witnesses, and Qualcomm's lead counsel Bob van Nest made an opening statement laying out his defensive strategy. Day 2 went better for Qualcomm than the other three days, but all in all the FTC still controls the center of the chess board, with Qualcomm clinging to a last line of defense: trying to build a basis to argue that the FTC failed to prove actual anticompetitive harm. After four trial days, including testimony by Qualcomm CEO Steve Mollenkopf and Qualcomm president Cristiano Amon, it appears increasingly unlikely that Qualcomm can fundamentally challenge the FTC's allegations and theories. Qualcomm's lawyers are trying many things, and they're trying smart and hard, but it's largely just like scratching at the periphery of the issues.

Qualcomm has an army of public relations professionals and lobbyists working on this case. They've orchestrated a lot of things, some of which Apple CEO Tim Cook complained about and dismissed as falsehoods (without going into specifics) in a recent CNBC interview, and the latest prouct of those efforts is this Fox News article published on Monday morning, entitled "Trump allies warn Obama-era FTC suit against US firm giving boost to China."

I've often shared Fox News articles on social media. I admit it's my favorite TV news network by far and away, and I've had to defend it against liberals who criticized me for sharing articles from what they considered an unreliable source. One story on an antitrust case that misses the point doesn't change how I view Fox News in general. It's all too easy to see they've been used by people who in turn have been used by Qualcomm.

Let's start with the headline. As for "Obama era," I already explained in my post on FTC chairman Joseph Simons's recusal from this case (now I learned from the Fox article that it's because a law firm he was a partner of had Qualcomm for a client) that there are indeed decisions that then-outgoing President Obama made that were against American interests, such as an indirect sponsorship of suicide terrorism or a "refugee" dael with Australia when anyone with half a brain should understand that people who travel all the way from Africa or the Middle East to Australia (!) to seek asylum there, after crossing and bypassing numerous safe countries, lost their refugee status even under the Geneva Convention a long time (and many thousands of miles) ago. But the FTC's antitrust case here is not an ideological issue.

Just like Fox News doubts that my favorite president is aware of the details of this case, I guess then-outgoing President Obama was, in January 2017, more interested in his book deals, in some final retribution against Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in a long vacation, and a hundred or a thousand other things than in fair baseband chipset competition. Presumably he was just told that there was this investigation that had been going on for two years and the transition of power shouldn't delay filing the related lawsuit. Statistically, no president faced more Congressional slow-rolling with respect to appointments of government officials than President Trump. A lot of time could have been wasted, and at some point Qualcomm might have complained about a protracted investigation.

The most counterfactual part of the headline, however, is the idea of "giving [a] boost to China" by letting a company like Intel compete on a more level playing field and by giving a device maker like Apple more choice. Largely, the whole Fox News article just uses China as a bogeyman. Huawei's testimony was great, but merely validated and supported what U.S. companies such as Apple, Intel, or Motorola Mobility (though now owned by Lenovo, the stories go back to the times when it wasn't, and it still employs many people here), or companies from countries that are longstanding U.S. allies such as South Korea, have said. If the FTC's evidence were limited to testimony by Huawei, then I could see why some people might find this strange. But not when there's a long list of companies saying essentially the same things and even more than Huawei did. For an example, Apple and Intel provided insights that Huawei didn't and to some extent simply couldn't have.

What makes that obsession with China even more counterfactual is the fact that Qualcomm itself is known to favor China for the first 5G rollout. I just googled these two stories:

The suggestion (in the Fox News article) that playing videotaped testimony by Huawei is like different parts of the government working against each other (in light of concerns over buying Huawei infrastructure) conflates totally unrelated issues. The FTC is seeking an injunction against certain types of conduct on Qualcomm's part, none of which relate even indirectly to the procurement of Huawei products.

Neither Democrats nor Republicans have a patent on pro-competitive action, and there's no reason why Republicans should grant the Democrats one. The CCIA's Patent Progress website has published three public-interest statements filed by members of the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representativesin response to the United States International Trade Commission's mid-December notice relating to the ITC's investigation of Qualcomm's first complaint against Apple (with Qualcomm seeking an import ban, which is the ITC's sole remedy).

The United States Senators and United States Representatives who filed those letters, which support Administrative Law Judge Thomas B. Pender's recommendation that no import ban be ordered given the anticompetitive effect this would have on Intel's ability to compete with Qualcomm, include members of both parties of Congress. While all members of Oregon's Congressional delegation who signed a joint letter are Democrats (well, Oregon doesn't have a Republican Senator at the moment, and only one of five U.S. Representatives from Oregon is a Republican), Congressman Andy Biggs from Arizona (member of the House Judiciary Committee as well as the Committee on Science, Space and Technology) and Congressman Darrell Issa from California are Republicans.

What's particularly interesting about Mr. Issa's letter is that he's a tech entrepreneur, a patent holder, a party to past patent litigation as a plaintiff as well as defendant, and he personally testified before the ITC in connection with a case in which Broadcom was seeking an exclusion order (U.S. import ban) against products incorporating Qualcomm baseband chips. Could a politician possibly have a more knowledgeable background to submit such a public-interest statement? Hard to imagine.

Mr. Issa would also like the district court to adjudicate the FTC's antitrust case now. Obviously, an exclusion order against Intel-powered iPhones would potentially run counter to a finding that Qualcomm illegally sought to avoid competition from Intel.

Those public-interest statements mention 5G: for the U.S. economy, it's better to have Intel compete with Qualcomm on 5G. In the end, both companies will be more innovative then.

In the past, Republican politicians such as Senator Mike Lee (Utah) have spoken out clearly against the abuse of standard-essential patents.

To combat anticompetitive conduct is not, and should not be misportrayed, as a "blue" issue, just like border security should not be a "red" concern. Qualcomm should focus on its case-in-chief, starting Tuesday, and if (as I believe is more likely than not to happen) it becomes necessary, it should adapt its business practices, which it certainly could if it wanted and had to.

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Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Qualcomm switch patent asserted against Apple in Germany should be invalidated, Swedish patent office says

Yesterday's Qualcomm v. Apple trial took twice as long as the average Mannheim patent trial. In fact, the ventilation system was switched off in the late afternoon, so for the last hour, two doors had to be kept open. The courtrooms at the Mannheim Regional Court, Europe's leading venue for wireless patents, are famously windowless.

Presiding Judge Dr. Holger Kircher forthcomingly stated at the outset that this case was, in my words, too close to call (unlike the one that Qualcomm agreed to stay in June), thus the court had to elaborate on all our of Apple's defenses: non-infringement, invalidity (which German district courts don't determine, but they can and often do stay cases pending a parallel nullity or revocation proceeding in another forum), abusive conduct (antitrust), and licensing (through one or more contract manufacturers). I'll address the first two--the traditional defenses to patent infringement--in this post, and the affirmative defenses (the remaining two) in a subsequent post since there's an abundance of interesting things to report and comment on.

The patent-in-suit, EP2460270 on a "switch with improved biasing" ("biasing" in this context basically meaning that one voltage gets to control another), is not standard-essential. Essentiality hasn't been alleged by any party to the German Qualcomm v. Apple cases that have been heard so far. Nor is it related to wireless baseband processors: it's a general circuity patent covering a type of switch. It was mentioned during yesterday's trial that the chip allegedly infringing on the patent is supplied to Apple by Avago/Broadcom. But all of the accused devices come with an Intel baseband chip, a fact that will be relevant to the antitrust part of the next post.

In the combination of Judge Dr. Kircher's summary of the issues in the case and what Qualcomm's German counsel, Quinn Emanuel's Dr. Marcus Grosch, said yesterday, it turned out that Apple originally didn't even deny infringement but focused on invalidity. Then, after Qualcomm's reply in support of its complaint, Apple presented a non-infringement theory in a sur-reply. It wasn't said whether Qualcomm's reply brief or a change of mind triggered this, but normally a defense has to be presented in the defendant's first pleading, so I would attribute this to something Qualcomm said. This much is certain: the non-infringement argument is effectively a disputed construction of a claim limitation, not a factual question concerning the accused products.

As far as I understood, Apple argued that the patent-in-suit covered a certain chipset architecture involving a constant bulk voltage, with ground also being constant. But Qualcomm disagreed, arguing that "AC ground" stood for only the AC part, not DC. In any event, the court appeared less inclined to agree with Apple. But... and this was something very special:

Judge Dr. Kircher, who unlike German criminal judges does not have a duty to "investigate," felt the parties had not focused enough on an inconsistency between claim 1 (an apparatus claim; Qualcomm is asserting one or more apparatus claims) and independent claim 16, a method claim that refers--unlike the apparatus claim(s)--to only "the" (a single) control signal in connection with what turns on the switch, resulting in an input signal being passed through a plurality of transistors. The accused chip, however, has two control signals and would therefore, at least potentially, fall outside the claim scope.

I was profoundly impressed and still am. Apple v. Qualcomm is the commercially biggest patent-related dispute ever (at a minimum, the biggest one in the history of the mobile device industry). This patent is just a limited part of the wider dispute, but still this (unlike what Judge Alsup once mislabeled Oracle v. Google) is truly the World Series of IP. Yesterday one could see sky-high piles of case documents behind the bench. Still, with all that had been written in the build up to the trial, the presiding judge identified an issue that has the potential to be outcome-determinative and had not received much if any, attention.

It's not just because of one demonstration of extraordinary competence and dedication that I couldn't imagine a future Unified Patent Court (UPC) without this judge, despite fundamental disagreements in the past and the present with respect to the bearing that antitrust issues should have on patent infringement cases.

Unsurprisingly, Qualcomm argued that the distinction between one or two control signals was an irrelevant labeling question. I lack the expertise in electrical engineering to form an opinion, but I've watched numerous patent cases in (mostly) two major jurisdictions and this is the typical difference between an accused product and a properly-construed patent claim that routinely becomes a defendant's "get out of jail free" card. In fact, the world is littered with complaints that have been dismissed for lesser reasons.

However, Judge Dr. Kircher said that case law and literature were inconclusive as to whether or not a parallel claim could help a court construe another claim. Apparently, reasonable and reputable people disagree on this legal question because it hasn't been resolved. Better late than never. Here, it's a given that Qualcomm would appeal a stay by "complaining" (that's the term used here) to the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court.

For the development of German (and, by extension, European) patent case law it would actually be good if the Mannheim court was prepared to take the risk of being overruled on appeal. I have no idea how the appellate panel under Presiding Judge Dr. Andreas Voss ("Voß" in German), who previously presided over another patent infringement chamber in Mannheim, or, in the ultimate consequence, the Federal Court of Justice (both in the city of Karlsruhe) would decide. My guess is that neither would pronounce a bright-line rule declaring it categorically impermissible to get mileage out of something that is found in the patent document itself. Why rely on descriptions, which aren't even updated as the claims are narrowed (which is also a huge issue in this case, with Apple alleging that Qualcomm pointed to a drawing that relates to something that the original application covered but the actually-issued patent does not), but not on claims, which the examiners focus on? Much less on anything found outside the patent document? It would probably the most likely outcome that some weight (within reason) would be given to what can be inferred or deduced from parallel claims, and in a case that is too close to call, it doesn't take too much to tip the scales.

It's fair to stay that no one in the room appeared to have a better idea of the issues in the case and the evidence in the record, across the board, than Judge Dr. Kircher. But in connection with invalidity, something apparently entered the record rather late, and while the court initially showed an inclination not to grant Apple's motion to stay since it's based on lack of an inventive step, while German courts normally grant stays only if there's a strong case for anticipation. The aforementioned Judge Voss ("Voß") always reminded counsel that a stay required a prior art reference constituting a "photographic image" of the patent-in-suit.

That's because German patent infringement courts don't like to take a position on whether a person of ordinary skill in the art would be likely to combine two or more prior art references: they're jurists, not engineers, unlike patent examiners.

Yet the hurdle for getting German patent infringement cases has, fortunately, become lower and lower over the years, as the regional and higher regional courts saw all too many cases in which they issued injunctions and later the patent died or was defanged as its claims got narrowed.

The court agreed with Apple that a new prior art reference (with an Asian name I didn't fully understand, but I'll find out whenever I find the time to request access to the nullity file), coupled with one named "Brindel" or "Brindle" that had been considered by the examiner in connection, represented a relatively stronger case for invalidation than one that the examiner found wasn't likely to become part of a combination. Dr. Grosch's efforts to deny or downplay this didn't persuade the court.

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer's Prince Wolrad of Waldeck and Pyrmont argued Apple's invalidity contentions. Toward the end I got the impression that the court was potentially having second thoughts. Just potentially, but that means a lot in a case where the original position was that a stay would not be warranted here.

The potential silver bullet here is that Apple had submitted the original patent and its proposed combination of prior art references (which are, according to Apple, also at the heart of its German nullity complaint pending with the Munich-based Federal Patent Court) to the Swedish Patent & Registration Office ("PRV"), and received an expert opinion from an examiner according to which the patent-in-suit does lack an inventive step in light of the prior art.

I haven't been able to find that opinion on the website of the Swedish patent office yet, but I'll keep trying.

Judge Dr. Kircher asked a key question: how many sucb opinions had Apple requested before obtaining this one? Apple's counsel, under the usual obligation to speak the truth, said it was just this one, and stressed that Apple wanted a neutral opinion based on just the prior art and no interaction with the examiner himself. That's the way it works in Sweden according to Apple. The Austrian and Swiss patent offices were also mentioned as providers of such opinions, but one of them no longer offers that service and the other one lets the petitioner communicate a lot with the examiner, which Apple's lawyers didn't want to do because they have a stronger case based on an uninfluenced opinion.

Apple didn't say so, but I might add that Sweden is a country with a lot of expertise in this field of technology, especially because of Ericsson.

It was again no surprise that Qualcomm's counsel would be dismissive of Apple's position. Dr. Grosch said that it would obviously simplify all patent cases if one could just fill out a web form somewhere. And it's not like the court indicated a change of mind. But I got the impression that Judge Dr. Kircher may indeed take the independent Swedish evaluation seriously. Maybe--just maybe--this does constitute a basis on which the court would make one of those rare exceptions in which a patent infringement case is stayed over inventiveness, not novelty, concerns.

There'll be a formal post-trial brief for which Apple was granted leave, and a legal brief (no new facts) which Qualcomm announced. The court will announce a decision on December 4, 2018. That one could be a final ruling, a stay, or whatever other procedural order.

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Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Shareholder class actions against Qualcomm over frustrated Broadcom merger may turn on secrecy of CFIUS proceedings

Before we get to the actual topic of this post, a quick follow-up to the previous one: the Deseret News reports that President Trump has interviewed Senator Mike Lee, so the possibility of a FRAND-friendly Supreme Court Justice is real (though other candidates have been interviewed as well).

Last week, an interesting class action complaint was brought against Qualcomm in the Northern District of California by a group of consumers, with the class being defined broadly enough to include any U.S. smartphone buyer. I've run a couple of online searches and found that there's a whole bunch of other class lawsuits pending against Qualcomm, and they're all about Broadcom's acquisition of Qualcomm, which couldn't materialize after a presidential veto.

Many complaints were filed by small firms, but I've also found some complaints that were filed by firms with a strong track recordin securities litigation. Here's a particularly well-crafted complaint by the Pomerantz firm, which a United States District Judge called "some of the best lawyers in the United States, if not in the world" and which recently achieved the largest securities class action settlement in a decade as Petrobras coughed up $3 billion (this post continues below the document):

18 06 26 Jadhav Complaint by Florian Mueller on Scribd

I've also uploaded another complaint filed in the Southern District of California and a March complaint filed with the Delaware Chancery Court to Scribd. The Delaware complaint argued that Qualcomm's directors made an end-run around Delaware corporate law by seeking a presidential veto against a vote on the composition of Qualcomm's board.

Qualcomm's directors and officers now have to defend themselves against accusations that they "defrauded" the market by not disclosing their company's secret request that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) preclude Broadcom from acquiring Qualcomm (and, on the way to that destination, getting deal-friendly board members voted in). Failure to disclose material information of this kind can constitute securities fraud and give rise to insider-trading claims.

One doesn't have to be an expert in securities law to understand that Qualcomm's request for a presidential veto was very significant. However, the fact that something very significant wasn't disclosed isn't necessarily sufficient. As a patent litigation watcher I obviously find it inconsistent that a company would publish an infographic to announce and promote a patent infringement complaint, but would remain silent about its volunary request that the CFIUS initiate an investigation into Broadcom's unsolicited takeover bid. But that's just a personal opinion.

Qualcomm hasn't filed its answer to the complaints yet. It has merely sought an extension, especially since a number of parallel actions need to be consolidated.

The most interesting legal question will be whether Qualcomm's leadership--which was undoubtedly pursuing an agenda of entrenchment--had a stronger obligation to protect the confidentiality of its CFIUS request (in the interest of the United States) than to inform actual or prospective shareholders.

The website of the Department of the Treasury says the following:

"Confidentiality

In reviewing a transaction, CFIUS considers national security matters and commercially sensitive information provided by the parties. By law, information filed with CFIUS is subject to strong confidentiality requirements that prohibit disclosure to the public. Accordingly, CFIUS does not disclose whether parties to any transaction have filed notices with CFIUS, nor does CFIUS disclose the results of any review. When a transaction is referred to the President, however, the decision of the President is announced publicly."

None of that says that Qualcomm couldn't have told shareholders of the mere fact that it made a request for a CFIUS review (aiming to obtain, as Qualcomm did, a presidential veto). However, courts may still prioritize the national security interests of the United States over the obligation of publicly-traded companies to disclose certain material information.

In the further process, the parties will have to find apposite cases. Also, the United States' federal government might support Qualcomm on this one in case the Trump Administration feels that companies secretly raising national security concerns should not have to fear shareholder lawsuits.

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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Growing industry coalition urges the EU (again) not to turn Europe into a patent trolls' paradise

While Apple and Samsung still haven't been able to settle their global patent dispute, they do agree that patent assertion entities (PAEs), or "patent trolls", cause serious "problems that continue to plague innovators". In September the world's two largest smartphone makers were already among an impressive group of signatories of an open letter to European policy-makers that warned against an increasing patent troll problem in Europe and, especially, the ways in which the problem could exacerbate as a result of shortcomings in the rules of procedure of the Unified Patent Court system that is at the preparatory stage.

Apple and Samsung's concerns were already shared back then by other major players such as (a non-exhaustive list in alphabetical order) adidas, Cisco, Deutsche Post DHL, Google, HP, and Microsoft. This morning the UPC Industry Coalition released another open letter addressing the issue, and notable new members include Broadcom, Dell, Huawei, and Vodafone. Here's the letter (this post continues below the document):

25 February 2014 - UPC Industry Coalition - Open Letter by Florian Mueller

Once again, these companies -- mostly but not exclusively tech giants -- stress their support of "an effective and balanced unified patent system", but they apparently think that more work still needs to be done on the rules of procedure in order for Europe to "achieve the stated purpose of the UPC to defend 'against unfounded claims and patents,' 'enhance legal certainty,' strike 'a fair balance between the interests of right holders and other parties,' and allow for 'proportionality and flexibility.'"

The signatories have read with concern "[r]ecent press reports suggesting that some PAEs welcome bifurcation within the UPC further show that a system with perceived loopholes has the potential to open the floodgates to a detrimental form of patent litigation", pointing to an IAM (Intellectual Asset Management magazine) article entitled "Why the US's most litigious NPE is a huge fan of the German patent system".

The two primary issues that have tech-producing and tech-using companies concerned are that without clarity in the procedural rules, the UPC might grant injunctions too readily, and especially do so over patents that shouldn't have been granted in the first place. The second problem, which exacerbates the first one dramatically, is also called "bifurcation": validity and infringement remedies are addressed on separate tracks, with validity often taking considerably longer and even a short window of opportunity to enforce an actually-invalid patent giving a patentee enough leverage to obtain a settlement (which then includes the withdrawal of the bogus patent, so it remains a threat to everyone else).

Programmers of multi-threaded software call this a "race condition": a system will work properly only if the worked performed by one thread (here, the invalidation proceedings) is indeed concluded before a certain critical stage of a second thread (here, the infringement proceedings that can result in a sales ban) is completed -- but the system will fail if, for whatever reason, the second thread gets ahead of the first one because, which is simply a flaw, there is nothing in the system that makes the second thread wait for the first if necessary.

I'd like to say something here about my personal experience in discussing patent policy matters with the European Commission years ago (and based on what I hear, things haven't really changed in this regard). There are some great people working for the Commission who perfectly understand the economic dimension of these legal issues and are committed to balance and reasonableness. But there are also some people who are very dogmatic about IP enforcement and, unlike most researchers, have not yet understood how serious certain problems caused by the excesses of the patent system (too many invalid patent, overly powerful enforcement) are -- or maybe they don't even want to understand because they have a strong interest in growing the patent (including patent litigation) industry, not so much the real economy. The ultimate, high-level decision makers will hopefully listen to those who have a strategic and economic perspective, not to the ones whose dogmatic approach is that if there's any problem about the patent system, the system itself will solve it anyway.

There are also some who deny that Europe faces a PAE problem and that things may get a whole lot worse. I will talk about this in more detail on another occasion. I'd just like to say that PAEs are definitely not a US-only phenomenon. Case in point, on Friday the Mannheim Regional Court will rule on three cases brought by patent licensing firm IPCom, two against Apple (including a case in which a "partial" damages claim of EUR 1.57 billion ($2.2 billion) has been brought) and one against HTC. I attended the combined trial in the two Apple cases and I believe the complaints will be rejected. The court was noticeably unconvinced of there being an infringement of the patent in its narrowed form, if properly construed, after a recent decision in an opposition proceeding before the EPO. IPCom is not seeking an injunction against Apple anyway. But if IPCom had done so, and if the case had not been stayed to await the outcome of the opposition proceeding, it could have won, due to the way patent litigation works in Germany, a sales ban against the iPhone and all 3G-capable iPads in Germany.

With the Unified Patent Court, unless sufficiently clear rules of procedure are put in place, such lawsuits could result in Europe-wide injunctions on a premature basis (i.e., before the validity of a patent-in-suit has truly been ascertained). This would make Europe a patent trolls' paradise, and the policy-makers who can rein in the extremists now should so so, lest they will be responsible for massive damage to the European economy that will also affect European consumers.

[Update] I just saw this post on Google's EU policy blog by Catherine Lacavera, Google's litigation director, on "Curbing patent trolling in Europe", and also wish to recommend strongly this Technet blog post by Microsoft's deputy general counsel and corporate vice president Horacio Gutierrez who says very clearly that "[m]ore work [is] needed to protect [the] European Union from patent trolls" . [/Update]

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Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Nokia steps up pressure on HTC with French patent lawsuit, now suing in seven countries

HTC can run but it can't hide from Nokia's patent assertions on three continents. Originally, Nokia sued in two countries -- the United States and Germany -- in late April and early May 2012. More than 19 months later, HTC still hasn't taken a royalty-bearing patent license to any of Nokia's non-standard-essential patents (it does have a SEP license). Instead, it continues to defend itself and to emphasize its efforts to work around any Nokia non-SEPs it is found to infringe. Most recently, HTC obtained a stay from the England and Wales Court of Appeal, enabling it to ship all of its products into the UK market during the appellate proceedings following Nokia's recent win of an injunction over a hardware patent the court found various HTC devices incorporating Qualcomm and Broadcom chips to infringe.

Over time Nokia asserted an increasing number of patents against HTC, and it brought lawsuits in additional jurisdictions. In the UK, HTC was actually first to sue because it wanted to obtain declaratory judgments in order to influence various German courts, but Nokia counterclaimed for infringement (hence the aforementioned injunction). Subsequently, lawsuits in Italy, Japan and the Netherlands also became known. And the latest venue in which Nokia is suing HTC over one or more patents is Paris, France. I don't follow French patent lawsuits on a regular basis (though I attended a Samsung v. Apple preliminary injunction hearing before the Tribunal de Grande Instance in 2011), but I learned about this from a statement issued by Nokia on the stay of the UK action:

"Nokia was pleased that the UK High Court imposed an injunction on certain HTC products which it found in October to infringe a Nokia patent. The UK Court of Appeal has stayed the injunction until a full appeal hearing next year and Nokia welcomes the Court's invitation for the parties to expedite this. It is unfortunate that the stay means that HTC can continue to benefit from its unauthorized and uncompensated use of Nokia innovations. We look forward to the Court of Appeal confirming that the patent is valid and infringed, lifting the stay on the injunction and awarding Nokia financial compensation for HTC's infringement.

The same patent comes to trial in Dusseldorf, Germany next month and is also in suit in Paris, France; Rome, Italy[;] and its US counterpart is in Nokia's second complaint against HTC at the US International Trade Commission. Nokia began its actions against HTC in 2012, with the aim of ending HTC's unauthorised use of Nokia's proprietary innovations and has asserted more than 50 patents against HTC in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, UK and US. During 2013, HTC has been found to infringe Nokia patents in venues including the Regional Court in Mannheim, Germany, the UK High Court and the US International Trade Commission."

Last week the ITC decided to conduct (as usual) a review Nokia's preliminary win over HTC. In my post on that decision I already mentioned that a key Nokia v. HTC ruling is scheduled to be announced by the Munich I Regional Court this coming Friday (December 20) and explained that European Commission Vice President Joaquín Almunia's warning against Nokia's potential "patent trolling" after the sale of its wireless devices business doesn't mean much in practical terms. For SEPs, there are some key ongoing investigations (Samsung, Motorola Mobility) that will provide clarity for everyone (including, but not limited to, Nokia); and for non-SEPs, it's going to be a long shot for anyone trying to build an antitrust abuse theory. No antitrust regulator in the world has the authority to require Nokia to give away licenses to its patents for free, or to tolerate infringement. In principle, Nokia can sue until HTC pays. That's what it's doing and what it will continue to do. And the day will come when HTC will agree to pay.

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Thursday, December 12, 2013

HTC says it can again ship the One mini into the UK after winning stay of Nokia patent injunction

HTC has issued a statement to the media (Engadget was first to report) on a decision by the England and Wales Court of Appeal (the order itself has not been published yet):

"HTC is delighted that the Court of Appeals has granted a stay on the injunction against our products. We will immediately resume shipment of all of our devices into the UK, including the entire HTC One family. Similarly, our customers should feel confident in their ability to promote and sell all HTC devices. Even though we plan to aggressively appeal the validity decision of Nokia's EP 0 998 024 patent, we will continue to work with our chip suppliers on alternative solutions to ensure minimal disruption to our business in the future."

On October 30, the England and Wales High Court had held HTC liable for infringement of this patent, which the court deemed valid. HTC had brought the UK action to shoot down the patent with a view to influencing a German case pending before the Dusseldorf Regional Court. Nokia counterclaimed, successfully so far. On December 3, the High Court granted Nokia an injunction, but its scope was limited with respect to the devices it covered, making a distinction between those that HTC created/launched after becoming aware of the infringement allegations (particularly, the One mini) and those it designed before (the original HTC One, for example). The UK injunction order had, as an unintended side effect, revealed HTC's plans for a successor to the One, the HTC One Two. The High Court stayed its own injunction for a few days in order to allow HTC to appeal. HTC did appeal, and the appeals court has now granted HTC a further stay (presumably for the duration of the appellate proceedings).

The HTC statement above mentions that HTC is working with its chip suppliers (Qualcomm and Broadcom) on workarounds. In October HTC was reportedly working with Qualcomm to also work around two Nokia patents underlying a preliminary ITC ruling in Nokia's favor, which is now undergoing a thorough review before an import ban may (or may not) enter into force. Three Nokia v. HTC rulings are scheduled in Munich, Germany, over the course of the next four weeks.

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Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Nokia wins UK injunction against HTC devices including the One mini -- HTC can appeal

Settlement pressure on HTC is increasing significantly after Justice Arnold of the England and Wales High Court ordered an injunction against various HTC devices based on EP0998024 on a "modular structure for a transmitter and a mobile station", a mobile phone hardware patent that he found valid and infringed by HTC'various HTC products including its current Android-based flagship, the HTC One, in an October 30 ruling.

The injunction is "final" as far as the High Court is concerned, but Justice Arnold granted HTC permission to appeal ("albeit on more limited grounds than HTC had sought permission in respect of") and a stay of the injunction "pending the judgment of the Court of Appeal". HTC has until 4 pm UK time on December 6 to apply to the Court of Appeal for permission to appeal against Justice Arnold's "refusal of a wider stay".

Nokia is asserting this patent against HTC in several countries and issued the following statement on the decision:

"Nokia is pleased that the UK High Court has imposed an injunction on certain HTC products found in October to infringe a Nokia patent. The injunction is stayed until December 6 to allow HTC time to appeal. Pending the appeal, HTC has undertaken not to ship any more of the infringing products into the UK, except the HTC One which it may continue to sell until the conclusion of any appeal. If HTC does not succeed on appeal, the injunction will take effect on all infringing products. Nokia is also claiming financial compensation for the infringement of this patent."

Nokia just received good news yesterday in the United States, where Microsoft's acquisition of Nokia's wireless devices business received fast-track clearance from antitrust regulators. I understand that the European Commission's Phase 1 review will also conclude this week, and I would be very surprised if this procompetitive transaction wasn't also cleared immediately in the EU -- the only logical outcome unless antitrust law is suddenly turned on its head.

Patent licensing will be a substantial part of Nokia's revenue opportunity after the closing of the Microsoft deal, and the dispute with HTC is an important one because Nokia faces an unwilling licensee of its non-standard-essential patents. It's SEPs are already broadly licensed. Its non-SEPs are not, so there is potential upside for investors in that regard. From an enforcement point of view both categories of patents present different challenges. HTC will only take a royalty-bearing license from Nokia at a point at which the latter has substantial leverage. Otherwise HTC will continue to defend itself in court.

Nokia is suing HTC in six countries on three continents (US, UK, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, Japan) and gaining more and more leverage, which is why we may see a settlement even before the end of the year. In the United States, Nokia won a preliminary ruling at the ITC over two patents, and the result could be a U.S. import ban against HTC's Android-based devices. Some organizations have raised public interest concerns in that regard, but if the ITC upholds the liability findings, an import ban is going to be almost inevitable. And on Friday (December 6), the Munich I Regional Court will announce a ruling on a German Nokia v. HTC case over a USB-related patent (not a SEP, but it appears rather powerful). At the September trial Nokia appeared to be on the winning track. I will also attend the Friday announcement.

The decision mentions that, according to evidence adduced by HTC, various other companies (Apple, BlackBerry, Google/LG, Samsung and Sony) "are also marketing phones (or, in Sony's case, a tablet) containing infringing chips in the UK".

Finally, here's today's order:

13-12-03 HTC v Nokia UK Injunction by Florian Mueller

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Nokia wins patent case against HTC in the UK over patent asserted in 5 countries on 3 continents

I've been saying for a long time that HTC will end up paying royalties to Nokia for a license to some of Nokia's non-standard-essential patents (it already has a SEP license). It's been defending itself vigorously and effectively so far, but its own assertions against Nokia are not going to give it leverage. It's only a matter of time before a tipping point is reached, and Nokia made major headway today in the most difficult court in the world for plaintiffs, the England and Wales High Court.

Justice Arnold ruled today that Nokia's EP0998024 on a "modular structure for a transmitter and a mobile station", a pretty powerful mobile phone hardware patent, is valid (HTC tried to shoot it down in the UK in hopes of influencing decisions in other jurisdictions) and infringed by various HTC products including its current flagship, the HTC One, which incorporate certain Qualcomm and Broadcom chips. Nokia is suing HTC over this patent not only in the UK, where it can seek an injunction now after today's win on liability, but also in Germany, where the Düsseldorf Regional Court will hold a trial soon, Italy, and Japan. I didn't even know Nokia was also suing HTC in Japan -- so far I was aware of litigation in the US, UK, Germany, and Italy. Today Nokia also mentioned yet another jurisdiction in which it's suing HTC -- the Netherlands (it's not asserting today's winning patent there, at least not yet). All of this means a lot of pressure, and I say it again, HTC will inevitably end up paying. As will Samsung, with which Nokia has been negotiating for some time and which it may have to sue at some point.

This is the public ruling (this post continues below the document):

13-10-30 HTC v Nokia Public UK Judgment EP0998024 by Florian Mueller

Here's the summary of the ruling (click on the image to enlarge or read the text below the image):

"189. For the reasons given above, I conclude that:

i) claim 1 of the Patent is novel over Ikatura;

ii) claim 1 is not obvious over either Ikatura or Tan;

iii) each of the representatives HTC devices falls within claim 1;

iv) HTC has not established its defence of licence."

These are the representative devices and the corresponding chips accused in the UK action:

DevicesChips
One SV (non-LTE)Qualcomm WTR1605
One, One SV (LTE)Qualcomm WTR1605L
Wildfire SBroadcom BCM4329
One SV (LTE), One SV (non-LTE)Broadcom BCM4334

Nokia issued the following statement:

"Nokia is pleased that the UK High Court has today confirmed the validity of Nokia's patent EP 0 998 024 and ruled that a number of HTC products, including the HTC One, infringe this patent.

Today's judgment is a significant development in our dispute with HTC. Nokia will now seek an injunction against the import and sale of infringing HTC products in the UK as well as financial compensation. Local counterparts of this patent are already in suit against HTC in Germany, Italy, Japan and the US.

This is the third court this year to find that HTC infringes Nokia patents, bringing the number of patents found infringed to four. In September, the US International Trade Commission gave an initial determination of infringement of two Nokia patents and, in March, the Mannheim court ordered HTC to cease infringing a Nokia power saving patent.

Nokia began its actions against HTC in 2012, with the aim of ending HTC's unauthorised use of Nokia's proprietary innovations. Nokia has now asserted more than 50 patents against HTC in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, UK and US."

The ITC ruling is preliminary. HTC has petitioned for a Commission review of the initial determination, and it's working together with Qualcomm to modify its products so as to avoid a possible ban.

Next week Nokia may very well win a second German injunction against HTC. I will attend the announcement of that ruling.

Yesterday the Mannheim Regional Court held a trial on a Nokia v. HTC lawsuit over RFID. I did not attend that one, but will try to find out about the ruling when it comes down. I recently also missed a couple of Munich Nokia v. HTC trials (during my week off), but won't miss the rulings.

Many of Nokia's patent assertions against HTC involve Google's Android mobile operating system. A Nokia-HTC license agreement will relate to Android's use of various Nokia patents as well. 22 royalty-bearing patent license deals relating to Android are already known, and a Nokia-HTC settlement will be added to that list sooner or later.

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Thursday, October 3, 2013

Federal judge determines 19 WiFi patents are worth a FRAND rate of less than 10 cents per unit

A redacted version of the second U.S. FRAND royalty determination has just been published today. Judge James L. Robart in Seattle (Western District of Washington) pioneered this field with his 207-page rate-setting opinion in Microsoft v. Motorola, awarding the Google subsidiary less than one-twentieth of a percent of what it initially demanded. Now Judge James F. Holderman in Chicago (Northern District of Illinois) has largely adopted Judge Robart's approach, and in at least one respect -- the royalty base -- he actually took a licensee-friendlier approach, focusing completely on the price of WiFi chipsets because the patent holder failed to convince him of a royalty based on the price of an entire end product.

The numerical outcome is that Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC, a patent assertion entity that "has sued numerous coffee shops, hotels, restaurants, supermarkets, large retailers, transportation companies, and other commercial users of wireless internet technology located throughout the United States", is deemed entitled to a per-unit royalty of "9.56 cents for each Wi-Fi chip used or sold by the Manufacturers in the United States, subject to the terms of the patents, the applicable statute of limitations, and a finding of infringement" for a license to its portfolio of 19 patents essential to the IEEE 802.11 (WiFi) standard. This is a win for the manufacturers whose products are actually at issue in this case -- Cisco Systems, Motorola Solutions (not to be confused with Google-owned Motorola Mobility, which was spun off of Motorola, which then called itself Motorola Solutions), SonicWALL, Netgear, and Hewlett-Packard -- against this patent troll: according to the order, "Innovatio's proposed method, for example, [would have] result[ed] in royalties on average of approximately $3.39 per access point, $4.72 per laptop, up to $16.17 per tablet, and up to $36.90 per inventory tracking device (such as a bar code scanners)." Based on the non-weighted average of those four examples of $15.30, this means Innovatio got less than a percent of what it wanted. The experts who defended Innovatio's excessive demand included Berkeley Professor David J. Teece, whom I mentioned earlier today because of his work for Samsung and who (in)famously wrote on Motorola Mobility's behalf that it only takes one bullet to kill someone with a standard-essential patent (SEP).

Toward the end, Judge Holderman's ruling explains why the 9.56 cents per unit Innovatio is (subject to the conditions quoted further above) entitled to "is approximately three times Judge Robart's [F]RAND rate of 3.471 cents per unit". There's a reason for this difference:

"Judge Robart concluded that Motorola's patents were only of minimal value to the standard, [...] whereas the court here has found that Innovatio's patents are of moderate to moderate-high importance to the standard. A multiplier of about three is a reasonable difference between the two royalties to account for the greater importance of lnnovatio's patents to the 802.11 standard."

Judge Holderman also compares the number he arrived at with a jury award in Ericsson v. D-Link in the Eastern District of Texas. After finding three of Ericsson's 802.11n SEPs infringed, the jury awarded damages of $10.1 million. On that basis, the court held that Ericsson was entitled to 15 cents per unit as an ongoing future royalty. While that Texas case is less relevant (also because the jury just rendered a verdict without explaining any particular FRAND rate-setting methodology), the numbers nevertheless show that WiFi patents are worth a whole lot less than what some WiFi SEP holders demand.

There's a clear and strong trend in U.S. courts toward rationality in connection with SEP royalty rates. Conversely, irrational demands fail consistently these days. Last month, Chief Judge Rader of the Federal Circuit told Google's Motorola Mobility that its demand with respect a cellular SEP was "crazy". That was the appellate hearing on Judge Posner's dismissal of a two-way Apple-Motorola lawsuit in -- what a coincidence -- Judge Holderman's district.

Seattle is in the Ninth Circuit, Chicago in the Seventh Circuit, and all patent infringement cases are appealed to the Federal Circuit. From the West Coast to the Midwest to the East Coast, and apparently also including the trolls' favorite district, SEP holders get but tiny fractions of out-of-this world royalty demands. They will all have to become more reasonable now. Will they? Not sure.

It's also clear that Judge Robart's ruling becomes ever more influential. In the Innovatio case, the parties disagreed on a lot of things, but no party proposed a different approach than Judge Robart's -- they just disputed its application to this case. Germany has so far adjudged SEP cases by the Orange Book (the related ruling is called Orange-Book-Standard). In U.S. courts, the 207-page "Robart Book" is now the gold standard for FRAND determinations, which doesn't mean that there can't be further improvements, such as in connection with the appropriate royalty base, which show that Judge Holderman thought these issues through very independently.

Finally, here's the public version of Judge Holderman's FRAND determination:

13-10-03 Innovatio v. Mult. Def. WiFi Patents FRAND Determination by Florian Mueller

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